Singapore NRIs · Rental Income Tax
Rental income tax for NRIs in Singapore
Renting out Indian property from Singapore means your tenant must deduct tax under Section 195 — set it up right and reclaim the heavy over-deduction.
India-Singapore key facts: rental income tax
| Default Section 195 rate | 31.2% |
| India-Singapore DTAA treaty rate | 31.2% |
| Your saving via the treaty | No rate reduction — see note below |
| Treaty article / basis | Article 6 |
| Your TRC issuing authority | IRAS (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
A tenant paying rent to an NRI landlord must deduct TDS under Section 195 — the section for any payment to a non-resident — which means the tenant has to take a TAN, deduct each month on the gross rent, deposit it, file a quarterly Form 27Q against your PAN, and issue you a Form 16A. The common, costly mistake is the tenant using Section 194-IB (the 5% resident-landlord rule), which doesn't apply to a non-resident landlord and leaves both sides exposed.
The deduction on gross rent is more than you actually owe, because your taxable rental income is much smaller: a flat 30% standard deduction comes off under Section 24(a), and home-loan interest comes off too. When you file your return, the TDS the tenant deposited is set against your real liability and the excess is refunded — but only if the tenant's Form 27Q correctly reports it against your PAN, which is why setting the tenant up right from the start matters.
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
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Rental Income Tax sorted, by an Indian CA who works with Singapore NRIs
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