
Japan cabinet approves bill classifying crypto as financial products under securities law framework.
New rules introduce insider trading ban and mandatory annual disclosures for issuers.
Crypto tax may drop from 55% to flat 20% equity-like treatment.
Japan’s cabinet approved a bill to classify cryptocurrencies as financial products, moving Bitcoin and Ethereum under securities-style regulation. The change shifts crypto from payment instruments to investment assets, introduces insider trading bans, and aims to boost institutional participation in the world’s fifth-largest economy.
Japan Officially Reclassifies Crypto Under Financial Instruments
For years, Japan treated crypto the same way it treated payment apps useful for sending money, but nothing more serious than that. That era is now over.
The cabinet officially approved a bill on April 10, 2026 to bring cryptocurrencies under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act, the same law that governs Japan’s stock and bond markets.
Finance Minister Satsuki Katayama, speaking after the cabinet meeting, made the government’s intention crystal clear, expand growth capital, ensure market fairness, and protect investors.
Meanwhile, the bill highlights the key areas
- Insider trading ban for crypto markets
- Mandatory annual disclosures for issuers
- Reclassification to “crypto asset trading business”
- Exchanges regulated like financial institutions
- 3 million to 10 million yen penalties and up to 3 to 10 year of prison for unregistered operators.
Even, banks and insurance companies will also be permitted to hold and trade crypto assets. Authorities say these steps aim to improve transparency and investor protection.
Key Policy Changes at a Glance
| Category | Old Framework | New Framework |
| Regulation | Payment Services Act | Financial Instruments Act |
| Insider trading | Not clearly defined | Completely Banned |
| Penalties | Up to 3 years | Up to 10 years |
| Tax treatment | Up to 55% income | 20% flat tax like equities |
Why Japan Is Changing Crypto Rules
Regulators said crypto is increasingly used for investment rather than payments. With rising trading volumes and growing retail participation, authorities believe stricter financial market-style rules are needed.
Japan already has around 12 million active crypto users, roughly 15% of the adult population. The shift reflects growing demand for clearer regulation and institutional access.
On the tax front, capital gains will shift from a painful progressive rate of up to 55% down to a flat 20%, bringing Japan in line with how it taxes traditional equities.
What Comes Next? ETFs, Implementation, and 2027
If the bill clears the current Diet (parliamentary session), full implementation is expected in fiscal year 2027.
Japan has also already signaled its next step; the country announced in January 2026 that its first crypto ETFs could list as early as 2028, giving everyday retail investors a simple, familiar way to get Bitcoin exposure.
For a country that was badly burned by the Mt. Gox collapse, Japan is now clearly positioning itself as a serious, regulated home for digital finance.
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