Crypto Tax in Paraguay
Crypto tax in Paraguay depends on whether you are a natural person or a company, and whether the activity is Paraguay-sourced or foreign-sourced. The foundational ruling is Consulta Vinculante N.582, issued by DNIT in October 2024.
Not Tax Advice
The Foundational Framework: Consulta Vinculante N.582
In October 2024, DNIT issued Consulta Vinculante N.582, a binding ruling that establishes how cryptocurrencies are classified and taxed in Paraguay. "Vinculante" means binding - this ruling serves as a tax reference for the entire country.
The ruling was necessary because Paraguay's tax law (Law 6380/19) did not specifically address cryptocurrency. DNIT was asked to clarify: How should crypto be classified? Are gains taxable? How does VAT apply?
Key Classifications from CV N.582
- Crypto is classified as a good. Not a currency, not a financial instrument. It is treated the same as any other personal asset.
- Natural persons are not subject to IRE or IRP on crypto capital gains. Since crypto is a good, and the sale of personal goods falls outside the scope of both corporate tax (IRE) and personal income tax (IRP), natural persons generally do not pay tax on crypto gains.
- Companies may be subject to 10% IRE. If a company sells crypto in Paraguay, the capital gain may be subject to the 10% corporate tax rate under IRE.
- Sale of crypto is not subject to VAT. The sale of cryptocurrency itself does not trigger VAT.
- Payment in crypto for goods/services is treated as barter. Both parties apply VAT, which effectively cancels out for the transaction.
- Intermediation services are subject to 10% VAT on commissions only.
Natural Persons vs Companies: The Critical Distinction
The single most important factor in Paraguay crypto tax is whether you are operating as a natural person or through a company. CV N.582 treats these differently.
| Factor | Natural Person (IRP) | Company (IRE) |
|---|---|---|
| Crypto classification | Personal good | Business asset |
| Tax on capital gains (Paraguay) | Not subject to IRP | 10% IRE if Paraguay-sourced |
| Tax on foreign gains | Outside Paraguay tax base | Outside Paraguay tax base |
| VAT on crypto sale | Not applicable | Not applicable |
| Reporting (Resolución General 47/2026) | If threshold met | If threshold met |
For both natural persons and companies, the territorial principle applies: only Paraguay-sourced income is taxed. Foreign-source crypto activity - trading on foreign exchanges, holding in foreign wallets, staking on foreign protocols - is generally outside Paraguay's tax base regardless of whether you are a person or a company.
How Territorial Tax Applies to Crypto
Paraguay's territorial tax system means that the source of income - not your residency status - determines whether it is taxed. For crypto, the question is: where does the economic activity occur?
Generally Outside Paraguay Tax
- Trading on foreign exchanges while living in Paraguay
- Holding crypto in foreign wallets or cold storage
- Staking or DeFi activity on foreign protocols
- Crypto-to-crypto trades on foreign platforms
- Activity through a genuinely foreign-operated company or LLC
Potentially Paraguay-Sourced (Consult a Contador)
- Selling crypto to a Paraguay resident (P2P)
- Operating a Paraguay-based crypto business or mining operation
- Providing crypto intermediation services from Paraguay
- Situations where the economic activity is clearly centered in Paraguay
Source classification depends on the actual facts, not just the asset type. A bank transfer alone does not determine the source. If you are unsure about your specific situation, consult a Paraguayan tax professional. See also Foreign-Source Income Rules for the broader framework.
Law 7572/2025: Crypto as Regulated Securities
Law 7572/2025 is a securities market reform, not a tax law. It does not change the tax treatment established by CV N.582. However, it has significant implications for how crypto operates in Paraguay's financial system.
What Law 7572/2025 Does
- Recognizes crypto as a regulated security. Article 73 defines assets issued, registered, transferred, or stored through distributed ledger technology as securities under Paraguay's financial market framework.
- Introduces regulated tokenization. Real estate projects, companies, dividend flows, and investment projects can now be tokenized under a regulated framework with full legal protection.
- Requires broker licenses for exchanges. Crypto exchanges operating in Paraguay would technically need to establish as licensed brokerage firms (casas de bolsa).
- Allows foreign company tokenization. Foreign companies can tokenize assets under Paraguayan regulation without necessarily incorporating locally.
- Introduces investment fund framework. For the first time, Paraguay has formal definitions for private and public investment funds.
This law positions Paraguay as one of the first countries in South America with a clear regulatory framework for tokenization. For Web3 companies and investors, this creates new opportunities within a regulated structure.
Reporting Obligations: Resolución General 47/2026
Separate from tax treatment, Paraguay introduced annual informative reporting for qualifying crypto activity under Resolución General 47/2026.
- Threshold: Annual crypto transactions exceeding approximately USD 5,000 in reportable categories
- Who: Residents and entities headquartered in Paraguay
- Filing: Annual declaration via Marangatu (third month after fiscal year end)
- Penalty: Gs. 1,000,000 for late filing
- Nature: Disclosure obligation, not a tax
Reporting and taxation are separate concepts. Filing a disclosure does not mean you owe tax. See the full Resolución General 47/2026 guide for filing details.
For US Citizens: A Different Calculation
US citizens are subject to US tax on worldwide crypto gains regardless of Paraguay residency. Paraguay's territorial tax treatment does not help Americans avoid US tax obligations.
- Crypto gains are taxable in the US (short-term or long-term capital gains rates)
- FEIE does not apply to crypto capital gains (it only covers earned income)
- FBAR filing required if foreign exchange accounts exceed $10,000
- FATCA (Form 8938) required at higher thresholds
Paraguay can still appeal to US crypto investors for cost-of-living arbitrage, geographic diversification, and a path to second citizenship. But the tax saving is not the draw. See our US citizens guide for details.
Bottom Line
Paraguay's crypto tax framework, established by Consulta Vinculante N.582, is favorable for natural persons: crypto gains are generally not subject to personal income tax. For companies, 10% IRE may apply to Paraguay-sourced gains. The territorial principle means foreign-source crypto activity remains outside Paraguay's tax base for both persons and companies.
Law 7572/2025 adds a securities regulation layer without changing tax treatment. Resolución General 47/2026 adds a disclosure layer without creating a new tax. These are separate frameworks that stack on top of the core tax logic from CV N.582.
Always verify current rules with a local contador. Regulations are evolving.