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Japan Is Cutting Its Crypto Tax From 55% To 20% - But Maybe Not Until 2028

Published May 21, 2026
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Summary:
  • Japan's FSA plans a flat 20% tax on gains from spot crypto, derivatives and ETFs, down from a top rate of 55%.
  • The plan moves crypto under the same law that covers stocks and adds three-year loss carryforwards.
  • A Japanese banking official called the timeline "extremely slow." The change may not land until 2028.

Japan is about to make crypto trades as tax-friendly as stocks. Maybe.

The FSA, Japan's top finance watchdog, wants to cut the top crypto tax rate from 55% to a flat 20%. The catch is the timing.

The change may not land until 2028.

A New Rulebook

The FSA plan moves crypto under the same law that covers stocks. So crypto would sit inside a frame that big firms already know.

The plan also adds a three-year loss "carry." That means a trader can use past losses to lower the tax on future gains.

Stock traders already get the same break.

It is not for every coin. Only "specified crypto assets" get the 20% rate.

That means about 105 tokens, including Bitcoin and Ether, on listed venues.

Staking rewards, DeFi yield, lending and NFT gains stay taxed as other income. That can still hit 55%.

So the win is real for plain Bitcoin and Ether trades. Not for the trades that pay yield.

Every morning, Market Briefs breaks down what global policy shifts mean for your money. In five minutes a day, with a free investing masterclass thrown in.

Big Money Is Preparing

Japan's asset managers are not waiting. They are prepping crypto ETFs and trusts to chase ¥5 trillion in assets.

SBI is working on Bitcoin and Ether funds.

The interest tracks the global trend. About 76% of big investors plan to add to digital assets in 2026.

US spot Bitcoin ETFs have pulled in about $115 billion in big-fund inflows. That sets the bar Japan wants to clear.

Coincheck, a major Japan exchange, said revenue jumped 89% year-on-year in Q2 of fiscal 2026. Demand is already there.

Tokyo also wants to be the next big crypto hub in Asia. Lower taxes and clearer rules are how it plans to chase that goal.

The Trade-Offs

The plan also brings strict reporting and tougher rules on insider trades. That cleans up market trust but raises costs.

The lower rate skips staking and lending. So yield-led plays stay on the higher tax track.

That cools the pull for some big trading desks.

NFTs and DeFi protocols are also left out of the better tax frame. That limits Japan's pull for next-gen crypto products.

The mixed setup could push some traders to use overseas venues for the bits Japan does not cover.

What To Watch

A Japan banking official called the timeline "extremely slow." The reform could land in 2028, not 2026.

If Japan moves on time, it becomes a real rival to Hong Kong and the US for big crypto money.

If it slips, Tokyo watches the inflows go somewhere else.

Watch for a draft bill from the FSA. That will signal whether the 2026 or 2028 path wins out.

A 35-point tax cut is a huge pull for crypto money. But only if it lands on time.

The clock is ticking. The US and Hong Kong are not waiting for Japan to act.

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