Vietnam’s Ministry of Finance has released a draft circular proposing a 0.1% personal income tax on every cryptocurrency transaction, signaling a major step toward formalizing the country’s digital asset market.
The proposal aims to align the taxation of cryptocurrencies with Vietnam’s existing framework for securities and stock trading, shifting digital assets into a regulated financial category rather than treating them as unclassified commodities.
Under the proposal, taxation would differ based on whether the participant is an individual or a corporate entity.
Individuals would be subject to a flat 0.1% tax on the total value of each transfer or sale, calculated on gross revenue rather than profit. The tax would apply to all transactions executed through licensed service providers, regardless of whether the investor is a Vietnamese resident or a foreign national.
Importantly, the tax would apply even if the transaction results in a loss, making it a turnover-based levy rather than a capital gains tax.
Domestic companies earning income from digital asset transfers would fall under Vietnam’s standard 20% corporate income tax, calculated on net profit. This profit would be determined by subtracting acquisition costs and related expenses from the selling price.
The draft explicitly classifies cryptocurrency trading and transfers as exempt from value-added tax (VAT). By doing so, Vietnam treats digital assets as financial instruments, not consumer goods, reinforcing their integration into the formal financial system.
The tax proposal is part of a broader regulatory framework enabled by the Law on Digital Technology Industry, which officially recognized digital assets as legal property starting January 1, 2026.
Following this legal recognition, the State Securities Commission began accepting applications for digital asset trading platform licenses on January 20, 2026.
Key operational requirements include:
These rules apply under a five-year pilot program for a regulated crypto market launched in late 2025.
Vietnam remains one of the world’s most active crypto markets, with an estimated 17 million citizens holding digital assets and consistently ranking near the top of global adoption indexes.
The new framework provides long-awaited legal clarity for exchanges, investors, and service providers. However, analysts note that the 0.1% turnover-based tax, which applies regardless of profitability, could lead to short-term caution among high-frequency and active traders, particularly those operating on thin margins.
Vietnam’s proposal marks a decisive shift from informal tolerance to structured regulation of digital assets. By combining legal recognition, exchange licensing, and a securities-style tax regime, the country is building one of Southeast Asia’s most comprehensive crypto frameworks, though the turnover-based tax may test trader appetite during the transition phase.
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