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Thailand Joins Countries That Exempt Crypto Capital Gains Tax, but Only for 5 Years

Thailand will exempt capital gains taxes on cryptocurrency sales made through locally licensed crypto asset service providers for the next five years, a Ministry of Finance announcement yesterday (Tuesday) confirmed.

Specifically, capital gains taxes will be waived on all crypto sales made between 1 January 2025 and 31 December 2029.

Many Countries Are Offering Crypto Tax Incentives

Thailand’s decision came days after Vietnam, another country in Southeast Asia, passed new legislation to define cryptocurrencies legally. The legislation will become effective at the beginning of next year.

However, Thailand is not the first country to offer crypto investors a tax incentive. Many offshore jurisdictions, such as the Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Vanuatu and the Bahamas, already have zero capital gains tax on crypto. Singapore, Malaysia and the United Arab Emirates also impose no capital gains tax on individual investors.

Meanwhile, tax residents in several European countries, including Germany and Portugal, can avoid capital gains tax entirely if they hold their cryptocurrencies for more than a year.

Interestingly, Brazil recently ended its crypto tax exemption and decided to enforce a flat 17.5 per cent tax on all crypto gains.

You may also like: UK Crypto Firms Will Need to Collect Every Customer’s Address, Tax Number from 2026

Incentive to Trade on Licensed Exchanges

According to the Thai minister, the country’s decision to exempt crypto capital gains tax will help position it as a global financial hub and one of the first countries to implement proper crypto taxation laws.

The tax exemption would also encourage Thai residents to trade cryptocurrencies on exchanges regulated by the Thai Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC) rather than on any offshore venue.

Thailand is also strict on the operations of unlicensed offshore crypto exchanges in the country. Recently, the Thai SEC blocked five global crypto exchanges – Bybit, OKX, CoinEx, XT.COM and Bybit – as they were onboarding Thai residents without holding a local licence.

Read more: Thailand Cracks Down on Unregistered Crypto Services to Tackle Cyber Crime

Meanwhile, crypto companies like KuCoin and Tether have been expanding their Thai operations. KuCoin acquired a local licence and launched operations in the country, while Tether rolled out its tokenised gold digital asset in Thailand with a listing on the local crypto trading platform Maxbit.

This article was written by Arnab Shome at www.financemagnates.com.

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