South Korea is building an artificial intelligence system to monitor cryptocurrency transactions and enforce tax rules before the country begins taxing digital asset profits in 2027.
South Korea’s National Tax Service (NTS) has launched a project to build an artificial intelligence powered monitoring system that will analyze cryptocurrency trading data. The system is designed to help authorities identify unreported profits and suspicious transactions before the country’s long delayed crypto tax rules take effect in 2027.
According to reporting from The Korea Times, the government has already opened a bidding process to select a technology contractor that will develop the new platform.
South Korea is stepping up its oversight of the rapidly growing cryptocurrency market. The National Tax Service plans to introduce a new platform known as the Virtual Asset Comprehensive Analysis System.
The project will rely on artificial intelligence and machine learning technology to process massive volumes of digital asset transaction data. Officials believe this technology will allow regulators to examine trading patterns more efficiently than traditional monitoring systems.
Authorities say the system will help them detect unusual trading activity, identify undeclared crypto profits, and flag potential tax evasion cases. The technology will analyze trading behavior across cryptocurrency exchanges and digital asset platforms to uncover patterns that might otherwise go unnoticed.
The government has allocated about 3 billion Korean won, equivalent to roughly $2 million, to develop the platform. The procurement announcement has already been published through the government’s digital bidding system.
Officials expect the contractor selection process to conclude in March, after which development will begin.
The development schedule outlines a detailed timeline for building and testing the new system.
Once a vendor is chosen, platform development will begin in April. The system will then undergo months of testing to confirm operational stability and accuracy in identifying suspicious transactions.
The government plans to begin a trial phase in November 2026, giving tax authorities time to evaluate the system’s performance before it becomes fully operational.
If testing proceeds successfully, the AI-monitoring platform is expected to launch between November and December 2026. This rollout will position the government to enforce crypto tax regulations ahead of their official implementation.
Officials say the system will enable systematic collection and analysis of virtual asset transaction data, improving oversight of the digital asset market.
The platform will also allow authorities to share analytical findings and lists of suspected offenders with other agencies, including the Korea Customs Service and the Bank of Korea. This coordinated approach is intended to strengthen enforcement and improve cross agency investigations.
South Korea’s cryptocurrency taxation framework has faced multiple delays since it was first approved in 2020.
Lawmakers have repeatedly postponed the rollout amid concerns from the crypto industry and disagreements about tax thresholds. In 2024, policymakers debated whether to introduce the tax in 2025 or push it further into the future.
The government has now set January 2027 as the expected launch date for the crypto tax policy.
Under the proposed rules, cryptocurrency profits exceeding 2.5 million won will be subject to a combined 22% tax. This includes a 20% national income tax and a 2% local tax.
Authorities believe the new AI system will play a crucial role in ensuring accurate reporting of digital asset profits once the tax regime begins.
South Korea is one of Asia’s most active cryptocurrency markets, with millions of retail investors trading digital assets. As the industry expands, regulators are increasingly focused on improving transparency and preventing financial misconduct.
The planned AI platform represents a broader shift toward technology driven oversight of cryptocurrency markets.
In my experience covering crypto regulation, tax enforcement is one of the biggest challenges governments face with digital assets. Transactions move across exchanges quickly and often across borders, making traditional monitoring methods ineffective.
I found South Korea’s approach particularly interesting because it focuses on building the enforcement infrastructure before the tax actually begins. That preparation could make the rollout smoother than what we have seen in other countries.
If the system works as intended, AI powered monitoring could become a global standard for crypto tax enforcement. Many governments are watching how large crypto markets handle compliance, and South Korea may end up setting a model others follow.
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