India's cryptocurrency tax environment has just undergone new adjustments, although not as significant as industry insiders had hoped. The official budget for 2026-27 maintained the existing tax framework—30% crypto gains tax and 1% source deduction tax remain unchanged, disappointing many industry organizations.



But this time, nothing is entirely unchanged. The government has introduced a stricter penalty mechanism, which will take effect from April 1, 2026. The key change is a substantial upgrade in penalties for reporting violations. According to Section 509 of the Income Tax Act, entities that fail to report crypto asset transactions as required will face a fine of ₹200 (about $2.20) per day, continuing as long as the violation persists. If false information is submitted or if corrections are not made after being pointed out, an additional fine of ₹50,000, approximately $545, will be imposed.

This new compliance penalty framework appears to signal the government's intent to strengthen reporting enforcement. Officials describe it as enhancing compliance execution, but market participants generally believe that, without substantive tax rate reforms, this mostly adds to traders' burdens.

Ashish Singhal, co-founder of India's local exchange CoinSwitch, pointed out in comments that the existing tax system indeed poses challenges for retail investors. "Trades are taxed, but losses are not considered, which creates friction rather than fairness," he wrote in an email. He suggested lowering the source deduction tax from 1% to 0.01%, which could improve liquidity, simplify compliance, and increase transparency while maintaining transaction traceability. He also proposed raising the TDS threshold to ₹5 lakh to protect small investors from disproportionate impacts.

After months of lobbying, the entire industry was actually hoping for some degree of tax adjustment or policy tilt. But this budget chose a different path—keeping the tax rates intact and strengthening enforcement. This means the consequences for reporting violations become more severe, but the basic tax burden on traders remains unchanged. Many market observers believe this approach will perpetuate existing friction issues and may even drive more trading activity overseas, as the domestic tax and compliance costs remain quite heavy.
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