Hong Kong Opens Public Consultation on Crypto Tax Rules

On Dec 9, 2025 at 12:39 pm UTC by · 2 mins read

Hong Kong has opened a public consultation on adopting the OECD’s CARF and updating the CRS for automatic cross-border crypto tax reporting.

The Hong Kong government has opened a public consultation on adopting the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) and updating the long-standing Common Reporting Standard (CRS). This comes as the city aims to integrate cryptocurrencies into global tax-transparency systems and cross-border financial reporting.

Officials say the initiative would introduce automatic exchange of crypto-related tax data between Hong Kong and eligible partner jurisdictions from 2028. The full implementation is expected the following year.

The plan is under a broader effort to strengthen the city’s reputation as a compliant, well-regulated international finance hub. The consultation period remains open until February 6, 2026.

Strengthening Compliance and Information Sharing

Christopher Hui, Secretary for Financial Services and the Treasury, said the proposed update reinforces Hong Kong’s commitment to international tax cooperation.

Under the proposal, financial institutions will face stricter reporting obligations, mandatory registration requirements, and stronger enforcement mechanisms. The authorities are also considering higher penalties for violations.

These changes follow an ongoing OECD peer review of Hong Kong’s CRS framework. Notably, The OECD (Organisation for Economic Co-operation and Development) is an intergovernmental economic forum with 38 member countries.

It promotes policies for economic growth, prosperity, and sustainable development through data, analysis, and best practices in public policy.

Crypto Market Growth in Hong Kong

The push for updated regulations comes as Hong Kong’s crypto market gains renewed momentum. HashKey Holdings, one of the city’s leading licensed crypto platforms, has filed for an IPO.

The listing date is set for Dec. 17. If listed successfully, HashKey will become Hong Kong’s first publicly traded crypto exchange.

The city is also drawing interest from regional players. In November, a Bloomberg report claimed that Bitkub, a major Thai exchange, was exploring a $200 million funding round with plans for an IPO in Hong Kong by 2026.

It reportedly chose the city over Thailand due to its stronger regulatory outlook.

Meanwhile, Hong Kong’s securities regulator recently signaled plans to relax certain restrictions for crypto trading platforms. The regulator is preparing to allow regulated platforms to share global order books with overseas affiliates.

This could improve liquidity and align local markets with international trading flows.

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