A foreign platform does not remove Indian tax or foreign-exchange obligations, and an app balance is not proof of recoverable custody.
Verify the funding route, tax record and legal ownership before transferring money or tokens.
Map every deposit and withdrawal.
Bank and card statements.
False remittance purpose.
Indian tax rules apply to virtual digital asset income according to current law, while foreign-exchange permissibility depends on the actual funding and transaction.
RBI’s LRS FAQ prohibits remittance for overseas foreign-exchange trading and margin calls. Crypto activity should not be mislabelled as a permitted purpose.
Foreign platform accounts, wallets and income can create disclosure questions for applicable residents.
| Area | What to establish | Operating rule |
|---|---|---|
| Funding | Bank, card or token transfer source. | Preserve lawful route. |
| Asset | Token, derivative, staking or lending. | Identify substance. |
| Tax | Trades, rewards and withholding. | Keep complete ledger. |
| Custody | Exchange, wallet and recovery rights. | Stress platform failure. |
Do not assume that platform availability means the transaction is permitted or protected.
Preserve raw transaction data before an exchange closes or restricts access.
Record the residence conclusion, transaction purpose, account or remittance route, amount, currency, tax treatment and reporting action. This turns a cross-border question into a reviewable file.
Rules, forms and bank procedures can change. Use the current RBI direction, Income Tax form, authorised-dealer checklist and executed transaction documents.
Cross-border compliance should be mapped as four separate questions: who is resident under the relevant law, what transaction actually occurred, which account or remittance route was used, and how the income or asset is reported. A correct answer to one question does not automatically answer the others.
The working file should identify the legal entity or individual, country, currency, transaction date, source of funds, authorised dealer, tax year and supporting contract. This prevents the same transfer from being described differently to the bank, employer and tax authority.
Use gross amounts before foreign tax, platform fees or withholding when preparing income and asset reconciliations. Net bank credits are useful evidence but rarely provide the complete tax computation.
For every remittance, retain Form A2 or the bank’s equivalent declaration, debit advice, purpose document, SWIFT or transfer confirmation and proof of the overseas beneficiary. For investments, add custody statements and later sale records.
Where an error is discovered, first preserve the original record and identify whether the issue is a banking classification, tax return omission, delayed FEMA report or prohibited transaction. Each requires a different correction route.
Transition events—leaving India, returning, fundraising or changing business models—should trigger a full review rather than isolated account updates.
Material cross-border transactions should be reviewed by a qualified tax and FEMA professional before execution, not only during annual filing.
The safest review starts before money moves. Obtain the bank or platform checklist, compare it with the contract or invoice, and resolve the purpose code, beneficiary, source of funds and tax treatment before authorising payment.
After execution, reconcile four records: the Indian bank debit or credit, the foreign institution record, the accounting or investment statement and the Indian tax working. Differences should be explained with dated documents rather than left for annual filing.
Transition years deserve a separate memo because residence, bank account type, withholding and foreign-asset disclosure may change on different dates. The memo should identify each law and the fact that triggered the change.
Where the transaction is material, preserve evidence in both local currency and foreign currency. Record the conversion source and date so the tax return, bank application and investment statement can be reproduced later.
A correction should be transparent. Retain the original filing or bank classification, document why it was wrong, use the lawful revised return, bank amendment, late-reporting or compounding route and keep the final acknowledgement.
For a business or startup, assign one owner for the complete cross-border transaction. Dividing responsibility among bank, finance, legal and company-secretarial teams without one closing checklist creates missed filings.
Board or management reporting should show open FEMA and tax items, amount at risk, due date, correction plan and evidence of closure.