Amid a blast in digital asset exchange, the Indonesian Government intends to charge an esteem added charge (VAT) on crypto-asset exchanges and a personal duty on capital additions from such investments at 0.1% each, beginning from May 1, a tax official said on April 1. Interest in the field of digital assets has flooded Southeast Asia's biggest economy during the COVID-19 pandemic, with the number of crypto asset holders leaping to 11 million before the finish of 2021. Last year's all-out crypto-asset exchanges in ware fates markets arrived at 859.4 trillion rupiahs ($59.8 billion), up multiple times from 2020's exchange esteem, information from the Commodity Futures Trading Regulatory Agency showed. Indonesians are permitted to exchange crypto assets as an item however not to involve them for payment. "Crypto-assets will be subject to VAT because they are a commodity as defined by the trade ministry. They are not a currency," the official, Hestu Yoga Saksama, told a media briefing. "So we will impose income tax and VAT." He also added that the Indonesian government is as yet dealing with the execution guideline for the tax assessments.



