BrokerDir.
Forex
Crypto
Stocks
BrokerDir.

The most trusted, data-dense directory for comparing regulated forex brokers worldwide.

Explore

  • All Brokers
  • Features
  • Bonuses
  • Learn
  • Markets
  • Tools
  • Glossary
  • Broker Warnings

Company

  • About Us
  • Our Methodology
  • How We Cover Brokers
  • Contact

© 2026 BrokerDir. All rights reserved.

High Risk Warning: Trading forex carries a high level of risk.

HomeLearn

Forex Trading in India: SEBI and RBI Rules Explained

BrokerDir Editorial Team•11 min read•Updated May 3, 2026
Country Resources
  • Best brokers in India
  • SEBI regulator profile
On this page
  1. The Two Regulators: SEBI and RBI
  2. What Indian Residents Can Legally Trade
  3. Offshore Leveraged Forex: The Legal Position
  4. What SEBI Registration Requires from Brokers
  5. Practical Implications for Indian Traders
  6. Related Guides

India's framework for retail forex trading is unlike most other major markets. Where countries such as the UK or Australia operate a single primary regulator licensing brokers to offer leveraged forex directly, India's framework involves two separate authorities - the Securities and Exchange Board of India (SEBI) and the Reserve Bank of India (RBI) - and places meaningful restrictions on how and where Indian residents can access foreign exchange products.

Understanding these rules is essential before you deposit with any broker claiming to serve Indian traders.


The Two Regulators: SEBI and RBI

SEBI (Securities and Exchange Board of India) is the statutory regulator for India's capital markets, including recognised stock exchanges and the brokers registered on them. SEBI regulates currency derivatives - standardised currency futures and options - traded on recognised Indian exchanges such as:

  • NSE (National Stock Exchange)
  • BSE (Bombay Stock Exchange)
  • MSE (Metropolitan Stock Exchange)

RBI (Reserve Bank of India) is India's central bank and the authority responsible for the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) 1999. The RBI governs all foreign exchange transactions by Indian residents, including the use of funds for speculative trading on foreign platforms.

These two bodies do not share regulatory responsibilities: SEBI covers the securities and derivatives markets; RBI covers actual foreign exchange flows under FEMA.


What Indian Residents Can Legally Trade

Under SEBI and RBI rules, Indian residents are legally permitted to trade currency derivatives on SEBI-recognised exchanges. The permitted instruments are:

Currency Futures: Standardised contracts on major currency pairs - USD/INR, EUR/INR, GBP/INR, and JPY/INR - traded on NSE, BSE, and MSE. These are exchange-traded, centrally cleared products with limited leverage (RBI sets the margin requirements).

Currency Options: Exchange-traded options on USD/INR are permitted on NSE and BSE, with European-style options also available on a limited range of cross-currency pairs.

Cross-currency pairs: Since 2018, SEBI-approved exchanges permit trading in EUR/USD, GBP/USD, and USD/JPY futures and options on NSE, BSE, and MSE - expanding the accessible market beyond INR-quoted pairs.

This exchange-traded framework provides significant protections: contracts are centrally cleared, counterparty risk is absorbed by the exchange's clearing corporation, and margin requirements are set by SEBI and the RBI.


Offshore Leveraged Forex: The Legal Position

A significant portion of retail forex trading globally involves over-the-counter (OTC) leveraged forex and CFDs - the kind offered by most international brokers. This is where India's framework diverges sharply from markets like the UK or Australia.

The RBI's position under FEMA: The Foreign Exchange Management Act restricts Indian residents from engaging in leveraged speculative forex trading on platforms that are not authorised under Indian law. Remitting funds overseas specifically for OTC leveraged forex speculation - using brokers not authorised in India - is not permitted under FEMA's capital account rules.

In practice: Many international brokers accept Indian clients and Indian residents do use offshore OTC platforms. However, this sits in a legal grey area - or, in the RBI's interpretation, outside the permitted uses of foreign exchange under FEMA. Indian residents using offshore OTC brokers are exposed to legal risk under FEMA, and any disputes with such brokers have no regulatory recourse in India.

SEBI's position on unregistered foreign brokers: SEBI has repeatedly issued warnings about unregistered foreign entities soliciting Indian retail investors for forex and CFD products. SEBI's investor alerts list firms operating in India without registration. These firms are not subject to Indian regulatory oversight, and clients have no recourse through SEBI or the RBI if a dispute arises.


What SEBI Registration Requires from Brokers

Brokers offering exchange-traded currency derivatives to Indian retail clients must be registered with SEBI as Trading Members on the relevant exchange. Requirements include:

  • Net worth requirements: Members dealing in currency derivatives must maintain minimum net worth thresholds set by the exchange and SEBI.
  • SEBI registration: All trading members, sub-brokers, and their staff interacting with clients must be registered with SEBI.
  • KYC compliance: Full Know Your Customer (KYC) verification is mandatory for all client accounts, linked to PAN (Permanent Account Number) and Aadhaar.
  • Client fund segregation: Client funds must be maintained in separate accounts from the broker's own funds, subject to exchange and SEBI oversight.

Practical Implications for Indian Traders

If you want to trade currency derivatives legally in India: Use a SEBI-registered broker on NSE, BSE, or MSE. The product range is more limited than global OTC markets (specific pairs, standardised contract sizes), but you have full regulatory protection - centrally cleared trades, SEBI oversight, and FEMA-compliant currency flows.

If you are considering an offshore OTC broker: Understand the legal position clearly. The RBI's FEMA rules create meaningful regulatory and legal risk for Indian residents using foreign platforms for speculative leveraged forex trading. Any funds sent offshore for this purpose may be scrutinised under FEMA's capital account provisions.

SEBI's Investor Alert List: Before using any broker, check SEBI's investor alert list at sebi.gov.in for notices about the firm. SEBI regularly issues warnings against foreign entities soliciting Indian clients without proper registration.


Related Guides

  • Forex Regulation Explained - How SEBI compares to the FCA, ASIC, MAS, and other global frameworks
  • How to Choose a Forex Broker - A full evaluation framework covering regulation, costs, execution, and platform
  • How to Spot a Forex Broker Scam - How to identify brokers operating without proper authorisation
  • Forex Leverage Explained - How leverage limits differ by jurisdiction and what they mean for your risk

Browse all SEBI-regulated brokers →

Top Brokers for India Traders

Brokers ranked specifically for traders in India, sorted by overall score.

4.7/ 5
IC Markets
True ECN routing with raw 0.0 pip spreads on majors plus commission, deep liquidity, and the cleanest MT4 / MT5 / cTrader stack we test.
4.7/ 5
Pepperstone
Multi-regulated Australian ECN-style broker with fast execution, MT4 / MT5 / cTrader / TradingView and a strong active-trader rebate program.
4.6/ 5
Interactive Brokers
Listed broker with global market access, lowest financing rates we benchmark, and the powerful TWS workstation.
4.5/ 5
FP Markets
True ECN pricing, all three major platforms, strong ASIC regulation, and IRESS integration for share CFDs - a complete package for active traders.
View all brokers in India
Country Resources
  • Best brokers in India
  • SEBI regulator profile
More Country Guides
  • Forex Trading in the UAE: DFSA vs SCA (CMA) Regulation Explained
  • Forex Trading in the UK: FCA Regulation Explained
  • Forex Trading in Australia: ASIC Regulation Explained
  • Forex Trading in Singapore: MAS Regulation Explained
On this page
  1. The Two Regulators: SEBI and RBI
  2. What Indian Residents Can Legally Trade
  3. Offshore Leveraged Forex: The Legal Position
  4. What SEBI Registration Requires from Brokers
  5. Practical Implications for Indian Traders
  6. Related Guides

Personalised recommendation

Not sure which broker is right for you?

Answer 6 quick questions and we'll match you with the brokers that best fit your trading style, experience level, and country.

Find my broker