TLDR
- The Reserve Bank of India continues to support policies that favor crypto prohibition to limit financial and compliance risks.
- Tax authorities found that fewer than 25% of crypto traders reported taxable gains during the financial year ending March 2023.
- Government documents show officials remain concerned about offshore exchanges, stablecoins, and untracked peer-to-peer crypto transactions.
- India still lacks a dedicated crypto law despite having nearly 39 million digital asset investors holding about $2.1 billion in crypto.
- RBI believes wider crypto adoption could increase capital outflows and add pressure on India’s financial system and currency.
India continues to resist broader cryptocurrency adoption despite rising global support for blockchain finance. The Reserve Bank of India still supports policies leaning toward crypto prohibition, Reuters reported. Government documents also show persistent concerns about tax compliance and financial stability.
Reserve Bank keeps firm policy position
RBI continues recommending strict limits on cryptocurrency activities across the financial system. It wants banks and financial institutions to avoid holding or offering crypto exposure. Officials believe these restrictions can reduce financial contagion risks.
The Reserve Bank of India also opposes privately issued stablecoins, including rupee-backed tokens. Officials argue these assets could weaken monetary control during market stress. Reuters reviewed government documents outlining those policy concerns.
The Reserve Bank of India has maintained this position for several years despite changing global trends. Meanwhile, governments and investment banks increasingly support tokenization and regulated digital assets. India, however, continues following a different policy direction.
Tax officials highlight reporting concerns
The Reserve Bank of India shares concerns alongside tax authorities reviewing cryptocurrency transactions. Government records show serious reporting gaps among crypto users. Fewer than 25% of 645,000 traders reported gains during the financial year ending March 2023.
Reserve Bank of India believes offshore exchanges complicate financial oversight and tax collection. Authorities also struggle to monitor rupee-based peer-to-peer transactions. Consequently, officials consider enforcement difficult across decentralized trading platforms.
RBI operates within a broader policy debate over digital assets. India’s Supreme Court removed the 2018 banking restrictions in 2020. However, lawmakers never introduced the proposed 2021 cryptocurrency prohibition bill.
Economic pressures influence crypto policy
The Reserve Bank of India also considers broader economic conditions while shaping cryptocurrency policy. India depends heavily on imported energy and faces recurring current account pressures. Rising oil prices recently increased pressure on the rupee.
RBI argues unrestricted crypto adoption could accelerate capital moving outside traditional banking channels. Officials believe such movement may increase external financial pressures. They also remain concerned about privately issued stablecoins.
The latest government documents show the Reserve Bank of India still favors restrictions over broader cryptocurrency acceptance. Reuters said the central bank supports a policy “leaning toward prohibition.” Meanwhile, India still has about 39 million crypto investors holding roughly $2.1 billion in digital assets.

