For years, Japan’s crypto community has voiced a single, unified demand – The end of the “miscellaneous income” era. And finally, on 19 December, that demand met a concrete political response.
The Liberal Democratic Party (LDP) and the Japan Restoration Party released a landmark outline for the fiscal year 2026 tax reform, signaling a fundamental shift in how the nation treats digital wealth.
Japan’s 2026 tax reforms
Japan’s 2026 crypto tax reform reclassifies crypto from a “speculative tool” to a legitimate “financial product for asset formation.” While the reform takes a broadly positive direction, policymakers apply it selectively rather than universally.
The “green zone” receives the clearest benefits, covering spot trading, derivatives, and crypto ETFs or trusts – All of which will move to a 20% separate taxation system.
Traders in these categories will also gain access to three-year loss carryover, enabling them to offset future profits with past losses and bringing crypto taxation closer to the treatment of equities and FX.
Lack of uniformity
However, this reform does not apply uniformly across Web3.
Regulators continue to treat staking rewards, lending yields, and NFTs as miscellaneous income taxed at the time of receipt, often at rates that can reach 55%.
Additionally, the reform also introduces a new classification called “Specified Crypto Assets.”
Although the final definition is pending, it appears to cover primarily tokens listed on exchanges registered under Japan’s Financial Instruments and Exchange Act.
As a result, traders who deal with unlisted altcoins or decentralized protocols may not qualify for the 20% flat rate and may remain subject to the more burdensome comprehensive tax regime.
Any hidden risks?
Crypto losses cannot offset stock market gains, reinforcing a strict approach that taxes each asset class independently.
By aligning crypto more closely with traditional financial products, the reform also opens the door for a future Exit Tax. This could tax unrealized gains when an investor moves abroad.
Needless to say, the government will require exchanges to submit unified transaction reports directly, eliminating the possibility of manual or incomplete filings.
Hence, investors should begin organizing historical records and using automated PnL tracking tools now.
This is because accurately separating acquisition cost from reward value will be essential for smooth and compliant filings once the 2026 rules take effect.
Other nations with similar developments
Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s ASPIRe framework is nearing completion, pulling custodians and dealers under bank-level rules and solidifying the city as a fully regulated gateway for institutional capital.
Additionally, Russia, after years of restrictive policies, is shifting to a tiered system that finally legalizes digital asset ownership. This will cap retail exposure while allowing qualified investors to scale.
Finally, Spain is also driving Europe towards full transparency, wherein MiCA takes full effect in July 2026 and DAC8 begins in January.
Therefore, heading into 2026, the global crypto vision is that the regulatory winter is ending. It will be replaced by a more structured, transparent, and institution-led market cycle.
Final Thoughts
- Japan’s tax overhaul suggests crypto is finally being treated as a real financial product, not a fringe asset class.
- Shift towards separate taxation is progress, but fragmentation across asset types means regulators still view Web3 with caution.

