India’s crypto market entered 2026 with a familiar reality: heavy taxes, tighter oversight, and no signs of policy relief.

Key Takeaways

  • India kept its strict crypto tax rules unchanged in the 2026 budget.

  • Loss offsets remain disallowed, even when investors end the year in the red.

  • The government focused on tougher compliance rather than tax relief.

When the Union Budget was unveiled, digital assets were notable not for what was said about them, but for what wasn’t.

Budget clarity through omission

By skipping any reference to cryptocurrencies in her address, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman effectively confirmedthat India’s existing crypto tax regime will continue unchanged. The silence carried weight. It meant the flat 30% tax on virtual digital asset gains and the 1% transaction-level tax deduction remain firmly in place nationwide.

For the industry, the message was clear: engagement and lobbying over the past year did not translate into policy movement. Exchanges and tax platforms had pushed for adjustments to improve liquidity and simplify compliance, but Budget 2026 instead chose continuity.

Why traders still feel the squeeze

India’s crypto tax structure is unusual in its rigidity. Profits are taxed individually, losses cannot be offset, and deductions are limited strictly to the purchase price. In practice, this means an investor can lose money over the year and still owe tax on isolated winning trades.

That design has created mounting frustration, particularly among active traders. Market participants argue that the rules distort behavior, discourage volume, and push activity offshore rather than into regulated domestic platforms.

The numbers behind the pressure

Data from the 2024–25 financial year shows how this plays out in real terms. According to figures compiled by KoinX, investor outcomes were almost evenly split between gains and losses. Yet taxable gains exceeded ₹3,700 crore, even as aggregate losses crossed ₹1,100 crore.

Despite those losses, investors still paid tax on profitable trades that could not be netted out. At the same time, more than ₹500 crore was collected via the 1% crypto TDS mechanism. In many cases, the amount withheld exceeded the final tax liability, leaving capital tied up in refunds rather than circulating in the market.

Enforcement takes priority

Instead of adjusting the tax mechanics, the government used the budget to strengthen enforcement. New penalty provisions were introduced for missing or incorrect crypto disclosures, with implementation scheduled from April 1, 2026. The emphasis is firmly on compliance, signaling that reporting accuracy will be scrutinized more closely going forward.

For investors and platforms alike, this raises the cost of errors while offering little relief on the underlying tax burden.

A policy pause with long-term consequences

By choosing not to revisit crypto taxation, India has effectively extended a holding pattern. The rules are clear, but the debate is unresolved. Industry participants warn that prolonged inaction risks draining liquidity and innovation from the domestic ecosystem, even as global competition for crypto and blockchain talent intensifies.

For now, Budget 2026 delivers certainty of a kind - not through reform, but through reaffirming one of the world’s strictest crypto tax frameworks.

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