International Journal For Multidisciplinary Research

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A Widely Indexed Open Access Peer Reviewed Multidisciplinary Bi-monthly Scholarly International Journal

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Taxation of Non-Fungible Tokens in India: Adequacy, Challenges, and the Road Ahead

Author(s) Ms. Tanya Wadhwani
Country India
Abstract Taxation of Non-Fungible Tokens (NFTs) is a topical challenge in the emerging global digital economy. NFTs, being individual blockchain assets symbolizing ownership of art, music, gaming collectibles, or virtual property, are difficult to fit into traditional categories of property, securities, or commodity law. India's Finance Act 2022 brought a framework for taxing Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) including NFTs, by levying a flat 30 per cent tax on income arising on their transfer and a 1 per cent Tax Deducted at Source (TDS). This legislative move, making NFTs a part of the official economy, has at the same time created ambiguity around valuation, fairness, and the larger digital innovation implications.

The present paper embarks on an in-depth analysis of NFT taxation in India by putting the Finance Act 2022 within the overall policy context of economic formalisation. It analyzes the complexities of valuation, wherein subjective determination of price and unstable market conditions restrict even-handed assessment; risks of double taxation, especially where royalties, resale profits, and GST overlap; complexities of cross-border enforcement in decentralized blockchain transactions; and compliance burden on investors, creators, and exchanges through compulsory TDS deductions. These bring out the inflexibility and shortfalls in the current framework.

As a backdrop to understand India's strategy, the paper contrasts global practices. The United States has released Internal Revenue Service (IRS) guidance that indicates NFTs can be considered collectibles and taxed with a premium capital gains rate. The United Kingdom uses principles of capital gains tax to the transfer of NFTs, with the aim of equity with other assets. Singapore has exempted some NFT transactions from Goods and Services Tax (GST), which is a forward-thinking move, while the European Union is still considering a harmonized digital tax code under its proposed reforms of the digital economy. These cross-country views expose that India's flat-rate policy is an extreme outlier in its harshness, threatening to drive creators and investors to more innovation-friendly places.

The paper also addresses wider policy issues, such as whether NFTs are subject to capital gains rules or a general rate of tax, whether authentic creators should be distinguished from speculative traders, and how international cooperation, especially under the OECD's digital tax efforts, could reduce cross-border revenue losses.

Pursuant to these analyses, the report provides in-depth recommendations: the introduction of transparent and standardized valuation guidelines for NFTs; differentiated treatment for creators to foster innovation; relief from compliance burdens by amending the 1 per cent TDS; consideration of bilateral tax treaties to cover cross-border NFT transactions; and a phase-wise movement towards a capital gains tax model.

By plugging a major research lacuna in Indian juristic literature, this article contends that though India's taxation of NFTs is an important starting point, the existing architecture is incomplete and unbending. What is needed is a remodeled approach one that scales the state's interests with the imperative to promote a dynamic digital economy.
Keywords Virtual Digital Asset (VDAs) , Taxation , Crypto-currency , Non-fungible Tokens (NFTs) , TDS , Investors
Published In Volume 7, Issue 5, September-October 2025
Published On 2025-09-22
DOI https://doi.org/10.36948/ijfmr.2025.v07i05.56150

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