India brought in $340 billion in crypto inflows between June 2024 and June 2025. That number comes from the OECD's Asia Capital Markets Report 2026, and it equals about 9% of the country's GDP. In rupee terms, that activity adds up to roughly ₹32 trillion.
Source: OECD Report
No other major economy in Asia came close, and the gap has put India Crypto activity at the center of a much bigger conversation happening in Parliament right now.
South Korea came in second place, but the gap was wide. Vietnam and Indonesia followed after that, based on the chart published in the OECD report,which pulled its numbers from blockchain analytics firm Chainalysis.
Chainalysis tracks inflows by looking at on-chain value received by addresses linked to India. It uses IP and web traffic data for centralized exchanges and clustering methods for everything else.
This means the $340 billion figure reflects trading, transfers, and DeFi activity, not net money crossing the border from other countries.
Source: Chainalysis Report
Across the wider Asia-Pacific region, on-chain activity grew 69% year over year, reaching $2.36 trillion total. India led that growth on its own, with strength in both small retail trades and large transactions.
Some of this data can run a little high or low because of VPN use and proxy traffic, but the overall pattern still points to Indian space as the clear leader.
Indian virtual digital asset tax rules are some of the toughest anywhere. Gains face a flat 30% tax, and there's no way to offset losses against gains. On top of that, a 1% TDS applies on transfers above certain limits, and exchange services carry an added 18% GST.
Even with these strict rules, adoption hasn't slowed down. Chainalysis already ranked India first in the world on its 2025 Crypto Adoption Index. That ranking covers retail use, institutional activity, CeFi, and DeFi together. The country counts 119 million cryptocurrency users, the largest base anywhere.
Young users, mobile payment habits through UPI, and demand for extra income all play a part. People keep using cryptocurrency even when the tax bill stings.
On July 2, the Lok Sabha called the RBI in for questions on cryptocurrencies for the first time. This stands out because the RBI has long argued that virtual digital assets shouldn't operate at all. Parliament asking the central bank to explain itself shows this debate is nowhere near settled.
The numbers behind this fight are hard to ignore. India has led global adoption for three years straight, yet 73% of trading volume still happens on foreign exchanges, and more than 180 Indian crypto-based startups have already shifted their operations abroad.
The country collects tax revenue from this activity. What it hasn't done yet is build a clear rulebook around it.
Three paths sit ahead after the July 2 hearing.
Lawmakers could build real regulation and turn the nation into a digital asset hub.
They could ban the activity outright, pushing more talent and capital overseas.
Or they could leave things as they are, much similar to what happened in May meeting with exchanges.
Some basic groundwork already exists. FIU-IND has registered more than 54 VDASPs under PMLA rules, and updated AML and KYC guidelines came into effect this past January. From April 2026, Section 509 reporting adds another layer, with CARF data-sharing set to begin in April 2027.
None of this replaces an actual framework for custody, stablecoins, or DeFi. Experts say that gap remains the biggest hole in Indian Crypto regulations today, even as the country keep adding users month after month.
Public reaction has its own ideas too. Some commenters online have pushed for India to launch its own state-run cryptocurrency exchange, allow stock purchases using crypto, and use digital assets as a tool against rupee weakness. None of that exists in any official plan right now, but it shows how far public imagination has run ahead of actual policy.
Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial or investment advice. Cryptocurrency markets carry significant risk. Always do your own research before making any investment decisions.


