Skip to content
Got a notice? Emergency response →

Singapore NRIs · NRO TDS Recovery

NRO account TDS recovery for NRIs in Singapore

Your Indian bank deducts tax on NRO interest at the full non-resident rate — the India-Singapore treaty lets you bring it down and reclaim the excess.

If you live in Singapore and hold an NRO fixed deposit or savings account in India, your bank deducts tax at source on the interest at 30% — the default Section 195 rate for a non-resident. The India-Singapore tax treaty caps that interest withholding at 15% (Article 11), so for most Singapore NRIs the gap between the two is over-withheld tax you are entitled to recover. To claim the lower rate you file Form 10F backed by a Tax Residency Certificate from your country of residence, and any tax already over-deducted comes back as a refund when you file your Indian return.

India-Singapore key facts: nro tds recovery

Default Section 195 rate30%
India-Singapore DTAA treaty rate15%
Your saving via the treaty15%
Treaty article / basisArticle 11
Your TRC issuing authorityIRAS (Inland Revenue Authority of Singapore)

Rates reflect India's domestic Section 195 withholding and the India-Singapore treaty. Surcharge and cess apply on top where relevant.

How it works on the India side

Indian banks apply TDS on NRO interest under Section 195 at the 30% non-resident rate (plus surcharge and cess) unless you have given them a valid Form 10F and Tax Residency Certificate showing you qualify for the treaty rate. Once those are on file, the bank deducts at the lower DTAA rate going forward.

For interest the bank has already over-deducted, the route is your income tax return: the TDS the bank deposited shows in your Form 26AS and AIS against your PAN, you compute your actual liability at the treaty rate, and the difference is refunded with interest under Section 244A. Past years that were missed can often still be recovered through a condonation request, within the window the CBDT allows.

What changes because you live in Singapore

Singapore levies no capital-gains tax and doesn't tax unremitted foreign income, so on the gains side the India-side tax is usually the whole story. One genuine edge case to watch: Indian listed equity bought before 1 April 2017 is grandfathered under the treaty's Third Protocol — those gains are exempt in both India and Singapore — while post-April-2017 holdings are taxed in India. The same folio can hold both treatments depending on when each lot was bought.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions from Singapore NRIs

Go further

Read the full guide, or see your country's complete picture

NRO TDS Recovery sorted, by an Indian CA who works with Singapore NRIs

Tell us your situation and a practising Chartered Accountant will confirm the rate that applies, the paperwork you need, and what you can reclaim — on a free call, no obligation.

No card, no obligation. All filing work is handled by ICAI-registered practising Chartered Accountants.