If there’s one thing the crypto chappies adore, it’s a country that lets them hang on to their ill-gotten (or, in fairness, well-gotten) gains. Enter Thailand, which has kindly decided to let its digital dabblers dodge capital gains tax for a solid five years. Rather sporting of them, what?
The beaks down at Thailand’s Ministry of Finance are in a fine mood, having just waved through a measure designed to turn the country into a sort of Monte Carlo for Bitcoin barons. On June 17, the dapper Deputy Finance Minister, Julapun Amornvivat—presumably after a bracing cup of tea—announced that anyone cashing out crypto via above-board exchanges, brokers or dealers (the ones with a shiny license, that is) needn’t fork over a single satang in capital gains tax from the first of January 2025 right through to the dying days of 2029. Pip pip for the taxman, eh?
According to Julapun—and let’s assume he delivered this with only mild cackling—the hope is that this fiscal freewheeling will fire up Thailand’s homegrown crypto scene, inject a bit more vim into the economy, and bring in a billion baht here or there because, after all, the spicy soup doesn’t pay for itself.
There’s also some stern chat about keeping things “transparent and traceable,” which in crypto circles generally gets much the same reception as a wasp at a picnic. Rest assured, the Anti-Money Laundering Office is on the case. International standards are being bandied about, the OECD is looming overhead, and everyone’s being frightfully proper, or at least making the right noises for polite society. 🧐
This sunny news arrives hot on the heels of Thailand’s recent regulatory rumble, which saw some of the big-name global exchanges—Bybit, OKX, CoinEx, XT.COM and the like—swiftly shown the door, having failed to do the bureaucratic foxtrot required for local licensing. It’s all part of the great effort to ensure that, if you’re going to make a fortune in crypto, you’ll jolly well do it under the approving gaze of the Thai Securities and Exchange Commission.
Speaking of ticker tape and regulatory red tape, KuCoin (eager beaver that it is) has already set up a shop that’s as compliant as afternoon tea with Aunt Agatha, complete with a fresh SEC license to fend off legal frowns. They’ll be slugging it out for customers with a solid stable of eight other exchanges, all perfectly above board, of course.
Thailand’s crypto scene is fairly hopping, and now, with a tax carrot dangled before the masses, it’s as lively as a garden party after someone’s spiked the punch. The government’s even letting tourists pay in crypto—no word yet on whether you get change in Ethereum if you buy a coconut on the beach. 🏖️
Capital gains tax holidays aren’t new, mind. Thailand is joining an exclusive club of sun-drenched, surf-kissed locales (think Cayman Islands, British Virgin Islands, Vanuatu, Bahamas) where digital fortunes may grow untaxed and tan lines are all but mandatory. Fellow shipmates in this tax-free fleet include Singapore, Malaysia, and the UAE, where individual investors can frolic in the financial surf unmolested by the taxman’s net.
And for those with a flair for the Continent, certain bits of Europe let residents skip the tax altogether—just tuck those coins away for a year or so in your virtual mattress, and Bob’s your uncle (at least in Germany and Portugal).
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2025-06-18 11:13