Your Salary in Crypto:
Which Companies Pay in Bitcoin
& What Indians Need to Know
Over 4,500 companies globally now pay salaries in Bitcoin or stablecoins. Some of the biggest names in tech are on that list. But for Indians — employees and freelancers both — the question isn’t just “which companies?” It’s “is this even legal for me?” The answer is more complicated than you’d expect.
Something Is Quietly Changing About How People Get Paid
Imagine getting your salary notification and instead of seeing a bank credit, you see a Bitcoin transaction land in your wallet. No middle bank. No two-day clearing. No weekend holds. Just money — moving at the speed of the internet, anywhere in the world, at any hour.
For a growing number of professionals globally, this isn’t a thought experiment anymore. It’s Tuesday morning.
Over 4,500 companies now use Bitwage alone — just one of several crypto payroll platforms — to pay salaries in Bitcoin or stablecoins. The platform processes over $400 million in payroll transactions annually. A 2024 compensation survey by Pantera Capital found that over 9.6% of workers in the blockchain industry now receive at least part of their compensation in crypto. And the trend is moving beyond just blockchain companies — athletes, celebrities, mayors, and multinational corporations are all experimenting with it.
But here’s what most articles about this topic miss when writing for an Indian audience. The global picture of crypto salaries is interesting — but it exists in a completely different legal context from what Indian employees and freelancers actually face. We’re going to cover both: the global reality, and then the very specific, very important Indian reality.
Real Companies That Actually Pay in Bitcoin or Crypto
Let’s start with the names. These aren’t rumours or “reportedly considering” situations. These are companies with documented, publicly confirmed crypto salary programs.
Blockchain.com
Blockchain.com pays all employees in Bitcoin — not as an option, but as company policy. CEO Peter Smith has spoken publicly about the company’s commitment to running entirely on a Bitcoin economy. For a company whose entire business is built on the asset, paying employees in the same currency they work with creates genuine alignment. Staff anywhere in the world receive BTC directly to their wallets.
100% BTC SalaryConsenSys
Founded by Ethereum co-founder Joseph Lubin, ConsenSys builds tools and applications for the Ethereum network. Staff — particularly developers — have been compensated partly in ETH, creating direct financial alignment with the ecosystem they’re building. The logic is straightforward: if you believe in Ethereum enough to build on it full-time, receiving ETH as part of your pay is a natural extension of that conviction.
ETH + Fiat HybridGMO Internet Group
GMO Internet Group was one of the earliest large corporate adopters of crypto payroll. The company offered all approximately 4,000 employees in Japan the option to receive up to 100,000 yen (roughly ₹55,000) per month of their salary in Bitcoin. This wasn’t a fringe experiment — GMO is a publicly listed company with multiple major business lines. The program was positioned explicitly as promoting “the spread and development of cryptocurrencies” within Japan.
Optional BTC up to ¥100,000/monthRemixpoint
In July 2025, Remixpoint announced via press release that it would offer employees the option to receive part of their salary in Bitcoin. This is significant because Remixpoint is a listed company with operations in traditional energy — not a crypto-native firm. It signals that crypto salary programs are spreading beyond blockchain-specific companies into conventional corporate Japan.
Optional BTC — Announced July 2025SC5 (Finland)
SC5, a Finnish internet technology firm, has been paying employees in Bitcoin since 2013 — making it one of the earliest known corporate salary-in-crypto arrangements anywhere in the world. More than a decade later, the company continues the practice, which gives it a unique claim: it has more real-world payroll data on Bitcoin salary programs than almost any other company on earth.
Bitcoin salary since 2013Beyond these, companies like Tether (creator of USDT), Kraken, Coinbase, Ripple, and dozens of other crypto-native firms pay at least some portion of compensation in digital assets. Web3 gaming studios, DeFi protocols, NFT companies, and blockchain infrastructure firms routinely offer token-based compensation packages alongside or instead of traditional salaries.
There’s also an important nuance about which crypto is actually used. In January 2026, Request Finance processed 4,034 payments totalling $23.8M, with stablecoins accounting for over 90% of all transactions. The era of “volatile Bitcoin salary” is quietly giving way to “stable USDC or USDT salary” — and for good reason. Nobody wants their monthly salary to drop 30% because the market had a bad week.
Athletes and Public Figures Leading the Way
The corporate world moves cautiously. Athletes and public figures, it turns out, move faster.
Russell Okung, NFL offensive lineman, made headlines in 2020 when he converted half of his $13 million salary into Bitcoin — becoming the first major professional athlete to receive payment in crypto. At the time, people thought it was a publicity stunt. Given what Bitcoin did in the years following, it turned out to be one of the better financial decisions a professional athlete made that decade.
NBA player Klay Thompson and MMA fighter Jon Fitch publicly expressed interest in receiving crypto as part of their compensation. Miami’s mayor Francis Suarez proposed that the city accept Bitcoin for fees and taxes and suggested his own salary should be paid in Bitcoin — making him one of the most senior elected officials globally to make such a statement publicly.
When NFL players, NBA stars, and city mayors are willing to take their pay in Bitcoin, the argument that crypto is only for speculators starts to fall apart pretty quickly.
The broader signal here is important: when people who have significant financial stakes — not just hobbyists — choose to receive compensation in Bitcoin, it reflects genuine conviction in the asset, not just hype. A mayor accepting a salary in Bitcoin is putting reputational and financial skin in the game. So is a footballer converting $6.5 million of guaranteed income.
For Indians watching this trend, the question naturally becomes: can I do the same? Can my employer in Bangalore pay me in Bitcoin? Can the US startup I freelance for send me USDC instead of a wire transfer? The answer, unfortunately, is not a simple yes — and understanding exactly where the lines are drawn is critical.
The India Question — Is Crypto Salary Legal Here?
I want to be honest with you here, even though the honest answer is complicated. This is not a topic where I can give you a clean yes or no and leave it at that. The reality has several distinct layers, and each one matters.
Layer 1: Crypto Is NOT Legal Tender in India
As of May 2026, crypto is classified as a Virtual Digital Asset (VDA) under the Income Tax Act. It is legal to buy, hold, sell, and trade. But it is explicitly not legal tender — meaning you cannot use it to legally discharge debts, make official payments, or receive wages in lieu of INR under Indian labour law. An Indian company paying an Indian employee in Bitcoin instead of INR is on legally shaky ground.
⛔ What Indian Law Currently Says
Under the Payment of Wages Act, 1936, wages must be paid in “current coin or currency notes” — meaning Indian Rupees. Bitcoin and other cryptos do not qualify. If an Indian employer pays your salary entirely in crypto without an INR equivalent, they may be in violation of Indian labour law.
Additionally, crypto cannot be used as a form of payment for services, goods, or salaries in ways protected by consumer law. The RBI does not recognise crypto as money and continues to view it as a high-risk asset.
Layer 2: The FEMA Complication for Foreign Employers
What if you work remotely for a foreign company — a US startup, a Dubai firm, a global Web3 protocol? Can they pay you in Bitcoin or USDC directly to your wallet?
Here’s where it gets genuinely complicated. Under FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act), export service payments from Indian freelancers and remote workers must arrive via authorised banking channels in convertible foreign currency. Crypto receipts do not satisfy this condition. You won’t get an e-FIRA (Foreign Inward Remittance Advice), which is a key document proving you received legitimate foreign income — important for GST purposes and for documenting export earnings.
The practical risk: receiving payment in crypto from a foreign client is not going to land you in jail — but it creates compliance complications that can cost more than any fee savings. During audits, tax assessments, or GST verification, questions will arise that are difficult to answer cleanly without proper banking documentation.
Layer 3: The Grey Area That Exists
None of this means Indians are completely locked out of crypto compensation. There are legal grey areas that many Indian professionals are navigating carefully. If a foreign employer pays your salary in fiat (USD/EUR) via bank transfer, and you then choose to convert some of that fiat to Bitcoin on a registered Indian exchange — that is entirely legal. You received your salary in fiat. You chose to invest part of it in crypto. Both steps are compliant.
Some Web3 protocols also pay contributors in tokens as “grants” or “bounties” rather than formal employment salary — a different legal framing that sidesteps some of the employment law constraints, though the tax treatment remains the same: 30% on any gains.
🇮🇳 The Bottom Line for Indian Employees
If you work for an Indian company: your salary must be in INR. If your employer wants to give you a Bitcoin bonus on top, that’s legally ambiguous — consult a CA who understands VDAs before accepting. If you work remotely for a foreign company: receive payment in fiat via authorised banking channels for compliance, then convert to crypto in India if you want exposure. If you’re a Web3 contributor receiving protocol tokens: it’s happening, it’s grey, document everything, and talk to a specialist CA.
The Freelancer Angle — Getting Paid in Crypto from Foreign Clients
Let me talk directly to Indian freelancers for a moment, because this is where the most action is happening — and where the most confusion exists.
Thousands of Indian developers, designers, writers, and blockchain specialists are working for global clients who prefer to pay in crypto — often stablecoins like USDC or USDT. The appeal is obvious: instant settlement, no SWIFT fees (which can eat 3–7% of a payment), no waiting for Monday morning for a wire to clear. For someone in Pune working for a startup in San Francisco, getting $2,000 in USDC that lands in 90 seconds versus waiting 3–5 business days for a wire is a genuine quality-of-life difference.
The practical reality in India in 2026: receiving crypto from a foreign client is not criminal. You are not going to be arrested. But the compliance trail is messier than a clean bank wire. You won’t get the standard documentation that Indian GST and income tax authorities expect to see for foreign income. If you’re under a Presumptive Tax scheme or claiming export benefits, the absence of e-FIRA documentation is a problem.
The workaround that many Indian freelancers use — and that is legally cleaner — is to request payment via platforms like Wise, Payoneer, or Deel in USD, receive it into your Indian bank account, and then optionally convert part of it to crypto through a registered Indian exchange. You get the legitimate documentation. You get your rupees. And then you make your own investment decision about crypto.
Some Indian freelancers also work through their own sole proprietorships or private limited companies that hold separate accounts — making the compliance chain cleaner. If you’re doing meaningful volume, setting up a proper structure with a CA who understands digital assets is worth the investment. As I’ve written before about how crypto is reshaping economies globally, the payment infrastructure is evolving fast — India’s regulatory framework will likely clarify these grey areas over the next 2–3 years.
If You Do Get Paid in Crypto — How India Taxes It
Let’s say you receive compensation in Bitcoin or USDC — either as a freelancer working for a foreign client, or as part of a token compensation package from a Web3 company. Here’s how Indian tax applies, because this is where most people are confused.
Indian Tax Treatment of Crypto Compensation — 2026
- Receiving crypto as income: The fair market value of the crypto at the time you receive it is treated as income — taxed at your applicable income tax slab rate, not the 30% VDA rate. This is because it’s income from work, not capital gains from trading.
- When you sell the crypto: If you later sell the Bitcoin or USDC you received as income, you pay 30% flat tax on the gain — calculated from the value at the time you received it (your cost of acquisition). Not from zero.
- 1% TDS applies on sales: When you sell on an Indian exchange, 1% TDS is deducted automatically on the transaction value above ₹10,000. This is a credit toward your tax liability, not an extra tax.
- USDC/stablecoin nuance: Stablecoins pegged to USD are treated as VDAs in India — same 30% tax applies when sold, even though their price barely moves. For USDC received and converted to INR, gains from the USD/INR exchange rate movement are also taxable.
- Keep every record: Date of receipt, crypto amount, INR value at time of receipt (use the exchange rate that day from a registered Indian exchange), date of sale, sale price. Every transaction is a potential taxable event.
The tax math is the reason most Indian professionals working in Web3 prefer fiat payment + voluntary crypto conversion over direct crypto payment. When you receive INR and buy crypto, you control exactly when the taxable event happens. When you receive crypto directly, the taxable event is the moment of receipt — even if you haven’t sold anything.
For the full picture on India’s 30% crypto tax and whether there are legal ways to reduce what you pay, that’s a topic I’m covering in a dedicated upcoming article. The short version: the 30% rate itself cannot be reduced, but how you structure your activity and what you deduct as cost of acquisition can meaningfully impact your final bill.
How to Receive Crypto Payments Safely as an Indian
If your situation does involve receiving crypto — whether as a contractor, a token grantee, or through any other legitimate arrangement — here’s how to do it in a way that creates the cleanest possible compliance trail.
| Scenario | Recommended Approach | Compliance Level | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Freelancer — foreign client | Receive USD via Wise/Payoneer, convert to crypto in India | CLEAN | E-FIRA generated, GST compliance simpler |
| Web3 contractor — token grant | Document receipt value in INR on date of receipt, consult CA | GREY AREA | Keep every record, get specialist CA advice |
| Indian employer — crypto bonus | Request INR salary + bonus, invest crypto independently | CLEANEST | Avoids labour law complications entirely |
| DAO contributor — stablecoin | Document as professional income, convert via registered exchange | GREY AREA | No e-FIRA; tax as income at slab rate on receipt |
| Direct BTC salary from foreign company | Legally complex — consult a CA before accepting | COMPLEX | FEMA implications, documentation gaps |
One practical tool worth knowing about: Bitwage allows individuals to receive a portion of their salary in Bitcoin even if their employer pays in regular currency — by routing payroll through Bitwage’s system. The platform is used in over 190 countries and handles the conversion automatically. For Indian users, there are still FEMA and documentation questions to address, but it’s the most established infrastructure for this use case globally.
Where to Find Web3 Jobs That Pay in Crypto
If you’re actively looking for opportunities where crypto compensation is part of the package, here’s where Indian professionals are finding them. These are real platforms, not aspirational lists.
Where Indians Are Finding Crypto-Paying Web3 Work
- web3.career — Lists 2,546+ jobs explicitly tagged “pay in crypto” as of May 2026. Filter by skill, token, chain, and remote availability. The most concentrated source of crypto-payroll jobs globally.
- Gitcoin — Grant and bounty platform where protocols pay contributors in their native tokens or ETH for open-source work. Popular with Indian developers who contribute to DeFi and Web3 infrastructure projects.
- Dework — DAO-focused work platform where contributors earn crypto tokens for completing tasks within decentralised communities. Growing rapidly among Indian designers and developers entering Web3.
- Braintrust — Decentralised talent network that pays contributors in BTRST tokens in addition to client fees. Has a meaningful Indian user base in tech and design.
- Layer3 — Quest-based platform where protocols reward users and contributors with tokens for completing specific tasks — learning, testing, promoting. Lower income levels but zero barrier to entry.
- Upwork and Fiverr — filtered for “blockchain/Web3” — Many clients on traditional freelance platforms specify crypto payment. Read the payment terms carefully and request fiat via platform escrow for compliance, then convert independently.
The most in-demand skills for crypto-paying Web3 work among Indian professionals in 2026: Solidity smart contract development, blockchain security auditing, DeFi protocol economics, community management (Discord/Telegram), technical writing for whitepapers and documentation, and UI/UX design for Web3 interfaces. If you’re developing skills in any of these directions, the opportunities are genuinely significant — and growing.
Understanding the underlying technology that powers these opportunities is equally important. Whether it’s how DeFi and stablecoins work or where tokenized banking is headed, the knowledge base you build now directly translates into the value you can offer to Web3 employers.
Frequently Asked Questions
Final Thoughts — Is It Worth It for Indians?
Here’s my honest take, after going through all of this.
The crypto salary trend is real. It’s global. It’s growing. Companies like Blockchain.com have been doing it successfully for years. Athletes have taken bold, public positions on it. The infrastructure — Bitwage, Request Finance, Rise, and others — exists and works. Over 90% of crypto payroll has shifted to stablecoins, which removes the volatility argument that used to be the strongest objection.
For Indians specifically, the opportunity is most accessible through Web3 jobs and freelance work — not through Indian employment. The legal barriers to receiving Indian employer salary in crypto are real and not easily navigated. But as a freelancer or contractor working for global clients, particularly in the Web3 space, there is genuine opportunity — as long as you handle the compliance side thoughtfully.
The cleanest version of this for an Indian professional today is: build skills in Web3 development, security auditing, or protocol economics. Work for global clients through legitimate channels. Receive fiat via banking. Convert to crypto in India through registered exchanges. Keep meticulous records. Pay your taxes correctly. That combination gives you exposure to the crypto economy, access to better-paying global opportunities, and a compliance trail that holds up to scrutiny.
The version where you receive direct BTC salary and sort out the paperwork later — that’s the version that will cause you problems. In crypto, as in most things, the shortcut rarely ends up being shorter.
For context on how the payment landscape is evolving broadly — from PayPal’s crypto checkout to stablecoins entering mainstream finance — the direction is clearly toward more crypto integration in everyday financial life. India will eventually catch up with the legislative clarity needed to make crypto salary a clean, mainstream option. Until it does, navigate carefully.





