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India Taxes Crypto at 30% — But Still Won't Call It Legal

India Taxes Crypto at 30% — But Still Won't Call It Legal

On July 2, 2026, the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) told a parliamentary finance committee that cryptocurrency should not be legalized — the regulator still refuses to recognize it as a legitimate asset class, Business Standard reports. The hearing was part of a consultation process — no new law was passed, so nothing has formally changed yet.

Meanwhile, crypto in India sits in a genuinely contradictory spot: buying, holding, and selling it is legal, but it has no status as official currency — and the government has been steadily collecting taxes on it regardless, Indian Pay Calculator notes. The tax rate on crypto profits is 30%, plus a 1% TDS withheld on every transfer — figures that haven't changed in years.

Since April 1, 2026, the pressure on exchanges has only grown: failing to file reports carries a penalty of ₹200 a day, and submitting incorrect data costs a flat ₹50,000, Nadcab explains.

What this means in practice: the Indian government treats crypto like a real, recognized source of income — taxing it, demanding reports, fining violations — while deliberately withholding any formal legal status. For an ordinary user, that means paying taxes is mandatory, but counting on the legal protections of a recognized asset is not.

This article is for informational purposes only and is not tax or financial advice.

Mike Robinson

Author

Mike Robinson

News feed editor

I'm constantly writing about crypto, Bitcoin, and altcoins. I cover a variety of topics related to the virtual currency market.

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