BY CA Surekha S Ahuja
Financial Year 2025–26 | Assessment Year 2026–27
Statutory Architecture – A Self-Contained Code with Anti-Abuse Intent
The Indian VDA framework is not an extension of existing tax principles—it is a ring-fenced, code-driven regime.
The legislative backbone rests on:
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Section 2(47A) of the Income-tax Act 1961
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Section 115BBH of the Income-tax Act 1961
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Section 194S of the Income-tax Act 1961
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Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act 1961
Read holistically, these provisions establish a closed taxation system where:
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Classification disputes are largely irrelevant
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Deductions are legislatively denied
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Losses are intentionally ring-fenced
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Reporting is transaction-specific and traceable
The legislative intent is unmistakable:
Tax certainty for the State, compliance burden for the taxpayer.
Definition and Scope – Intentionally Wide, Practically Expansive
The definition under Section 2(47A) of the Income-tax Act 1961 uses expansive language—“any information, code, number or token generated through cryptographic means.”
This ensures automatic inclusion of:
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Cryptocurrencies and stablecoins
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NFTs and fractional tokens
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DeFi governance tokens
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Staking and reward-based assets
The exclusions—fiat currency, securities under Securities Contracts Regulation Act 1956, and CBDCs issued by Reserve Bank of India—create a boundary line that is conceptually clear but practically porous.
Interpretational Tension:
Hybrid tokens with profit rights or governance rights may trigger disputes between “security” vs “VDA,” particularly in cross-border listings.
Section 115BBH – The Core Charging & Computation Provision
The scheme under Section 115BBH of the Income-tax Act 1961 must be read as a non obstante code overriding all general provisions.
Key Legal Characteristics
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Flat 30 percent tax (plus surcharge and cess)
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Applies to any income from transfer
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Overrides head of income classification
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Denies deduction of any expenditure or allowance
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Restricts loss utilisation
This represents a departure from fundamental tax jurisprudence, where net income—not gross receipts—is ordinarily taxed.
Computation Discipline – Where Most Litigation Will Arise
The absence of detailed computational rules shifts the burden to the taxpayer.
Cost of Acquisition – Narrow Interpretation
Only actual purchase cost is permissible.
All ancillary costs stand disallowed due to the explicit bar in Section 115BBH.
Practical Exposure:
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Gas fees
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Platform charges
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Wallet transfer costs
Any attempt to capitalise these may be challenged as indirect deduction.
Methodology – FIFO as De Facto Standard
While not codified, FIFO has become the accepted audit and compliance standard.
Deviation without disclosure may attract:
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Allegation of manipulation
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Rejection of computation
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Recasting of income
Complex Transaction Categories – High Litigation Sensitivity
The statute is silent on emerging categories, creating interpretational exposure:
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Airdrops – taxable at receipt vs at transfer
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Staking rewards – income vs accretion
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Token swaps – one transfer vs dual transfers
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Liquidity pool exits – composite transactions
Professional Position:
Each case must be backed by documented methodology and consistent treatment, not opportunistic tax positions.
Loss Restriction – Legislative Ring-Fencing
The denial of set-off and carry forward is not incidental—it is structural.
The provisions override general principles under Section 70 of the Income-tax Act 1961 and Section 71 of the Income-tax Act 1961.
Resulting Impact:
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Economic losses remain tax-inefficient
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High volatility is not tax-recognised
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Tax liability becomes asymmetrical
Section 194S – Withholding as a Surveillance Tool
The withholding mechanism under Section 194S of the Income-tax Act 1961 is designed not merely for tax collection but for data capture and traceability.
Structural Issues
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TDS on gross consideration, not income
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Applies even in non-cash transactions
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Creates liquidity blockage
High-Risk Zones
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Crypto-to-crypto trades
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P2P transfers
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Transactions through non-compliant exchanges
Failure attracts consequences under Section 201 of the Income-tax Act 1961 and interest under Section 201(1A) of the Income-tax Act 1961.
Gift Taxation – Anti-Avoidance Backstop
The applicability of Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act 1961 ensures that value transfers without consideration do not escape taxation.
The absence of prescribed valuation rules makes FMV determination a potential dispute area, especially in volatile markets.
PMLA Overlay – Compliance Beyond Taxation
The inclusion of VDA ecosystem within the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002 framework, monitored by Financial Intelligence Unit India, transforms VDA compliance into a financial surveillance regime.
Implications for Taxpayers
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KYC traceability
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Transaction monitoring
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Cross-verification with tax filings
Critical Insight:
Mismatch between AML data and tax disclosures is now a primary trigger for deep scrutiny.
Return Filing & Disclosure – The Real Battlefield
The introduction of Schedule VDA has shifted compliance from summary reporting to granular transaction-level disclosure.
Core Requirements
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Date-wise acquisition and transfer
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Cost and sale value
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TDS details
Foreign holdings must be reported, failing which exposure may extend beyond the Income-tax Act.
AIS Reconciliation is Non-Negotiable.
Any mismatch is algorithmically flagged for scrutiny.
Scrutiny & Litigation – Defence Framework
Departmental enquiries in FY 2025–26 are increasingly data-driven and technology-backed.
Primary Triggers
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AIS mismatch
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High-value trading patterns
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Offshore exchange usage
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Inconsistent reporting
Litigation-Ready Documentation
A defensible case must include:
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Exchange transaction reports
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Wallet ownership proof
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Blockchain transaction hashes
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FIFO computation sheets
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Bank and fund flow trail
Legal Positioning Strategy
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Emphasise strict interpretation of Section 115BBH
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Demonstrate consistency in methodology
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Avoid aggressive or artificial claims
The defence must be fact-backed first, law-supported next.
Tax Audit & Business Characterisation
Where trading assumes commercial scale, audit under Section 44AB of the Income-tax Act 1961 may apply.
However, Section 115BBH continues to govern computation, creating a structural mismatch between classification and taxation.
Turnover determination remains an evolving issue, requiring professional judgement and documentation.
Penalty & Prosecution – Real and Increasing
Exposure under Section 270A of the Income-tax Act 1961 can extend to:
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Fifty percent of tax (under-reporting)
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Two hundred percent (misreporting)
Coupled with interest and potential prosecution, the regime is deterrence-driven.
PMLA non-compliance adds a parallel layer of enforcement with severe consequences including attachment and arrest.
Key Risk Areas – FY 2025–26 Trend Analysis
The Department is focusing on:
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Crypto-to-crypto transactions
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P2P activity outside exchanges
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Offshore wallets
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Non-disclosure in foreign asset schedules
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TDS mismatches
These are no longer audit risks—they are systematically tracked data points.
Strategic Planning – What Still Works
Despite restrictive provisions, certain approaches remain viable:
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Timing of disposals to optimise overall tax position
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Structured intra-family transfers within legal exemptions
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Ensuring seamless TDS credit flow
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Maintaining consistency in computation
Aggressive structuring, expense claims, or artificial losses are highly vulnerable in litigation.
Professional Caution – The Real Advisory Shift
The VDA regime marks a shift from tax planning to compliance engineering.
The role of the professional is no longer limited to computation, but extends to:
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Designing documentation frameworks
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Ensuring audit trails
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Managing litigation preparedness
Closing Insight – The Reality of VDA Taxation
The Indian VDA framework is deliberately stringent, data-driven, and enforcement-oriented.
It is not designed to incentivise participation—it is designed to tax, track, and verify.In this regime, interpretation may support your position—but only documentation will sustain it.




