The Financial Services Agency (FSA), Japan’s top financial regulator, is planning to reclassify 105 cryptoassets, including Bitcoin (BTC) and Ethereum (ETH), as “financial products.”
At the same time, it wants to overhaul how those assets are taxed. This could potentially lower the crypto gains tax. From up to 55% to a flat 20% rate. These changes could reshape the Japanese crypto landscape for both beginners and experienced investors.
Key Regulatory Changes Under Discussion
The FSA’s proposal would bring these 105 cryptoassets under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, a regulation that now covers more traditional financial instruments. By doing so, the regulator would apply rules similar to those for stocks or bonds. One major change: the FSA is considering new insider‑trading restrictions, which would ban people with privileged access (such as insiders at exchanges or crypto projects) from trading on undisclosed information — for example, upcoming token listings or financial back‑door details.
Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA) plans to reclassify 105 cryptoassets, including BTC and ETH, as “financial products” and push for a tax overhaul in fiscal year 2026—reducing the current progressive crypto tax rate of up to 55% to a flat 20% capital gains tax. The agency…
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) November 16, 2025
On the tax side, the implications are even more dramatic. Currently, in Japan, crypto profits are treated as “miscellaneous income,” and some traders pay up to 55% tax on their gains. Under the FSA’s proposal, those same gains could be taxed like capital gains — at a flat 20% rate. That flat rate would align crypto with how Japanese residents pay tax on stock gains.
Why It Matters & What It Means for Investors
This proposal arrives amid a broader trend: as crypto matures, regulators around the world are working to bring it into established financial frameworks. In Japan, this could mean more legitimacy for crypto, better investor protection, and a stronger link between digital assets and traditional finance.
‼️ BITCOIN AND ETHEREUM TO BE EXCLUDED FROM EU CRYPTO REGULATIONS ‼️
A speech from the Central Bank of Ireland confirms: “MiCA will not cover all crypto-assets, with some of the most well-known crypto-assets, such as Bitcoin and Ether, not within scope of the regulation given… pic.twitter.com/cCgc3nWSKa
— SMQKE (@SMQKEDQG) September 20, 2025
A real-world example: under the new rules, banks and insurance companies might be allowed to offer crypto through their securities arms, giving more retail investors regulated access to BTC and ETH. That could significantly expand the ways everyday people invest in crypto, rather than relying solely on independent crypto exchanges.
Furthermore, lower taxes and formal classification may attract more long-term investors. That could help Japan’s crypto industry grow beyond speculative trading into something more stable and enterprise-driven.
Disclaimer
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