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Introduction

NRI ITR filing can look simple, but practically there are many points where taxpayers make mistakes. An NRI person has to check which Indian income is taxable, which income is not taxable in India, which ITR form is applicable, how TDS refund can be claimed, and whether old tax regime or new tax regime is better.

Normally, the major Indian incomes for an NRI are bank interest, capital gains from sale of securities, dividend income, rental income, and in some cases business or F&O income. If tax is payable, it has to be paid through the ITR. If excess TDS has been deducted, the refund can be claimed through the return.

Before filing, an NRI should also update the residential status on the income tax portal profile. If the profile still shows resident status, it should be changed to NRI / non-resident so that the return is filed correctly.

Main Discussion

1. Which ITR Form Is Applicable for NRI?

For most NRI individuals, ITR-2 is applicable where income mainly includes capital gains and bank interest. However, if the NRI is doing intraday trading, F&O trading, running a business in India, or earning any business income from India, then ITR-3 should be filed.

Applicable ITR Forms for NRI

Situation Applicable Form
Bank interest and capital gains ITR-2
Indian stock market / mutual fund capital gains ITR-2
Intraday trading or F&O income ITR-3
Business or professional income in India ITR-3
ITR-1 or ITR-4 filing by NRI Avoid this mistake

2. Taxable and Non-Taxable Income for NRI

The basic rule is simple: income earned from India is taxable in India. Foreign income earned outside India while living outside India is generally not required to be separately declared in Indian ITR for an NRI, and no Indian tax is payable on that foreign income.

Income Treatment for NRI

Income Type Tax Treatment in India
NRO bank interest Taxable
Capital gains from Indian shares / mutual funds Taxable
Dividend income from India Taxable
Rental income from Indian property Taxable
Foreign salary / foreign income earned outside India Not taxable in India for NRI
NRE / FCNR interest Not taxable in India; can be shown as exempt income

3. New vs Old Tax Regime for NRI

A very important point is that NRI taxpayers do not get the benefit of Section 87A rebate. For resident persons, rebate may reduce tax liability in eligible cases, but for NRI persons this benefit is not available.

In the new tax regime, if income crosses the basic exemption limit, tax becomes payable. In the old tax regime, deductions such as Section 80C and Section 80D can be claimed if the NRI has eligible investments or payments. Therefore, the practical approach is to compute tax under both regimes and select the one where tax is lower.

Old vs New Regime – Practical View

Point New Regime Old Regime
Section 87A rebate for NRI Not available Not available
Chapter VI-A deductions Generally not available Available if eligible
80C / 80D benefit Not useful under new regime Can be claimed if actually paid/invested
Practical approach Draft and compare Compare before final filing

4. Important Reporting in ITR

In ITR-2, an NRI usually needs to review Schedule Other Sources for bank interest and Schedule Capital Gains for share market or mutual fund gains. If crypto or VDA transactions exist, the relevant VDA schedule should be selected.

Schedule FSI, Schedule TR and Schedule FA are generally relevant for resident persons in foreign asset reporting situations. If the taxpayer is filing as an NRI, these schedules are normally not required merely because the person lives outside India.

Important ITR Schedules for NRI

Schedule / Field Practical Use
General Information Select non-resident status, country and identification details
Schedule Other Sources Report Indian bank interest, dividend and other income
Schedule Capital Gains Report STCG / LTCG from shares and mutual funds
Schedule VDA Report crypto / virtual digital asset income if applicable
Schedule House Property Report Indian rental income and loan interest if applicable
Schedule EI Report exempt income such as NRE / FCNR interest if required

5. Bank Account, TDS and Refund

For NRI taxpayers, bank account details are very important because TDS refund will be credited to the validated bank account. The portal allows adding NRO account details by entering account number and IFSC code. TDS deducted on FD interest, capital gains, dividend or rent can be checked in Form 26AS and claimed in ITR.

NRI Bank Account and TDS Points

Point Practical Meaning
NRO account Indian taxable income and refund credit can be linked
NRE account interest Generally not taxable in India
Form 26AS Check TDS deducted before filing
AIS data Review prefilled income and confirm after checking
Refund claim Available where excess TDS is deducted

Practical Impact

The practical impact of these rules is very important for NRIs because wrong form selection, wrong residential status, missing Indian income, or not claiming TDS correctly can create unnecessary tax issues.

  • Do not file ITR-1 or ITR-4 as an NRI if ITR-2 or ITR-3 is applicable.
  • Update residential status on the income tax portal before filing.
  • Report Indian bank interest, capital gains, dividend and rent correctly.
  • Check Form 26AS and AIS before claiming TDS refund.
  • Compare old and new tax regime because 87A rebate is not available to NRI.
  • File within due date if refund, carry forward loss, or tax credit claim is involved.

Conclusion

NRI ITR filing is not only about submitting a return. It requires correct residential status, correct ITR form, proper reporting of Indian income, review of AIS and Form 26AS, correct bank account validation, and careful tax regime comparison.

For most NRIs, ITR-2 is suitable where income includes Indian bank interest, dividend, capital gains and rental income. ITR-3 becomes relevant where business income, intraday trading or F&O income exists. A practical and careful approach helps avoid notices, claim TDS refund correctly, and maintain proper compliance in India.

Key Takeaways

  • NRI should file ITR-2 or ITR-3, depending on income type.
  • Indian income such as NRO interest, capital gains, dividend and rent is taxable in India.
  • Foreign income earned outside India is generally not taxable in India for NRI.
  • NRI taxpayers do not get Section 87A rebate benefit.
  • Old regime may be useful where eligible 80C / 80D deductions are available.
  • Form 26AS and AIS should be checked before claiming TDS refund.
  • NRO account details should be validated for refund credit.
  • NRE / FCNR interest is generally not taxable and may be reported as exempt income.

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As a Chartered Accountant with six years of professional experience, I specialize in Finance, GST, Income Tax, and ROC compliances. My goal is to provide clear, actionable solutions for my clients' compliance and financial requirements. With a strong academic foundation in Accounting, I excel in usi View Full Profile

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