Crypto Firms In South Korea Raise Concerns Over AML Crackdown: Report

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South Korean courts have been stepping in to block a wave of regulatory sanctions against the country’s biggest crypto exchanges — and now the industry is taking its fight to the rulemaking process itself.

Industry Body Warns Of Reporting Overload

The Digital Asset eXchange Alliance, known as DAXA, submitted formal comments opposing proposed changes to South Korea’s anti-money laundering framework.

The group speaks for 27 registered virtual asset service providers, including the five largest exchanges in the country: Upbit, Bithumb, Coinone, Korbit, and Gopax.

At the center of the dispute is a rule that would require exchanges to flag every overseas crypto transfer worth 10 million Korean won — roughly $6,800 — as a suspicious transaction, regardless of whether the transfer shows any sign of wrongdoing.

DAXA says the math doesn’t work. Reports from South Korea’s five major platforms totaled around 63,000 suspicious transaction cases last year.

Under the new rule, that number would climb to more than 5.4 million annually — an 85-fold increase. The alliance argues the volume would make meaningful compliance nearly impossible.

DAXA also pushed back on a separate requirement to verify the accuracy of customer data, saying it goes beyond what the underlying law actually requires.

The Financial Services Commission and the Financial Intelligence Unit jointly put forward the amendments on March 30. A public comment window runs through May 11, with final rules expected in July after regulatory and legal review.

BTCUSD trading at $78,600 on the 24-hour chart: TradingView

Three Exchanges Win Temporary Court Relief

The proposed rule changes come as multiple exchanges are already battling sanctions tied to existing AML requirements. Upbit’s parent company, Dunamu, won a first-instance court ruling on April 9 that canceled a three-month partial business suspension.

The sanction had been linked to alleged failures in customer due diligence and transactions with unregistered foreign platforms. Regulators appealed that decision on April 30, according to Yonhap News Agency.

Bithumb followed a similar path. The Seoul Administrative Court agreed to pause enforcement of a six-month partial suspension while the main case works its way through the system.

That sanction stemmed from an inspection conducted by the Financial Intelligence Unit that found alleged violations of South Korea’s Financial Information Act.

Coinone faces both a three-month partial suspension and a fine of 5.2 billion won over AML-related failures. It too received a temporary halt on enforcement after filing a legal challenge.

Exchanges And Regulators On Collision Course

The pattern is hard to miss. South Korean authorities have been pushing harder on crypto AML enforcement, and the industry has been pushing back — in comment letters, in court, and through its trade group.

The outcome of both the rulemaking process and the pending legal cases could shape how crypto compliance works across one of Asia’s most active digital asset markets.

Featured image from Nathan Benn/Getty Images, chart from TradingView

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