BTCC / BTCC Square / Cryptopolitan /
Crypto Crime Surge & Youth Tax Woes: India’s Digital Asset Dilemma Explodes

Crypto Crime Surge & Youth Tax Woes: India’s Digital Asset Dilemma Explodes

Published:
2026-01-19 11:07:40
7
1

Indian authorities flag crypto crime explosion, tax headache among youth

Indian authorities are sounding the alarm—a perfect storm of crypto-related crime and tax confusion is brewing among the nation's youth.

The Enforcement Headache

Forget the old-school scams. Regulators are now tracking sophisticated digital heists—rug pulls, phishing farms, and DeFi exploits—that leave traditional finance looking like a slow-motion replay. The anonymity tools? Cutting-edge. The cross-border cash flows? Bypassing legacy systems entirely. It's a game of cryptographic cat-and-mouse, and the mice have better tech.

The Taxman's Nightmare

Meanwhile, a generation raised on apps and instant transactions is colliding with a tax code that moves at the speed of government paperwork. Calculating gains across a dozen exchanges, tracking airdrops, or reporting yield from a liquidity pool? That's enough to make any accountant's spreadsheet weep. The result? A compliance gap you could drive a blockchain through—and a revenue headache for authorities counting every rupee.

The Underlying Shift

This isn't just about crime or taxes. It's a symptom of a massive, irreversible shift. Digital assets are rewriting the rules of value, ownership, and trust. The old guard sees risk; the new wave sees opportunity. Sure, the volatility would give a traditional fund manager heartburn—but since when did playing it safe ever build the future?

The message is clear: adapt or get left behind. The genie isn't going back in the bottle. The only question is who builds the new bottle—and who gets to profit from it.

Tighter rules as crypto use grows

India now has 34 million people trading virtual digital assets, popularly referred to as cryptocurrencies. They are holding ₹24,800 crore worth of these assets as of November 30, 2025. Around 41% trade on sites based outside India, where local regulators have difficulty reaching them.

Digital currency is not trusted by the authorities. Officials say they let people avoid paying taxes, finance terrorists, and launder dirty money. In March 2023, the Prevention of Money Laundering Act was amended to properly supervise cryptocurrency exchanges.

The Financial Intelligence Unit is now required to register any company that helps people buy, sell, or store cryptocurrencies in India. Whether the company is headquartered in Miami or Mumbai is irrelevant. Registration is necessary if Indians are to use it to transfer digital currencies or trade cryptocurrencies for rupees.

Fifty-two companies have registered so far. They are required to report any suspicious deals that smell like crime money, transactions that seem unnecessarily complicated, or trades where the origin of the cash cannot be determined. Warning signs include old accounts that suddenly become active, transactions kept just under the reporting limits, fake trading to create losses on paper, and money that appears from nowhere.

These reports have increased significantly. Companies submitted 1,343 filings in fiscal 2024. That figure ROSE to 6,272 in fiscal 2025. Through November 30 of this year, it has already reached 11,720.

Officials reviewed 9,795 reports from May 2023 to May 2025. The cryptocurrency mentioned most often was Tether, which is designed to stay equal to one US dollar. It appeared in 7,467 cases, or 76% of the reports. bitcoin showed up in just 6%.

Straightforward fraud made up 62% of the suspicious activity. Unusually complex or odd transactions accounted for 16%, while strange account behavior made up 10%.

By state, Rajasthan had the most reports at 18%, followed by Uttar Pradesh at 11%. Maharashtra and West Bengal each had 7%, and Madhya Pradesh had 6%.

A finance committee led by BJP member Bhartruhari Mahtab is now looking into cryptocurrency. The government has imposed ₹29 crore in fines on rule-breakers and blocked 63 websites under Section 69A of the Information Technology Act, 2000.

Cambodia link raises trafficking concerns

One case shows how serious this gets. Investigators found 34 customers whose internet connections traced back to Cambodia. They were using Cambodian phone numbers to access their Indian crypto accounts and getting money through Huione Pay, a payment company in Cambodia. Police think the money is tied to internet crimes and human trafficking.

“These individuals exhibited consistent behaviour of funding their accounts with USDT, immediately liquidating it, and withdrawing the corresponding amount in rupees to their bank accounts,” the Financial Intelligence Unit report stated.

Software that tracks crypto movements showed the digital coins came from Huione Pay. Several customers used the same phone or computer to log in and shared internet addresses.

Huione Pay said it reached 21 of these customers through WhatsApp. Eight were in Cambodia, six in Thailand, one in Vietnam, and one in India. They worked regular jobs, hotels, restaurants, engineering, supermarkets. Not the kind of work that explains moving that much money around.

The US has now cut off Huione Group from the American financial system. They can’t trade in dollars anymore.

Another problem is tax collection. By avoiding organizations that frequently report to tax authorities, cryptocurrency enables users to transfer money covertly across borders in a matter of seconds.

It gets harder to identify taxable revenue as more individuals utilize services with no central authority, private wallets they control, and foreign exchanges. Tax collectors are unable to identify property owners or collect unpaid taxes. Revenue from cryptocurrencies is often undocumented.

Don’t just read crypto news. Understand it. Subscribe to our newsletter. It's free.

|Square

Get the BTCC app to start your crypto journey

Get started today Scan to join our 100M+ users

All articles reposted on this platform are sourced from public networks and are intended solely for the purpose of disseminating industry information. They do not represent any official stance of BTCC. All intellectual property rights belong to their original authors. If you believe any content infringes upon your rights or is suspected of copyright violation, please contact us at [email protected]. We will address the matter promptly and in accordance with applicable laws.BTCC makes no explicit or implied warranties regarding the accuracy, timeliness, or completeness of the republished information and assumes no direct or indirect liability for any consequences arising from reliance on such content. All materials are provided for industry research reference only and shall not be construed as investment, legal, or business advice. BTCC bears no legal responsibility for any actions taken based on the content provided herein.