Crypto Sector Contributes Rp 1.96 Trillion in Indonesia's Digital Tax Revenue



The Directorate General of Taxes (DJP) of the Ministry of Finance has recorded total tax revenue from Indonesia's digital economy sector reaching Rp48.11 trillion as of February 28, 2026. This figure reflects consistent growth across various segments of the domestic digital economy.
The revenue comes from several main sources, namely Value-Added Tax (VAT) on Electronic System-Based Trade (PMSE) amounting to Rp37.40 trillion, fintech or peer-to-peer lending taxes amounting to Rp4.64 trillion, taxes collected through the Government Procurement Information System (Pajak SIPP) totaling Rp4.11 trillion, and taxes on crypto assets amounting to Rp1.96 trillion.
Director of Education, Service, and Public Relations at DJP, Inge Diana Rismawanti, stated that the trend of digital tax revenue continues to show a positive direction even though there were no new designations, cancellations, or changes in VAT PMSE collection data in February 2026.
From the PMSE perspective, the annual growth has been quite consistent. Of the total Rp37.40 trillion collected in VAT PMSE, the breakdown is Rp731.4 million in 2020, Rp3.9 trillion in 2021, Rp5.51 trillion in 2022, Rp6.76 trillion in 2023, Rp8.44 trillion in 2024, Rp10.32 trillion in 2025, and Rp1.74 trillion until February 2026. As of the end of February 2026, 223 PMSE collectors have carried out collection and payment.
On the crypto side, its contribution has also continued to increase year by year since this tax was first implemented. The crypto tax collected amounts to Rp1.96 trillion, originating from Rp246.45 billion in 2022, Rp220.83 billion in 2023, Rp620.4 billion in 2024, Rp796.74 billion in 2025, and Rp84.7 billion until February 2026.
The significant surge in crypto tax revenue from 2023 to 2025 reflects the increasing activity of digital asset trading in Indonesia, in line with the global crypto market trend that regained momentum during that period. The government itself states that it will continue to strengthen oversight and expand the tax base in the digital sector through regulatory optimization and the utilization of information technology.
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