The global crypto industry does not have one rulebook. Every country is writing its own and right now, three very different stories are playing out at the same time. Italy is taxing harder. Japan is cutting rates. Sri Lanka is building rules from scratch.
From 2026, crypto capital gains tax rises from 26% to 33%. The €2,000 tax-free threshold is removed every gain, no matter how small, is now taxable. EMT euro and ETF/derivatives remain at 26% under the 2025 Budget Law (L. 199/2025). Cryptocurrency alone gets the higher rate.
Impact: Small retail investors who stayed safely under the threshold now have no buffer. Italy is not aligning Cryptocurrency with other financial assets it is taxing it above them.
Japan currently taxes crypto gains at up to 55%. The proposal on the table drops that to a flat 20% the same rate as stocks and bonds as Japan moves to classify Cryptocurrency under a traditional financial instrument framework.
Source: CoinGecko X Account
Impact: A 35-point drop removes the biggest reason Japanese investors have been moving activity offshore. Japan is actively choosing to retain Cryptocurrency participation, not drive it away.
Sri Lanka's SEC and Digital Economy Ministry brought regulators, policymakers, and industry together to map a virtual asset framework for a market running entirely outside the formal system until now. Most activity flows through P2P and offshore platforms today. Models being studied: Singapore, Hong Kong, New Zealand, and Malaysia. Focus areas: KYC, anti-money laundering, and investor protection.
Source: X Account
Impact: Sri Lanka is not taxing or restricting yet it is making Cryptocurrency visible first. Regulators want activity onshore before anything else is decided.
|
Country |
Direction |
Key Move |
|
🇮🇹 Italy |
Tightening |
Tax up to 33%, threshold gone |
|
🇯🇵 Japan |
Opening up |
Tax down to 20%, aligned with stocks |
|
🇱🇰 Sri Lanka |
Formalizing |
Building framework from scratch |
These three moves point in completely different directions. Italy is treating Cryptocurrency as a revenue target. Japan is treating it as a legitimate asset class. Sri Lanka is simply trying to acknowledge it exists formally.
For crypto holders and projects operating across borders, that divergence is what matters. No unified framework is forming each country is making independent calls based on its own priorities. As more governments move from ignoring crypto to regulating it, the gap between strict and open markets will likely widen before it narrows.
This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or legal advice.


