Tax authorities across Seoul have begun actively seizing the digital assets of residents who have failed to pay local taxes. In recent efforts, officials successfully confiscated millions of Korean won worth of cryptocurrency after tracking wallet activity linked to delinquent accounts.
Local governments are rolling out automated systems designed to identify and freeze the crypto wallets of tax debtors. Under these new programs, assets held in exchange-linked or custodial wallets by individuals who owe taxes above a specific amount can be frozen or liquidated to cover their outstanding liabilities.
While these systems are proving effective for easily accessible exchange wallets, it is currently unclear whether authorities can extend the seizures to cold wallets (offline hardware or paper wallets). Seizing assets from cold storage would likely require direct legal action or the taxpayer being compelled to disclose their private keys.
This seizure campaign is part of a larger government strategy to fully integrate digital assets into South Korea’s tax enforcement framework. Authorities are combining blockchain analytics with mandatory cooperation from crypto exchanges. This aggressive enforcement signals the government's intention to close the compliance gap between traditional financial assets and cryptocurrency holdings ahead of the nation's planned 20% crypto income tax roll-out in 2027.
October 2025, Cryptoniteuae