According to several reports, Indians are increasingly engaging with cryptocurrency. This rise in participation also increases the risk of fraud and exposure to sanctioned entities. This is where the Travel Rule becomes important. First devised for banks and later extended by the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) to crypto assets in 2019, the rule requires key information about the originator and beneficiary to “travel” with each transfer. A wallet address alone is not enough; identity must accompany value so that suspicious flows can be traced across institutions and borders.