Japan is preparing for a major change in how it handles crypto. The country’s ruling political parties recently released a tax reform outline for fiscal year 2026, and crypto assets were a key focus. The proposal suggests treating cryptocurrencies as financial products, similar to stocks and exchange-traded funds (ETFs).
This marks a clear shift from how crypto has traditionally been viewed in Japan. For years, most crypto income has been treated as speculative income, often leading to high taxes and complex reporting. Under the new proposal, lawmakers are signaling that crypto should instead be seen as a legitimate investment tool that helps citizens build long-term wealth.
One of the biggest changes being discussed is the introduction of separate taxation for certain crypto transactions. This is the same tax system used for stocks and investment trusts. According to the outline, this could apply to spot trading, crypto derivatives such as futures and margin trading, and crypto-related ETFs.
Japan’s FY2026 tax reform blueprint proposes classifying crypto assets as financial products for wealth building, exploring separate taxation for spot, derivatives and ETF gains with up to three years of loss carryforward. Staking, lending income and NFTs may remain under general…
— Wu Blockchain (@WuBlockchain) December 26, 2025
Are There Exemptions?
However, the proposal makes it clear that not all crypto income will be treated the same way. Rewards earned from activities like staking and lending were not clearly included in the separate taxation category. Because these rewards are earned through holding crypto rather than trading it, they may continue to be taxed as miscellaneous income.
Another important detail is that the new tax system may only apply to “specified crypto assets.” While the document does not list exact tokens, this likely refers to cryptocurrencies handled by licensed exchanges in Japan. This means smaller or unregulated tokens may fall outside the new framework.
The reform also includes a positive update for investors: loss carryforward. If approved, crypto trading losses could be carried forward for up to three years. This would allow investors to offset future profits with past losses, a system already available for stocks and foreign exchange trading.
Globally, this proposal is being closely watched. Japan is known for its strict but structured crypto regulations. Treating crypto as a financial product could influence how other countries approach crypto taxation and regulation.
🚨 BREAKING: Japan slashes crypto taxes to a flat 20% on gains, down from up to 55%.
Time to move to Japan! 😄 pic.twitter.com/J4skf5y7D0
— Real World Asset Watchlist (@RWAwatchlist_) December 1, 2025
While many details are still undecided, one thing is clear. Japan is not pushing crypto away. Instead, it is working to fit crypto into its financial system more clearly and maturely.
Crypto in Japan is no longer just speculation. It is slowly becoming part of mainstream finance.
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