Non-dom is dead. Your Indian income is now UK-taxable on arising basis. The treaty still helps.
From 6 April 2025, the remittance basis is gone. Your NRO interest, MF capital gains and Indian rental are now UK-taxable as they arise, and HMRC's nudge letters from CRS data are already landing. The India-UK DTAA caps interest at 15% (general) and portfolio dividends at 10% (the 15% sub-rate applies only to property-vehicle / REIT dividends), and Self Assessment FTC stops the double hit. About £1,560 a year for a typical NHS-consultant or City-finance portfolio.
£1,560
lost per year by British Indians
15%
DTAA treaty rate on interest income
(instead of 30% TDS deducted in India)
1.7 million+
Indians in the UK
Recovery from ₹4,999/yr + 15% success fee. No India trip needed.
At a glance
Where British Indianssave, and where they don't
Green bars = your treaty rate. Red bars = what your bank actually deducts. The gap is your money.
3 income types(capital gains, rental, etc.) where the treaty rate matches the default are not shown above. Some treaties include Article 22 provisions for “other income” — eligibility depends on your specific income structure. A CA will confirm which rates apply to you.
What is TDS?
Tax Deducted at Source. Whenever you earn income from investments in India — FD interest, mutual fund returns, dividends — the payer (bank, AMC, or company) deducts tax before crediting your account. For NRIs, this is usually 30% under Section 195, regardless of what you actually owe.
What is DTAA?
Double Tax Avoidance Agreement. A treaty between India and UK that caps the tax rate on your Indian income. For example, interest is capped at 15% instead of 30%. The difference is legally yours to claim back.
Want exact numbers, not estimates?
Upload your AIS (Annual Information Statement from the IT portal) and we'll match every TDS line against the India–UK DTAA treaty rates.
Upload your AIS, freeReal numbers
A typical British Indian's story
Based on NHS consultants and GPs (London, Birmingham, Leicester, Manchester), City of London finance (banking, hedge funds, Big 4), tech professionals around the M4 corridor (Cambridge, Oxford, Reading), East African Gujarati restaurateurs in Leicester and North London, pharmacists and locums, academics across Russell Group universities. The community spans both ends of the income spectrum. Wembley shopkeepers and Mayfair bankers under the same DTAA., the kind of people in the British Indian community.
Vikram
44, NHS consultant cardiologist in Manchester, UK resident for 12 years. Holds ₹1.05Cr in NRO FDs (built from family property sale), a ₹1.65Cr Indian MF portfolio rolled over from his Bangalore IT days, and a Pune 3-BHK earning rental. April 2025 non-dom abolition means his NRO interest is now UK-taxable on arising basis. FTC optimisation matters more than ever.
Indian Investments
Annual TDS Impact
Every year, Vikram saves
₹1,29,150
5-year recovery potential
₹6,45,750
This is just one example. Many Indians in the UK with investments of Wide range. NHS consultants and tech: ₹40L-1.5Cr in MFs, ₹15-50L in FDs, plus a Bangalore/Mumbai flat. City finance professionals often ₹1Cr+ in MFs. Restaurateurs and pharmacists: ₹20-60L in FDs, lower MF exposure, family property in Gujarat or Punjab. save even more.
Your side of the process
How to get your Tax Residency Certificate
You're a British Indian. India needs proof. Here's the workflow from UK, documents, portal, timeline, the lot.
Who issues it
HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC)
What it costs
Free (HMRC issues at no charge via Government Gateway)
Timeline
6-8 weeks by post
Form 10F / Form 41
Required alongside TRC
Step by step
- 1
Sign into the Government Gateway with your HMRC credentials.
- 2
Open 'Certificate of Residence' under Self Assessment or use the online form for non-SA individuals.
- 3
Specify the treaty country (India), the income type, and the period covered.
- 4
Submit. HMRC posts the certificate to your UK address in 6-8 weeks.
- 5
Scan and send to your Indian CA along with Form 10F details.
Documents you'll need
- UTR (Unique Taxpayer Reference) if you file Self Assessment
- National Insurance number
- UK address proof (utility bill or council tax)
- Details of the Indian income and treaty article being claimed
UK-specific gotchas
- From 6 April 2025 the non-dom regime is abolished. If you used the remittance basis, your Indian income is now UK-taxable as it arises, check your filing position.
- UK inheritance tax is now residence-based (10-year rule). Indian ancestral property can fall into the UK IHT net after 10 years of UK residence.
- HMRC's 6-8 week turnaround is the slowest in Europe. Apply in January for a March Indian filing deadline.
Once you have the TRC
Attach the HMRC certificate to your Form 10F on the Indian portal. Claim Foreign Tax Credit on your UK Self Assessment for the Indian TDS paid at the treaty rate.
Don't want to deal with HM Revenue & Customs (HMRC) yourself? Our CAs handle the TRC workflow for British Indians every day.
Things British Indians should know
Pitfalls we've seen Indians in the UK face
We work with the British Indian community every day. These are the traps that cost real money.
April 2025 non-dom abolition: the FIG (Foreign Income and Gains) regime gives new arrivals a 4-year exemption then full worldwide taxation. If you were on the remittance basis for years and your NRO/NRE interest was sitting outside UK tax, that protection is gone, every rupee of Indian interest is now UK-taxable as it arises.
Self Assessment deadline is 31 January (online) for UK; ITR is 31 July in India, a 6-month mismatch that means you typically file India first and then claim FTC on the UK return that lands months later. Get the Indian Form 67 + ITR-V ready before you touch SA106.
HMRC Certificate of Residence takes 6-8 weeks via the Government Gateway portal, the slowest of any major country. Apply by mid-January if you want it in hand before the Indian FY closes on 31 March.
IHT (Inheritance Tax) tail on Indian-origin assets: under the new residence-based IHT regime from April 2025, you can remain in scope of UK IHT on worldwide assets for up to 10 years after leaving the UK. This catches British-Indian retirees who think moving back to India ends their UK tax exposure.
HMRC nudge letters: since 2024, HMRC has been sending one-to-many letters to taxpayers based on CRS data received from India. Indian banks, MFs and brokerages now report under CRS automatically. If you've received one, do NOT ignore it; the disclosure window is short and penalties scale fast.
SIPP / UK pension vs Indian PPF/EPF: lump-sum withdrawals, QROPS transfers, and the India-UK pension article all need careful sequencing. Drawing the wrong one first can cost five figures.
Indian MF redemptions are reportable on SA106 as foreign income/gains, even if the money never leaves the NRO account. Post-non-dom abolition, the 'I didn't remit it' defence no longer works.
What British Indians usually miss
The specifics most Indians in the UK (and their advisors) overlook
UK NRIs sit at the intersection of two mature tax regimes — and the UK side just had its biggest reform in decades (the abolition of the non-dom remittance basis on 6 April 2025 and the pivot to a residence-based IHT regime). Below are the second-order specifics — the basis mismatches, ISA traps, IHT tail period, and SRT day-count thresholds — that even cross-border CAs routinely miss.
When a UK-resident person inherits Indian property, two completely different cost bases apply. Selling later requires reconciling both — and the gap can be substantial.
UK side — TCGA 1992 §62 probate-value step-up. Under §62(1) of the Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992, on death the assets pass to the personal representatives at market value at the date of death (the "probate value"). When the heir later disposes of the asset, the UK chargeable gain is measured from probate value — a death-date step-up parallel to the US IRC §1014 rule. The post-October-2024 Budget rates apply: 18% basic-rate / 24% higher-rate CGT on residential property; the rate alignment in the Autumn 2024 Budget brought non-residential CGT up from 10% / 20% to 18% / 24% for disposals on or after 30 October 2024, removing the prior non-residential discount.
Indian side — Section 49(1)(ii) / 49(1)(iii)(a) carry-over. Same as for any inherited Indian asset: the cost of acquisition carries from the previous owner under §49(1); §55(2)(b)(ii) lets the heir elect FMV as of 1 April 2001 if the previous owner acquired pre-2001 (capped at stamp-duty value for land/building per the FA 2020 proviso). No date-of-death step-up.
The numbers. A Mumbai flat acquired in 1995 for ₹15 lakh, FMV at parent's 2024 death ₹2.5 cr, sold 2026 for ₹3 cr.
• Indian gain (carry-over): ₹3 cr − ₹15 lakh = ₹2.85 cr at Section 112 12.5% = ~₹35.6 lakh of Indian tax (pre-surcharge / cess). Section 55(2)(b)(ii) FMV-1-April-2001 election is live; if the 2001 FMV (capped at stamp-duty value) is, say, ₹35 lakh, the gain falls to ₹2.65 cr and tax to ~₹33.1 lakh.
• UK gain (probate-value step-up): proceeds ~£286,000 at £/₹105 minus probate value ~£238,000 = £48,000 gain. UK CGT at 24% (higher rate) = ~£11,500.
• UK Foreign Tax Credit relief: under the India-UK DTAA Article 24, the UK gives credit for Indian tax on the same gain — but capped at the UK tax on that gain (~£11,500). Indian tax in GBP is ~₹35.6 lakh / 105 ≈ £33,900, so excess Indian tax of ~£22,000+ cannot be credited and is lost on the UK side. Conversely, the Indian-side liability is computed without reference to UK CGT — there is no Indian foreign-tax credit for a UK-only resident.
The trap. Many UK tax preparers use the Indian original cost on the UK return — overstating the UK gain by orders of magnitude. The two parallel computations must be reconciled file-by-file, with the §55(2)(b)(ii) election exercised on every pre-2001 inherited disposal.
Sources
- Taxation of Chargeable Gains Act 1992 §62(1) — death-date market value uplift for personal representatives (UK)
- Section 49(1)(ii) and 49(1)(iii)(a) of the Income-tax Act 1961 — Indian cost-basis carry-over
- Section 55(2)(b)(ii) of the Income-tax Act 1961 — FMV-as-on-1-April-2001 election with FA 2020 stamp-duty cap
- UK Finance Act 2025 sections 7-12 — CGT main rate uplift to 18% / 24% on disposals on or after 30 October 2024
- India-UK DTAA Article 24 — relief from double taxation
Last reviewed 2026-05-03. We re-audit this list quarterly against new CBDT circulars, Finance Act amendments, and home-country tax updates.
British Indians who recovered
Real people. Real money back.
“The HMRC TRC process felt... daunting, honestly. TrustNRI walked me through every single step, filed my amended ITR, and I got £2,100 back. Their UK-specific knowledge is something else entirely.”
V.P.
NHS Consultant, London
“Uploaded my 26AS, saw the savings breakdown in like... 2 minutes? The Germany-specific guidance was spot-on, including the Finanzamt TRC process which nobody else understands. Recovered €2,200.”
D.V.
Engineer, Walldorf
Questions from British Indians
Everything Indians in the UK ask us
51+ answers. Hover on dotted terms for plain-English explanations.
£7,800
lost over 5 years by the average British Indian
Every year you wait, another £1,560 walks out the door.
1. Upload 26AS
Two minutes. We read your TDS, flag the excess, quote your recovery.
2. We file the treaty paperwork
Form 10F + your country's tax certificate + ITR-2. We pull every form, you stay abroad.
3. Refund into your NRO
Direct credit from the ITD. You keep 85%. Our 15% is success-only.
Free to check. From ₹4,999/yr · 15% success fee. We only charge when you recover.
More for Indians in the UK
Friends & neighbours
NRIs in nearby countries with similar DTAA benefits. Know someone? Share this.