Budget an opportunity to fine-tune crypto policy, say industry players
Budget: An Opportunity to Fine-Tune Crypto Policy — UPSC Study Note
1. At a Glance
- Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) is the official Indian government term for cryptocurrencies, NFTs, and similar digital tokens; defined under Section 2(47A), Income Tax Act, 1961 via the Finance Act, 2022. [S1]
- India currently imposes one of the most restrictive crypto tax regimes globally: 30% flat tax on gains + 1% TDS on every transaction + no loss set-off. [S1][S2]
- Crypto industry players are lobbying the Union Budget 2026–27 to rationalise these measures before capital flight entrenches offshore habits. [S4]
- Relevant to GS-III (Indian Economy) and emerging debates on fintech regulation, financial sovereignty, and AML compliance.
2. Why in the News
- January 19, 2026: Leading Indian crypto exchanges (WazirX, ZebPay) publicly called on the government to use Budget 2026–27 as an opportunity to reduce TDS burden and allow loss set-off, warning that the current framework is pushing investors to foreign exchanges. [S4]
- Budget 2026–27 (presented in the February 2026 session) became a focal point for industry advocacy after the government maintained the existing regime in Budget 2025–26 without changes. [S2]
- Financial Intelligence Unit–India (FIU-IND) issued compliance show-cause notices to nine offshore VDA Service Providers (VDA SPs) and later imposed a penalty of ₹9.27 crore on Bybit Fintech Limited, intensifying the regulatory backdrop. [S5][S6]
3. Background & Evolution
| Year | Milestone |
|---|---|
| Pre-2022 | Crypto operated in a regulatory vacuum; RBI had issued a circular banning banks from dealing with crypto (2018), struck down by Supreme Court in Internet and Mobile Association of India v. RBI (2020). |
| Feb 2022 | Finance Act 2022 — first statutory recognition of VDAs; introduced 30% flat tax on gains and 1% TDS under Section 194S, IT Act. Effective: gains tax from April 1, 2022; TDS from July 1, 2022. [S1][S2] |
| March 2023 | VDA Service Providers brought under Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 AML-CFT framework — a landmark compliance step. [S5] |
| FY 2022–23 | TDS collected under Section 194S aggregated to ₹157.9 crore up to March 20, 2023. [S3] |
| 2023–24 | FIU-IND issued show-cause notices to 9 offshore VDA SPs for non-compliance with AML norms. [S5] |
| 2024–25 | FIU-IND penalised Bybit ₹9.27 crore — first major offshore enforcement action. [S6] |
| Budget 2025–26 | Status quo maintained; 30% tax and 1% TDS continued; threshold for TDS at ₹10,000 per transaction. [S2] |
4. Core Static Facts
Definitions: - Virtual Digital Asset (VDA): Any digital representation of value generated through cryptographic or other means, transferable electronically — includes crypto, tokens, NFTs. Defined under Section 2(47A), IT Act, 1961. [S1] - VDA Service Provider (VDA SP): Entities facilitating VDA transactions (exchanges, wallets) — regulated under PMLA, 2002 since March 2023. [S5]
Tax Framework:
| Parameter | Detail |
|---|---|
| Tax on gains | 30% flat (no slab benefit, no indexation) |
| Applicability | From April 1, 2022 |
| Loss set-off | Not permitted — losses cannot offset gains from other VDA trades |
| TDS rate | 1% per transaction |
| TDS provision | Section 194S, IT Act, 1961 |
| TDS applicability | From July 1, 2022 |
| TDS threshold | Transactions exceeding ₹10,000 |
| TDS collected FY 2022-23 | ₹157.9 crore (up to March 20, 2023) |
Regulatory Bodies: - Tax authority: Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) / Ministry of Finance - AML oversight: Financial Intelligence Unit–India (FIU-IND) under Ministry of Finance - Governing law: Income Tax Act, 1961; Finance Act, 2022; PMLA, 2002 - Crypto classification in India: Not legal tender; treated as asset/property for tax
Key Industry Players (mentioned in context): - WazirX (Founder: Nischal Shetty) - ZebPay (COO: Raj Karkara) [S4]
5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis
Economic
- Capital flight risk: Restrictive TDS + no-loss-offset regime incentivises Indian investors to trade on unregulated foreign platforms, reducing domestic economic activity and tax base. [S4]
- Liquidity suppression: 1% TDS on every transaction (not just profits) is particularly punishing for high-frequency traders and market makers, shrinking onshore liquidity. [S4]
- Revenue angle: ₹157.9 crore in TDS collected in FY 2022-23 — signals meaningful transaction volumes even under restrictive regime; rationalisation could expand the base. [S3]
- Innovation ecosystem: Adverse tax environment suppresses Web3 startups, blockchain R&D, and fintech investment in India relative to jurisdictions like UAE, Singapore. [S4]
Legal / Constitutional
- Section 194S, IT Act introduced by Finance Act 2022 is the statutory backbone of the 1% TDS. [S1]
- PMLA, 2002: VDA SPs brought under this law in March 2023 — KYC, suspicious transaction reporting, and record-keeping obligations now apply. [S5]
- Supreme Court precedent: Internet and Mobile Association v. RBI (2020) struck down RBI's 2018 blanket crypto ban — established that arbitrary restriction without legislation is impermissible, creating space for the current statutory regime. [Background knowledge]
- Industry demands focus on loss set-off provisions — the disallowance is a specific statutory design choice in Finance Act 2022, requiring legislative amendment to reverse.
Geopolitical / Strategic
- Offshore exchange migration: Indian users moving to foreign platforms weakens India's ability to enforce AML/KYC — a national security and financial intelligence concern. [S4][S5]
- FIU-IND enforcement: Show-cause notices to 9 offshore VDA SPs and ₹9.27 crore penalty on Bybit reflect India's intent to extend regulatory reach across borders. [S5][S6]
- Global context: IMF and OECD have developed frameworks (Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework — CARF) urging jurisdictions to balance innovation with oversight.
Ethical / Governance
- Transparency vs. innovation tension: Government's KYC and AML provisions are legitimate governance tools; industry's ask is calibration, not elimination of oversight. [S4]
- Compliance incentive inversion: Overly punitive tax may paradoxically reduce compliance by pushing activity offshore, away from the regulatory perimeter — a governance failure.
- No loss set-off is perceived as asymmetric: the state taxes 100% of gains but provides zero relief for losses — raises equity questions relative to treatment of other asset classes (equities, mutual funds).
Administrative
- Dual-track compliance: VDA SPs must comply with both CBDT (tax) and FIU-IND (AML) frameworks — two separate regulatory tracks with different reporting requirements.
- P2P trades: For peer-to-peer trades on international exchanges, individual investors must self-deduct and deposit 1% TDS — an administrative burden that is widely flouted.
- Implementation gap: Large-scale migration to offshore platforms undermines the data trail FIU-IND needs for financial intelligence — a direct administrative cost of poor calibration.
6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)
- January 19, 2026: Industry players (WazirX, ZebPay) publicly called for Budget 2026 to reduce TDS and allow loss set-off, framing it as a capital-retention and compliance-improvement measure. [S4]
- Budget 2025–26 (February 2025): Government retained 30% tax and 1% TDS without changes — second consecutive budget with status quo on crypto. [S2]
- FIU-IND penalty on Bybit (2024): ₹9.27 crore penalty on Bybit Fintech Limited — first major enforcement action against an offshore VDA SP; signals extraterritorial reach. [S6]
- Budget 2026–27: PIB confirms budget sets stage for India as a global hub for cloud and AI infrastructure — broader digital economy ambitions provide context for crypto policy alignment. [S7]
- FY 2022-23 TDS data: Government reported ₹157.9 crore TDS collected under Section 194S up to March 2023 — cited as evidence of taxable activity; industry argues this undercounts offshore migration. [S3]
7. Prelims Hooks
- VDA stands for Virtual Digital Asset — the official Indian government term for cryptocurrencies and NFTs.
- VDAs are defined under Section 2(47A) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, inserted by the Finance Act, 2022.
- Flat tax on VDA gains: 30% — no slab concession, no indexation, applicable from April 1, 2022.
- TDS on VDA transfers: 1% under Section 194S, IT Act — applicable from July 1, 2022.
- Loss set-off is NOT permitted on VDA transactions — losses from one crypto trade cannot offset gains from another.
- TDS threshold: transactions exceeding ₹10,000 attract the 1% TDS obligation.
- TDS collected under Section 194S in FY 2022-23: ₹157.9 crore (up to March 20, 2023). [S3]
- VDA Service Providers were brought under PMLA, 2002 (AML-CFT framework) in March 2023. [S5]
- FIU-IND penalised Bybit Fintech Limited ₹9.27 crore for non-compliance with AML norms — a landmark offshore enforcement action. [S6]
- FIU-IND issued show-cause notices to 9 offshore VDA Service Providers for non-compliance. [S5]
- The Supreme Court in Internet and Mobile Association of India v. RBI (2020) struck down RBI's 2018 circular banning banks from dealing with crypto.
- The Finance Act, 2022 was the first Indian legislation to statutorily recognise VDAs.
- India does not recognise cryptocurrency as legal tender; it is treated as a property/asset for tax purposes.
- WazirX (founder: Nischal Shetty) and ZebPay are two prominent Indian crypto exchanges demanding Budget 2026 reforms. [S4]
8. Mains Relevance
GS Paper Mapping:
| Paper | Syllabus Heading |
|---|---|
| GS-III | Indian Economy — mobilisation of resources, growth and development; Digital Economy; Government Budgeting |
| GS-III | Science & Technology — developments in IT and computers; awareness in the field of new technologies |
| GS-II | Government policies and interventions for development in various sectors; regulatory bodies |
Plausible Mains Question Stems: 1. "India's Virtual Digital Asset (VDA) tax framework — enacted through the Finance Act, 2022 — has been criticised for encouraging capital flight to offshore exchanges. Critically examine the existing framework and suggest a balanced regulatory approach that promotes innovation while ensuring AML compliance." (GS-III) 2. "The inclusion of Virtual Digital Asset Service Providers under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act, 2002 marks a significant step in India's financial regulation. Discuss its implications for fintech governance and consumer protection." (GS-II/III) 3. "Evaluate the twin objectives of 'onshore liquidity restoration' and 'regulatory oversight' in the context of India's evolving cryptocurrency policy. How should the Union Budget approach VDA taxation?" (GS-III)
9. Related Topics to Study Next
| Topic | Connection |
|---|---|
| Finance Act, 2022 | The parent legislation introducing VDA taxation; must understand its clauses |
| Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), 2002 | VDA SPs now regulated under it; AML-CFT architecture |
| Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND) | Key regulator for crypto AML; enforcement arm |
| Central Bank Digital Currency (CBDC) / Digital Rupee | RBI's sovereign alternative to private crypto; policy contrast |
| OECD Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) | International standard India is expected to adopt; cross-border tax transparency |
| Section 194S & TDS mechanism (Income Tax Act) | Statutory basis of 1% TDS; examinable provision |
| Web3 / Blockchain Technology | Technological substrate of VDAs; GS-III science-tech angle |
| Capital Account Convertibility & FEMA | Offshore exchange use raises FEMA compliance questions |
10. Common Errors / Trap Areas
- "Crypto is banned in India" — WRONG. The 2018 RBI circular was struck down by the Supreme Court (2020). Crypto is legal but unregulated as currency; taxed as an asset.
- Confusing the tax rate with slab rate — VDA gains attract a flat 30% regardless of income bracket; not subject to normal progressive slabs.
- TDS date confusion — 30% gains tax: April 1, 2022; 1% TDS under Section 194S: July 1, 2022 — two different effective dates within the same Finance Act.
- Assuming loss set-off is allowed — it is explicitly prohibited for VDAs; this is a deliberate statutory design, unlike equity where short/long-term loss set-off is permitted.
- Ministry confusion — Crypto taxation falls under Ministry of Finance / CBDT; AML oversight under FIU-IND (also under MoF); technology regulation loosely under MeitY — they are distinct tracks, not a single regulator.
11. Sources
- [S1] Finance Act, 2022 — Section 2(47A) IT Act & Section 194S — https://www.incometaxindia.gov.in — (Tier 1; referenced via search results)
- [S2] Crypto Tax India 2026: Complete Guide — Koinly — https://koinly.io/guides/crypto-tax-india/ — (Tier 4 adjacent; corroborating secondary)
- [S3] PIB: TDS from VDA aggregates ₹157.9 crore up to March 2023 — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1911517 — (Tier 1)
- [S4] The Hindu BusinessLine article (primary source): "Budget an opportunity to fine-tune crypto policy, say industry players" — T.C.A. Sharad Raghavan, January 19, 2026 — thehindu.com — (Tier 4)
- [S5] PIB: FIU-IND issues compliance show-cause notices to 9 offshore VDA SPs — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=1991372 — (Tier 1)
- [S6] PIB: FIU-IND imposes ₹9.27 crore penalty on Bybit Fintech Limited — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleaseIframePage.aspx?PRID=2098153 — (Tier 1)
- [S7] PIB: Budget 2026–27 Sets Stage for India as Global Hub for Cloud and AI — https://www.pib.gov.in/PressReleasePage.aspx?PRID=2227953 — (Tier 1)