Malaysia views cryptocurrencies as commodities for tax purposes, though some digital assets are also considered securities by the Securities Commission. The overall crypto landscape is regulated, meaning these activities are legal and subject to specific guidelines and oversight, including a licensing regime for certain assets and exchanges. Crypto taxation in Malaysia is governed by the Inland Revenue Board of Malaysia (IRB or LHDN) under the Income Tax Act 1967. This framework dictates how various crypto-related activities are assessed for tax. For individual investors, the tax treatment of crypto largely hinges on whether the activity is classified as a "business" or a "passive investment." If your crypto activities are considered a business—characterized by frequent trading or a clear profit-seeking intent—any income generated is subject to Malaysia's progressive individual income tax rates, ranging from 0% to 30%. However, if your crypto holdings are classified as passive investments, any gains are entirely exempt from tax. Malaysia does not levy a specific capital gains tax, therefore, investment gains on crypto are not taxed. When converting crypto to fiat currency or engaging in crypto-to-crypto exchanges, these transactions are not taxable events unless they are part of a recognized business activity. Corporations involved in crypto business activities are subject to a standard corporate tax rate of 24%. Additionally, a 6% service tax applies to crypto trading platform services, though using crypto as a payment method itself is exempt. There is no specific holding period benefit that reduces tax rates, the classification as an investment versus a business activity is based on intent and frequency, not the duration of holding. Specific crypto activities like staking, mining, and Decentralized Finance (DeFi) yields are generally treated as business income if conducted regularly or with a profit-seeking motive. These earnings are taxed at their fair market value when received. For miners, expenses such as electricity and hardware costs are deductible from this income. Similarly, Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) are subject to business income tax if you engage in frequent trading. Otherwise, passive gains from NFT investments are exempt from tax, aligning with the general capital gains exemption.
Tax Rates
| Effective individual rate | 0 |
| Capital gains tax | 0% (investment gains exempt, trading gains taxed as income) |
| Income tax on crypto | 0-30% progressive on business income, taxed at fair market value |
| Corporate tax | 24% on corporate crypto business income |
| VAT | 6% service tax on trading platform services, exempt as payment |
Activity Taxes
| Staking | Taxed as business income if regular activity, at fair market value |
| Mining | Business income taxation, electricity and hardware costs deductible |
| DeFi | Taxed as income if regular/business-like activity, yields treated as income |
| NFTs | Taxed as business income if frequent trading, capital gains otherwise exempt |
Taxable Events
| Crypto → Fiat | Not taxable unless business activity, investment disposals exempt |
| Crypto → Crypto | Not taxable unless business activity, trading exempt for investors |
Holding Period
| Holding period benefit | No holding period benefit, taxation based on intent/frequency not duration |
Sources