South Korea proposed taxing unrealized gains on stocks and real estate at a National Assembly forum on Tuesday. The push triggered what local traders are already calling Black Tuesday across the entire Korean stock market.
The proposal would tax investors on paper profits they have never realized by selling, redefining how wealth is treated in Asia’s fourth-largest economy.
What South Korea’s New Tax Proposal Says
An unrealized gain is the on-paper profit an investor holds before actually selling the asset and converting the value into cash. The new South Korean push would treat that paper gain as taxable income, even if the underlying stock or property has never changed hands.
The forum brought together a powerful coalition. Lawmakers from the Democratic Party, the Progressive Party, the Rebuilding Korea Party, and the Social Democratic Party signed on.
Furthermore, civic groups, including the Korean Confederation of Trade Unions and the Federation of Korean Trade Unions, joined the effort.
The forum title clearly sets the tone. Organizers framed the event as “Exploring the Tax Gap on Asset Income and a Transition to Comprehensive Income Taxation.” The argument rests on a simple idea: rising wealth signals rising capacity to pay, regardless of whether assets are sold.
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The proposal is the latest step in a broader campaign. In February, lawmakers floated lowering the real estate capital gains exemption from ₩1.2 billion to ₩800 million (~$780,000 to $520,000).
Moreover, an April push targeted the long-term holding deduction for property owners.
“We should revive the financial investment income tax, reduce tax exemptions and deductions concentrated among high-income groups, and add nominal brackets to raise the effective tax rate for the ultra-high-income class,” said Park Ki-san, director at the Federation of Korean Trade Unions.
Tuesday marks the first time the campaign has explicitly reached unrealized stock gains.
Under current law, investors owe tax only when they sell shares and lock in a profit. The proposed shift would fundamentally redefine taxation across all major Korean asset classes.
The wider context matters. President Lee Jae Myung reversed an earlier plan in September 2025 to lower the capital gains tax threshold from ₩5 billion to ₩1 billion (~$3.26 million to $652,000) after a retail-investor backlash erased billions in market value across a single trading week.
Why the Proposal Triggered a Korean Black Tuesday
The market reaction was immediate and brutal. Traders quickly dubbed June 23 a Black Tuesday for Korean equities, with major listings plunging across the KOSPI and the broader index. As a result, retail sentiment turned sharply negative within hours of the forum.
The fear among investors is structural. Taxing paper gains would force holders to sell shares simply to pay an annual liability.
Also, the policy could undermine long-term investing, hurt retirement portfolios, and accelerate capital flight toward overseas equity markets across Asia.
Internationally, there is now a clear precedent. The Netherlands passed a similar law on February 12, 2026, imposing a flat 36% annual tax on unrealized gains across stocks, bonds, and crypto assets. The Dutch backlash hit local markets and startups almost immediately.
Critics are already pointing to the Dutch example. They argue the Netherlands case shows how an aggressive unrealized gains regime can choke innovation, drive talent abroad, and pressure household balance sheets.
As a result, opposition lawmakers are expected to escalate resistance in the coming weeks.
Supporters frame the policy as fairness. They argue that high-net-worth holders have an enormous capacity to pay long before selling, while wage earners pay tax on every paycheck. Civic groups insist that closing the gap is essential for a modern income tax architecture.
The path forward remains uncertain. Any actual legislation must still clear the National Assembly, where parties remain divided.
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