Schedule FA in ITR: How to Disclose Foreign Assets & Foreign Income and Avoid Black Money Act Penalties (2025)
Introduction
You filed your Income Tax Return, you paid your tax honestly, and you feel the tension is over. Just hold on. The Income Tax Department is not only looking at India income and India assets. They are also tracking foreign assets and foreign income.
If you are a resident taxpayer, and you have any foreign asset or foreign income, then Schedule FA (Foreign Assets) becomes a very important schedule in your ITR. This schedule may not change your tax calculation directly, but the disclosure is mandatory. And if you miss the disclosure, the Black Money Act has a strict penalty framework.
Main Discussion
1) What Schedule FA covers
Schedule FA is basically for foreign assets and income from outside India. Two things are relevant:
- If you held any foreign asset (property, foreign bank account, shares/securities, ESOPs/RSUs, etc.).
- If you received any foreign income (salary, social media payouts, foreign stock dividend, export of services income, etc.).
A key point: Schedule FA is for disclosure purpose. Your tax is computed under the relevant head of income, while Schedule FA and related schedules are to mirror and disclose the foreign trail properly.
2) Reporting foreign income: head of income + FSI + FA
If you earn from outside India—say social media payments, freelancing/export of services, dividend, or salary—first identify the correct head:
- If it is business/professional income, report under PGBP.
- If it is income from other sources, report accordingly.
Then you also need Schedule FSI (Foreign Source Income), which is only for income (not assets). And along with that, the foreign income disclosure is also captured in Schedule FA (Table G) as per the schedule structure in the return.
3) Reporting foreign assets: calendar-year concept and “held” principle
For foreign assets, reporting is linked to the calendar year cut-off used for that schedule. The big practical point is the wording: it is not only about “purchased”. If the asset is held, it has to be disclosed—even if you bought it years ago and still continue holding it.
Same logic applies to ESOPs/RSUs: if vested/held, it needs disclosure, and you continue reporting while you hold it.
4) Foreign tax paid and DTAA relief
If tax is already deducted outside India (withholding), India allows relief under the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement mechanism, where applicable. Practically, this is supported through Schedule TR and Form 67, along with the income disclosure trail.
5) How the department gets foreign information
Many taxpayers think, “India will not know.” That is not the right assumption. There are data-exchange frameworks like FATCA (for US-linked reporting) and CRS (for global reporting). So if a foreign asset exists, it can come into the department’s visibility through these exchanges and related reporting systems.
Practical Impact / Expert View
Schedule FA is strict because non-disclosure can trigger penalty exposure. The Black Money Act section on late/non-filing in foreign-asset cases provides: “the Assessing Officer may direct that such person shall pay, by way of penalty, a sum of ten lakh rupees”.
As an update relevant for 2025: the law also has a relaxation carve-out for smaller foreign assets (other than immovable property), stated as: “this section shall not apply… (other than immovable property)… [if]… does not exceed twenty lakh rupees.”
So the practical approach is simple and professional:
- Don’t ignore disclosure just because tax does not change.
- Report foreign income in the correct head, then mirror in FSI and FA.
- For foreign assets, disclose based on holding, not just purchase.
- If you missed it, use the revised return option within the permitted time and correct the schedules properly.
Conclusion – key takeaways –
- Schedule FA is mandatory disclosure for resident taxpayers with foreign assets/income.
- Tax is calculated under the income head, while FSI/FA are disclosure schedules.
- Foreign assets are disclosed based on held status, even if bought earlier.
- DTAA relief (where applicable) needs proper trail through Schedule TR and Form 67.
- Penalty framework exists under the Black Money Act; compliance is always better than explaining later.
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REALLY INFORMATIVE ARTICLE. DOES SEC 43 PENALTY COVER NON DISCLOSURE OF FOREIGN REFERRAL FEES RECEIVED IN INDIAN BANK AND TAX PAID IN INDIA, IN SCH FSI ?
Yes—Sec 43 (Black Money Act) can apply for not reporting foreign-source income / Schedule FSI, even if the money came to an Indian bank and tax was paid in India, but mainly if you are ROR. If NRI/RNOR, it generally won’t apply.