Coinbase makes a major push into India with direct-rupee rails, targeting $3B market Coinbase is stepping up its India strategy with a major product and regulatory push: starting June 1, 2026, the Nasdaq-listed exchange will allow Indian customers to deposit and withdraw Indian rupees (INR) directly via the Immediate Payment Service (IMPS). The move removes third-party intermediaries and peer-to-peer workarounds that have long frustrated Indian users, and signals Coinbase’s intent to deepen its presence in one of the world’s fastest-growing crypto markets. Why this matters For years, many Indians funded crypto accounts through P2P channels or third-party intermediaries—methods that can be slow, opaque and risky. Users have reported payment scams and, in some cases, frozen bank accounts after transfers from unfamiliar counterparties triggered enforcement scrutiny. By integrating directly with IMPS, Coinbase aims to offer instant, bank-to-platform rails that reduce friction and counterparty risk for retail and institutional customers alike. Product rollout and features Coinbase’s India launch goes beyond simple fiat rails. Retail users will gain access to spot markets for major assets, while the platform will also offer perpetual futures contracts. For professional and institutional traders, “Coinbase Advanced” will include TradingView integration, advanced APIs and other institutional-grade tools. Crucially, Coinbase is building local INR order books so trades settle against domestic liquidity rather than global prices—an important detail for market depth and price discovery. Regulation and long-term intent Coinbase’s renewed push follows an earlier, rocky 2022 attempt to enable UPI payments, which the National Payments Corporation of India (NPCI) disputed at the time. This time Coinbase has registered with the Financial Intelligence Unit — India (FIU-IND), the country’s central agency for monitoring suspicious financial activity. The FIU registration underscores Coinbase’s commitment to a regulated, long-term presence in India. “India has long been one of the most important markets in crypto, in terms of developer talent, trading activity, and the broader adoption of blockchain technology,” John O’Loghlen, Coinbase’s Head of APAC, said in an announcement shared with CoinDesk. “With the launch of direct INR rails, we're making Coinbase fully accessible to Indian retail traders, with the same platform trusted by institutions and traders around the world. We're registered with FIU-IND and here for the long-term,” he added. Market potential and local engagements The timing is strategic. Chainalysis ranked India among the top APAC markets for crypto adoption in 2025 and placed the country first in its Global Crypto Adoption Index. Industry data show a rapidly expanding opportunity: consulting firm Imarc estimates India’s crypto market reached $3.04 billion in 2025 and projects it could swell to $14.21 billion by 2034, a compound annual growth rate of about 18.66% between 2026 and 2034. Coinbase has already been building local ties—its investments include a stake in Indian exchange CoinDCX, and it has committed over $1 million to Indian developers via its Base layer-2 network—efforts that now complement the product and compliance moves announced this week. Bottom line By pairing direct INR rails with institutional-grade tools and FIU-IND registration, Coinbase is positioning itself as a compliant, full-service entrant for both retail and professional crypto users in India. If adoption follows the country’s growth trajectory, Coinbase’s IMPS integration and local order books could materially reshape how Indians access crypto markets. Read more AI-generated news on: undefined/news