CRYPTOCURRENCIES AND NFTS IN INDIA: NAVIGATING OPPORTUNITY AND REGULATION
- sahibameher24070
- Jul 24
- 7 min read
- by Sahiba Meher, Junior Editor at CBLT
Introduction
The rise of Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) and Cryptocurrencies has already begun to drastically alter the world’s finance and the digital experience. NFTs are unique digital assets or tokens that can be sold similarly to physical property, yet lack a tangible existence. NFTs act as a token or certificate of ownership for virtual or tangible things. They are stored in a blockchain system, which tracks everyone's ownership of their special digital assets. The advances made from blockchain technology are undermining the established governance, finance and property rights. NFTs are essentially an organisation of a peer-to-peer (P2P) transaction using cryptocurrencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum and eliminates the need for a third-party service to facilitate the purchase or sale of an NFT. Therefore, against a backdrop of a major digital revolution, the rate of technology adoption in India is growing substantially. The combination of a large, tech friendly population being pulled into the broader world of crypto and NFTs due to smart phone penetration and quickly developing interest in Decentralized Finance (DeFi) has nurtured a crypto and NFT environment.
With the rapidly evolving trend of digital adoption in India, there are many legal obstacles as well as opportunities. Although blockchain technology can provide an element of transparency and increased efficiencies in governance and financial systems, the inconsistencies of virtual world assets (assets such as crypto, stablecoin, NFTs etc) and the speculative frenzy surrounding NFTs raise complex questions around investors' protection, taxation and financial stability.
This column examines the development of NFTs and cryptocurrencies in India, focussing on their legal context, economic impacts, regulatory hurdles, and potential future paths for lawmakers.
Cryptocurrencies in India: A Regulatory Conundrum
India’s crypto boom is as exciting as it is impossible to ignore: millions are investing, trading, and building in this new digital frontier. India has emerged as one of the fastest-growing cryptocurrency markets in the world. According to Chainalysis’ 2021 Global Crypto Adoption Index, India ranked second globally in crypto adoption. Driven by platforms including WazirX, CoinDCX, Unocoin, and ZebPay, Indian users had transacted more than $10 billion in cryptocurrency by mid-2021. As the market booms, regulators too have failed to keep pace, forced to walk a tightrope between promoting innovation and addressing their dangers. This regulatory maze triggers urgent concerns on legality, investor safeguard as well as the future of Indian finance.
Today, there are a hundred and one reasons for the rapid embrace of cryptocurrency in India. As the Indian Rupee gets continuously devalued and with inflation rising, everyone has sought refuge from digital currencies like Bitcoin and Ethereum as reliable alternative assets, including “Digital gold”. Another reason why crypto has gained global adoption has been ecosystem accessibility, the global proliferation of mobile tech with smartphone and low-cost internet have made it easy for new users to adopt crypto through mobile apps and e-wallets. As the world’s largest recipient of remittances, India’s context has made the remittance faster and cheaper cross-border transfer benefits of cryptocurrencies very attractive to conventional banking systems. Furthermore, with over ½ the population under the age of 25, India’s young, tech-savvy demographic is ideally positioned to embrace decentralized finance (DeFi) and other blockchain-based financial innovations.
Despite this growth, India’s regulatory stance remains ambivalent. The Reserve Bank of India (“RBI”) in 2018 imposed a de facto ban on crypto by prohibiting banks from facilitating crypto transactions. This decision, however was overturned by the Supreme Court in 2020 ruling Internet and Mobile Association of India v. Reserve Bank of India, which deemed the ban unconstitutional.
Since then, the government's stance has changed; the proposed Cryptocurrency and Regulation of Official Digital Currency Bill, 2021 (“CBDC”) seeks to forbid all private cryptocurrencies while regulating official digital currency. Though introduced, the measure has not been approved. Furthermore, 1% TDS on every transaction and a 30% tax on income from NFT and cryptocurrency transactions were included in the Union Budget of 2022. In 1 December, 2022, the RBI also launched pilot programs for the Digital Rupee, testing wholesale and retail applications in collaboration with major banks and fintech players.
Although this action recognised the existence of digital assets, it was considered as punitive and caused a notable decline in trading volumes.
Taxation and Compliance Challenges
As cryptocurrencies become more popular as investments in India, the government has been cautious yet unclear. While taxation on crypto signals some level of acknowledgement from the government yet the lack of clear legal definitions and an inconsistent tax structure leaves both investors and businesses in a web of uncertainty.
The issue stems from India’s lack of definition of cryptocurrency. Money, property, products, or stocks? Income tax, capital gains tax, and GST are difficult to apply due to this lack of clarity. Digital currencies are more sophisticated since they are decentralised. Peer-to-peer (P2P) and DEX transactions don’t employ middlemen, making it challenging for tax authorities to monitor and enforce rules. In some circumstances, double taxation taxes both the invested money and the gains, making things worse. Investors are discouraged instead of encouraged. India can’t develop legislation in a vacuum since cryptocurrencies work globally. International standards including Financial Action Task Force (“FATF”) recommendations to prevent money laundering and terrorism financing must be met.
The Indian government must take more than half-measures to grow its crypto industry. Cryptocurrencies should be legally defined as assets, commodities, or something else. This will ensure fair and straightforward tax policies. More importantly, the tax system must be simple and sensible. Too many or confusing restrictions could hinder innovation and push talent and money out of the country. Instead, a fair, simple, and globally aligned tax system will encourage compliance, safeguard investors, and help India maximise blockchain and digital finance.
Digital Ownership or Speculative Bubble: NFTs in India
Though it is still in infancy, the NFT trend is catching on in India. NFTs have been launched by Bollywood stars including Amitabh Bachchan, Salman Khan, and Kamal Haasan, where Bachchan’s first collection sold for almost $1 million. Players like Dinesh Karthik and Rohit Sharma have signed onto NFT sites including Rario and FanCraze. Even traditional and tribal artists are digitising and monetising their works, thanks in part to Indian artists and sites like Kalakriti.io and WazirX NFT marketplace.
Although the participation of collectors and fans has driven fast expansion, issues regarding the long-term viability of this excitement still exist.
NFT Legal and Ethical Challenges
As the popularity of NFTs have exploded, they have revolutionised how we buy, sell and trade our digital assets, yet there lies a legal mess that India is not prepared for. Several cases of artworks being minted as NFTs without author permission have surfaced. NFTs only give ownership of the token, unlike physical art; they do not always confer copyright; hence, violating numerous Intellectual Property and Copyrights. Moreover, scams such as NFT rug pulls, in which the creators of an NFT disappear as soon as they’ve made a pocketful of cash, and artificially inflating a price through fake buying and selling, have proliferated around the globe. Sadly, India’s legal framework provides little to no safeguard to perpetrators of these frauds. If a consumer is defrauded in these fraudulent scams, there is almost no recourse under the law currently.
To address these increasing concerns, India is in dire need of establishing a robust legal infrastructure for the NFTs. This includes clear regulations in and around licensing, ensuring creators’ copyrights are enforced, determining how NFTs should be taxed, and most crucially, implementing consumer protection laws. Without this, both the creatives and the consumers are left susceptible to scams, fraud, and legal ambiguity.
The Road Forward: Control, Creativity, and Financial Inclusion
India should seek for a smart, enabling regulatory architecture that supports innovation while guaranteeing responsibility instead of outlawing crypto and NFTs.
Rather than reacting in an overly dystopian fashion and banning NFTs and cryptocurrencies, India should focus on building a smart, supportive regulatory framework that balances innovation with accountability. This includes requiring industry wide crypto and NFT marketplaces to adhere to certain stringent Know Your Customer (KYC), Anti-Money Laundering (AML), and data privacy standards. Regulatory institutions such as the SEBI and RBI should work together to allow for improved risk disclosures, grievance redressal and financial literacy to prospective investors. Just as essential as setting up a clear legal definition of what counts as a digital asset is, so is establishing a practical, fair, and understandable tax code that lets investors offset investment losses against their profits and steer clear of adding further complexity or litigation into the mix. India’s flourishing blockchain ecosystem, still budding with new startups in DeFi, NFTs and enterprise blockchain, can be great enough to make India the heart and soul of the blockchain universe.
CBDCs and Coexistence with Private Cryptocurrencies
Aiming to improve financial inclusion, lower transaction costs, and modernise the payments ecosystem, the RBI’s Digital Rupee project CBDCs shouldn’t, however, be considered substitutes for private cryptocurrencies. Private Cryptocurrencies can complement CBDCs in specialised uses, like programmable money and DeFi integration, that CBDCs might not be able to fulfil. Development of APIs and protocols will help to guarantee seamless interactions between the Digital Rupee and crypto assets. India, in this regard can learn from nations like Japan, the UK, and Singapore that have allowed private cryptos under legislative control.
Blockchain in Public Government
Beyond only financial applications, blockchain technology presents revolutionary opportunities for public governance; states including Telangana and Maharashtra are testing blockchain-based land registries in order to stop fraud and boost openness. Blockchain can improve traceability in industries including textiles, drugs, and agriculture, so strengthening supply chains. Particularly in urban municipal elections and diaspora involvement, blockchain can guarantee safe and open voting.
Global Cooperation and Guidelines
Cooling the speculative crypto market isn’t a fight India can take on by itself, it requires robust global collaboration. Otherwise, industries could just move their operations to nations with laxer safeguards to avoid compliance, a phenomenon called regulatory arbitrage. In partnership with other nations, India has the ability to establish technology standards and best practices while working together to combat problems such as cross-border money laundering and tax evasion and enforcement. Engaging aggressively in global forums such as the IMF, G20 and FATF are critical to steer globally-compatible rules that keep up with this rapidly-evolving digital economy.
Conclusion
Not only economic trends, NFTs and cryptocurrencies are harbingers of a broader shift towards decentralized, digital-first economies. To India, these technologies offer enormous promise: better digital governance, greater financial inclusion, new avenues for cultural expression, and economic competitiveness on the world stage. But only smart, adaptive regulation that protects investors without inhibiting creativity will unlock this massive potential.
India stands at a crossroads. One way leads to a restrictive climate that capital and talent go abroad. The other leads towards opportunities for international blockchain innovation leadership. The decisions today—by companies, governments, and civil society—will determine India’s digital destiny for decades to come.
On this rapidly evolving landscape, the necessary characteristics will be a guarded optimism, technological inquisitiveness, and regulatory vision. It is the strategically and powerfully opportune time now to move.

