Updated Jun 30, 2026, 5:00 a.m. Published Jun 30, 2026, 4:59 a.m.

3 min read

Indian flag (Naveed Ahmed/Unsplash)
Indian flag (Naveed Ahmed/Unsplash)

Summary

  • Tether’s USDT stablecoin has surged to an unusually high premium on Indian crypto exchanges.
  • Executives at major platforms CoinDCX and CoinSwitch say the premium reflects a demand-supply imbalance and thin local liquidity, not exchange-set pricing or hidden fees.

USDT, the world's largest dollar-pegged stablecoin, is trading well above face value on Indian crypto platforms. While local reports attribute the premium to a recent enforcement action, exchanges explain it as a simple demand-supply dynamic.

The stablecoin's premium rose to 7–10% above its dollar value on Indian platforms over the weekend. At one point, USDT traded around ₹102.88 against an official dollar-rupee rate of about 94.65 per USD. USDT's market cap stood at $184.68 billion as of this writing, making it the world's largest dollar-pegged stablecoin.

That gap, known as the USDT premium, normally runs between 3% and 4%. Put simply, it's the extra rupees buyers pay for dollar exposure via USDT instead of through a bank. The premium widens whenever local demand outpaces the supply of tokens actually available to trade.

The spike followed action by India's Enforcement Directorate related to USDT payments, the country's financial-crime agency said, CoinDesk reported Tuesday.

Now, exchanges are responding to the premium spike, and their explanations line up closely with that supply-side account.

The market clears higher

Minal Thakur, CFO of the Mumbai-based CoinDCX, framed the premium as a function of local order-book depth relative to the global dollar reference price.

"The INR price of USDT is set by local order-book depth and the global dollar reference. India has structurally been a net buyer of crypto, so local INR demand often runs ahead of available sell-side liquidity. When that liquidity is thinner near the global reference price, the market clears higher," Thakur told CoinDesk.

"The premium then becomes a signal of the local arbitrage band: how expensive or slow it is for liquidity providers to replenish supply and close the gap," she added.

In plain terms, India has more people wanting to buy USDT than there are sellers willing to part with it near the global price. When that imbalance grows, the price Indian buyers pay rises until the market finds a new equilibrium.

Not unique to any single platform

CoinSwitch co-founder and CEO Ashish Singhal gave a more detailed account, stressing that the premium isn't something exchanges are setting themselves.

"As with any actively traded asset, when demand outpaces available supply, prices adjust accordingly. The [USDT] premium is therefore not unique to any single platform; it reflects broader market dynamics, including liquidity conditions and the availability of dollar-backed digital assets.

This phenomenon is not unique to India. Stablecoins have traded at premiums in several markets during periods of elevated demand or liquidity constraints. It is also important to note that exchanges do not manually set the price of USDT. Prices are determined by buyers and sellers trading on the platform.

In recent days, USDT has traded at a premium across several Indian exchanges, with premiums generally ranging between 7% and 10%, depending on liquidity and market activity. On CoinSwitch, USDT has traded at around a 9% premium over the past few days.

"At CoinSwitch, users always see the live buy and sell price before placing an order. We do not charge any hidden fees beyond our disclosed brokerage. The premium reflects prevailing market conditions rather than any platform-imposed markup," Singhal said.

Both CoinDCX and CoinSwitch attribute the premium entirely to organic supply-and-demand dynamics: more buyers than sellers, thinner liquidity near the global reference price, and a market mechanism — not platform pricing decisions — setting the rate. Neither executive directly addressed the ED's enforcement action or its effect on token supply in their statements.

Nevertheless, the supply squeeze that drove the premium unusually higher could be linked to the enforcement action.

Market makers and liquidity provides could have scaled back from sourcing USDT overseas after the ED's action, which would show up exactly as a supply-side liquidity shortage, the same mechanism both Thakur and Singhal describe in general terms.

Operating on Indian exchanges has been relatively tougher for market makers because of a flat 30% tax on gains, no allowance to offset losses, and a restrictive 1% tax deducted at source (TDS). These rules have long contributed to market dislocations.

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