
Owning property in India often feels like reclaiming roots for NRIs, whether it’s your parents’ flat or a plot in your hometown.
I’ve seen the emotional pull of real estate lead to financial pitfalls-builder scams, title disputes, tax surprises, and management hassles from afar.
This guide breaks down FEMA regulations, the new 12.5% capital gains tax (2024), repatriation limits, documentation, and common traps to avoid.
Whether you’re in Dubai, New York, or London, read this before investing. Comparing real estate to GIFT City fixed deposits or mutual funds? We’ll help you decide.
Can NRIs Legally Buy Property in India? What FEMA Says
Yes, NRIs can buy property in India -but not just any property.
The Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) governs what Non-Resident Indians, Persons of Indian Origin (PIOs), and Overseas Citizens of India (OCIs) can purchase.
FEMA was introduced in 1999 to replace the more restrictive Foreign Exchange Regulation Act (FERA) and has made real estate investment significantly easier for NRIs.
What NRIs CAN Buy
Residential Properties
You can purchase any number of residential properties -apartments, villas, independent houses, plots for residential construction. There's no limit on the number of properties or their value. Whether it's a 1BHK in Pune or a luxury villa in Goa, it's allowed.
Commercial Properties
NRIs are also permitted to buy commercial real estate -office spaces, retail shops, warehouses, commercial plots. This opens up rental income opportunities from businesses, which typically offer higher yields than residential rentals.
Joint Ownership Options
NRIs can co-own property with other NRIs or OCIs without restrictions. You can also co-own with resident Indians, but only if they're immediate family members (spouse, children, parents). Co-ownership with non-family resident Indians requires specific permissions.
Also Read -Can NRIs Open Joint Accounts with Residents in India
What NRIs CANNOT Buy
Agricultural Land
This is the big one. NRIs are strictly prohibited from purchasing agricultural land in India. It doesn't matter if you're an Indian citizen -if you're a non-resident, you cannot buy farm land, agricultural plots, or land zoned for agricultural use.
Plantation Properties
Similar to agricultural land, plantations (tea estates, coffee plantations, rubber estates) are off-limits to NRIs.
Farmhouses
Farmhouses built on agricultural land cannot be purchased by NRIs. This is one of the most common areas of confusion because many "farmhouses" near cities are marketed to NRIs -but if they're on agricultural land, the purchase violates FEMA rules.
Exceptions: Inheritance and Gifts
If you inherit agricultural land, a plantation, or a farmhouse from a resident Indian relative, you're allowed to hold it. You don't have to sell it immediately.
Similarly, you can receive such properties as gifts from resident Indian relatives. However, you cannot sell these properties to another NRI. They must be sold to a resident Indian.
👉 Tip: Before buying any property in India, verify its land-use classification. Many builders sell properties claiming they're "residential" when they're actually on agricultural land. Get legal verification to avoid future complications and potential confiscation under FEMA.
The Real Reason Agricultural Land is Off-Limits
You might wonder: why can't NRIs buy agricultural land? It seems arbitrary.
The government's rationale is national security and food security. Agriculture is considered strategic -India doesn't want foreign nationals or non-residents (even if they're Indian citizens) controlling agricultural production. There's also a concern about land speculation driving up prices for resident farmers.
Is this rule likely to change? Unlikely. It's been debated for years, but there's strong political resistance to opening agricultural land to NRI investment.
If you're eyeing that beautiful farmhouse near Bangalore or Nashik, understand: unless it's clearly on non-agricultural land (with proper documentation), you're taking a major risk. Many NRIs have had such properties seized or been forced to sell at a loss.
How to Pay for Property: Payment Methods Under FEMA
FEMA is very specific about how NRIs can pay for property in India. You can't just show up with cash or wire money from any source.
Permitted Payment Methods
1. Remittance from Abroad Through Banking Channels
You can send money from your foreign bank account to India through normal banking channels. This creates a clear paper trail showing the source of funds.
2. Debit from NRE/NRO/FCNR Accounts
You can use funds from your NRE account, NRO account, or FCNR account to purchase property. This is the most common method.
- NRE Account: Funds brought from abroad, fully repatriable. Ideal if you want to repatriate sale proceeds later.
- NRO Account: Funds earned in India (rent, dividends, salary). Partially repatriable (USD 1 million per year). Most NRIs use this for property purchased with Indian earnings.
- FCNR Account: Foreign currency account. Can be used, though less common for real estate.
3. Loans from Indian Banks
NRIs can take home loans from Indian banks to fund property purchases. Most major banks offer NRI home loans with loan-to-value ratios of 70-85%. Interest rates are typically 0.5-1% higher than resident rates.
Prohibited Payment Methods
Cash
You cannot pay for property in cash, even partially. All transactions must be through banking channels.
Traveler's Cheques
Not allowed under FEMA.
Foreign Currency Notes
You cannot hand over USD or AED in cash to the seller. All foreign currency must be converted through banking channels with proper documentation.
👉 Tip: Always maintain complete documentation of how you paid for the property. You'll need this later for tax purposes, repatriation, and proving FEMA compliance. Keep bank statements, remittance certificates, and loan documents in a safe place.
Taxation for NRIs: The Numbers That Really Matter
This is where things get expensive. And complicated.
Rental Income: 30% TDS
If you rent out your property, the tenant is legally required to deduct 30% Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) on your rental income before paying you. This applies even if the tenant is an individual, not a company.
Example: Your property generates ₹50,000 per month in rent (₹6 lakh per year). The tenant must deduct ₹1,80,000 as TDS and deposit it with the government. You receive ₹4,20,000.
The tenant must provide you with Form 16A as proof of TDS deduction.
Can you get this back? Yes, if your actual tax liability is lower than 30%, you can claim a refund when you file your Income Tax Return. But the TDS is deducted upfront, affecting your cash flow.
Can you reduce TDS? Yes, by applying for a lower TDS certificate (Form 13) from the Income Tax Department if your actual tax liability is lower. This requires filing your previous years' returns and demonstrating lower tax liability.
Also Read -Taxation on Rental Income in India for NRIs
Capital Gains on Sale: The Big Change in 2024
When you sell property, you'll pay capital gains tax. The rules changed significantly in Budget 2024, and many NRIs don't know about these changes yet.
Holding Period Determines Tax Type:
- Short-Term: Property held for less than 24 months (2 years) from the date of purchase.
- Long-Term: Property held for 24 months or more.
Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)
The New Rule (After July 23, 2024):
LTCG on property is now taxed at a flat 12.5% without indexation.
Previously, LTCG was taxed at 20% with indexation benefit (which adjusted the purchase price for inflation, reducing your taxable gain). The government removed indexation and reduced the rate to 12.5%.
Why this matters: For properties purchased many years ago when prices were much lower, indexation was a huge benefit. Removing it means your taxable gain is higher, even though the tax rate is lower. For some NRIs, this change increased their tax liability.
Transition Rule for Properties Bought Before July 23, 2024:
If you bought property before July 23, 2024, you have a choice when you sell:
- Option A: Pay 12.5% without indexation
- Option B: Pay 20% with indexation
You can choose whichever results in lower tax.
(Source: Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024)
Example:
You bought a flat in 2010 for ₹50 lakh. You sell it in 2025 for ₹2 crore.
Without indexation:
- Capital Gain = ₹2 crore - ₹50 lakh = ₹1.5 crore
- Tax at 12.5% = ₹18.75 lakh
With indexation (assuming Cost Inflation Index adjusts the purchase price to ₹1.2 crore):
- Indexed Capital Gain = ₹2 crore - ₹1.2 crore = ₹80 lakh
- Tax at 20% = ₹16 lakh
In this case, Option B (20% with indexation) is better. You'd choose that.
But if you bought the property recently (say, 2022), indexation won't help much, and 12.5% will be the better option.
Also Read - NRI's Complete Guide to Selling Property in India
Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG)
If you sell property within 24 months of purchase, gains are taxed at your applicable income tax slab rate. For most NRIs, this is 30% plus surcharge and cess.
TDS on Property Sale
When you sell property, the buyer is required to deduct TDS before paying you. TDS rates changed in Budget 2024:
For Long-Term Capital Gains (property held more than 24 months):
- TDS Rate: 12.5% (reduced from 20% in July 2024)
- Applied to: Full sale value, not just the gain
For Short-Term Capital Gains (property held less than 24 months):
- TDS Rate: 30%
- Applied to: Full sale value, not just the gain
Example: You sell a property for ₹2 crore (long-term holding). The buyer deducts TDS of 12.5% = ₹25 lakh. But your actual capital gain is only ₹1 crore, and your actual tax liability is ₹12.5 lakh (12.5% of ₹1 crore) + surcharge and cess = approximately ₹14.95 lakh.
The buyer deducted ₹25 lakh, but you only owe ₹14.95 lakh. The excess ₹10.05 lakh will be refunded when you file your Income Tax Return.
How to reduce TDS: Apply for a lower TDS certificate (Form 13) before the sale by calculating your actual tax liability and submitting it to the Income Tax Department. The buyer can then deduct TDS at the certificate rate instead of the standard rate.
👉 Tip: Always file your ITR after selling property, even if you don't have other income in India. The TDS deducted on sale value is often much higher than your actual tax liability, and filing is the only way to get the refund. Delays in filing can mean you're giving an interest-free loan to the government for months.
Also Read -DTAA and Capital Gains Tax: The Confusing Bits Explained
Capital Gains Exemptions: How to Save Tax Legally
The good news? You can reduce or eliminate capital gains tax by reinvesting in specific ways.
Section 54: Buy or Construct Another Residential Property
If you sell a residential property and invest the capital gains in another residential property in India, you can claim full exemption.
Rules:
- Purchase another residential property 1 year before or 2 years after the sale, OR
- Construct a residential property within 3 years after the sale
- The new property must be in India (not abroad)
- You cannot sell the new property for 3 years, or the exemption is reversed
How much to invest? You only need to invest the capital gain amount (not the entire sale proceeds) to get full exemption. If you invest less, exemption is proportionate.
Maximum exemption: ₹10 crore of capital gains.
Section 54EC: Invest in Specified Bonds
If you don't want to buy another property, you can invest capital gains in bonds issued by NHAI (National Highways Authority of India), REC (Rural Electrification Corporation), or PFC (Power Finance Corporation).
Rules:
- Invest within 6 months of property sale
- Maximum investment: ₹50 lakh per financial year
- Lock-in period: 5 years
- Interest rate: Approximately 5-5.5% per annum (taxable)
This option is useful if you have modest capital gains and want a safe, fixed-income investment.
Also Read - How to Invest in Bonds - Beginner's Guide for NRIs
Section 54F: Sell Any Asset, Buy Residential Property
If you sell any capital asset other than a residential property (say, commercial property, land, shares, or gold) and invest the proceeds in a residential property, you can claim exemption under Section 54F.
Rules:
- You must invest the entire sale proceeds (not just the gain)
- Purchase property 1 year before or 2 years after, or construct within 3 years
- You should not own more than one residential house on the date of sale (other than the new house)
- Don't buy or construct another residential house within 2 years
Also Read -Tax Exemption Under Section 54 and Section 54F for NRIs: Your Complete Tax-Saving Guide
Avoiding Double Taxation: Use DTAA
India has signed Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) with over 85 countries. If you pay tax on rental income or capital gains in your country of residence, you can claim credit in India or vice versa.
To claim DTAA benefits:
- Obtain a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from your country's tax authority
- Submit Form 10F to the Indian Income Tax Department
- Provide documentation when filing returns
For example, NRIs in the UAE or USA can use DTAA to avoid paying tax twice on the same income.
Repatriation Rules: Can You Take the Money Back?
After you sell the property, can you transfer the sale proceeds to your foreign bank account?
The answer: It depends.
Repatriation Limits
If You Bought Property with Foreign Funds (via NRE account or foreign remittance):
- You can repatriate sale proceeds without any limit.
- You can repatriate proceeds from up to 2 residential properties during your lifetime.
- You must provide documentary proof that the property was purchased using foreign currency or funds from your NRE account.
Also Read - How to Repatriate Funds from NRO/NRE Accounts
If You Bought Property with Indian Funds (via NRO account or inherited):
- Repatriation limit: USD 1 million per financial year (April-March).
- This USD 1 million limit applies to all repatriations from your NRO account (not just property sale proceeds).
- You'll need Form 15CA and Form 15CB (CA certificate) for repatriation.
Documentation Required for Repatriation
To repatriate sale proceeds, you need:
- Original purchase documents showing how you paid for the property
- Bank certificates or remittance certificates proving foreign currency was used (if applicable)
- CA certificate (Form 15CB) certifying that applicable taxes have been paid
- Form 15CA declaration
- ITR acknowledgement for the year of sale
- Encumbrance certificate showing the property is free from legal disputes
👉 Tip: Many NRIs struggle to repatriate funds because they can't produce original remittance certificates from 10-15 years ago. Maintain a separate file with all property-related documents (purchase deed, remittance certificates, loan documents) and keep digital backups. You'll need these when you sell.
Power of Attorney: Risks and How to Do It Right
Most NRIs can't be physically present in India for every step of the buying or selling process. That's where a Power of Attorney (PoA) comes in.
A PoA allows you to authorize someone in India -typically a family member, lawyer, or trusted friend -to act on your behalf for property transactions.
Types of Power of Attorney
General Power of Attorney (GPA)
Gives broad powers to the attorney to conduct all financial and legal matters on your behalf. Too risky for property transactions -don't use this.
Special Power of Attorney (SPA)
Gives limited, specific powers for a defined purpose (like buying a specific property or selling a specific property). This is what you should use.
The Risks of Power of Attorney
PoA misuse is one of the most common ways NRIs lose money or property in India. Cases of PoA holders selling property without the owner's knowledge, forging signatures, or pocketing sale proceeds are disturbingly common.
Common PoA scams:
- Unauthorized sale: The attorney sells your property without your consent and takes the money.
- Undervalued sale: The attorney sells at a low price to a friend or relative, then they resell at market price and pocket the difference.
- Forged documents: The attorney creates fake sale deeds or loan documents using your PoA.
- Property mortgaged without consent: The attorney takes loans against your property.
How to Create a Safer Power of Attorney
1. Use a Special Power of Attorney, Not General
Clearly define what the attorney can and cannot do. For example: "Power to sign sale deed for property at [specific address] and receive sale proceeds only."
2. Set Time Limits
Don't give open-ended PoA. Specify: "This PoA is valid for 12 months from the date of execution" or "This PoA is valid until the completion of the sale transaction."
3. Get It Notarized and Attested
The PoA must be notarized in your country of residence and attested by the Indian embassy or consulate. Without this, it's not legally valid in India.
4. Register the PoA in India
Once attested, the PoA must be registered with the local Sub-Registrar's office in India where the property is located. Unregistered PoAs have limited legal standing.
5. Choose Your Attorney Carefully
Only give PoA to someone you trust completely -ideally a close family member. Even then, maintain oversight. Ask for regular updates, copies of all documents signed, and keep communication open.
6. Revoke PoA After the Transaction
Once the property transaction is complete, immediately revoke the PoA by registering a revocation deed. Don't leave active PoAs floating around.
7. Use Technology for Oversight
Insist on:
- Video calls before any document is signed
- Scanned copies of all documents immediately after signing
- Real-time updates on transaction progress
- Joint accounts for receiving sale proceeds (so you see the money coming in)
👉 Tip: Never give PoA to a property agent, broker, or builder -no matter how much they insist it's "standard practice." Only give PoA to someone whose financial interests are aligned with yours (family) or someone with legal liability (a lawyer).
Common Mistakes NRIs Make When Buying Property
1. Buying Based on Emotion, Not Economics
You see the neighborhood where you grew up. You imagine your kids playing in that garden. You feel the connection.
But the property is overpriced, in a declining area, with poor rental yields, and the builder has a history of delays.
Lesson: Emotion is a terrible investment advisor. Treat property as a financial decision. Run the numbers. Compare rental yields to fixed deposits, mutual funds, or GIFT City investments. If the math doesn't work, walk away.
2. Not Checking RERA Registration
The Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act (RERA) was introduced in 2016 to protect homebuyers from unscrupulous builders. All new projects must be registered with RERA, and builders must provide regular updates on project progress.
If a project is not RERA-registered, you have almost no legal recourse if things go wrong.
Before buying:
- Check if the project is registered on the state RERA website
- Verify the RERA registration number
- Check for any complaints or delays listed against the project
3. Skipping Title Verification
A "clear title" means the property is free from legal disputes, encumbrances, and ownership claims. Many NRIs skip proper title verification and later discover:
- There are multiple claimants to the property
- The property is under litigation
- The seller doesn't actually own the property
- There's an unpaid loan or mortgage against the property
What to do:
- Hire a property lawyer to conduct a title search going back at least 30 years
- Get an Encumbrance Certificate from the sub-registrar's office
- Verify all previous sale deeds and ownership documents
- Check for any pending court cases involving the property
This costs ₹10,000-25,000 in legal fees, but it can save you from losing crores.
4. Trusting Virtual Tours and Photos
Builders create beautiful 3D renders and video tours. The reality? The project is delayed by 3 years, the construction quality is poor, or the "amenities" are non-existent.
Always:
- Visit the site in person or send a trusted representative
- Check construction progress if it's under construction
- Talk to existing residents if it's a completed project
- Verify all amenities shown in brochures
5. Not Factoring in Hidden Costs
The property price is just the beginning. You'll also pay:
- Stamp Duty: 5-7% of property value (varies by state)
- Registration Fees: 1-2% of property value
- GST: 5% on under-construction properties (after 1/3rd abatement)
- Legal Fees: ₹10,000-50,000
- Home Loan Processing Fees: 0.5-1% of loan amount
- Property Tax: Annual tax (varies by city and property size)
- Maintenance Charges: ₹2-10 per sq ft per month in apartments
A ₹1 crore property can easily cost ₹1.15-1.20 crore all-in. Budget accordingly.
6. Ignoring Rental Yields
Many NRIs buy property assuming it will generate rental income to cover costs. But rental yields in India are low -typically 2-3% per year in most cities.
Example: You buy a ₹1 crore property. Rental income: ₹25,000/month = ₹3 lakh/year = 3% yield.
But you're paying:
- Home loan interest: 8.5% on ₹70 lakh = ₹5.95 lakh/year
- Property tax: ₹25,000/year
- Maintenance: ₹1.2 lakh/year
Total outflow: ₹7.4 lakh/year. Rental income: ₹3 lakh/year. Net loss: ₹4.4 lakh/year.
Unless the property appreciates significantly, you're losing money every year.
Compare this to GIFT City FDs offering 4.5-5% in USD with zero tax and full repatriation, or equity mutual funds delivering 12-15% long-term returns.
7. Not Planning for Property Management
Who will collect rent? Who will handle tenant complaints? Who will coordinate repairs?
If you're in Dubai and the geyser breaks in your Pune flat, who's dealing with it?
Many NRIs underestimate the hassle of managing property from abroad. You can hire a property management company (charging 8-10% of monthly rent), but that further reduces your already low rental yield.
Real Estate Scams NRIs Should Watch Out For
1. Builder Scams and Delays
The scam: Builders sell apartments in "upcoming" projects, take your money, and then:
- Delay the project indefinitely
- Deliver poor-quality construction
- Disappear with the money
How to protect yourself:
- Only buy from reputed builders with a track record of completed projects
- Check RERA registration and project timelines
- Never pay more than the schedule mentioned in RERA (builders often ask for "advance" payments)
- Insist on construction-linked payment plans, not lump-sum payments
2. Title Fraud and Fake Documents
The scam: Fraudsters forge ownership documents and sell property they don't own. By the time you discover the fraud, they've vanished with your money.
How to protect yourself:
- Always verify documents directly with the sub-registrar's office, not just the seller's copies
- Check the Encumbrance Certificate to see the full ownership history
- Use only registered properties (never buy unregistered property or "agreement for sale" properties)
- Hire a lawyer to verify every document
3. Power of Attorney Misuse
We covered this earlier, but it's worth repeating: PoA misuse is one of the top ways NRIs lose property.
The scam: Your PoA holder sells your property, pockets the money, and disappears. Or they undervalue the sale and collude with the buyer.
How to protect yourself:
- Use Special PoA, not General PoA
- Set time limits on PoA
- Revoke immediately after transaction
- Keep communication open and demand documentation at every step
4. Broker Overcharging and Kickbacks
The scam: Property brokers show you overpriced properties and take kickbacks from builders. They might also:
- Inflate property prices and pocket the difference
- Recommend properties that are poor investments but offer them high commissions
- Create urgency ("only 2 flats left!") to pressure you into a bad decision
How to protect yourself:
- Do independent research on property prices using portals like MagicBricks, 99acres
- Get multiple quotes and compare
- Don't rush. Good properties will still be available next month.
- Ask for all-inclusive quotes (don't pay "unexpected" fees later)
5. Rental Income Fraud
The scam: You buy a property expecting rental income of ₹50,000/month (as the builder promised). But the area has poor demand, and you can only get ₹20,000/month -or no tenant at all.
How to protect yourself:
- Research actual rental rates in the area (use online portals, talk to residents)
- Don't trust builder's rental projections
- Visit the area and see how many "To Let" boards are up -high vacancy = low demand
Should You Even Invest in Real Estate? Comparing Options
Let's be honest: Indian real estate is not the great investment it used to be.
In the 2000s, property prices were doubling every 5 years. Today? Most cities see 3-5% annual appreciation -barely keeping pace with inflation. And that's before factoring in the hidden costs (stamp duty, maintenance, property tax, loan interest) and the illiquidity.
Here's how real estate compares to other NRI investment options:
Factor | Real Estate | NRI Fixed Deposits | GIFT City USD FDs | Equity Mutual Funds |
---|---|---|---|---|
Returns | 3-5% appreciation + 2-3% rental yield | 6.5-7.5% p.a. | 4.5-5.5% (USD, tax-free) | 12-15% p.a. (long-term) |
Liquidity | Low (takes months to sell) | Medium (penalty for premature withdrawal) | Low (lock-in 1-5 years) | High (can redeem anytime) |
Tax Efficiency | 30% TDS on rent, 12.5% LTCG on sale | 30% TDS on interest | Tax-free | LTCG 12.5% (over ₹1.25L) |
Minimum Investment | ₹25 lakh - ₹2 crore+ | ₹10,000 | $1,000 | ₹500 |
Management Hassle | High (tenants, repairs, brokers) | None | None | None |
Currency Risk | High (INR depreciation) | High (INR depreciation) | None (USD-denominated) | High (INR depreciation) |
Repatriation | USD 1M limit (NRO), unlimited (NRE) | Unlimited (NRE), USD 1M (NRO) | Unlimited | Unlimited (NRE/NRO) |
Best For | Long-term, high-capital commitment, personal use | Short-term safety, INR returns | Dollar stability, tax-free | Long-term wealth creation |
Take: If you want a vacation home or a place for your parents, buy property. If you want an investment, there are better options.
For most NRIs, a diversified portfolio of GIFT City FDs (for safety and tax-free dollar returns), equity mutual funds (for growth), and government bonds (for stability) will outperform a single property investment with far less hassle.
Step-by-Step Process: How to Buy Property in India as an NRI
If, after all this, you still want to buy property, here's how to do it right:
Step 1: Open an NRE or NRO Account
You'll need an NRE or NRO account with an Indian bank to make payments. Choose based on your repatriation needs.
Step 2: Get a PAN Card
A PAN card is mandatory for all financial transactions in India, including property purchases. If you don't have one, apply online.
Step 3: Research and Shortlist Properties
Use online portals (MagicBricks, 99acres, Housing.com) to research. Shortlist 5-10 properties that fit your budget and needs. Check:
- Builder reputation
- RERA registration
- Location and connectivity
- Amenities
- Pricing vs comparable properties
Step 4: Hire a Property Lawyer
Find a reputed property lawyer in the city where you're buying. They will:
- Conduct title verification
- Check for encumbrances
- Verify all legal documents
- Advise on FEMA compliance
Budget ₹10,000-50,000 for legal fees.
Step 5: Visit the Property (or Send a Trusted Representative)
Don't buy without a physical inspection. If you can't visit, send a family member or hire a property consultant you trust.
Check:
- Construction quality (if under construction)
- Actual vs advertised amenities
- Neighborhood and surroundings
- Talk to existing residents about builder's track record
Step 6: Negotiate and Make an Offer
Once satisfied, negotiate the price. Don't accept the first asking price. Get everything in writing -price, payment schedule, possession date, amenities, penalties for delay.
Step 7: Sign Sale Agreement and Pay Token Money
You'll sign a Sale Agreement (also called Agreement for Sale) and pay 10-20% as token money. This is not the final sale deed -it's a commitment from both parties.
The agreement should clearly state:
- Property details (address, area, floor)
- Sale price
- Payment schedule
- Possession date
- Penalties for delay (on builder)
- Your rights if you cancel
Step 8: Make Payments Through Banking Channels
Pay using your NRE/NRO account or through foreign remittance. Never pay in cash.
For under-construction properties, follow the construction-linked payment plan. For ready properties, you can pay in a lump sum or through a home loan.
Step 9: Get a Home Loan (If Needed)
Most Indian banks offer home loans to NRIs with LTV ratios of 70-85%. You'll need:
- PAN card
- Passport
- Visa/work permit
- 6 months' bank statements (foreign + Indian)
- Income proof
- Property documents
Interest rates: 8-10% for NRIs (higher than resident rates).
Step 10: Pay Stamp Duty and Registration Fees
Once the full payment is made, you'll register the property. You must pay:
- Stamp Duty: 5-7% of property value (varies by state). Women often get 1-2% discount.
- Registration Fees: 1-2% of property value
These are substantial costs -budget ₹6-8 lakh on a ₹1 crore property.
Step 11: Register the Sale Deed
The final sale deed must be registered at the local Sub-Registrar's office. Both buyer and seller (or their PoA holders) must be present.
After registration, you'll receive the registered sale deed -this is your proof of ownership.
Step 12: Update Property Records and Transfer Utilities
After registration:
- Update the property mutation in the local municipal corporation records
- Transfer electricity, water, and gas connections to your name
- Pay property tax annually
Step 13: Set Up Property Management
If you're abroad, arrange for property management:
- Hire a property management company (8-10% of rent)
- OR appoint a trusted family member to oversee
- Set up online payment systems for rent collection
Documentation Checklist for NRI Property Purchase
Here's every document you'll need. Keep physical and digital copies of all.
Personal Documents:
- Valid passport
- PAN card
- Visa/work permit
- NRE/NRO account statements
- Address proof in country of residence
Property Documents:
- Title deed and ownership chain for last 30 years
- Encumbrance certificate
- Sale deed of previous owners
- Property tax receipts (last 3 years)
- Approved building plan
- Occupancy certificate (for completed properties)
- Completion certificate
- RERA registration certificate
- No Objection Certificate (NOC) from society (for apartments)
- Khata certificate (property ownership document)
For Under-Construction Properties: 11. RERA registration number and details 12. Builder-buyer agreement 13. Construction schedule 14. List of amenities promised
Financial Documents: 15. Sale agreement 16. Payment receipts 17. Bank statements showing payment trail 18. Home loan sanction letter (if applicable) 19. Stamp duty and registration fee payment receipts
For Selling Later: 20. Proof of source of funds (foreign remittance certificate or NRE account statement) 21. Original registered sale deed 22. This will be needed for repatriation
👉 Tip: Create a Google Drive folder with scanned copies of all documents. If the originals are lost or you need to share documents quickly, you'll have backups. Also, share access with a trusted family member in case of emergencies.
Managing Property from Abroad: Practical Tips
Find a Reliable Caretaker or Property Manager
You need someone local to handle:
- Tenant onboarding and rent collection
- Maintenance and repairs
- Bill payments (electricity, water, property tax)
- Complaint resolution
Options:
- Hire a property management company: Charges 8-10% of monthly rent. They handle everything.
- Appoint a family member: No cost, but they need time and willingness to manage.
- Use online platforms: Services like NoBroker offer property management for NRIs.
Automate Bill Payments
Set up auto-debit from your NRO account for:
- Property tax
- Maintenance charges
- Electricity, water, gas
Use Digital Tools for Rent Collection
Don't rely on cash. Use:
- Bank transfers directly to your NRO account
- Rent collection apps (MagicBricks, NoBroker)
- Set up auto-reminders for tenants
Have a Local Bank Account
Even if you're using an NRE account for savings, keep a small NRO account balance in India for local expenses (repairs, emergency fixes, small bills). It's easier than remitting funds every time something breaks.
Visit Periodically
If possible, visit India once a year to inspect the property, meet tenants, and handle any pending issues. Remote management works, but nothing beats being there in person.
Conclusion: Think Twice Before Buying
Here's our honest advice after 12 years in this space:
Buy property in India if:
- You want a home for personal use (vacation, retirement, parents)
- You have capital you won't need for 10+ years
- You're okay with low liquidity and moderate returns
- You can visit periodically or have trusted family to manage it
- You're emotionally attached and willing to accept lower financial returns
Don't buy property if:
- Your primary goal is investment returns
- You need liquidity or want to access your capital soon
- You're not prepared for the hassle of property management from abroad
- You don't have ₹25 lakh+ to commit (below this, transaction costs eat into returns)
- You're chasing the "Indian real estate dream" based on what it was like 15 years ago
For most NRIs, a mix of tax-free GIFT City FDs, equity mutual funds, and government bonds will deliver better risk-adjusted returns with far less hassle than property.
That said, if you've done your homework -verified documents, checked RERA, hired a lawyer, understood tax implications, set up proper management, and accepted the illiquidity -property can work. It's not a bad investment. It's just not the spectacular one many NRIs expect.
At Belong, we help NRIs navigate smarter investment options -starting with USD fixed deposits in GIFT City that offer tax-free returns, dollar stability, and full repatriation with none of the headaches of property ownership.
If you want to compare your options -property vs FDs vs mutual funds vs bonds -download our app and use our FD rates explorer, investment calculator, and rupee-dollar monitor to make data-driven decisions.
And if you're still confused or want to discuss your specific situation, join our WhatsApp community of 10,000+ NRIs. Real people, real experiences, real advice -no sales pitch.
Make smart choices. Your future self will thank you.
Sources
- Reserve Bank of India - FEMA Regulations
- Ministry of External Affairs - Acquisition and Transfer of Immovable Property
- Income Tax Department - NRI Taxation
- Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 - Capital Gains Changes
- RERA Official Website - Karnataka
- Business Today - NRI Property Tax Changes Budget 2024
- ClearTax - Capital Gains Tax Guide
- Zerodha - New Tax Rules for NRIs
- LawCrust - NRI Real Estate Challenges
- NRI Legal Service - Real Estate Scams
Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute legal or financial advice. Real estate regulations, FEMA rules, and tax laws are subject to change. Consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor, chartered accountant, and property lawyer before making any property purchase decisions. Past trends in real estate appreciation are not indicative of future returns.