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India to share cross-border crypto transaction data from April 2027

In a significant move to curb tax evasion and enhance digital asset transparency, India will officially begin exchanging cross-border cryptocurrency transaction data starting April 1, 2027.

This initiative aligns India with the Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF), a global standard developed by the OECD. The framework mandates the automatic exchange of information between tax authorities to ensure that offshore crypto holdings and trades are reported back to a user’s home country.


1. The CARF Implementation Timeline

The transition to a global sharing system is a multi-year process involving legislative and technical preparations.

  • Reporting Commences (April 2026): Starting April 1, 2026, Indian crypto exchanges, wallet providers, and intermediaries will be required to maintain and submit detailed records of user transactions to the Income Tax Department.
  • First Global Exchange (April 2027): Data collected during the 2026-27 fiscal year will be shared with international partner jurisdictions starting in April 2027.
  • Format Finalization: A senior Finance Ministry official confirmed that the detailed global information exchange format will be released before April 2026 to give exchanges time to prepare.

2. New Penalties for Non-Compliance

To ensure reporting discipline before the global exchange begins, the Union Budget 2026-27 introduced stiff penalties for exchanges and intermediaries under Section 509 of the Income Tax Act:

InfractionPenalty AmountEffective Date
Failure to submit reportsโ‚น200 per day until compliance.April 1, 2026
Inaccurate reportingโ‚น50,000 flat penalty per error.April 1, 2026
Failure to correct errorsโ‚น50,000 flat penalty.April 1, 2026

3. Why This Matters for Investors

The primary goal of joining CARF is to eliminate “hiding places” for wealth in offshore accounts.

  • Targeting Offshore Platforms: Indian authorities are particularly focused on users who moved their trading to foreign exchanges (like Binance or Bybit) to avoid the domestic 1% TDS. Under CARF, those offshore platforms will be obligated to report Indian residents’ activity back to the Indian government.
  • Scope of Assets: The framework covers a wide range of digital assets, including stablecoins, NFTs, and tokenized securities.
  • 30% Tax Reminder: Despite the new reporting rules, India’s core crypto tax remains unchanged: a 30% tax on all gains and a 1% TDS on all transactions.

4. Global Context: The 50+ Nation Pact

India is one of over 50 jurisdictionsโ€”including the UK, USA, and most EU member statesโ€”that have committed to the 2027 exchange deadline.

  • MCAA Signature: India is expected to sign the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement (MCAA) for crypto in 2026, which provides the legal “pipes” for the automatic data flow.
  • Ending Anonymity: For the first time, crypto-assets will be treated with the same level of transparency as traditional bank accounts under the existing Common Reporting Standard (CRS).

Conclusion: Disclosure is No Longer Optional

The message from the 2026 Budget and the CARF commitment is clear: the era of “invisible” offshore crypto holdings is ending. By the time the first data exchange happens in April 2027, the Indian government will have a granular view of every significant crypto transaction made by its residents, regardless of where the exchange is located.

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