Indonesia Implements Stricter Crypto Tax Regime Effective August 1
Indonesia's Ministry of Finance has overhauled cryptocurrency taxation, reclassifying digital assets as financial instruments rather than commodities. The new structure imposes a 0.21% transaction tax for domestic trades—double the previous rate—while cross-border transactions now face a 1% levy, a fivefold increase from the prior 0.2%.
Value-added tax collection shifts from purchasers to earlier in the transaction chain, with rates between 0.11% and 0.22%. Mining operations bear the brunt of changes, with VAT doubling to 2.2% and the special 0.1% mining profits tax set for elimination in 2026.
The regulatory revamp reflects Southeast Asia's accelerating crypto adoption, though no specific coins or exchanges were cited in the policy announcement. Market participants across all digital assets will need to adjust to the heightened fiscal requirements.