Is Forex Trading Legal in India? 2026 Guide
Quick answer. Forex trading is legal in India only through SEBI-registered brokers trading currency futures or options on NSE, BSE, or MSE. Offshore retail forex apps, spot forex platforms, and sending money abroad for trading margins are illegal under FEMA 1999. This is a citizen guidance page, not an official government, RBI, or SEBI page.
What is legal forex trading in India?
In India, foreign exchange trading is not a free-for-all. The Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (FEMA) draws a hard line: Indian residents may deal in foreign exchange only with an authorised person and only for permitted transactions. For most retail traders, “legal forex trading” means one specific thing - exchange-traded currency derivatives on recognised Indian stock exchanges.
The Reserve Bank of India (RBI) regulates foreign exchange, while SEBI regulates brokers and exchanges. A legal forex trade in India must pass three tests: the broker must be SEBI-registered in the Currency Derivatives segment, the exchange must be NSE, BSE, or the Metropolitan Stock Exchange (MSE), and the product must be an exchange-traded futures or options contract - not spot forex, not a Contract for Difference (CFD), and not a leveraged retail betting product.
For the full picture of what can go wrong with offshore platforms, see forex trading scam India.
Which currency pairs are permitted?
As of 2026, Indian residents may trade the following currency derivatives on authorised exchanges:
- INR pairs (four): USD/INR, EUR/INR, GBP/INR, JPY/INR
- Cross-currency pairs (three): EUR/USD, GBP/USD, USD/JPY
These cross-currency pairs are permitted only as exchange-approved derivative contracts on NSE, BSE, or MSE. Trading them on an offshore platform or a non-authorised electronic trading platform (ETP) is a FEMA violation even if the pair itself appears on this list.
Spot forex - where you buy one currency directly against another without an exchange-listed contract - is not permitted for Indian retail residents. This is the core distinction that most offshore trading apps exploit. They advertise “legal currency pairs” but deliver them as spot or CFD products that are not exchange-traded and not FEMA-compliant.
FEMA limits and the LRS rule
Under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), Indian residents can remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year (April to March) for a range of purposes. However, the RBI has specifically clarified that remitting money for margins or margin calls to overseas exchanges or counterparties is not permitted under LRS. This means that funding an offshore forex trading account - even with amounts below USD 250,000 - is illegal.
If you move money to an overseas broker's account for currency trading, you are not just at risk of losing money to a scam. You are also potentially breaching FEMA. The Directorate of Enforcement (ED) has powers to investigate and attach proceeds of such violations.
TCS (Tax Collected at Source) applies to LRS remittances. From April 1, 2025, the TCS-free threshold for foreign remittances was revised to Rs 10 lakh per financial year. However, this TCS rule is about lawful remittances - it does not legalise offshore forex trading.
Penalties under FEMA
Under Section 13 of FEMA 1999, a person found to have conducted unauthorised forex transactions can be penalised up to three times the amount involved in the contravention. Where the amount is not quantifiable, the penalty can be up to Rs 2 lakh, with a further Rs 5,000 per day for each day the contravention continues after the first.
Serious violations can also attract prosecution under the Prevention of Money Laundering Act (PMLA), especially where large offshore deposits are involved.
The RBI Alert List
The RBI maintains an official “Alert List” of entities that are not authorised to deal in forex under FEMA and not authorised to operate an electronic trading platform (ETP) in India. The list also flags entities that promote unauthorised platforms - including those offering forex training or advisory services on behalf of unlicensed brokers.
As of November 2025, the Alert List contains 95 entities. The RBI has explicitly warned: the absence of a name from the list does not mean the entity is authorised. The list is not exhaustive.
You can access the Alert List at: https://rbi.org.in/scripts/bs_viewcontent.aspx?Id=4235
The RBI also maintains:
- A register of authorised persons (licensed dealers) at rbi.org.in
- A register of authorised Electronic Trading Platforms (ETPs) at rbi.org.in
How to verify a broker before you trade
- Go to the SEBI website: https://www.sebi.gov.in/sebiweb/other/OtherAction.do?doRecognisedFpi=yes&intmId=32
- This page lists all registered stock brokers in the Currency Derivatives segment. As of June 2026, over 2,700 brokers are registered.
- Search by the broker's name or registration number. A legitimate broker will show their SEBI registration number on their website and in every communication.
- Check the RBI Alert List at the URL above to confirm the platform is not flagged.
- If the platform offers you leveraged spot forex, promises “international market access,” asks you to deposit in USD, crypto, or to a foreign bank account - stop. These are markers of an unauthorised and likely fraudulent operation.
Red flags: how unauthorised platforms present themselves
- They use terms like “MetaTrader 4/5,” “ECN broker,” “offshore liquidity” - these products are not exchange-traded derivatives
- They offer leverage of 1:100, 1:500, or higher. Indian exchange-traded contracts have much lower leverage
- Withdrawals are blocked when you try to take profits
- They show an Indian phone number, a .in domain, or even a “SEBI registered” claim without a verifiable registration number
- They ask you to pay “tax” or “release fees” before processing withdrawals
- Account managers contact you via WhatsApp or Telegram with assured return promises
If you have already been defrauded, see forex trading scam India for complaint steps and which regulator to approach.
For a broader guide on choosing the right regulator for your complaint, see which regulator to complain to.
Frequently asked questions
Is it illegal for an Indian resident to use Olymp Trade or similar apps?
Yes. The RBI has specifically listed platforms like Olymp Trade on its Alert List of entities not authorised to deal in forex under FEMA 1999. The Government of India has confirmed in parliamentary responses that operating such platforms violates FEMA. Using these platforms exposes you to penalty under Section 13 of FEMA (up to three times the amount involved) and potential investigation by the Enforcement Directorate.
Can I trade EUR/USD in India legally?
Yes, but only as an exchange-traded futures or options contract on NSE, BSE, or MSE through a SEBI-registered broker in the Currency Derivatives segment. Trading EUR/USD as spot forex or on an offshore retail broker's platform is not permitted under FEMA.
What is the RBI Alert List and where do I find it?
The RBI Alert List is a public document listing entities not authorised to deal in forex or operate electronic trading platforms in India. It is updated periodically and available on the RBI website at rbi.org.in/scripts/bs_viewcontent.aspx?Id=4235. As of November 2025, it covers 95 entities. Absence from this list does not mean a platform is authorised - always verify against the RBI's list of authorised persons and ETPs.
Can I send money via LRS to fund an overseas forex account?
No. The RBI has explicitly clarified that remitting money for margins or margin calls to overseas exchanges or counterparties is not a permitted use of the Liberalised Remittance Scheme. The USD 250,000 annual LRS limit applies to lawful purposes only; offshore forex margin funding is excluded.
How do I check if a broker is SEBI-registered for currency trading?
Visit sebi.gov.in and look up the list of registered stock brokers in the Currency Derivatives segment. Legitimate brokers display their SEBI registration number on their website. You can also call SEBI's investor helpline at 1800-266-7575 to verify. Any broker who cannot provide a verifiable SEBI registration number should not be trusted.
What if I already traded on an unauthorised platform and lost money?
File a complaint with the Cyber Crime portal (cybercrime.gov.in) and your nearest police station under cyber fraud provisions. You can also write to the RBI or SEBI enclosing evidence of the platform's operations. While recovery of funds from offshore platforms is very difficult, a formal complaint creates a record and helps regulatory action against repeat operators. Preserve all transaction records, chat screenshots, and payment proofs.
Sources
- RBI FAQ on forex transactions for residents: https://www.rbi.org.in/commonman/english/scripts/FAQs.aspx?Id=3347
- RBI Alert List of unauthorised forex platforms: https://rbi.org.in/scripts/bs_viewcontent.aspx?Id=4235
- RBI guidance on resident forex permissions: https://www.rbi.org.in/commonman/english/scripts/PressReleases.aspx?Id=3369
- SEBI registered brokers in Currency Derivatives segment: https://www.sebi.gov.in/sebiweb/other/OtherAction.do?doRecognisedFpi=yes&intmId=32
- Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 - Section 13 (penalties): https://www.indiacode.nic.in/bitstream/123456789/1988/1/A1999_42.pdf
The RTI Playbook has guidance on using the Right to Information Act to verify government records and regulatory decisions: The RTI Playbook
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