BSV
$67.47
Vol 45.99m
-0.15%
BTC
$90549
Vol 58513.83m
-0.47%
BCH
$438.51
Vol 486.1m
-0.47%
LTC
$90.46
Vol 1309.64m
3.16%
DOGE
$0.36
Vol 8277.36m
-0.21%
Getting your Trinity Audio player ready...

Portugal may soon shed its digital currency tax haven status. Finance Minister Fernando Medina confirmed to Parliament that his ministry is studying how to tax digital currency gains in the country.

According to local news outlet Sapo, Medina made the confirmation while speaking at a Parliamentary hearing for the country’s 2022 budget. The Minister noted that Portugal has been lagging behind other countries in taxing digital currencies. He also did not provide a timeframe for when the law will be rolled out.

“Several countries are building their models concerning this issue [crypto taxing] and we are going to build our own. Right now, I don’t want to make a commitment regarding a date, but we’re going to adapt our legislation and our taxation,” Medina said. 

However, the minister highlighted several considerations that the government is making to tax digital currencies. The tax law will be comprehensive so as not to leave digital currency investors any loopholes to dodge paying taxes. But it will also aim to follow the principle of justice and efficiency. 

The policy goals are targeted at establishing a system that “makes taxation adequate, but does not make taxation an exceptional character that ends up reducing revenue to zero,” he said. 

Market participants expect the legislation to favor digital currencies 

While the budget for the country is set to be approved by the end of May, market participants do not envision it including the digital currency taxation provisions.

The tweet rationalized that the legislation will likely be designed to damage the other digital currency-friendly incentives. For him, the government has taken years to establish these incentives to attract investors to the country. 

“Portugal has based a lot of legislation around attracting people to the country and giving them huge tax breaks. This is no different, once implemented crypto-friendly incentives should still be in place,” he said. 

Hence, he expects the legislation to further fortify the country’s status as a tax haven and also leave a ton of “convenient loopholes.” 

Portugal has long been a famous destination for digital currency investors because of its “zero tax” on the assets that have been in place since 2016. Many digital currency investors from other parts of the world have taken advantage of the arrangement according to a CNBC report. 

Watch: CoinGeek New York presentation, Digital Currency as a Tool for Financial Inclusion

Recommended for you

UNISOT makes Europe’s ‘Digital Product Passport’ easy to manage
UNISOT's Digital Product Passport module would bring greater transparency and accountability to consumer products, benefiting everyone in the value chain,...
November 18, 2024
OneCoin’s ‘Cryptoqueen’ alive and in South Africa: report
A new documentary from a German filmmaker who has been following Ruja Ignatova has dismissed claims of her death, alleging...
November 18, 2024
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement