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India's New Crypto Trading Tax Compliance Push: $545 Penalties Start April 2026
India’s government confirmed its stance on crypto trading taxation in the 2026-27 Union Budget, keeping the existing 30% tax on cryptocurrency gains and 1% tax deducted at source (TDS) in place. However, officials introduced a stricter compliance framework to enforce reporting requirements, disappointing traders and exchanges who had lobbied for rate reductions.
Tax Rates Stay Put, But Compliance Requirements Intensify
The 2026-27 budget maintained the current crypto trading tax structure that has long been criticized by the industry. While many market participants expected the government to reconsider the punitive tax regime, authorities chose instead to tighten enforcement mechanisms around transaction reporting under India’s Income-tax Act.
“The lack of reform means existing frictions remain even as compliance obligations expand,” said Ashish Singhal, co-founder of CoinSwitch, signaling industry disappointment. The decision suggests the government prioritizes compliance monitoring over tax relief for traders and exchanges operating in the country.
Reporting Penalties and Fines: What Traders Need to Know
Starting April 1, 2026, entities failing to report crypto-asset transactions will face new monetary penalties. Under amendments to the Income-tax Act’s Section 509, non-compliance now carries real costs:
These provisions, detailed in the Finance Bill 2026 and implemented through Section 446 amendments, are designed to strengthen compliance and discourage inaccurate or incomplete reporting of crypto transactions.
The Industry’s Bigger Concern: Taxing Transactions Without Recognizing Losses
Market participants argue the core issue remains unresolved. The 30% flat tax on crypto gains combined with 1% TDS creates asymmetrical taxation—gains are fully taxed while losses often receive limited recognition, pushing retail participants offshore.
Ashish Singhal proposed concrete solutions: reducing TDS from 1% to 0.01% and raising the TDS exemption threshold to ₹5 lakh would improve liquidity and ease compliance for retail traders. “A reduction in TDS could enhance transparency while preserving transaction traceability,” he noted, highlighting how crypto trading tax in India continues to dampen market activity compared to global competitors.
What’s Next for India’s Crypto Market?
The government’s decision to leave crypto trading tax rates unchanged while introducing stricter penalties reflects a compliance-first approach rather than policy reform. For traders and exchanges, this means:
The April 2026 deadline gives market participants less than two weeks to prepare for the new penalty regime, signaling that India’s regulators intend to enforce strict compliance standards even as the broader crypto trading tax framework remains contentious among industry stakeholders.