NRI Investment Guide India 2026 — NRE/NRO Accounts, Mutual Funds, Tax, and Real Estate
If you are an NRI (Non-Resident Indian), investing in India is both an opportunity and a compliance maze. The wrong account type can cost you taxes. The wrong investment can trigger complex RBI reporting.
This guide covers everything — from which bank account to open, to how to invest in Indian markets as an NRI.
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The First Principle: Residential Status Defines Everything
Your residential status for tax purposes determines which investments you can make and how they are taxed. Under the Income Tax Act, you are an NRI if you were in India for less than 182 days in the financial year (or less than 60 days + 365 days over 4 years).
First Principle: NRI status is not binary — it changes every financial year based on your physical presence. Always check your status before making investment decisions.
NRE vs NRO vs FCNR — Which Account?
| Feature | NRE Account | NRO Account | FCNR Account |
|---|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Hold foreign income in INR | Hold Indian income (rent, dividends) in INR | Hold foreign currency deposits |
| Repatriation | Fully repatriable | Up to $1M/year | Fully repatriable |
| Tax on Interest | Tax-free | Taxable (30% + surcharge) | Tax-free |
| Joint with Resident | Not allowed | Allowed | Not allowed |
| Best For | Salary from abroad | Rent, dividends, interest from India | Large foreign currency deposits |
How NRIs Can Invest in Indian Markets
Mutual Funds: NRIs can invest in Indian mutual funds through their NRE/NRO accounts. However, many fund houses restrict NRI investments from certain countries (US, Canada). Always check with the AMC before investing.
Stocks: NRIs can trade in Indian stock markets through a Non-Resident Ordinary (NRO) Demat account or a Portfolio Investment Scheme (PIS) account. PIS requires permission from a designated bank branch.
Real Estate: NRIs can buy residential and commercial property in India freely. Agricultural land, plantation property, and farmhouses require special RBI approval.
NRI Taxation
| Income Source | Tax Rate | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Interest on NRE/FCNR | 0% | Fully tax-exempt |
| Interest on NRO | 30% + cess | TDS deducted by bank |
| Capital Gains (Stocks/MFs) | 10% LTCG (>1L), 15% STCG | Same as residents |
| Rental Income | Slab rate | After 30% standard deduction |
| DTAA Benefit | Varies by country | India has DTAA with 90+ countries |
Best Investment Options for NRIs
- PPF: NRIs cannot open new PPF accounts, but can continue existing ones until maturity.
- NPS: NRIs can open NPS accounts and get tax benefits under Section 80CCD.
- SGBs: NRIs cannot subscribe to new SGB issues but can buy existing ones on the secondary market.
- Real Estate: Best long-term investment for NRIs — provides rental income in INR + capital appreciation.
The Smart Friend’s Verdict
Open an NRE account for your foreign income and an NRO account for Indian income. Invest in Indian mutual funds through your NRO account. If you are in a country with DTAA (US, UK, Canada, Singapore, UAE, Australia), you may save significantly on taxes — consult a CA who specializes in NRI taxation.
Next: Tax on US Stocks for NRIs — understanding DTAA and Form 67.