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The rise of cryptocurrency has transformed the way individuals and businesses perceive money, investment, and digital transactions. From Bitcoin to Ethereum, digital currencies offer decentralized, borderless, and fast transactions, disrupting traditional financial systems. But with innovation comes uncertainty—especially when it comes to legal regulations, compliance, taxation, fraud, and dispute resolution.
At CyberLex Advocate, we offer expert legal services for individuals, startups, and businesses engaged in cryptocurrency transactions, trading, investments, blockchain projects, and dispute resolution. As India’s legal and regulatory stance on crypto continues to evolve, our role is to help clients stay compliant, secure, and legally protected in this dynamic space.
Cryptocurrency is a form of digital or virtual currency secured by cryptography and built on blockchain technology. Unlike fiat currency, it is decentralized and operates independently of a central bank.
Popular cryptocurrencies include:
Bitcoin (BTC)
Ethereum (ETH)
Ripple (XRP)
Solana (SOL)
Tether (USDT)
These currencies can be used for trading, investing, payments, and as the basis for decentralized applications (DApps) and smart contracts.
India does not currently recognize cryptocurrency as legal tender, but trading and holding crypto is not illegal. The regulatory approach is cautious, with focus on anti-money laundering (AML), taxation, investor protection, and preventing misuse.
Key legal developments include:
The Supreme Court in Internet and Mobile Association of India v. RBI (2020) quashed the RBI circular that banned banking services to crypto exchanges, thereby allowing crypto trading to continue in India.
As per Finance Act, 2022, income from virtual digital assets (VDAs) is taxed at a flat 30%, with no deductions allowed (except cost of acquisition).
A 1% TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) applies on every crypto transaction exceeding ₹10,000 under Section 194S of the Income Tax Act.
As of March 2023, the Indian government has brought cryptocurrency exchanges, wallet providers, and other intermediaries under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA). They are now required to:
Maintain KYC of users
Report suspicious transactions
Share information with law enforcement agencies
While cryptocurrencies offer new opportunities, they also bring unique legal risks:
Phishing attacks, Ponzi schemes, fake tokens, rug pulls, and fraudulent investment platforms have become increasingly common.
Exchanges and wallets are targets of cyberattacks, leading to massive losses with limited recourse.
Errors in smart contract execution or ambiguous terms can lead to high-value disputes in decentralized applications (DeFi, NFTs, staking platforms, etc.).
Frequent changes in regulations can disrupt business operations for crypto startups, traders, and investors.
Legal jurisdiction becomes complex when disputes arise from international crypto transactions or asset tracing.
We offer end-to-end legal services in the cryptocurrency and blockchain domain:
AML/KYC advisory for exchanges and wallet operators
Regulatory strategy and business structuring
Tax planning and compliance for crypto holdings
Legal representation in disputes related to crypto fraud, smart contracts, and blockchain agreements
Filing complaints and litigation in cyber fraud cases
Assistance with filing FIRs and working with cybercrime cells
Tracing and recovering stolen or misappropriated crypto through legal and technical means
Working with forensic blockchain analysts and international platforms
Whitepapers for crypto projects
Tokenomics and investor agreements
Smart contract audits and legal reviews
Terms of use and privacy policies for blockchain apps
Filing writ petitions against unlawful account freezes or seizures of crypto assets
Legal defense in investigations involving digital currencies
Although there is no exclusive crypto law yet, the following legal frameworks are applied in crypto-related matters:
Information Technology Act, 2000
Section 66C/66D: Identity theft and cheating using digital means
Section 43A: Compensation for failure to protect personal data
Indian Penal Code, 1860
Section 420: Cheating
Section 406: Criminal breach of trust
Section 463/465: Forgery of electronic records
PMLA (Prevention of Money Laundering Act)
Applicable to exchanges and individuals involved in large crypto transactions
Income Tax Act, 1961
Imposes tax liability on crypto income under capital gains or business income
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