Indonesia has one of the fastest-growing and most dynamic crypto-asset markets, but the tax consequences of its simplified and blanket regime remain underexplored. This article analyses the evolution of Indonesia’s crypto-asset taxation framework from intangible commodities to digital financial assets. The latest reclassification represents a pivotal regulatory transition by eliminating VAT, applying a single transaction tax, redefining crypto-assets as financial instruments, and leaving central bank digital currencies (CBDCs) untaxed. This study employs a doctrinal and comparative analysis with India and the European Union (EU) countries and ascertains that the taxonomy change largely constitutes a nominal redefinition as the tax treatment continues to mirror commodity-based levies. It highlights key pitfalls in Indonesia’s simplified framework (including ambiguous definitions, regressive burdens, high reliance on withholding agents, and unworkable deterrent rates). It also underscores the opportunities and risks in aligning crypto-asset taxation with financial market regulation and the Organization of Economic Co-operation and Development (OECD) Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF). The study argues that sustainable reform requires adopting functionally grounded classifications and methods of tax treatment that balance efficiency, equity, and adaptability in Indonesia’s rapidly expanding digital economy. These findings may extend to other emerging economies with robust and fast-growing crypto-asset markets where governments face similar challenges in balancing innovation, regulation, and taxation.
Intertax