Coinbase just flipped the switch on direct Indian rupee bank transfers, letting users in India deposit and withdraw funds through the country’s Immediate Payment Service (IMPS) network. It’s a move that effectively removes the biggest friction point for Indian crypto traders on the platform: getting money in and out without jumping through hoops.
The integration gives Indian users access to spot markets, perpetual futures, and Coinbase’s Advanced Trade interface, all from a single platform connected to local bank accounts. For a market with roughly 150 million crypto users, that’s a big deal.
From regulatory exile to banking rails
Here’s the thing. Coinbase’s history in India has been, to put it gently, complicated.
The exchange made its initial push into the Indian market in 2022, and it went about as smoothly as a screen door on a submarine. The company struggled to integrate UPI, India’s dominant payments infrastructure, for rupee deposits. Operations effectively stalled within days of launch. Not the grand entrance anyone had in mind.
The turnaround began with Coinbase’s registration with India’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU), which gave the exchange a formal regulatory footing in the country. That registration was the prerequisite for everything that followed, including the banking integration that went live this month.
The FIU registration made Coinbase one of the first major international crypto exchanges to operate with sanctioned banking rails in India. That distinction matters in a market where regulatory uncertainty has historically been the single biggest obstacle to institutional and retail adoption alike.
IMPS, for those unfamiliar, is India’s real-time interbank transfer system. It operates 24/7, including holidays, and settles transactions almost instantly. The integration reportedly reduced transaction processing times from 24 to 72 hours down to under 10 minutes for the vast majority of transfers. In English: what used to take up to three days now takes less time than brewing a pour-over.
India’s crypto landscape: massive, taxed, and competitive
India isn’t just a large crypto market. According to Chainalysis, it’s the global leader in crypto adoption. The country’s user base has grown to approximately 150 million, driven by a young, tech-savvy population and widespread smartphone penetration.
But operating in India comes with strings attached. Indian crypto transactions face a 30% capital gains tax. There’s also a 1% tax deducted at source (TDS) on certain trades. Those tax rates have been a persistent headwind for trading volumes across the board, pushing some activity to offshore platforms and dampening the kind of speculative frenzy seen in other markets.
The competitive landscape isn’t exactly wide open either. Domestic competitors already control roughly 22% of the advanced trading segment, and they’ve had years to build relationships with local banks, regulators, and users. Coinbase is entering a market where incumbents know the terrain.
Still, Coinbase is betting that its global brand, product suite, and now-compliant banking infrastructure give it enough of an edge to carve out meaningful market share. Early signals suggest the bet might be paying off. The platform reportedly saw a 300% increase in new account registrations within the first two weeks of the IMPS activation, along with a 220% jump in INR deposit volumes over the same period.
Those are impressive numbers, though they come with the caveat that percentage increases from a small base can look dramatic. Whether that momentum sustains itself through India’s tax regime and competitive dynamics is the real test.
What this means for investors
Look, the significance here isn’t just about one exchange adding a payment method in one country. It’s about what this signals for the broader regulatory trajectory in India.
Coinbase’s successful FIU registration and banking integration reportedly contributed to increased regulatory discussions around formalizing comprehensive legislation for crypto assets in India. If those discussions produce clearer rules, it could unlock a wave of institutional capital that’s been sitting on the sidelines waiting for regulatory certainty.
For Coinbase shareholders and the broader crypto industry, India represents one of the last truly massive untapped markets. The US, Europe, and parts of Asia already have relatively mature crypto ecosystems. India, despite its enormous user base, has been held back by regulatory ambiguity and infrastructure gaps. Coinbase’s move to fill that gap with compliant, fast banking rails could establish a template that other international exchanges try to replicate.
The risk calculus is worth considering too. India’s regulatory environment has historically been unpredictable. The Reserve Bank of India attempted an outright crypto ban in 2018 before the Supreme Court overturned it. Tax policies have been punitive by global standards. And the government has shown willingness to change rules with relatively little notice. Any exchange building deep infrastructure in India is making a long-term bet that the regulatory direction continues trending toward accommodation rather than restriction.
Competitors should be paying close attention. Coinbase now has something most international exchanges in India don’t: direct, compliant fiat rails that actually work in real time. Domestic players who’ve relied on regulatory complexity as a de facto moat against foreign competition just watched that moat get a lot shallower. The pressure to match Coinbase’s infrastructure, or risk losing users to a platform where deposits clear in minutes instead of days, is now very real.
For retail investors in India specifically, the practical impact is straightforward. Moving rupees into and out of crypto just got dramatically easier and faster on a major global platform. Whether that convenience translates into sustained trading volume or gets dampened by the 30% tax rate and 1% TDS will be one of the more interesting things to watch in the coming quarters.
Disclosure: This article was edited by Estefano Gomez. For more information on how we create and review content, see our Editorial Policy.

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