Crypto Law Profile

South Korea Act on the Protection of Virtual Asset Users

South Korea’s statute requiring VASPs to segregate deposits and assets, hold reserves or insurance, retain records, monitor abnormal transactions, and avoid unfair trading.

South Korea Effective Act Jul 19, 2024

At a glance

Status In force since July 19, 2024; current Korean text lists Act No. 20372.
Scope Applies to virtual assets and VASPs with effects in South Korea, subject to statutory exclusions.
User assets VASPs must segregate user deposits and virtual assets and hold entrusted types and quantities.
Market conduct Prohibits material nonpublic information misuse, price manipulation and fraudulent trading.

Overview

South Korea’s Act on the Protection of Virtual Asset Users is an in-force national statute for virtual asset user protection. The law was enacted as Act No. 19563 on July 18, 2023, amended by Act No. 20372 on March 12, 2024, and its core provisions took effect on July 19, 2024. As of June 3, 2026, it remains South Korea’s statute focused on user asset protection, unfair trading controls, and supervisory powers for virtual asset markets.

What the Virtual Asset User Protection Act covers

The Act defines “virtual assets” as electronic certificates with economic value that can be traded or transferred electronically, while excluding items such as certain closed-use certificates, game-related assets, electronic money, electronic securities, electronic bills of lading, Bank of Korea digital currency, and other instruments set by Presidential Decree. A virtual asset service provider, or VASP, includes persons conducting trading, exchange, transfer, safekeeping or administration of virtual assets, and brokerage or agency services connected to trading or exchange.

The statute applies to South Korean virtual asset activity and reaches overseas conduct where the effects extend to the Republic of Korea. It sits alongside South Korea’s anti-money-laundering VASP reporting framework.

Key provisions for VASPs and users

User deposit and custody protections

VASPs must segregate users’ deposits from their own funds by placing or entrusting them with a prescribed custodian, such as a bank. The Act requires the deposit to be identified as user property and restricts offsetting, attachment, transfer, or collateral use except as prescribed by subordinate rules.

For virtual assets held for users, VASPs must keep user assets separate from their own assets, maintain user lists, and effectively possess the same types and quantities of assets entrusted by users. The Act also requires a prescribed portion of user virtual assets to be held offline, and it requires insurance, mutual aid, or reserves for hacking or computer failures. Transaction records must be retained for 15 years after the relevant transactional relationship ends.

Unfair trading and market surveillance

The Act prohibits the use of material nonpublic information, coordinated or false trades designed to mislead the market, price manipulation, fraudulent schemes, false statements, and certain trading by VASPs in assets issued by themselves or related persons. VASPs operating virtual asset markets must monitor abnormal transactions, take user-protection measures, and report suspected violations to the Financial Services Commission and the Financial Supervisory Service. In specified cases, reporting to investigative authorities is also required.

The statute also restricts discretionary blocking of user deposits or withdrawals. Where a VASP blocks deposits or withdrawals for a prescribed good cause, it must provide advance notice to the user and report the action to the FSC. The Act creates damages liability for certain violations, but it does not guarantee the value or safety of virtual assets.

Regulators and enforcement

The FSC is the lead supervisory authority, with the FSS carrying out inspection and investigation functions delegated or requested under the statute. The FSC may inspect VASP business and financial status, request reports and documents, publish investigation results, issue corrective orders or warnings, suspend all or part of business operations, and file accusations with investigative agencies.

For unfair trading violations, the FSC may impose penalty surcharges of up to twice the profit gained or loss avoided, or up to KRW 4 billion where gains cannot be assessed. Criminal penalties include imprisonment and fines tied to unfair gains, with aggravated penalties for larger amounts. Administrative fines of up to KRW 100 million may apply for failures involving deposits, safekeeping, reserves, records, reporting, monitoring, or inspection cooperation.

Status and timeline

DateEvent
June 30, 2023Passed by the National Assembly.
July 18, 2023Promulgated as Act No. 19563.
March 12, 2024Amended by Act No. 20372 through a related-law amendment.
July 19, 2024Core Act and subordinate rules took effect.
January 1, 2025Addenda Article 2(6) cross-reference amendment took effect.

Editorial context

The Act is best treated as South Korea’s first-stage virtual asset market statute: it prioritizes custody, user assets, market surveillance, unfair trading, and enforcement. It does not by itself create a complete issuance, stablecoin, or licensing regime. For CryptoSlate taxonomy, classify this profile as an in-force statute affecting VASPs, exchanges, custodians, token issuers, and consumers.

Key provisions

Definitions and territorial reach

Defines virtual assets, VASPs, users and virtual asset markets; applies to overseas acts whose effects extend to South Korea.

Scope Jul 19, 2024 Source

Segregation of user deposits

Requires VASPs to segregate user deposits from their own funds and place them with a prescribed custodian such as a bank.

Custody Jul 19, 2024 Source

Safekeeping of user virtual assets

Requires user lists, segregation of user virtual assets, effective possession of entrusted types and quantities, and prescribed offline storage.

Safekeeping Jul 19, 2024 Source

Insurance, reserves and records

Requires insurance, mutual aid or reserves for hacking or system failures and 15-year retention of transaction records.

Operations Jul 19, 2024 Source

Unfair trading prohibitions

Prohibits material nonpublic information misuse, wash or false trades, price manipulation, fraudulent trading and certain self-issued asset trades.

Market conduct Jul 19, 2024 Source

Supervision, sanctions and penalties

Authorizes FSC/FSS supervision and investigations, corrective orders, business suspensions, penalty surcharges, criminal penalties and administrative fines.

Enforcement Jul 19, 2024 Source

Timeline

  1. Passed by National Assembly

    FSC announced passage at the National Assembly plenary session.

    Passed Source
  2. Promulgated as Act No. 19563

    Act on the Protection of Virtual Asset Users was enacted and promulgated.

    Published Source
  3. Related-law amendment adopted

    Current text lists amendment by Act No. 20372 through a related-law amendment.

    Adopted Source
  4. Enforcement Decree approved

    Government approved the Enforcement Decree, with implementation aligned to the Act.

    Adopted Source
  5. Core provisions took effect

    The Act and subordinate rules became effective for VASPs and virtual asset markets.

    In force Source
  6. Addenda cross-reference effective

    Addenda Article 2(6), linked to an Income Tax Act cross-reference, took effect.

    Effective Source

Who it affects

Actors

Consumers, Custodians, Exchanges, Token issuers, Virtual asset service providers

Asset classes

Virtual assets

Official sources

Editorial note

Current Korean text lists Act No. 20372, Mar. 12, 2024, as a related-law amendment to the original Act No. 19563. Addenda Article 2(6) took effect Jan. 1, 2025 and appears to update an Income Tax Act cross-reference.