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South Korea Faces Renewed Debate Over 22% Crypto Tax as Opposition Seeks Repeal - Crypto Economy
TL;DR
South Korea’s long-delayed crypto tax is back at the center of a political fight, and the renewed clash is exposing how unsettled the country’s digital asset policy remains. The debate has returned just as implementation was supposed to be getting closer. South Korea’s main opposition party, the People Power Party, has proposed scrapping the planned tax before its Jan. 1, 2027 rollout by amending the Income Tax Act and removing provisions on digital asset income. The move revives a dispute that has forced the measure to be postponed three times since it was first introduced.
Why the Tax Fight Is Reopening Now
Under the current plan, gains above 2.5 million Korean won would face a 20% income tax plus an additional 2% local tax. The opposition says that framework is unfair, duplicative and difficult to enforce. According to the report, the PPP argues that most retail stock investors do not pay income tax on gains unless they cross major shareholder thresholds, while crypto investors would face a blanket levy. The party also contends that because crypto assets are treated as goods under the VAT framework, the proposal risks creating two layers of taxation on the same activity.

That argument is colliding with a bureaucracy that is already preparing for rollout. Tax authorities are not waiting for the political fight to settle before building enforcement tools. The report says authorities have started constructing systems for next year’s crypto taxation, including a transaction analysis platform designed to track digital asset activity. It also notes that, on March 12, the National Tax Service opened a procurement bid for an artificial intelligence powered platform to analyze crypto trading data and flag possible tax evasion. The result is a policy contradiction between legislative resistance and administrative preparation.
The next question is whether repeal efforts can move beyond symbolism. South Korea’s ruling camp has not embraced abolition, but it has not shut the door either. Democratic Party senior deputy floor leader for policy Kim Han-gyu said the ruling party has not seriously discussed scrapping the tax, though it will review the new proposal. That leaves the country with a familiar pattern: repeated delays, no settled consensus and a tax regime that remains politically combustible even before launch. For investors and exchanges alike, the signal is persistent uncertainty, not regulatory closure, heading into 2027.