NRE interest is taxable on your 1040. PFICs eat your MFs. The treaty still has work to do.
Your NRE FD interest is exempt in India and fully taxable by the IRS. Your Indian mutual funds are PFICs that need Form 8621. Your bank still deducts 30% TDS on NRO interest when Article 11 caps it at 15%. A typical American NRI overpays around $4,500 a year on Indian withholding alone, before the PFIC clean-up, the FBAR and Form 8938 paperwork, and the RNOR planning that should start years before you actually move back.
$4,500
lost per year by American NRIs
15%
DTAA treaty rate on interest income
(instead of 30% TDS deducted in India)
5 million+
Indians in America
Recovery from ₹4,999/yr + 15% success fee. No India trip needed.
At a glance
Where American NRIssave, and where they don't
Green bars = your treaty rate. Red bars = what your bank actually deducts. The gap is your money.
4 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 US 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–US DTAA treaty rates.
Upload your AIS, freeReal numbers
A typical American NRI's story
Based on Bay Area / Seattle / Austin software engineers (H-1B, L-1, Green Card, naturalised citizens) and PMs at FAANG and startups; East Coast hospital consultants and surgeons across NJ and the Midwest; Wall Street and Chicago finance professionals; quant and ML researchers; founders; plus a substantial 60+ retired-physician cohort sitting on decades of compounded Indian assets. A large slice are 5-15 years from actively planning the return-to-India RNOR window., the kind of people in the Indian-American community.
Priya
38, senior software engineer at a Bay Area FAANG. H-1B since 2014, Green Card 2021. Planning a return to Bengaluru in 2028 to use a 2-year RNOR window. Holds ₹2.1Cr in NRO FDs (legacy from pre-FATCA days), ₹4.5Cr across Indian equity and hybrid mutual funds in an Aditya Birla folio that still takes US NRIs, and ₹75L in NRO savings. Files FBAR and Form 8938 every year, mid-way through cleaning up PFIC exposure on her older MF holdings.
Indian Investments
Annual TDS Impact
Every year, Priya saves
₹2,99,250
5-year recovery potential
₹14,96,250
This is just one example. Many Indians in America with investments of ₹50L-1.5Cr in mutual funds is the Bay Area baseline; senior doctors and tech leads commonly carry ₹1-3Cr. Add ₹30-80L in NRO/NRE FDs, ₹10-30L in NRO savings, plus a Mumbai / Bengaluru / Pune flat worth ₹80L-5Cr and often a parental property still in the NRI's name. save even more.
Your side of the process
How to get your Tax Residency Certificate
You're an Indian-American. India needs proof. Here's the workflow from US, documents, portal, timeline, the lot.
Who issues it
Internal Revenue Service (IRS)
What it costs
$85 (~₹7,000)
Timeline
6-12 weeks from IRS receipt
Form 10F / Form 41
Required alongside TRC
Step by step
- 1
Download IRS Form 8802 from irs.gov. Fill applicant name, TIN, tax year, and treaty country (India).
- 2
Pay the $85 user fee through pay.gov, the reference number goes on the 8802.
- 3
Mail the completed 8802 + payment confirmation to the IRS Philadelphia address listed on page 7.
- 4
IRS processes the request in 6-12 weeks. Form 6166 arrives by post as the US TRC.
- 5
Scan and send to your Indian CA for Form 10F.
Documents you'll need
- Form 8802 (Application for United States Residency Certification)
- Proof of $85 user fee payment (pay.gov confirmation)
- Copy of prior-year Form 1040 as residency evidence
- Form 8821 if an authorized representative is applying on your behalf
US-specific gotchas
- IRS turnaround is the slowest of any major country, start 3+ months before your Indian ITR deadline.
- Form 6166 is issued for a specific calendar year. India's FY runs April-March so you may need two separate 6166s to cover one Indian FY.
- The 15% dividend treaty rate only applies to corporate holders with ≥10% voting stock. For individual NRIs, the treaty cap is 25%, but India's domestic Section 195 rate is 20% — so individuals effectively pay 20% domestic and the DTAA delivers zero relief on Indian dividends. FTC on Form 1116 is the only lever.
Once you have the TRC
Scan Form 6166, upload on the Indian e-filing portal with Form 10F. Claim DTAA rates in your ITR and Foreign Tax Credit on your US 1040.
Don't want to deal with Internal Revenue Service (IRS) yourself? Our CAs handle the TRC workflow for American NRIs every day.
Things American NRIs should know
Pitfalls we've seen Indians in America face
We work with the Indian-American community every day. These are the traps that cost real money.
PFIC trap: Every Indian mutual fund unit is a Passive Foreign Investment Company under IRC §1297. Each fund needs a separate Form 8621, and the default 'excess distribution' regime is punitive, interest charges on deferred gains. QEF election is impractical (most Indian AMCs don't issue PFIC Annual Information Statements; a small number do on request). Mark-to-market election (§1296) is the only practical out, and you pay ordinary-income rates on phantom gains every year.
NRE FD interest is tax-FREE in India but 100% taxable by the IRS. This is the single most misunderstood thing for American NRIs, every dollar of NRE interest must go on Form 1040 Schedule B, taxed at your full federal + state bracket. No FTC because India levied no tax. Most NRIs find out years later during an audit.
FBAR (FinCEN 114) is mandatory if your aggregate Indian accounts (NRE + NRO + demat + PPF + EPF + insurance cash value) exceed $10,000 at ANY point in the year. Penalty for willful non-filing (CY 2026): greater of $165,353 or 50% of account balance, per violation, per FinCEN's annual inflation adjustment under 31 CFR 1010.821 (Federal Register, 17 Jan 2025). Non-willful: ~$16,000 per violation (also inflation-adjusted; verify the current year's FinCEN table).
FATCA Form 8938 layers on top of FBAR. For NRIs (US persons living abroad): $200K (single, end of year) / $300K at any time during year, or $400K (joint, EOY) / $600K at any time. The lower $50K/$100K thresholds apply only to US-resident filers, NRIs abroad get the higher offshore thresholds. Different form, different threshold from FBAR, both still required.
State tax layering: California (FTB) is aggressive on worldwide income at up to 13.3% and notoriously slow to release residents. NY and NJ also tax Indian income with no state-level FTC for Indian tax. A Bay Area or NJ NRI pays federal + state on the same Indian rupee.
RNOR planning window: If you're planning to move back to India, the 2-3 year RNOR (Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident) status under §6 of the Income-tax Act is invaluable. You can liquidate US-held assets without Indian tax during this window, but you have to plan the year of return precisely.
FATCA-locked AMC accounts: Groww, Zerodha, Kuvera and many AMCs refuse to onboard or freeze accounts of NRIs with US addresses because of W-9/W-8BEN and FATCA reporting overhead. Existing folios often go into 'redeem-only' mode.
Dividend DTAA gives American individuals zero relief: Article 10(2)'s 15% rate is for company-to-company holdings only. Individual NRIs are stuck at India's 20% default withholding, and the only real lever is FTC on Form 1116.
What American NRIs usually miss
The specifics most Indians in America (and their advisors) overlook
US NRIs sit at the intersection of two sophisticated tax regimes — the Income-tax Act on the Indian side and the Internal Revenue Code on the US side — that don't always align. The big-ticket items (PFIC on Indian mutual funds, FBAR on foreign accounts, Form 8938 FATCA reporting) are documented elsewhere on this site. Below are the second-order specifics — the basis mismatches, basket allocations, and state-domicile traps — that even cross-border CAs routinely miss.
When a US person inherits Indian property, two completely different cost bases apply on the two sides. Selling the property later requires reconciling both — and the gap can be in crores.
US side — IRC §1014(a) read with §1014(b)(1) stepped-up basis. Property "acquired by bequest, devise, or inheritance, or by the decedent's estate from the decedent" takes a basis equal to fair market value at the decedent's date of death (or the alternate-valuation date if §2032 was elected on the estate return). The section is not geographically limited and applies to foreign property, including Indian real estate received under a Hindu Will or by intestate succession under the Hindu Succession Act 1956. Inheritance itself is not US-taxable income. When you sell later, the US capital gain = sale price − FMV at decedent's death.
Indian side — Section 49(1)(ii) / 49(1)(iii)(a) carry-over basis. When property is inherited under a Will, Section 49(1)(ii) applies; when inherited by succession or devolution (e.g., intestate under HSA 1956), Section 49(1)(iii)(a) applies. Under the closing words of Section 49(1), the cost of acquisition carries from the previous owner; the holding period also carries via Section 2(42A) Explanation 1(i)(b). There is no step-up to FMV at death. If the previous owner acquired before 1 April 2001, Section 55(2)(b)(ii) lets the inheritor elect, in respect of an asset that became the property of the previous owner before 1 April 2001, the higher of (a) the previous owner's actual cost or (b) FMV as of 1 April 2001 — but only to 1 April 2001, not date of death. For land or building, a Finance Act 2020 proviso caps the FMV-as-of-1-April-2001 election at the stamp-duty value as of that date.
The numbers. A Mumbai flat acquired by your parent in 1992 for ₹12 lakh, FMV at parent's death in 2024 of ₹2.5 crore, sold by you in 2026 for ₹3 crore.
• Indian capital gain (Section 49(1)(ii) carry-over): ₹3 cr − ₹12 lakh = ₹2.88 cr. Section 112 LTCG at 12.5% (post Finance (No. 2) Act 2024, effective 23 July 2024) = ~₹36 lakh of Indian tax before surcharge and cess. Best-case under Section 55(2)(b)(ii): if the FMV of the flat as of 1 April 2001 was, say, ₹40 lakh (subject to the stamp-duty-value cap for land/building), the Indian taxable gain falls to ₹2.6 cr and tax to ~₹32.5 lakh — exercise the election on every inherited-pre-2001 disposal. Note the FA(No.2) 2024 alternative of 20% LTCG with indexation for pre-23-July-2024 land/building disposals is available only to resident individuals/HUFs; US NRIs are locked into the flat 12.5% without indexation. Section 195 buyer-side withholding applies on the gross sale consideration unless the seller obtains a Section 197 Lower Deduction Certificate (Form 13 application to the jurisdictional A.O.).
• US capital gain (IRC §1014): $360,000 − $300,000 ≈ $60,000 (at ~$/₹83 conversion). Long-term capital gain at 20% federal = ~$12,000.
• Form 1116 foreign tax credit in the passive category: the Indian tax paid (~₹36 lakh ≈ $43,000) far exceeds the US tax (~$12,000). FTC is capped at US tax on the same income, so excess Indian tax is non-creditable in the current year (carryforward 10 years / carryback 1 year is available under IRC §904(c)).
The trap. Many US tax preparers use the Indian cost basis (₹12 lakh in this example) on the US 1040 — overstating the US gain by orders of magnitude. Conversely, some Indian CAs use US-side stepped-up basis on the ITR-2 — under-reporting Indian gain and inviting Section 148 reassessment. Two parallel cost bases. Two parallel computations. They must be reconciled file-by-file.
Sources
- 26 USC §1014(a) read with §1014(b)(1) — basis of property acquired from a decedent by bequest, devise, or inheritance (US Internal Revenue Code)
- Section 49(1)(ii) and 49(1)(iii)(a) of the Income-tax Act 1961 — cost-basis carry-over for property inherited under a Will or by succession; Section 2(42A) Explanation 1(i)(b) — holding-period carry-over
- Section 55(2)(b)(ii) of the Income-tax Act 1961 — FMV-as-on-1-April-2001 election for assets acquired by previous owner pre-2001 (with FA 2020 stamp-duty-value cap for land/building)
- Section 112 — flat 12.5% LTCG on immovable property post Finance (No. 2) Act 2024 (effective 23 July 2024)
- IRC §904(c) — foreign-tax-credit carryback / carryforward
Last reviewed 2026-05-03. We re-audit this list quarterly against new CBDT circulars, Finance Act amendments, and home-country tax updates.
Questions from American NRIs
Everything Indians in America ask us
50+ answers. Hover on dotted terms for plain-English explanations.
$22,500
lost over 5 years by the average American NRI
Every year you wait, another $4,500 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 America
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