Step 1 — Determine Your Residential Status
Your filing obligations in India depend entirely on your residential status for FY 2024–25. Under the Income Tax Act, 1961, you are classified as an NRI if you were physically present in India for fewer than 182 days during the financial year.
The 182-Day Rule
- Resident (ROR): Present in India for 182 days or more in the FY
- NRI: Present in India for fewer than 182 days in the FY
- RNOR (Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident): Returned within 2 of the last 10 years, OR India-days fewer than 730 in the last 7 years
Tip: Use your passport’s entry/exit stamps to count days precisely. Partial days count as full days.
Step 2 — Identify Taxable Income in India
As an NRI, only income that is received or accrued in India is taxable here. Foreign income is not taxable in India.
Income Type | Taxable for NRI? | Key Notes |
Salary received / earned in India | YES | Taxable even if credited to a foreign account |
Rent from Indian property | YES | 30% standard deduction allowed; TDS by tenant applies |
Capital gains — Indian assets | YES | Covers listed shares, mutual funds, and property |
Interest on NRE / FCNR accounts | EXEMPT | Fully tax-free as long as NRI status is maintained |
Interest on NRO accounts | YES | TDS deducted @ 30% (may reduce under DTAA) |
Foreign salary / foreign income | EXEMPT | Not taxable in India at all |
Dividend from Indian companies | YES | TDS @ 20%; DTAA may reduce this rate |
Agricultural income in India | EXEMPT | But added for rate computation purposes |
Step 3 — Choose the Correct ITR Form
NRIs cannot use ITR-1 (Sahaj). Filing ITR-1 will make your return defective and invite a notice from the Income Tax Department.
Form | Who Should Use It | Covers |
ITR-2 | Most NRIs — salary, property, capital gains | Salary, house property, capital gains, other income. No business income. |
ITR-3 | NRIs with business/profession income in India | Director fees, freelance work done in India, business income. |
ITR-1 | NOT for NRIs | Do not use. Only for resident individuals with simple income. |
Warning: ITR-1 (Sahaj) is available only to resident individuals. Using it as an NRI renders the return defective.
Step 4 — Collect Documents Before Filing
- PAN Card — Mandatory. Link to Aadhaar if you have one to avoid higher TDS
- Form 26AS / AIS / TIS — Download from incometax.gov.in — shows all TDS deducted against your PAN
- Form 16 / 16A — From your employer or deductor (bank, tenant, etc.)
- Bank statements — Complete statements for NRE, NRO, and FCNR accounts for full FY 2024–25
- Capital gains statements — From broker or mutual fund house — equity, debt, and property transactions
- Property documents — Rent agreements, sale deed, home loan interest certificate if applicable
- Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) — From your country of residence — required to claim DTAA benefits (Form 10F)
- Passport with travel dates — To verify days spent in India and establish residential status
- Advance tax challans — Challan 280 receipts if advance tax was paid during the year
Step 5 — File on the E-Filing Portal (Step by Step)
- Visit incometax.gov.in and log in with your PAN and password. If you don’t have an account, register using your PAN.
- Go to e-File > Income Tax Return > File ITR. Select Assessment Year 2025-26 and choose your form (ITR-2 for most NRIs).
- In the filing status section, select NRI. Enter your passport number and country of residence.
- Fill in income details across all schedules — salary (Schedule S), house property (Schedule HP), capital gains (Schedule CG), and other sources. TDS credits from Form 26AS auto-populate.
- Select your tax regime — New Regime (default) or Old Regime (opt-in). See Section 6 below for guidance.
- Claim eligible deductions: Section 80C (up to Rs 1.5 lakh), Section 80D (medical insurance), Section 80TTA (NRO savings interest up to Rs 10,000), and DTAA relief via Schedule FSI/TR.
- Compute your total tax liability. Pay any balance tax using Challan 280 (Self-Assessment Tax) on the portal before submitting.
- Preview and submit the return. Note your Acknowledgement Number (ITR-V).
- e-Verify within 30 days: use Aadhaar OTP, net banking, or Demat account. Alternatively, post the signed ITR-V to CPC Bengaluru within 30 days by ordinary post.
Critical: The 30-day e-verification deadline is strict. An unverified return is treated as if it was never filed.
Step 6 — Old Regime vs New Regime (2026)
From FY 2024–25, the New Tax Regime is the default. You must explicitly opt for the Old Regime when filing.
Feature | New Regime (Default) | Old Regime (Opt-In) |
Basic exemption limit | Rs 3,00,000 | Rs 2,50,000 |
Tax slabs | Lower rates (5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 25%, 30%) | Higher rates (5%, 20%, 30%) |
Section 80C deduction | Not available | Up to Rs 1,50,000 |
Section 80D (health insurance) | Not available | Up to Rs 25,000 / Rs 50,000 |
HRA exemption | Not available | Available if receiving HRA |
Home loan interest (self-occupied) | Not available | Up to Rs 2,00,000 |
Rebate u/s 87A | Up to Rs 25,000 if income <= Rs 7L | Up to Rs 12,500 if income <= Rs 5L |
Best for NRIs with | No major India deductions | Total deductions exceeding ~Rs 3.75 lakh |
NRI Note: NRIs cannot claim the basic exemption limit against long-term capital gains on listed equity or equity mutual funds — these are taxed at flat rates (10% LTCG / 15% STCG) regardless of the regime chosen.
Step 7 — Key Tax Rates for NRIs
Income / Asset Type | Tax Rate | Surcharge / Notes |
Short-term capital gains (listed equity/equity MF) | 15% | Securities Transaction Tax (STT) paid |
Long-term capital gains (listed equity/equity MF) | 10% (above Rs 1 lakh exemption) | No indexation benefit |
Short-term capital gains (debt MF / property) | As per income slab | Added to income, taxed at slab rate |
Long-term capital gains (property, unlisted) | 20% with indexation | Or 12.5% without indexation (post Jul 2024) |
Long-term capital gains (debt MF post Apr 2023) | As per income slab | Indexation benefit removed |
NRO interest income | 30% flat (TDS) | DTAA may reduce rate; declare in ITR |
Dividends from Indian companies | 20% TDS | DTAA may reduce to 10–15% |
Royalty / technical fees (Indian source) | 10% TDS | Under Section 195 |
Step 8 — DTAA: Avoiding Double Taxation
India has Double Tax Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) with over 90 countries. NRIs can use DTAA provisions to claim lower withholding tax rates in India or a credit for taxes paid in their country of residence.
Common DTAA Benefits by Country
Country of Residence | Interest TDS | Dividend TDS | Key Provision |
USA | 10–15% | 15% | Article 11 / 10 — lower WHT on passive income |
UK | 10–15% | 15% | Similar to US treaty provisions |
UAE | Domestic rate (30%) | Domestic rate (20%) | UAE has no income tax; India taxes at domestic rate |
Canada | 15% | 15% / 25% | Pension income also has treaty protection |
Singapore | 10% | 10–15% | Favourable for IT professionals |
Australia | 10–15% | 15% | Credit method for taxes paid |
Germany | 10% | 10% | Strong treaty — broad scope |
How to Claim DTAA Benefits
- Obtain a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from the tax authority of your country of residence
- Fill in Form 10F with your personal details and submit it to the Indian deductor (bank / company)
- Claim DTAA relief in Schedule FSI (Foreign Source Income) and Schedule TR (Tax Relief) in your ITR
- For lower TDS on NRO accounts, submit TRC + Form 10F to your bank before the interest is credited
Step 9 — Advance Tax Obligations
If your total tax liability in India exceeds Rs 10,000 in a year, you must pay advance tax in four instalments. Failure attracts interest under Sections 234B and 234C.
Instalment | Due Date | Minimum Cumulative Payment |
1st Instalment | 15 June 2025 | 15% of estimated annual tax |
2nd Instalment | 15 September 2025 | 45% of estimated annual tax |
3rd Instalment | 15 December 2025 | 75% of estimated annual tax |
4th Instalment | 15 March 2026 | 100% of estimated annual tax |
Step 10 — ITR Filing Deadlines (AY 2025-26)
Deadline | Applicable To |
31 July 2026 | Original return — non-audit cases (most NRIs) |
31 October 2026 | Audit cases and transfer pricing cases |
31 December 2026 | Belated return or revised return |
31 March 2027 | Updated return (ITR-U) — subject to additional tax |
Late Filing Penalties
- Penalty of Rs 5,000 if return filed after 31 July but before 31 December 2026
- Reduced penalty of Rs 1,000 if total income does not exceed Rs 5 lakh
- Interest @ 1% per month (simple) on outstanding tax from the due date under Section 234A
Warning: If you miss the 31 July deadline, file a belated return by 31 December 2026 to avoid prosecution. An updated return (ITR-U) can be filed up to 31 March 2027 with an additional 25%–50% tax on the tax due.
Common Mistakes to Avoid
Wrong ITR Form: Filing ITR-1 as an NRI renders the return defective. File ITR-2 or ITR-3 as applicable.
Omitting NRO Interest: Interest on NRO accounts has TDS deducted, but the income must still be declared in your ITR under ‘Other Sources’. Omitting it triggers notices under Section 139(9).
Missing TRC / Form 10F: Without a Tax Residency Certificate, you cannot claim reduced TDS rates under DTAA. Excess TDS already deducted at the higher rate can be claimed as a refund in your ITR.
Unlinked PAN: Transactions without a valid PAN attract TDS at 20% or higher under Section 206AA. Ensure your PAN is linked to your Aadhaar if you hold one.
Refund Tip: After filing, validate your NRO bank account on the portal for direct credit of refunds. Refunds are typically processed within 4–8 weeks of e-verification.
Repatriation of Funds from India
NRIs can repatriate up to USD 1 million per financial year from NRO accounts after paying applicable taxes. The following documents are needed:
- Form 15CA — Online declaration filed by remitter on the income tax portal
- Form 15CB — Certificate from a Chartered Accountant certifying that taxes have been paid/deducted
- Proof of source — Sale deed, bank statement, or other documentary evidence
Tip: NRE and FCNR accounts allow free repatriation without any limit or documentation requirement, as the funds are already in foreign currency.
Quick Reference: Key Sections of the Income Tax Act
Section | Description |
Section 2(30) | Definition of Non-Resident for income tax purposes |
Section 5 | Scope of total income — NRI taxed only on India-sourced income |
Section 6 | Residential status rules — the 182-day test |
Section 9 | Income deemed to accrue or arise in India |
Section 80C | Deduction for specified investments — up to Rs 1,50,000 |
Section 80D | Deduction for medical insurance premiums |
Section 80TTA | Deduction on interest from savings accounts — up to Rs 10,000 |
Section 87A | Rebate for resident individuals (NRIs not eligible) |
Section 111A | Tax on short-term capital gains from listed equity — 15% |
Section 112A | Tax on long-term capital gains from listed equity — 10% above Rs 1 lakh |
Section 195 | TDS on payments made to non-residents |
Section 234A / B / C | Interest on late filing, non-payment, and deferment of advance tax |
Disclaimer
This guide is prepared for general informational purposes only based on the Income Tax Act, 1961 and applicable rules for Assessment Year 2025-26. Tax laws are subject to change. The information herein does not constitute legal or tax advice. Readers are strongly advised to consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or tax advisor before filing their income tax return. The author and publisher disclaim all liability for any errors, omissions, or consequences arising from reliance on this guide.





