The Working Group on Crypto-asset Systems, operating under the Financial System Council of Japan’s Financial Services Agency (FSA), published its formal report on 16 February 2026. This document sits within the official advisory body sequence of the Financial System Council, which means it is not an industry self-regulatory white paper — it is pre-legislative regulatory research at Japan’s statutory level. The core direction points to one thing: shifting crypto assets away from their current classification as “payment instruments” under the Payment Services Act (資金決済法) toward a framework closer to investment-type financial products under the Financial Instruments and Exchange Act (FIEA). The full report and supporting materials are available on the FSA working group page.
Editorial Assessment: Practical Impact on Japan USDT Card Users
Bottom line first: this report does not amend any existing rules. It is the basis for future legislative revision. For users holding a USDT card today, there is nothing that requires immediate action.
That said, two tracks are worth monitoring closely for Japan-based users:
The first track is the stablecoin token layer. Japan passed amendments to the Payment Services Act in 2023 that permit “electronic payment instruments” (including compliant stablecoins) to circulate, but USDT has yet to complete local registration and issuance in Japan. This means most Japanese users’ USDT still originates from overseas exchanges or on-chain wallets, then gets topped up onto overseas-issued virtual cards. If the working group report drives crypto assets into the FIEA framework, token listing, custody, and disclosure obligations at the exchange level will increase substantially — and this will show up first on Bybit Card and OKX Card, since their top-up entry points are directly tied to exchange accounts subject to Japanese regulatory influence.
The second track is card issuance and KYC entry points. Aggregator-type issuers such as the editorially selected MPCard (Asia Elite variant, an Asia-Pacific-routed virtual Visa) are not Japan-licensed entities and face limited direct exposure from this report. However, if Japanese users complete KYC using Japanese identity documents and a Japanese IP, issuers may adjust their account-opening policies for Japan residents in response to future regulatory developments.
Expected timeline:
- Within 7 days: No changes. The report is in its publication phase.
- Within 30 days: Watch for whether FSA releases a companion legislative timetable or opens a public comment period.
- Within 90 days: Exchanges may begin pre-emptive adjustments to feature permissions for Japanese users — historically, this is where Japan’s regulatory direction surfaces first.
Historical Comparison: 2023 Stablecoin Legislation and MiCAR
Readers familiar with Japan’s regulatory cadence will recall the Payment Services Act amendments that took effect in June 2023 — that was Japan becoming one of the first jurisdictions globally to establish a clear legal status for stablecoins. The similarity is that both rounds follow the standard “working group report → legislative revision → implementing rules” process: slow-moving but with a clear path, and almost none of the enforcement-surprise uncertainty seen in events like the US SEC vs. Coinbase.
The difference matters: the 2023 round focused on “are stablecoins a lawful payment instrument?” and concluded “yes, but issuance requires a licence.” The 2026 report shifts emphasis from “payment” to “investment product regulation,” aligning more closely with the EU’s MiCAR logic of categorising crypto assets and bringing them under financial regulation. MiCAR took roughly 18 months from legislation in 2023 to phased implementation by end of 2024. If Japan follows the same path, rules that actually affect ordinary cardholders are unlikely to materialise before 2027.
In short: this is a directional document, not an immediately effective one. Based on the 2023 precedent, at least one full legislative cycle separates the report from changes users will actually notice.
Regulatory Boundaries: What Japan Currently Permits
Stating the current boundaries clearly, to avoid unnecessary alarm:
- Clearly permitted: Japan residents holding and transferring crypto assets; buying and selling through licensed exchanges; using overseas-issued virtual cards for spending (the card itself is not issued in Japan and is regulated by the issuer’s jurisdiction).
- Legal grey area: USDT as an “electronic payment instrument” has not completed local registration and issuance in Japan, so domestically regulated compliant USDT circulation channels remain limited, and most users operate through offshore routes.
- Clearly tightening: Token listings at exchanges, leverage, and custody — this is precisely the area the report aims to strengthen.
For specifics on resident card applications, tax treatment, and reporting obligations, we recommend following our Japan Compliance Guide, which will be updated as FSA takes further action.
Key Milestones Worth Watching
- FSA public comment period: Reports typically trigger a companion consultation draft — the first hard signal that legislation is moving.
- Financial bills in the 2026 regular Diet session: Watch for any FIEA amendment motion based on this report.
- Feature announcements from major exchanges for Japanese users: If Bybit, OKX, or others adjust permissions in the Japan market, this will affect actual top-up access before any legislation does.
- Progress on local stablecoin issuance: Whether any compliant entity moves to register USDT/USDC for local issuance in Japan.
Editorial Recommendations
- Japanese users holding MPCard (including the Asia Elite variant): no action needed. This report does not change existing rules. How your card works today is how it will work tomorrow. For fee details and Asia-Pacific routing specifics, see the MPCard review.
- Japanese users primarily topping up via exchange-native cards (Bybit / OKX): Add the exchanges’ Japan-region announcements to your watch list. Feature changes consistently arrive before legislation — this has been the most reliable pattern over the past several years.
- Japanese users planning to apply for a new card: No reason to delay because of this report, but it is worth prioritising aggregator-type issuers whose top-up entry points are not directly tied to Japan-licensed exchanges, preserving your flexibility. Start by comparing 2026 Top 5 and cards suited for Japan users against your top-up habits.
One sentence summary: this is the steering wheel turning on a slow lane, not a sudden brake. Watch the milestones. No action needed yet.