Key Highlights
- Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice confirmed the state holds 210.45 BTC in seized assets as of October 31, 2025.
- The disclosure potentially ranks Taiwan as the eighth-largest sovereign holder of Bitcoin worldwide.
- Government officials are currently evaluating whether to liquidate these holdings or transition them into a formal national reserve.
Taiwan’s Ministry of Justice has disclosed that the national government held 210.45 BTC in seized assets as of October 31. This positions Taiwan as a major participant in the global scenario regarding the possession of digital currency by the state.
In an X post on Thursday, Ko Ju-Chun, a member of the Legislative Yuan, stated that holdings of 210.45 BTC would place Taiwan as the eighth country with known government-held Bitcoins. This puts the country in the league of larger economies, and it becomes evident that the extent of cybercrimes and other kinds of fraud committed in the country using digital money has reached the level of requiring management.
Strengthening the legal and regulatory framework
According to the Ministry of Justice, the Bitcoin holdings are the outcome of successful law enforcement operations. Contrary to other countries, which have made deliberate purchases of Bitcoins to hold in reserves, Taiwan’s holdings are incidental to the confiscation of ill-gotten gains in the course of investigating crimes.
The backdrop to these revelations has been a concerted effort by the Taiwanese government to upgrade its laws governing digital finance over several years. Recently, Taiwan has emphasized its strategies to combat money laundering and has also cracked down on scams targeting decentralized finance and illicit exchange sites.
Normally, digital assets that were confiscated over the years were placed in cold storage by individual district prosecutors’ offices. But due to the increasing value, the Ministry of Justice has started a system to ensure its digital asset books are above board.
Building on this, Taiwan’s Premier’s Office and Central Bank recently committed to a three-stage roadmap to evaluate Bitcoin in its national reserves, which currently consist of $577 billion primarily held in the U.S. Treasuries and gold. Championed by Legislator Dr. Ju-chun Ko, the initiative involves a six-month research phase to draft crypto-friendly regulations and a pilot program that will utilize the existing inventory of confiscated Bitcoin.
Reserve debates and regional influence
The disclosure of these assets could lead to a debate in policy pertaining to managing state-held cryptocurrency. Although existing policy does tend to call for the auctioning of confiscated assets in order to refund the state or compensate those who have been affected by the seizure, the value of 210.45 BTC alone could lead to speculation as to whether the state will create a permanent policy regarding managing these assets.
Taiwan could also create a regional policy regarding the auditing of confiscated assets in order to encourage neighboring countries to follow suit in making disclosures.
A new era of financial transparency
This disclosure by the Ministry of Justice is an important episode within Taiwan’s quest for financial transparency, having found the region’s position within the global list of cryptocurrency holders surprisingly high.
Although the government has yet to express any desire to include Bitcoin in the reserve, the handling of the 210.45 BTC is another demonstration that the nation’s system that manages such assets is not primitive.
As digital currencies remain foundational within the international realms of both crime and finance, the nation at the eighth position within the list of the biggest holders within the public domain cannot afford the status quo regarding the handling of digital seizures.
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