Starting August 1, Indonesia will enforce stricter tax rules on cryptocurrency transactions, targeting both domestic and international trading platforms.
A new regulation issued by the Ministry of Finance outlines higher tax rates, with overseas crypto trades subject to steeper fees than those conducted within the country.
According to the new structure, the sellers of digital assets through local exchanges will now pay 0.21% in tax per transaction, twice the 0.1% they used to pay earlier.
Sellers through overseas exchanges will now pay 1% in tax, down from 0.2% earlier. In a move towards simplifying the system, value-added tax (VAT) will not be collected from the purchaser anymore. Instead, it will be collected earlier at a rate of 0.11% to 0.22%.
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Cryptocurrency mining operations will also be impacted. The value-added tax on mining operations will increase to 2.2% from 1.1%.

In addition, the special 0.1% mining profits tax will be removed in 2026. Afterward, such profits will be subject to regular personal or corporate income tax rates. The regulatory overhaul comes amid growing digital asset adoption in Southeast Asia’s largest economy.
In 2024, the value of digital currency transactions tripled year-over-year to 650 trillion rupiah (nearly $39.67 billion), with over 20 million registered users, surpassing the number of stock market investors in the country.
The local Bitcoin exchange, driven by Binance, welcomed the regulatory announcement, commenting that the move is due to the evolving stance of Indonesia in regulating virtual coins as financial products, not commodities.
The company, however, seems to have requested a minimum of a one-month grace period for the required adjustment of the business operations.
Tokocrypto also urged increased control of digital asset transactions that are done using non-domestic exchanges, and for tax relief in support of innovation.
The exchange further said the new rates of digital asset tax are greater than those of stock capital gains, warning that this will make the market less competitive.
These moves represent a turning point in the history of digital asset regulation in Indonesia, joining the trend towards formalization and regulation of the digital assets economy in response to explosive growth and rising inter-border transaction activities.
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