South Korea Extends Crypto Crackdown to Cold Wallets and Hard Drives
In an unprecedented step, the National Tax Service (NTS) has announced plans to widen its crackdown on digital-asset tax evasion – not just on exchanges, but in people’s homes. Investigators say they are now prepared to seize hardware wallets, hard drives, and other storage devices if they suspect undeclared holdings are being hidden offline.
From Blockchain Trails to Door-to-Door Raids
Tax officials have been using blockchain-tracking software to analyze trading patterns and cross-reference them with declared income. When those trails suddenly vanish into private wallets, the agency now intends to follow the evidence into the physical world.
“We’re no longer stopping at the exchange level,” one official told the Hankook Ilbo. “If signs point to offline concealment, we will visit the address.”
The shift represents a major escalation for a country that already runs one of the most sophisticated digital-asset compliance regimes in Asia.
A Rapidly Growing Market
South Korea’s crypto ecosystem has exploded since 2020. According to local data, the number of active investors has climbed from barely over a million to nearly 11 million today, while trading volumes have multiplied several-fold. That boom has also created a new class of tax evaders, many of whom rely on cold wallets to keep their wealth invisible.
Since launching its first crypto-seizure operations in 2021, the NTS has recovered more than $108 million in undeclared assets from over 14,000 taxpayers, turning digital coin into a tangible source of revenue.
The clampdown comes as regulators confront a record surge in suspicious transaction reports. The Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) logged nearly 37,000 alerts from crypto service providers by August 2025 – already exceeding totals from the previous two years combined. Officials say the spike reflects both growing adoption and a widening misuse of crypto for illicit transfers.
Crypto Privacy Meets Its Limits
Cold wallets – long praised for security because they remain offline – now sit at the center of the enforcement debate. What once served as protection from hackers has become, in the government’s view, a convenient shield for tax dodgers.
South Korea’s message is blunt: digital wealth, no matter where it’s stored, is still subject to taxation. And as authorities begin knocking on doors to collect what’s owed, the line between online regulation and real-world enforcement has all but disappeared.
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Filed under: Bitcoin - @ October 10, 2025 1:20 pm