Indonesia Raises Crypto Trading Taxes, Targets Overseas Exchanges
Indonesia will implement higher cryptocurrency transaction taxes starting August 1, with significantly steeper rates for trades conducted on overseas exchanges, according to new finance ministry regulations reported by Reuters on Wednesday.
The tax increases reflect Indonesia's growing crypto market, where transaction values tripled in 2024 to over 650 trillion rupiah ($39.67 billion). The country now has more than 20 million crypto exchange users, exceeding its stock market investor base, the news wire said.
Under the new structure, sellers on domestic crypto exchanges will pay 0.21% tax on transaction value, up from the previous 0.1% rate. Sellers using overseas exchanges face a more substantial increase to 1%, jumping from the prior 0.2% rate.
The changes eliminate value-added tax (VAT) for crypto buyers, who previously paid 0.11-0.22% VAT under the old system. However, crypto mining faces higher taxation, with VAT rates rising to 2.2% from 1.1%.
Beginning in 2026, crypto mining income will be subject to standard personal or corporate tax rates rather than the current 0.1% special income tax rate.
Cryptocurrencies are legal for trading in Indonesia but cannot be used as payment methods under current regulations.
Swift Crypto Rebound After Fed Decision Reinforces Market Stability
Your daily access to the backroom...
Will Stablecoins Face a Problem of Plenty?
The booming digital asset sector sees major financial players, from brokerages to banks, launching s...
Trump Administration Releases Comprehensive Crypto Policy Framework
White House working group outlines regulatory roadmap to establish U.S. as "crypto capital of the wo...