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Slovenia

Europe
25*effective individual rate

Slovenia legally defines cryptocurrencies as "virtual currency" rather than financial instruments or monetary assets. The country has a regulated crypto environment, with specific guidelines issued by the Financial Administration of the Republic of Slovenia (FURS), the primary body governing crypto taxation under existing personal income tax, corporate tax, and Value Added Tax (VAT) laws. Currently, private investors generally do not pay capital gains tax on profits from selling cryptocurrencies to fiat currency or using them to purchase goods, unless their activity is deemed a permanent business operation. If considered a business, income is taxed at progressive rates up to 50%. Corporate entities engaged in crypto business are subject to a standard 19% corporate income tax. Value Added Tax (VAT) is exempt for crypto exchanges and related transactions. There is no benefit for holding cryptocurrencies for a longer period, as a flat rate is proposed regardless of holding duration. Regarding specific crypto activities, mining and staking rewards are treated as ordinary personal income and are subject to progressive tax rates up to 50% upon receipt, even if not part of a formal business. Decentralized Finance (DeFi) yields and Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) are not specifically defined but are generally expected to be taxed following the principles for other virtual assets, potentially as capital gains or income if they constitute a business activity. Crucially, converting one cryptocurrency to another (crypto-to-crypto swaps) is currently not considered a taxable event and is expected to remain untaxed under proposed reforms. A significant reform is pending: from January 1, 2026, Slovenia proposes a flat 25% tax on capital gains realized from converting cryptocurrencies to fiat currency or using them to acquire goods or services. This proposed tax will not apply to gains made before 2026, nor will it affect crypto-to-crypto exchanges. Investors will be required to self-assess and report their taxable crypto transactions annually by the end of February for the previous year.

Tax Rates

Effective individual rate0
Capital gains taxNot taxable for private investors, 25% flat from 2026 on crypto-to-fiat
Income tax on cryptoProgressive up to 50%, mining taxed as ordinary income
Corporate tax19%
VATExempt

Activity Taxes

StakingTaxed as ordinary income at receipt, progressive rates apply
MiningTaxed as personal income even outside business, progressive rates
DeFiTaxable as capital gains or income if business activity
NFTsUnclear, likely follows general crypto/virtual asset treatment

Taxable Events

Crypto → FiatTaxable, currently exempt for private unless business, 25% from 2026
Crypto → CryptoNot taxable, excluded from proposed 2026 reforms

Holding Period

Holding period benefitNone, flat rate regardless of holding period

Sources