South Korean Customs Officials Promise their Own ‘Crypto Crackdown’
Tim Alper is a British journalist and features writer who has worked at Cryptonews.com since 2018. He has written for media outlets such as the BBC, the Guardian, and Chosun Ilbo. He has also worked...
- Naver-Dunamu Crypto ‘Mega-Company’ Could Be Worth $2.1B a Year – Experts
- Russia Losing ‘Millions of Dollars a Year to Illegal Crypto Miners’ – Report
- Russian Economist: BTC Will Hit $120k-$130k Again Before End of Year
- Russia’s Central Bank: Tokenization Will Let Foreigners Buy Domestic Shares
- S Korean Tax Agency: Pay Your Bills or We’ll Take Your Crypto Cold Wallets
South Korean customs authorities have added their voices to the choir of public officials promising to “clamp down” on illegal crypto transactions – particularly those involving overseas remittances and opportunistic traders seeking to take advantage of the kimchi premium.

In a report from the Hankook Ilbo, the Korea Customs Service was quoted as saying that it would step up the “monitoring of trade finance-related crimes and foreign exchange transactions that make use of cryptoassets.”
A spokesperson also added that “cryptoassets can be used for financial crimes such as stealing assets, disguising [illicit] transactions as trade transactions or money laundering.” The Korea Customs Service said it would be “monitoring these trends” and if it found evidence of wrongdoings would “initiate investigations.”
The customs service added that its own “monitoring” efforts for “crypto transactions” would be independent of the government’s recently announced “joint crackdown.”
The spokesperson concluded that “illegal cryptoasset transactions” would “an extension of” the service’s “monitoring operations for “trade-related financial crimes and illegal foreign exchange transactions.”
As reported, the kimchi premium is a phenomenon whereby the demand for tokens such as bitcoin (BTC) and major altcoins is so high in South Korea that prices are pushed up above the global average. Some have sought to exploit this by buying tokens from overseas sellers – primarily over-the-counter vendors in China – and then sell the coins on domestic exchanges.
The government has already begun leaning on banks, asking them to restrict “suspicious”-looking remittances to China – with one major commercial bank, Woori, already falling into line.
In previous weeks, the kimchi premium has risen up to the 18% mark, but data from Scolkg at the time of writing indicated that it has shrunk back to around the 8% level – meaning that the price of BTC 1 is around USD 4,480 more expensive on the domestic market-leading exchange Upbit than the token would cost on Binance’s global platform.
____
Learn more:
– ‘Intense Crackdown’ until End of June as Seoul Fights Crypto Fraudsters
– S Korean MPs Seek to Ban Crypto Felons from Returning to the Industry
– South Korean City Goes to War with Tax Evaders, Will Seize their Crypto
– Judge Hands Convicted Crypto Tax Evader 3-Year Suspended Jail Sentence
- China’s DeepSeek AI Predicts the Price of XRP, PEPE and Shiba Inu By the End of 2026
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: 12-Year Trend Shattered Has Broken – Is “Quantum Computing” Secretly Killing Bitcoin?
- Crypto Price Prediction Today 16 February – XRP, Ethereum, Cardano
- Google’s Gemini AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Solana and Bitcoin By the End of 2026
- XRP Price Prediction: Deadly “Gravestone Doji” Spotted – Can XRP Go to Zero?
About Us
2M+
250+
8
70
Market Overview
- 7d
- 1m
- 1y
- China’s DeepSeek AI Predicts the Price of XRP, PEPE and Shiba Inu By the End of 2026
- Bitcoin Price Prediction: 12-Year Trend Shattered Has Broken – Is “Quantum Computing” Secretly Killing Bitcoin?
- Crypto Price Prediction Today 16 February – XRP, Ethereum, Cardano
- Google’s Gemini AI Predicts the Price of XRP, Solana and Bitcoin By the End of 2026
- XRP Price Prediction: Deadly “Gravestone Doji” Spotted – Can XRP Go to Zero?
More Articles
Get dialed in every Tuesday & Friday with quick updates on the world of crypto