New I-T bill allows officials to access emails, WhatsApp chats to unearth undisclosed crypto assets

The Income-Tax Bill, 2025, allows officials to access electronic records such as emails and WhatsApp chats if they suspect undisclosed cryptocurrency holdings.

The bill, which seeks to replace the I-T Act, of 1961, extends existing search and seizure provisions to the digital realm, allowing officers to inspect virtual assets when they have a reason to believe that a person has concealed taxable income.

The proposal prevents tax evaders from exploiting loopholes in the digital economy, experts have said, as crypto trading booms in India.

Cryptocurrency transactions are taxed at a flat 30 percent rate on gains, with 1 percent Tax Deducted at Source (TDS).

The proposed legislation enables officers above the rank of joint commissioner to override access controls of electronic devices and digital platforms if necessary. This includes accessing cloud storage, encrypted communication channels, and digital asset exchanges to gather evidence of tax evasion.

The move aligns taxation powers with technological advancements, ensuring that virtual digital assets such as cryptocurrencies, do not escape scrutiny, tax expert Ajay Rotti said.

These powers are not new but a reiteration of existing provisions in a clearer form. “The law already permits tax officials to inspect electronic records during search and seizure actions. The new bill extends this to virtual digital spaces to ensure undisclosed cryptocurrency holdings are not overlooked,” chartered accountant Hemant R said.

Section 247 of the bill allowing authorised officers to gain access by overriding the access code of a computer system or virtual digital space is only the reiteration of the already existing provision in a simpler language. No additional power has been given to the tax authorities, experts said.

At present, Section 132 of the I-T Act enables authorised officers to require any person who is found in possession of books, accounts or other documents in the form of electronic records to inspect such documents as well as to seize such documents.

During search and seizure, officials can access evidence that has tax implications in digital space in forms such as desktop, mobile, laptops, hard disk drives, storage servers Software as a Service (SaaS) clouds, Enterprise Resource Planning (ERP) systems. They can also access communication platforms like emails, WhatsApp, Telegram and virtual digital assets like cryptocurrency, it says.

The Income-Tax Bill has been introduced in Parliament and is being reviewed by a select committee, which will hold discussions with stakeholders before finalising it.

According to a Reuters report, cryptocurrency trading is seeing a huge rise in India, especially in smaller towns. Trading volumes of bitcoin, ethereum, dogecoin and other cryptocurrencies on four of the country’s largest exchanges grew more than two-fold quarter-on-quarter to $1.9 billion in the December quarter, Reuters said in a report citing data from aggregator CoinGecko. Overall, India's crypto market is expected to grow to more than $15 billion in 2035 from $2.5 billion in 2024, the report said

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Disclaimer: The content above is only the author's opinion which does not represent any position of Followin, and is not intended as, and shall not be understood or construed as, investment advice from Followin.
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