Real Estate Transactions with Non-Residents- FEMA Angle
India’s real estate market continues to attract NRIs, OCIs, foreign family offices, and global Indians looking to invest back home. Yet, in my experience, real estate transactions involving non-residents are one of the most common sources of FEMA violations—not because the law is prohibitive, but because its finer rules are rarely discussed and complied.
Tax advisors focus on TDS and capital gains. Brokers and buyers focus on pricing and possession. But FEMA compliance often gets attention only when a bank refuses repatriation or an old transaction rear its head during due diligence. Let is explore the finer nuances as below:
1. Buyer violates the rule most of the time:
Under FEMA, eligibility depends entirely on residential status, not nationality.
NRIs and OCIs
They may purchase:
- Residential property
- Commercial property
They cannot purchase:
- Agricultural land
- Plantation property
- Farmhouses
This prohibition is absolute. Consent of family members, joint ownership with residents, or “temporary use” does not cure the violation.
Foreign nationals of non-Indian origin
They generally cannot acquire immovable property in India without prior RBI approval (except in limited cases such as long-term leases or diplomatic categories).
Foreign companies / LLPs
May acquire property only for business use (office, staff housing), not for investment or resale.
2. Seller’s FEMA Status Matters Too:
Most people examine only the buyer’s status. FEMA looks at both sides.
When a resident sells property to a non-resident:
- Payment must come through permitted banking channels
- Source of funds must be traceable
- Cash or third-party payments are strictly prohibited
When a non-resident sells property:
- Repatriation rules apply
- Mode of receipt and bank approvals become critical
I’ve seen perfectly valid sale deeds get stuck because the payment routing violated FEMA, even though ownership was permitted.
3. Payment Channels — Most FEMA Breaches Occur here
Permitted modes:
- Inward remittance in convertible foreign exchange
- Debit to NRE / FCNR(B) / NRO accounts
- Housing loans from Indian banks to NRIs
Not permitted:
- Cash payments
- Remittances routed through relatives or overseas business accounts
- Payments via crypto or digital wallets
- Third-party foreign remittances (may be from friends/relatives) not linked to the buyer
In many compounding cases, the transaction itself is lawful, but the money trail was not.
4. Repatriation of Sale Proceeds — Confusion is galore
This is where expectations and FEMA reality diverge sharply.
Freely repatriable
- Sale proceeds of up to two residential properties
- Provided the original purchase was funded through foreign exchange or NRE/FCNR accounts
Restricted repatriation
- Properties acquired using NRO funds or rupee resources
- Inherited properties
Such proceeds fall under the USD 1 million per financial year repatriation limit (including other assets).
Many NRIs discover this restriction only at the time of sale, when funds are needed urgently.
5. Gifts and Inheritance — Permitted with caution
Gifts:
NRIs/OCIs may gift residential or commercial property to:
- Resident Indians
- Other NRIs or OCIs
They cannot gift agricultural land, farmhouses, or plantation property.
Any hidden consideration converts a gift into a FEMA violation.
Inheritance:
NRIs/OCIs may inherit any immovable property, including agricultural land.
However:
- Repatriation of sale proceeds remains restricted
- Inheritance does not convert restricted property into freely repatriable assets
Inheritance is an exception for ownership, not for repatriation freedom.
6. Joint Ownership — A Potential Trap
Joint ownership between residents and non-residents is permitted only if the non-resident is otherwise eligible to purchase that property.
For Example:
A resident cannot add an NRI child as a joint owner in agricultural land—even for a 1% share.
Such arrangements are routinely flagged during:
- Bank audits
- Repatriation requests
- Family settlement reviews
7. Loans, Mortgages and Pledges:
NRIs may take housing loans in India, but:
- Only from authorised Indian lenders
- Repayment must come through permitted accounts
What is often missed:
- Indian property cannot be mortgaged to overseas lenders without RBI approval
- Pledging Indian property for foreign loans is a clear FEMA violation
This is a frequent trigger for ED scrutiny in high-value cases.
8. Developer-Side FEMA Risks:
Developers often inadvertently violate FEMA by:
- Accepting booking amounts from ineligible foreign buyers
- Receiving funds from non-permitted accounts
- Marketing agricultural land to NRIs
- Refunding advances to overseas bank accounts
Such issues surface later during:
- RBI inspections
- Enforcement Directorate inquiries
- IPO or PE due diligence
At that stage, rectification becomes expensive and time-consuming.
9. Practical Tips:
From experience, a few simple steps prevent most issues:
- Determine FEMA residency upfront (tax residency is not enough)
- Classify the property correctly — residential, commercial, agricultural
- Route all payments through authorised banking channels
- Document the source of funds meticulously
- Plan repatriation at the time of purchase, not at exit
- Avoid informal family arrangements
- Seek a professional FEMA advice in case of high-value or legacy transactions
These steps cost little compared to the consequences of non-compliance.
10. FEMA Compliance Is About Future Certainty
Real estate decisions are often emotional—especially for NRIs investing in India. FEMA compliance, however, is unemotional and technical. The law is clear, but its application requires care.
Most FEMA violations I see in real estate are not deliberate. They arise from assumptions, informal advice, family arrangement or incomplete understanding.
Let us be disciplined and compliant and seek professional advice whenever in doubt.
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In case you have any concern and queries or need any support under FEMA, FDI, ODI, GST and International Taxation, you may like to contact us.
Abhinarayan Mishra, FCA, FCS; Managing Partner, SAM Law Associates LLP; KPAM & Associates, Chartered Accountants, Dwarka, New Delhi; +9910744992, ca.abhimishra@gmail.com



this article about NRI investment in immoveable properties in India is very informattive.
Thank you Mr. K. Surendran for appreciation!