49 Exchanges and Counting: India’s Push to Formalize Crypto and Fight Financial Crime
NEW YORK, NY, February 04, 2026 /24-7PressRelease/ — India has never had a quiet relationship with crypto. From sweeping bans to surprise tax laws, the country’s stance has swung between extremes. But 2026 is shaping up differently; not with ultimatums, but with infrastructure.
This month, India’s Financial Intelligence Unit (FIU) confirmed that 49 crypto exchanges have registered under new anti–money laundering regulations, signaling a shift away from regulatory whiplash and toward operational maturity.
It’s a bureaucratic headline with real industry weight.
From Chaos to Compliance
For years, Indian crypto users operated in legal grey zones. Platforms like WazirX thrived despite unclear rules. Taxation arrived fast and hard, 30% capital gains, 1% TDS, but without consistent enforcement or guidance.
Now, the government’s tone has changed.
Instead of chasing users or banning platforms, they’re bringing exchanges into the fold, applying traditional financial crime frameworks to crypto. It’s not innovation-killing, it’s structure-building.
And yes, it’s also pressure. Exchanges must now comply with KYC standards, transaction monitoring, and suspicious activity reporting, or face expulsion from the formal market.
But here’s the twist: most are opting in.
Why the Industry Is Leaning In
At first glance, regulation feels like a headwind. But for exchanges operating at scale, clarity is a feature.
Registration doesn’t just check a legal box, it unlocks:
Access to better banking rails
More stable partnerships
Confidence from domestic institutions
A reputational edge over sketchier, offshore players
This isn’t about surveillance. It’s about stability. And in a market still recovering from global liquidity shocks, that matters.
The Global Ripple Effect
India isn’t acting in a vacuum. The EU’s MiCA rules, the UK’s HMRC push, and U.S. enforcement actions are all part of a global wave of crypto normalization.
But India is unique in scale. With hundreds of millions of users and a growing digital economy, how it balances innovation and compliance will set a tone for other emerging markets, from Southeast Asia to parts of Africa.
Exchanges that survive India’s vetting process won’t just be legal, they’ll be durable.
The Takeaway
Crypto’s future won’t be defined by who moves the fastest. It will be defined by who can stay relevant once the regulators arrive.
India’s 49 registered exchanges are early signals that the industry isn’t just bracing for compliance, it’s building with it.
And in 2026, that might be the most underrated advantage of all.
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