Live ETH-INR rate from Phemex spot, with USD-INR foreign-exchange from a daily-refreshed reference rate. India is one of the largest crypto markets in the world by user count, with estimates ranging from 100 to 200 million holders depending on the survey.
Pre-calculated at the live rate of 1 ETH = ₹2,15,608.60 INR.
ETH-INR sees notable Indian retail volume on CoinDCX, WazirX, Bitbns, and ZebPay, plus active P2P markets on Binance and OKX. The 30% flat tax + 1% TDS regime applies identically to ETH and BTC in India — there's no preferential treatment for either. Staking yield from ETH adds reporting complexity since the TDS framework was designed primarily around outright trades rather than yield-bearing income.
Ethereum is the second-largest cryptocurrency by market value and the settlement layer for most decentralised finance, NFTs, and stablecoin activity. ETH-fiat pairs are nearly as liquid as BTC's on the major exchanges, but the price often diverges from BTC during periods of strong on-chain activity (high gas fees correlate with ETH outperformance). Stakers earn an annualised yield of roughly 3-4% in ETH for locking coins to the network — a structural reason some holders prefer it over BTC for long horizons.
The Indian rupee traces its name to the silver coin (rūpiya) issued by the Mughal Empire in the 16th century. Independence in 1947 led to the establishment of the Reserve Bank of India as the sole issuer. The rupee was pegged to the British pound until 1966, then devalued and managed against a basket of currencies, before transitioning to a managed float in 1993. India's foreign-exchange reserves have grown to over $600 billion as of recent figures, providing a substantial buffer against currency speculation. Demonetisation in November 2016 — when the government cancelled the 500 and 1000 rupee notes overnight — accelerated digital payment adoption and indirectly increased crypto curiosity among the digitally-native middle class.
Used in: India exclusively. Bhutan and Nepal use the rupee informally in border regions but maintain their own currencies. The Indian government has progressively tightened controls on outbound rupee remittances under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme.
India is one of the largest crypto markets in the world by user count, with estimates ranging from 100 to 200 million holders depending on the survey. INR-pair liquidity is concentrated on domestic exchanges — WazirX (now under FIU registration), CoinDCX, ZebPay — and on global exchanges' P2P desks. The 2022 introduction of a 30% flat tax on gains and a 1% TDS on every transaction reshaped the market: domestic volumes fell sharply, P2P and offshore venues absorbed much of the displaced activity.
Domestic options include CoinDCX (Mumbai), WazirX (Singapore-incorporated, India-operating), Bitbns, and ZebPay. Binance and OKX run active P2P markets in INR despite not holding direct INR fiat rails. Tax treatment is unusually severe: all gains taxed at 30% flat (no holding-period discount, no offset of losses against other income), plus a 1% TDS withheld at source on every disposal above ₹10,000 — meaning even a break-even round trip incurs a 2% structural cost. UPI is the fastest fiat on-ramp at domestic exchanges (instant, free) but several major banks have been intermittent about supporting crypto-related UPI traffic. Foreign-exchange controls (LRS) limit annual outbound transfers to USD 250,000 per resident — relevant for moving fiat to offshore exchanges.
India's crypto market is the world's largest by user count and one of the most paradoxical by structure. The 2018 RBI banking ban (overturned by the Supreme Court in 2020) chilled the early industry; the 2022 introduction of a flat 30% gains tax plus 1% TDS on every transaction was widely interpreted as a deliberate effort to price retail out without an outright ban. Yet the user base kept growing. Cultural attitudes vary widely: the under-35 urban middle class treats crypto as portfolio diversification and a hedge against rupee weakness, while the under-banked rural population uses it primarily for remittances and store-of-value via stablecoins. Bitcoin maximalism is muted; Ethereum and stablecoin activity dominate. P2P markets on Binance and OKX absorbed substantial volume after the tax regime crushed domestic exchange activity. The cross-border-payment angle — XRP, stablecoins, Bitcoin Lightning for remittances — has structural relevance given India's $100+ billion annual remittance inflow. Tax compliance is patchy; FIU-IND data-sharing arrangements with domestic exchanges are tightening enforcement progressively.
1 ETH is worth ₹2,15,608.60 INR at the current spot rate. The rate updates every minute against the Phemex price feed and the USD-INR foreign-exchange rate refreshes hourly from a public reference source. Prices on individual exchanges differ by a few basis points owing to spread and venue-specific liquidity, but the spot rate above is a reliable reference point.
Yes, holding and trading Ethereum are legal in India. India's crypto market is the world's largest by user count and one of the most paradoxical by structure. See the regional context block above for the full picture on tax treatment, exchange access, and any restrictions on using ETH as a means of payment.
The exchange landscape for ETH-INR in India is summarised in detail in the section above. UPI is the fastest fiat on-ramp at domestic exchanges (instant, free) but several major banks have been intermittent about supporting crypto-related UPI traffic. Use the converter widget above to size your purchase against the current rate before opening the exchange.