Japan has passed amendments that move cryptoasset regulation closer to traditional financial-market oversight.
The changes shift core cryptoasset rules from the Payment Services Act to the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, treating cryptoassets more like investment products than payment instruments.
The reforms create a clearer legal category for cryptoassets under financial-market rules while introducing stronger investor protection and market-integrity requirements.
They include insider-trading rules for crypto transactions, disclosure obligations for certain cryptoasset issuers and tougher penalties for unregistered businesses.
The legislation also lays the groundwork for separate tax treatment of crypto gains, with a future tax regime expected to reduce the rate to around 20% and allow investors to carry losses forward for three years.
Those tax changes are expected to apply from 2028, depending on implementation rules.
The amendments also create a legal basis for domestic spot cryptocurrency exchange-traded funds, although final approval of specific products has not yet been confirmed.
Implementation will depend on future cabinet ordinances, regulatory guidelines and supervisory practice.
The reforms form part of Japan’s wider effort to align digital assets more closely with financial-market regulation while supporting Web3, investment and digital-asset innovation.
Why does it matter?
Japan’s reforms are significant because they move crypto further into the mainstream financial regulatory framework rather than treating it mainly as a payment-related activity. Insider-trading rules, issuer disclosures and stronger supervision could improve investor protection and market integrity. At the same time, tax and ETF changes may make the market more attractive to institutional and retail investors. The approach also reflects a wider global shift: major economies are increasingly trying to integrate digital assets into regulated financial markets rather than leaving them in a separate or lightly supervised category. Japan’s implementation will be watched closely because it combines stricter oversight with measures that could support market growth.
Would you like to learn more about AI, tech, and digital diplomacy? If so, ask our chatbot!
