Japan applies one of the most comprehensive crypto tax frameworks in the world. Cryptocurrency is treated as “miscellaneous income” (*zatsu shotoku*) for individuals, and profits from trading, mining, staking, and airdrops are taxed at progressive income tax rates that can exceed 50% when including local inhabitant taxes. The National Tax Agency (NTA) provides detailed rules on valuation, reporting, and classification for crypto assets. Corporate entities face separate rules under corporate tax law.
Under NTA guidance, crypto assets are not treated as currency or financial securities. Instead, most individual crypto activity falls under miscellaneous income, meaning gains must be declared annually regardless of whether the taxpayer has converted crypto back to yen.
Japan’s crypto framework is governed by:
Profits from selling crypto for JPY are fully taxable as miscellaneous income, regardless of holding period.
Crypto-to-crypto exchanges are taxable at the moment of the transaction. Gains or losses must be calculated using fair market value in yen.
Spending crypto on goods or services triggers a taxable event. Gains must be calculated based on disposal value versus acquisition cost.
Crypto received through:
is considered income at the fair market value in yen when received.
Rewards from lending, liquidity pools, or DeFi protocols are treated as miscellaneous income and must be reported annually.
Japan taxes individual crypto earnings using progressive income tax brackets:
Combined rates can exceed 55% for high-income taxpayers.
Unlike many countries, Japan does not distinguish between short- and long-term gains for individuals. All crypto profits are taxed as ordinary income.
Companies dealing in crypto must apply corporate tax rules, which differ from individual income tax treatment.
Crypto investors must file a tax return (*kakutei shinkoku*) if their crypto income exceeds ¥200,000 annually. This includes trading profits, staking rewards, and airdrops.
The NTA requires detailed records of:
Crypto losses classified as miscellaneous income generally cannot be used to offset other types of income. Loss carryforwards are also not permitted for individuals.
NFTs are treated similarly to other digital assets. Selling or exchanging NFTs triggers taxable income. NFT creators may owe business income tax on sales.
DeFi rewards, interest, and token swaps are taxable. Tax treatment depends on the fair market value at the time rewards are received or disposals occur.
Japanese crypto taxation requires precise record-keeping. Investors must maintain accurate yen-based valuations, especially for crypto-to-crypto trades. Crypto tax software can simplify calculations and reporting.
Several tax platforms integrate with Japanese exchanges and support yen-based cost basis calculations and NTA-compliant reporting formats.
Late filing or inaccurate reporting can lead to penalties, fines, and interest charges. The NTA has increased oversight of crypto users through exchange reporting requirements and blockchain monitoring.
Japan’s crypto tax system requires individuals to report all gains as miscellaneous income, often resulting in high tax rates. With no preferential capital gains treatment and detailed reporting requirements, investors must carefully track all activity and file accurate annual tax returns.

In June 2026, JuCoin was flagged for abnormal withdrawal processing, with reports that a significant portion of its reserves consisted of stablecoins issued on its own proprietary chain rather than official versions, raising doubts about reserve transparency. The platform has undergone multiple rebrands, previously suffered losses due to contract vulnerabilities, and has heightened user vigilance regarding exchange security. CoinW, in contrast, has maintained an eight-year track record with zero security incidents. It employs multi-signature technology, MPC-based private key sharding and distributed storage, full-stack risk controls with real-time monitoring, and a publicly verifiable Proof of Reserves (PoR) mechanism to ensure transparent and auditable asset backing. Users are advised to self-check withdrawal conditions on their current platforms, verify PoR, assess operational history, and consider migrating to CoinW, where completing KYC enables secure trading.

On June 1, 2026, Strategy (formerly MicroStrategy) disclosed that it sold 32 BTC—the company’s first Bitcoin sale since December 2022—to fund preferred stock dividend payments. Although the amount represented only a tiny fraction of its holdings, the transaction created the first visible crack in the long-standing “never sell” narrative.

Abandon mechanical farming and build authentic identities; forge an unbreakable Web3 credit passport through diverse on-chain footprints.