Being
an Non-Resident Indian (NRI) at this point in time must a great spot to be in.
And specially for NRIs who wish to make investments in India as well as for
those who want to sell investments made some time ago.
According
to property consultants, Indian metro cities are seeing a good 20 to 30%
year-on-year increase in property sales from NRIs in the past 4 to 6 months.
This is on the back of a constant rise in property prices in the metro cities.
According
to data from Residex, the residential index of National Housing Bank, prices in
Mumbai and Delhi have shot up by 17 and 20% between March 2012 and March 2013.
While many NRIs are still mulling and some even selling their properties, it’s
important they know how they will be taxed on such a transaction.
If
a resident Indian or a NRI sells a
property in India after holding it for a period of more than three years, then
long term capital gains tax of 22.66 % will be applicable.
While
the taxation is same for both the parties, there is a difference in the way
Tax-Deducted at Source (TDS) is calculated.
Mr.
Anil Harish, DM, Harish & Co. said, “An NRI selling
property in India has the right to apply to the assessing officer for
certificate of non-deduction or / lower tax deduction. That is for deducting
his TDS only on the capital gains.”
He
can make this application because if the 20.66 % is applied on the sale price,
then the NRI may end up getting less than what he had invested.
In
other words, the TDS including surcharge of 22.66 % will be calculated only on
the capital gains and not on the sale price which will not erode his profits,
if any. If this gets approved by the Income Tax office, then the buyer of the
NRI’s property can make payment to him in full (ie: sale price), whereas a
certificate of (TDS on capital gains) will be issued separately to the NRI.
This
procedure takes nearly 2 to 4 weeks, and will require the NRI to submit some
key documents like his sale-agreement, PAN, income tax returns, bank statements
and so on. Hence, hiring a chartered accountant or a property lawyer in India
would work in his benefit to ensure a smoother transaction.
First,
deduct the expenses incurred by NRI from the sale price, which will give you
the net selling price of the property. Expenses incurred can include legal
fees, transfer fees, traveling fees etc. Then, the difference between this
& the indexed cost of purchase will be your capital gains.
However,
as an NRI you can save this TDS as well.
One
way of getting this waiver is if the NRI
re-invests these capital gains made from the sale of property in another
property (within 2 years) or / in
tax-free bonds (within 6 months).
In
such cases, the NRI will be exempt from tax in India, and no TDS will be
deducted either.
For
this, they will have to apply for a tax-exemption certificate under Section 195
of income tax act.
Whereas,
if the NRI decides to sell that property within 3 years, then he will have to
pay short-term capital gains tax according to the tax-bracket he falls under
along with a fixed rate of TDS respectively.
As
an NRI, he can ask his CA to file form 15 CA & CB electronically which will
state that the NRI has no tax-liability and can remit this money back to his
country now.
If
he/she does not wish to repatriate the money, he can keep it in his Indian
bank’s NRO account. However, according to Reserve Bank of India) RBI guidelines
repatriation of such funds per financial year should not exceed $10 lakh.
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