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‘No to crypto tax’: Turkey’s crypto community fights 40% gains levy

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Turkey’s crypto community launched a mass #kriptodavergiyehayır campaign ahead of a vote on a draft bill imposing a 0.03% transaction levy and up to 40% tax on foreign-platform gains.

Summary
  • Turkey’s parliament was set to vote on a draft crypto tax law on March 25 that would impose a 0.03% transaction fee on all trades and up to a 40% gains tax for those using foreign platforms.
  • The hashtag #kriptodavergiyehayır — roughly translating to “No to crypto tax” — exploded across X on March 24, drawing 145,000 views, 3,700 likes, and 686 retweets on a single post by prominent Turkish crypto analyst Selçuk Ergin (@Selcoin).
  • Turkey is the largest crypto market in the Middle East and North Africa region, recording nearly $200 billion in annual on-chain transactions — almost four times that of the UAE — making the proposed legislation one of the most consequential crypto tax moves in the region.

Turkey’s crypto community staged a sweeping online protest on March 24, one day before the Turkish Grand National Assembly was due to vote on a draft crypto tax bill that would introduce a 0.03% transaction levy on all digital asset trades plus a 10% withholding tax on profits for users of licensed domestic exchanges — and as much as 40% for those trading on foreign platforms, according to an explanatory breakdown by Istanbul-based tax advisor CPA Evren Özmen. The backlash was swift and broad, uniting retail traders, influencers, and analysts under the hashtag #kriptodavergiyehayır — “No to crypto tax” — which trended nationally in Turkey on March 24.

Selçuk Ergin, a widely-followed Turkish crypto analyst and educator known as @Selcoin, emerged as one of the leading voices against the bill. His post on March 24 accumulated 145,000 views, 686 retweets, and 3,700 likes on X within hours. “The community showed a tremendous solidarity on the crypto tax issue that will be put to vote tomorrow in parliament,” Ergin wrote. “It said #kriptodavergiyehayır. It stated that the draft is completely flawed. I believe that this mistake will be recognized tomorrow and the right step will be taken.” He added that despite investors on U.S.-listed stocks and the domestic Borsa Istanbul remaining largely quiet, “community solidarity is very high.”

The discontent stretched well beyond Ergin’s platform. Taner Yılmaz, a verified commenter on the thread @TanerYlmaz13, pointed out that “the 15–40% tax rates on crypto income are not a new situation for entrepreneurs and tradespeople who are already under a high tax burden of up to 40%,” arguing that applying the same framework to crypto would further stifle an already strained segment of the economy. Another user, @Temel_analiz1, took a competitive angle: “There is a war in the Gulf. Dubai is a critical place for crypto. Instead of dealing with taxes, we should turn this crisis into an opportunity. Now is the right time to make Istanbul the capital of crypto.”

A Draft Built on Division

At the core of the legislation’s controversy is what critics describe as a deliberately punitive structure. Under the draft, investors who keep their holdings on Turkish-regulated exchanges benefit from a flat 10% withholding tax handled automatically by the platform, with no need for individual tax filings. But those using foreign exchanges face a far steeper burden — their gains are classified as standard annual income under Turkey’s progressive tax system, potentially hitting 40%, with the full compliance burden falling on the individual. Critics say the 30-percentage-point gap is effectively designed to force capital out of international platforms and into the domestic financial system rather than to raise revenue fairly.

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Turkey’s Outsized Crypto Exposure

The stakes are particularly high given Turkey’s outsized position in global digital asset markets. According to a Chainalysis report cited by Istanbul Blockchain Week, Turkey is the MENA region’s largest crypto market with nearly $200 billion in annual on-chain transactions — roughly four times that of the UAE. Driven by persistent inflation and a weakened lira, cryptocurrency has served as a financial refuge for millions of Turkish citizens for years.

Turkey previously declined to impose a crypto profits tax in 2024 after an equity market downturn prompted the government to shelve the idea. The current draft marks a return to the question — and, judging by the volume of the community response, the answer from Turkish crypto holders remains the same.

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