Key Takeaways
Cryptocurrency is booming again, but Indian traders know better than to count their profits before tax. In 2025, India’s crypto taxation rules remain some of the strictest in the world.
Whether you’re swapping Bitcoin or staking altcoins, you lose a significant portion of your earnings to taxes and transaction costs.
So, how much do you actually keep from your crypto profits in India in 2025? Let’s break it down.
On July 7, 2025, leading global exchange Bybit officially rolled out 18% GST on all crypto-related services for Indian users.
This follows government clarification that crypto exchanges, platforms, and apps operating in India or serving Indian users must:
This does not affect your trading profits directly, but it adds a cost layer on platform usage, and that’s why it matters.
18% GST covers not only spot and futures trading, but also tools like copy trading, and automated strategies such as grid bots, DCA bots, and futures bots.
Beyond trading, it also extends to:
This sweeping application of GST means that nearly every service offered by crypto platforms to Indian users now carries an added tax cost.
And it doesn’t end there.
In response to this regulatory tightening, Bybit is scaling back its offerings in India. The platform will:
Together, these moves represent a significant retreat from the Indian crypto market.
Here are the four major tax components you need to understand if you’re trading or investing in crypto in India:
| Component | Rate | Applies To |
| Income Tax (Sec 115BBH) | 30% | Flat tax on crypto profits |
| Cess | 4% on tax | Adds 1.2% on top of 30% = Effective 31.2% |
| TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) | 1% | On total sale value, not just profits |
| GST (Post July 7, 2025) | 18% | On exchange/platform fees |
Let’s say you bought Ether (ETH) for ₹2 lakh and sold it for ₹3 lakh. That’s a ₹1 lakh gain. Here’s how taxes and charges stack up:
| Item | Amount |
| Gross profit | ₹1,00,000 |
| Income tax @30% | ₹30,000 |
| Cess @4% on ₹30,000 | ₹1,200 |
| Total tax payable (31.2%) | ₹31,200 |
| TDS @1% on sale (₹3,00,000) | ₹3,000 |
| Exchange fee (say 1%) | ₹3,000 |
| GST @18% on fee | ₹540 |
| Final profit in hand | ₹1,00,000 – ₹31,200 – ₹3,000 – ₹540 = ₹65,260 |
So, you keep just 68.26% of your actual crypto gain.
Please note that when you sell crypto, the exchange deducts 1% TDS on the total sale amount—for example, ₹3,000 on a ₹3 lakh sale. This means you actually receive ₹2,97,000 in your wallet (before fees). That ₹3,000 is sent directly to the Income Tax Department on your behalf.
In tax reporting:
So in the earlier example, your true post-tax cash in hand is ₹68,260, but your declared profit is still ₹1,00,000, with ₹31,200 tax liability (TDS offsets some of that).
Even if you only receive ₹65,260 in-hand after all charges, the government taxes you based on the ₹1,00,000 profit, not what you actually walked away with.
The Income Tax Department in 2025 is cracking down harder than ever:
If you use exchanges like Bybit, Binance, or OKX, and you’re in India, remember that your transactions are being reported to tax authorities.
With centralized exchanges like Bybit, Binance, and OKX now reporting user data to Indian tax authorities, avoiding crypto tax compliance is no longer an option. To legally hold on to more of your profits, it’s essential to optimize how you trade, file, and track your transactions.
Here are practical tips to help you minimize friction and maximize what you keep:
If you a crypto trader in India, avoid these mistakes:
Crypto profits are real, but so is the taxman. By July 2025, Indian crypto taxation has become more structured, traceable and unforgiving. Between 31.2% in taxes, 1% TDS, and 18% GST on services, traders typically retain only 66–68% of their gross profits.
If you’re in the game, stay compliant, track everything, and plan better. Crypto is still profitable, but only if you trade smart and file smarter.
As of 2025, crypto profits in India are taxed at a flat 30%, with an additional 4% cess, making the effective rate 31.2%. Additionally, there is a 1% TDS on the gross sale value and 18% GST on exchange/platform fees. No. 18% GST applies only to the services provided by crypto exchanges, such as trading fees, withdrawals, staking, and swaps, not to your crypto profits directly. But it still adds to your cost of trading. No. Under Section 115BBH, crypto losses cannot be set off against gains from other cryptocurrencies, assets, or any other income. Losses also cannot be carried forward. Failing to disclose crypto holdings in your Income Tax Return (Schedule VDA) can result in notices, penalties, and even raids. As of February 2025, undeclared gains found via investigation can be taxed at a punitive rate of 60%, plus fines.