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UK NRIs · Property Sale Tax

Property sale tax for NRIs in UK

When an NRI in UK sells Indian property, the buyer withholds tax on the whole sale value — a Form 13 certificate brings that down to tax on the actual gain.

When you sell Indian property as an NRI living in United Kingdom, the tax on the gain itself is governed by India — under the India-UK treaty, immovable property is taxable in the country where it sits (Immovable property taxable in source country (India)), so the treaty does not lower the headline 12.5% long-term capital-gains rate. The expensive problem is the withholding: the buyer must deduct TDS on the entire sale consideration, not just your profit, which routinely blocks ₹20-30 lakh of cash at closing. The fix is a Form 13 lower-deduction certificate (Section 197), which drops the deduction to a figure based on your real gain.

India-UK key facts: property sale tax

Default Section 195 rate12.5%
India-UK DTAA treaty rate12.5%
Your saving via the treatyNo rate reduction — see note below
Treaty article / basisImmovable property taxable in source country (India)
Your TRC issuing authorityHM Revenue & Customs (HMRC)

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

How it works on the India side

On an NRI property sale the buyer deducts TDS under Section 195 on the full sale value at the long-term capital-gains rate plus surcharge and cess — a much larger sum than the tax you actually owe, because your taxable gain is only the profit after indexation or the 1 April 2001 fair-market-value step-up, not the whole price. That over-deduction sits with the government until you file your return and claim it back, which can be a year or more of blocked cash.

Form 13 (Section 197) is the way to avoid the block rather than chase a refund afterwards. Filed before the sale on the TRACES portal, it asks the Assessing Officer to certify a lower or nil deduction based on your computed gain. With the certificate in hand the buyer deducts only the certified amount, so most of your proceeds reach you at closing instead of being trapped for a year.

What changes because you live in United Kingdom

UK residents report this Indian income through Self Assessment, on the foreign pages (SA106), claiming a foreign tax credit for the Indian tax already paid. Since the April 2025 abolition of the non-dom remittance basis, Indian income is taxable as it arises even if it never leaves your NRO account — and HMRC's nudge letters, driven by CRS data shared automatically by Indian banks and AMCs, are already landing.

Frequently asked questions

Common questions from British Indians

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