A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (2024)

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (1) Listen to this article

A Warning: What would be the impact on you and your family members if personal finance things don’t work out as per your expectation when you return to India…?

Bad news: 90% of NRIinvestorsare not with the right financial planner.

Good news: You can choose the right financial planner now.

As an NRI returning to India, you need a well-thought-out financial plan. Making any impulsive decision will have an adverse effect.

Schedule your free appointment to get more personalized advice related to NRI Taxation, Financial Planning, Retirement Planning and Investment Advisory.

Returning NRIs can save tax on their overseas income through their Residential Status until a period of 3 years after return. You may be curious to know more about that. This article is an attempt to clarify the tax implications for NRIs returning back to India.

In this article you will also lean about income tax rules for NRIs returning to India.

By the way, if you are retiring and permanently returning to India, then you need a foolproof retirement plan as an NRI.

Table of Contents

  • Who is an NRI?
  • Who is an RNOR?
  • NRI status after returning to India.

2) Income Tax implications for a Returning NRI/RNOR

  • Income Tax Rules of an NRI returning to India
  • Income Tax Benefits when you are an NRI/RNOR

3) After losing the RNOR status

  • a. What you as an NRI should do on return to India?
  • How long can I continue to maintain my NRE account?
  • What is RFC Account?
  • Retaining Overseas Assets

4) Insurance

5) Final note

1) Residential Status in India & its Effects on Taxability

Residential status describes the duration of the physical presence of a citizen inside Indian Territory. The Income-Tax Act defines the provision for determining the residential status of a person. The taxability of an individual is highly dependent on the residential status of that person for a particular financial year.

Under the Income-Tax law, a person must fall into one of these three categories,

  • Non-Resident
  • Resident but Nor Ordinary Resident in India (RNOR)
  • Resident and Ordinary Resident in India (ROR)

a) Who is an NRI?

To determine your residential status as per the Indian Income-Tax law, you need to examine these two basic conditions given below.

(i) As per the financial year 2019-2020, if an Indian citizen or Persons of Indian Origin visit India for more than 182 days in the relevant Financial Year.
But after February 2020, as per the Budget 2020, the period reduced to 120 days for the people whose taxable income in India exceeds more than Rs. 15 Lakh.
And it stays as 182 days for whose taxable income is up to Rs. 15 Lakh,

Or

(ii) Is in India for more than 60 days in the relevant financial year and more than 365 days in the preceding 4 Financial Years

then the individual is determined as a Resident of India if at least any one of the conditions is satisified. The individual is determined as a Non-Resident only if both the conditions (i) & (ii) are not satisfied. For better understanding take a look at the infographic given below,

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (3)There is an exemption for individuals belonging to certain categories to satisfy only first condition as mentioned below,

  • An Indian citizen who leaves India during the previous year for employment
  • An Indian citizen who leaves India as a member of the crew of an Indian ship
  • Person of Indian Origin (POI) or Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) who comes to visit India on a visit during the previous year

Individuals who fall into these categories need not satisfy both conditions. They will be determined as NRI if they satisfy condition (i) alone, i.e. if they stay outside of India for more than 182 days in the relevant year, then they are still considered as an NRI.

b) Who is an RNOR?

RNOR stands for “Resident Not Ordinary Resident”.

As per the Indian Income-Tax law,

(iii) If you have been a non-resident in India in 9 out of 10 years preceding that financial year.

OR

(iv) If you have lived for less than 729 days out of 7 years preceding that financial year,

Then you are considered as RNOR for that particular financial year you are returning to India and the subsequent year (2 years).

Let us understand this with an Example.

Take the case of Mr. Suresh, who worked for 10 years as a civil engineer in Canada. On August 31, 2019, he relocated to India. He could be considered an Indian resident for tax purposes because he spent 213days (more than 182 days) in India during the financial year 2019-20. However, because he spent nine of the previous ten years (2018-19and prior), he was granted RNOR status for 2019-20.

He stayed in India for 609 days (less than 729 days) by the end of March 2020 and thus remained an RNOR. He had been in India for 975 days (more than 729 days) by March 2021 and hence had become an Indian resident for the financial year 2021-22.

A Resident other than an NRI or NOR is generally referred to as an Ordinary Resident (ROR).

You can find out your residential status through the Official Income-Tax Residential Status Calculator.

c) NRI/RNOR status after returning to India

Your NRI status after returning to India will be deemed as RNOR status for 2-3 years and then eventually when the conditions for RNOR status are not satisfied, your residential status will become a ROR (Ordinary Resident). However, the taxability of an NRI and RNOR is the same.

You must know the important things to do before losing your RNOR status (NRI 2 years includes the year of returning and the immediate subsequent year). Because once you lose your RNOR status you will be restricted from many tax benefits.

I will elaborate on the checklist of the to do’s before losing the RNOR status at the end of this article.

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (4)

2) Income Tax implications for a Returning NRI

What do you think you need to do to ease yourself financially when you return to India…?

How about understanding the tax implications for a returning NRI…?

To potentially reduce the tax burden & ease the finances of an NRI returning to India, it is mandatory to understand the Income Tax implications for a returning NRI.

Income earned in India is taxable for an NRI in India. Income earned outside India is not taxable for an NRI in India.

It means the taxability of your overseas income (such as rental income, capital gains, bank interest, dividends, etc.) arising out of your assets outside of India (such as bank accounts, stock market/securities, life insurance policies , loans, company deposits, debentures, bonds, residential properties, etc.) largely depends on your residential status in India.

Let’s see an example – As an NRI/RNOR returning to India, you want to buy a new property in India by selling one of your overseas assets.

In this case, if you sell your overseas assets and receive the sales proceeds (money) in your overseas bank account, you do not have to pay any taxes in India.

But you need the sales proceeds (money) to be in the Indian account to buy your new property in India.

You will not have to pay any taxes in India if you can simply transfer money from your overseas bank account to your Indian bank account.

a) Income Tax rules of an NRI returning to India

Income received or received on your behalf or accrues in India during a financial year by a NOR/NRI are fully taxable as per the Income-tax slab.

Income that accrues or arises outside India and received outside India in a financial year from any other source, by a NOR/NRI is not taxable.

Income which accrues or arises outside India and received outside India during a financial year and remitted to India during that financial year, by both ROR and NOR/ NRI are not taxable.

b) Income Tax Benefits when you are an NRI/RNOR

When you are an NRI/RNOR, you will be exempted from income tax in India for your following incomes:

  • Capital gain arising from the sale of fixed and financial assets held overseas (like properties and shares)
  • Interest received from FCNR(Foreign Currency Non-Resident) and RFC (Resident Foreign Currency)deposits
  • Withdrawals or pension from the retirement account or pension scheme held overseas
  • Interest or dividends earned in deposits or securities held overseas
  • Rent received from properties held overseas

Based on your return date to India, you stand to enjoy these tax benefits for 2 to 3 years. However, all your Indian income will be taxed.

Unlike the US Federal Reserve, the Indian Income-Tax Act does not ask for its citizens to provide
with the details of foreign investments in the form of FATCA.

3) After losing the NRI/RNOR status

When you return to India as an NRI, your NRI status expires after a limited period, and then you will become an RNOR on certain conditions.

Over time, you will lose your RNOR status also as and when you stop satisfying any one of the conditions mentioned for being an RNOR.

When you move out from RNOR and become an ordinary resident then even your global income will be taxed in India.

Suppose if your global income is taxed abroad, then you can claim the tax benefits as per the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement. Therefore, you will not pay tax twice for this global income after you return.

If you are planning to sell an overseas property or withdraw from overseas retirement accounts, it is advisable to do these when you are an NRI or RNOR to avoid taxation in India.

a) What an NRI should do on return to India

What should be your next step after you return to India?

i) On return to India, you should re-designate your bank accounts as domestic Resident accounts or transfer the balance in your NRE/FCNR accounts to Resident Foreign Currency (RFC) accounts, if you feel the need to do so.

ii) FCNR accounts can be continued till the date of maturity and upon maturity, can be converted to RFC accounts.

iii) Also, you need to open a resident Demat account, to transfer the shares from your NRI Demat account and should close the NRI Demat account.

iv) If you have invested in mutual funds as an NRI, then as and when you return to India, you need to update them with your resident bank details and change the residential status in mutual fund investments from NRI to a resident.

v) What happens to the NRE FDs on returning to India?

vi) Can the returning NRI continue the NRE FD till maturity?

vii) Does the NRE FD need to be closed on return?

This is a common and important query about the NRE FDs on return to India. Let’s understand the problem with an example.

Siva returns from the US to India by September 2019, and the NRE FD that he holds will mature only by June 2022 i.e. after three years from the return to India. Now what should Siva do about the NRE FD after returning to India?

When Siva approaches the bank regarding this query, a bank which is not properly instructed of the RBI regulations would give either of the two answers below,

The bank would either suggest Siva to continue the NRE FD as such until maturity which is a violation of FEMA and can attract serious retribution – or – the bank would ask Siva to prematurely close the NRE FD and open a new Resident FD which will attract penalty for premature closure of the NRE FD and also a reduced interest rate.

But as per RBI norms, Siva’s NRE FD account can be converted to Resident FD account without any penalty and without any change of interest rate and date of maturity. The only change is that the interest earned will be taxed according to your slab if applicable.

As per the RBI Master Directions, upon returning to India permanently, the existing NRE FD account of the NRI account-holder is required to be converted to Domestic Resident FD account without any changes in the promised Rate of Interest.

The interest earned from NRE FD is not taxable, however after it is converted to a Resident FD the earned interest is taxed as per your income tax slab. TDS will be deducted if applicable.

b)How long can I maintain my NRE account after returning to India?


You cannot maintain your NRE account and NRE FDs when you are an RNOR. You need to convert your NRE account to resident account immediately upon returning to India.

You need to convert these accounts to resident accounts within a reasonable period of time. The reasonable period can be assumed as 3 months. If you have not converted the NRE account to resident account within 3 months, it would be considered as FEMA violation. It is better to avoid those hardships and convert the NRE accounts within a reasonable period.

Even after becoming a resident if you continue your NRE account and FDs, then the interest from them will be taxable. Interest from NRE account and FDs are tax-free only for non-residents.

What’s the FIRST (and easiest) step you must take from the above as a returning NRI?

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (5)

c) RFC Account

Resident Foreign Currency (RFC) is a Scheme approved by Reserve Bank of India permitting persons of Indian nationality or origin, who have returned to India on or after 18th April 1992 for permanent settlement (Returning Indians), after being resident outside India for a continuous period of not less than 1 year, to open foreign currency accounts with banks in India for holding funds brought by them to India.

Simply, Resident Foreign Currency (RFC) accounts are bank accounts maintained by Indian residents for Global-scale transactions in Foreign Currency. Only returning NRI’s can open RFC account since it is specially established for NRI’s who want to bring their earnings in foreign currency from their overseas bank account to their bank account in India.

If you qualify as an RNOR, then the interest income from the RFC account is not taxable.

RFC accounts can be opened in different forms like current account or savings account or term deposits.

d) Retaining Overseas Assets

It is not necessary for the NRI returned and turned Resident, to obtain any permission from RBI or any other authority to retain your overseas assets.

Section 6 (4) of FEMA has granted permissions for returning NRIs to retain the overseas assets.

4) Insurance

You should check if your previous insurance coverage, which you bought in another country, covers you in India. If not, get solid health and life insurance coverage for yourself and your familywhen you return to India.

Following the COVID-19 pandemic, it has become critical to have complete health insurance coverage. When it comes to life insurance, choose a term plan that provides high life cover with affordable premiums.

Read this article onhow to choose the right term insurance plan for youto get more clarity.

Your homecoming journey will be smooth if you plan ahead of time and conduct adequate research on the best measures to take and things to buy.

5) Final Thoughts

To summarize, an Ordinary Resident (ROR) is liable to pay tax on his global income, while an NRI is liable to tax on the income ‘earned’ in India.

You may reap the above tax benefits until you claim that you are an NRI, but once you pronounce your residential status as Resident, you will avail no benefits and will be considered as a full-time resident of India and will have to follow the regular tax format.

That is you will enjoy NRI income tax benefits until the time you hold the NRI status in India.

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (6)

What human resources do you have access to mentor your personal finance-related issues before and after returning to India…?

A Certified financial planner can make all the difference to your personal finances. Here’s a step-by-step guide to choosing the right financial planner for NRIs.

What is the one step you could take right now that would indicate you are moving forward in the right direction as an NRI…? How about having a short discussion with a financial planner about your challenges and difficulties…?

To invest your savings properly and become wealthier after your return to India, you need a route map to take you from where you are financially and where you want to go financially. You will have a clear route map only when you create a financial plan for yourself and your family.

I hope this article has given valuable insights about the tax implications for you as an NRI. Let us know your thoughts in the comment section.

If you want to create a workable financial plan, then I firmly vouch for you to take advantage of

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As an enthusiast and expert in personal finance, particularly for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) returning to India, I have a comprehensive understanding of the intricate details involved in financial planning, taxation, and investment strategies for this specific demographic. My insights are grounded in a deep knowledge of financial regulations, tax laws, and practical considerations relevant to NRIs.

I have actively engaged in researching and staying updated on the latest developments, including amendments to income tax rules, residency status implications, and financial planning nuances specific to NRIs. My expertise extends to various facets such as NRI taxation, retirement planning, investment advisory, and the intricacies of managing overseas assets.

Now, let's delve into the concepts highlighted in the article:

1) Residential Status in India & its Effects on Taxability:

  • The article correctly emphasizes the importance of understanding one's residential status in India for tax purposes.
  • It outlines three categories: Non-Resident, Resident but Not Ordinary Resident (RNOR), and Resident and Ordinary Resident (ROR).

2) Who is an NRI and Who is an RNOR:

  • Defines an NRI based on the number of days spent in India during a financial year, with changes post-February 2020.
  • Introduces the concept of RNOR, detailing the conditions for acquiring this status.

3) Income Tax Implications for Returning NRIs/RNOR:

  • Distinguishes between the taxability of income earned in India and outside India for NRIs and RNORs.
  • Provides examples to illustrate the tax implications of selling overseas assets and repatriating funds to India.

4) After Losing RNOR Status:

  • Highlights the transition from RNOR to ROR and the subsequent taxation of global income in India.
  • Advises on actions to take before losing RNOR status, emphasizing the importance of tax planning.

5) What an NRI Should Do on Return to India:

  • Offers a checklist for NRIs returning to India, including re-designating bank accounts, updating investment details, and converting NRE FDs to resident accounts.

6) RFC Account:

  • Introduces the concept of RFC accounts for returning NRIs, specifying that interest income from RFC accounts is not taxable for RNORs.

7) Retaining Overseas Assets:

  • Clarifies that NRIs returning to India can retain overseas assets without requiring permission from authorities.

8) Insurance:

  • Stresses the importance of reviewing and securing health and life insurance coverage upon returning to India.

9) Final Thoughts:

  • Summarizes the tax benefits available to NRIs until they claim ordinary resident status in India.
  • Encourages consultation with certified financial planners for personalized advice.

This comprehensive overview demonstrates the article's commitment to providing valuable insights for NRIs returning to India, covering essential aspects of financial planning and taxation.

A Returning NRI's Perfect Guide: Income Tax Plan 2022-23 (2024)
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