India introduced one of the world’s strictest crypto tax regimes in 2022 through the Finance Bill, creating a dedicated framework for Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs). Crypto gains are taxed at a flat 30% rate under Section 115BBH of the Income Tax Act, with no deductions or loss offsets permitted. In addition, a 1% TDS applies to most crypto transfers, impacting both traders and exchanges. These rules make tax compliance essential for anyone dealing with crypto in India.
India legally recognises cryptocurrency, NFTs, and similar digital assets as Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs). This classification was introduced in the Finance Bill 2022 and firmly separates VDAs from currencies or traditional financial assets.
Crypto taxation in India is governed by:
Any sale of VDAs for INR or other fiat currencies attracts a flat 30% tax on net gains. No deductions are permitted except for acquisition cost.
Crypto-to-crypto transactions are treated as taxable events. Traders must calculate gains for each swap, and TDS may also apply.
Using crypto to buy goods or services counts as a transfer and triggers both 30% tax on gains and the 1% TDS requirement.
Crypto earned through:
is taxed as ordinary income at the applicable slab rate. Any later sale triggers the 30% VDA tax.
Gifts of crypto above ₹50,000 may be taxable as income unless received from a relative or exempt category under the Income Tax Act.
Section 115BBH imposes:
This tax applies regardless of income level, similar to lottery or gambling winnings.
India’s VDA rules prohibit:
A 1% tax deducted at source (TDS) applies on most crypto transfers under Section 194S. This affects traders executing high-frequency transactions and is deducted even when trades are loss-making.
This income is added to the taxpayer’s total income and taxed according to slab rates (up to 30%). When later sold, the gains are again taxed at 30% under 115BBH.
Crypto investors must report VDA gains in their annual Income Tax Return. Specific VDA disclosure schedules were added to ITR forms beginning in assessment year 2023–2024.
TDS obligations apply to both buyers and platforms, depending on transaction structure. In peer-to-peer trades, the buyer is typically responsible for deducting and depositing TDS.
Taxpayers must maintain detailed logs of:
Section 115BBH explicitly disallows:
This makes India’s crypto tax regime more restrictive than most global standards.
NFTs are classified as VDAs. Their sale triggers 30% tax on gains, and a 1% TDS may apply.
Income from lending, liquidity pools, or yield protocols is taxed as income. Disposals of tokens trigger VDA capital gains taxation.
Due to TDS and the strict 30% tax rules, maintaining accurate transaction histories is critical. Crypto tax software can streamline VDA calculations and TDS reconciliation.
Many crypto platforms support India-specific requirements, including 115BBH gain calculations and 1% TDS summaries.
Late payments, failure to deduct TDS, or inaccurate reporting can result in penalties, interest, and potential scrutiny. The government has increased monitoring through exchange reporting and bank oversight.
India’s crypto tax framework is highly structured, with a flat 30% tax on gains, strict limitations on loss treatment, and mandatory 1% TDS on transfers. Investors must keep thorough records and meet all reporting requirements to remain compliant under Sections 115BBH and 194S.

In May 2026, the anonymous account "Serenity" posted a 4502.45% annual return, earning the title "White‑Haired Stock God" and rapidly surpassing 750,000 followers on X. His core investment philosophy can be summarised as the "Shiso Leaf" theory and the "Chokepoint" theory – not chasing giants, but deeply cultivating irreplaceable "bottleneck" links in the industry chain, using public information to uncover undervalued assets. His holdings are concentrated in global small‑ to mid‑cap tech stocks in photonics, semiconductor substrates, and power semiconductors. CoinW has listed AI‑theme tokens such as TAO, RENDER, and FET, but no token exclusive to him. Risks to note include his unverified identity, post‑surge pullbacks, and high volatility in crypto assets.

In 2026, the U.S. equity AI investment logic is shifting from concept speculation to earnings delivery. A capital expenditure super-cycle, led by hyperscale cloud providers, has taken shape, with total annual CapEx expected to exceed $700 billion, securing order visibility for the industry chain over the next 12–24 months. Within the three‑tier structure of the industry chain, compute infrastructure (Nvidia, Broadcom, etc.) offers the highest certainty; the foundation model layer still faces unclear profitability paths; and the application software layer benefits from dual optimization of revenue and costs. Investment opportunities are spreading sequentially across compute, storage, optical communications, and power supply. CoinW has launched its TradFi zone, supporting trading in U.S. equities such as Nvidia and Google, as well as AI‑theme tokens including TAO, RENDER, and FET. Risks to watch include elevated valuations, slowing CapEx growth, and geopolitical factors.

On June 23, 2026, global stock markets suffered a synchronized sell-off: South Korea's KOSPI plunged 9.99% and triggered two circuit breakers, Japan's Nikkei 225 dropped 3.55%, China's A-share ChiNext fell 3.84%, and U.S. equity futures tumbled over 2% pre-market. The root cause lies in the AI trade shifting from "valuation expansion" to "earnings validation" – SpaceX lost 31% in three days (four simultaneous blows: acquisition dilution, bond issuance, options shorting, and fundamentals collapse), Google dropped 5% on talent departure, compounded by Korea's leveraged ETF regulatory scare, pre-earnings caution on Micron, and Fed hawkish signals pushing the 10‑year yield to 4.49%. The bigger test for SpaceX lies ahead with insider unlock in August.