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South Korea’s Crypto Tax Crackdown Seizes Assets from 200+ Residents

South Korea’s Crypto Tax Crackdown Seizes Assets from 200+ Residents

Author:
Bitcoinist
Published:
2025-09-23 23:00:22
16
2

Digital wallets run dry as authorities tighten grip on undeclared holdings.

The Enforcement Hammer Drops

South Korean tax officials just made over 200 crypto investors considerably poorer. Government seizures swept through digital wallets in what marks one of the country's most aggressive enforcement actions to date.

Tax agencies globally are playing catch-up with blockchain technology—but they're getting better at tracking transactions than most investors realize. The 'anonymous' nature of crypto continues to collide with regulatory reality.

Another reminder that when governments need revenue, they'll find creative ways to collect—even if it means mastering technology they once dismissed. The irony isn't lost on anyone watching traditional finance stumble through its own digital transformation.

City Opens Exchange Account

According to city statements, Cheongju created a trading account on a domestic crypto exchange to make seizure and conversion easier. The change matters because it lets officials not only freeze assets but also sell them and apply the proceeds to overdue tax bills.

Officials told reporters they now have a clearer path to turn crypto holdings into cash for tax recovery.

How The Seizures Are Carried Out

Reports describe a multi-step process. Tax offices identify residents with unpaid bills. They then request information from exchanges to see whether those people hold VIRTUAL assets.

When ownership is confirmed, exchanges are ordered to suspend transactions or to transfer the assets to the municipal account. If the taxpayer does not settle the debt, the city may liquidate the holdings and use the proceeds to cover what is owed.

Other Local Governments Have Taken Similar Steps

Several other South Korean cities and districts have used similar tactics. Jeju City investigated 2,962 people for unpaid taxes and found 49 of them holding crypto worth about 230 million won.

Jeju’s wider unpaid-tax list totaled about 19.7 billion won. Gwacheon, in Gyeonggi Province, built an “electronic virtual asset seizing system” and has recovered roughly 300 million won over recent years, targeting residents who owe more than three million won in local taxes.

Paju sent notices to 17 people who owed about 124 million won and has previously seized around 100 million won in similar cases.

Implications And Concerns

The moves underline how local governments are pressing exchanges for data and exercising legal powers to collect taxes. Some citizens and observers worry about transparency and due process.

Questions include how quickly exchanges must act, whether taxpayers receive fair notice, and how volatility is handled when assets are sold. Reports also note growing use of data tools, including AI, by some cities to find undeclared holdings.

City Officials Say They Want Compliance

Based on reports, city leaders framed the actions as an effort to stop tax evasion through virtual assets. They have warned residents that cryptocurrency cannot be used to hide from tax obligations.

Still, legal challenges could arise, and appeals from affected residents may push some cases into the courts.

Featured image from Unsplash/Matthew Schwartz, chart from TradingView

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