How to File Revised Return for NRIs (If You Made a Mistake)

How to File Revised Return for NRIs (If You Made a Mistake)

A finance manager in Singapore filed her India tax return in June. She felt proud: done early, well before the July 31 deadline.

Two months later, she received her mutual fund capital gains statement. Her stomach dropped.

She'd sold equity funds worth ₹8 lakh in February. Made ₹2.4 lakh LTCG. But when she filed her ITR in June, she completely forgot about these redemptions. She reported only her rental income and NRO interest.

She called us panicking.

"Ankur, I already filed and verified my ITR. The department is processing it. I just realized I missed ₹2.4 lakh capital gains. What do I do? Can I file again? Will I face penalties? Will they think I'm hiding income?"

We calmed her down: "This is exactly what revised returns are for. You can file a corrected return. The process is simple. You won't face penalties because you're correcting voluntarily before they notice. We'll handle it."

We filed her revised return within two days. Corrected the capital gains reporting. She paid the additional tax (₹12,500 after exemptions). Case closed.

This happens constantly at Belong.

NRIs file their India tax returns. Then they discover mistakes: forgot to report dividend income, claimed wrong deduction amount, selected wrong tax regime, missed a TDS entry. The panic sets in: "I already submitted. Is it too late to fix?"

You think filing ITR is final and irreversible. You assume any mistake means facing penalties, notices, or complex appeals.

Nobody tells you that the tax system explicitly allows corrections through revised returns.

Here's what we've learned helping thousands of NRIs fix filing errors at Belong: revised returns are common, straightforward, and penalty-free if you act before the deadline. The tax department expects some errors. They've built a correction mechanism into the system.

This guide walks through exactly when you can file a revised return, the step-by-step process, common mistakes that need correction, deadlines, and how our team handles revisions seamlessly.

What is a revised return and when can you file it

Let's start with the basics.

What is a revised return

A revised return (under Section 139(5)) is a corrected version of your original ITR.

Filed when you discover errors or omissions in your already-filed return.

It's not a separate form. You file the same ITR form (ITR-2, ITR-3) but mark it as "Revised Return" instead of "Original Return."

Why the option exists

The tax department acknowledges:

People make genuine mistakes. Calculations can be wrong. Income sources might be missed initially. Tax regime choice might be suboptimal.

Rather than penalizing everyone:

They allow voluntary correction via revised return. No penalty if you revise before deadline. Clean compliance record maintained.

When you can file revised return

You can file revised return if:

Your original return was already filed and verified. You discovered an error or omission. You want to correct it voluntarily. The deadline hasn't passed yet.

You cannot file revised return if:

You haven't filed original return yet (just file the original correctly). Deadline has passed (then you need updated return under different rules). Assessment has been completed by tax department.

Revised vs original vs updated return

Let's clarify the three types:

Type

When used

Deadline

Original Return

First time filing for the year

July 31 (non-audit cases)

Revised Return

Correcting already-filed return

Same as original (July 31) or before assessment

Type

When used

Deadline

Updated Return

Filing/correcting after deadline

Within 2 years of assessment year end

For most NRI errors discovered soon after filing: Revised return is the solution.

👉 Tip: Don't confuse revised return with belated return. Belated return is when you file for the first time after the deadline (with penalty). Revised return is correcting an already-filed return before the deadline (usually no penalty).

Learn about NRI tax filing deadlines.

Common mistakes that need revised returns

Let's look at what typically triggers the need for revision.

Mistake 1: Forgot to report an income source

Most common revision reason.

Examples:

Received ₹80,000 dividend from stocks (forgot to report). Sold property in February (forgot to include capital gains). Earned ₹1.2 lakh NRO interest (thought it was NRE, didn't report). Received rent for 2 months from second property (only reported first property).

Real case we handled:

USA-based NRI filed ITR reporting only rental income ₹6 lakh. Later discovered he'd redeemed mutual funds in January for ₹12 lakh (₹3.2 lakh LTCG). Original return showed tax liability ₹18,000. With capital gains: tax liability ₹54,000.

We filed revised return adding capital gains. He paid additional tax ₹36,000. No penalty (voluntary correction).

Mistake 2: Wrong income amount reported

Not forgetting income, but reporting wrong numbers.

Examples:

Reported rental income as ₹5 lakh (actually ₹6 lakh, miscalculated). Reported NRO interest as ₹80,000 (bank certificate shows ₹1.2 lakh). Reported capital gains as ₹4 lakh (correct amount after indexation was ₹2.8 lakh).

Why this happens:

Relying on memory instead of documents. Using estimates ("approximately 5 lakh") instead of exact figures. Calculation errors (indexation, standard deduction, etc.).

Mistake 3: Claimed wrong deductions

Deduction errors go both ways: claiming too much or too little.

Claimed too much:

Claimed ₹2 lakh home loan interest (actual was ₹1.4 lakh). Claimed Section 80C deduction ₹1.5 lakh (actual proof only ₹80,000). Claimed municipal tax ₹25,000 (paid only ₹15,000).

Claimed too little (or forgot to claim):

Didn't claim home loan interest at all (eligible for ₹2 lakh under Section 24b). Didn't claim Section 80D health insurance (paid ₹18,000 premium). Didn't apply 30% standard deduction on rental income correctly.

Real case:

Dubai-based NRI filed in new regime (thinking it's simpler). Later realized he had home loan interest ₹2.2 lakh and Section 80C investments ₹1.5 lakh. Old regime would save ₹48,000. We filed revised return switching to old regime. Refund increased by ₹48,000.

Mistake 4: TDS mismatch with Form 26AS

You reported TDS based on your records. Form 26AS shows different amount.

Examples:

You claimed ₹50,000 rental TDS (tenant told you this). Form 26AS shows only ₹38,000 (tenant deposited less or reported late). You claimed ₹15,000 dividend TDS. Form 26AS shows ₹22,000 (you missed one company's TDS).

Why revision is needed:

Tax department matches your ITR against Form 26AS. Mismatch delays processing. Better to revise and match exactly with Form 26AS.

Mistake 5: Selected wrong tax regime

Filed in new regime, should have chosen old regime (or vice versa).

Example:

You have: Rental income ₹8 lakh. Home loan interest ₹2.5 lakh. Section 80C investments ₹1.5 lakh.

Original filing: New regime, tax ₹72,000. Revised filing: Old regime (with deductions), tax ₹28,000.

Savings: ₹44,000 by switching regime.

This is a common error because new regime is now default. Many NRIs don't realize old regime saves more if they have significant deductions.

Mistake 6: Wrong residential status

Filed as NRI when you're actually Resident or RNOR (based on day count).

Why this matters:

Residential status determines: Which income is taxable. Whether Schedule FA (foreign assets) is required. Which tax rates apply.

Example:

You filed as NRI (thinking: "I live in USA, so I'm NRI"). Reality: You visited India for 195 days during the year (treatment, family). Correct status: Resident. You should have reported worldwide income, not just India income.

Revised return: Change status to Resident. Add foreign income (if taxable). Fill Schedule FA if foreign assets exceed ₹50 lakh. Pay additional tax.

Understand residential status determination.

Mistake 7: Forgot Schedule FA (foreign assets)

You're Resident or RNOR. Foreign assets exceeded ₹50 lakh. You didn't fill Schedule FA.

Why revision is critical:

Non-disclosure of foreign assets attracts penalty up to ₹10 lakh per year. Proactive revision (before tax department notices) shows good faith. Penalty is reduced or waived.

We've helped NRIs file revised returns adding Schedule FA for past omissions. Penalty: ₹2-5 lakh typically (vs ₹10 lakh if caught later).

Learn about Schedule FA reporting.

Mistake 8: Wrong bank account for refund

Mentioned closed bank account or wrong account number.

What happens:

Refund processing fails. Amount goes to "refund suspense account." You need to file revised return with correct bank details.

Prevention:

Pre-validate bank account on income tax portal before filing. Use active NRO account for refunds (not NRE or foreign account).

Step-by-step: How to file revised return

Here's the exact process.

Step 1: Identify what needs correction

Before starting revision, list all errors:

Income omitted or wrong. Deductions claimed incorrectly. TDS mismatch. Regime choice error. Bank account error. Other errors.

Cross-check with documents:

Form 26AS (TDS verification). Bank statements (interest, rent credits). Capital gains statements. Investment proofs.

Make a clear list of changes needed.

Step 2: Login to income tax portal

Visit: incometaxindiaefiling.gov.in. Login with PAN and password.

Navigate to: e-File > Income Tax Return > File Income Tax Return.

Step 3: Select assessment year and return type

Select: Assessment year (e.g., AY 2026-27 for FY 2025-26). ITR form: Same as original (ITR-2, ITR-3). Filing type: "Revised Return u/s 139(5)."

Critical: You must select "Revised Return" option (not "Original Return").

Step 4: Enter original return details

Portal will ask:

Original return acknowledgment number (from your original ITR-V). Date of original filing.

Portal pre-fills data from original return.

You'll see all your originally filed information.

Step 5: Make corrections

Now edit the sections with errors:

If you forgot income: Add new income source (salary, rental, capital gains, interest, dividend).

If income amount was wrong: Edit the amount in relevant section.

If deductions were wrong: Add or remove deductions in relevant schedules.

If TDS was wrong: Edit TDS amount to match Form 26AS exactly.

If regime was wrong: Change regime selection (old vs new).

If Schedule FA was missing: Fill Schedule FA sections.

Portal recalculates tax automatically as you make changes.

Step 6: Review new tax calculation

Check:

New total income. New tax liability. New refund or additional tax due.

If additional tax is due:

You'll need to pay before filing (via challan). Generate challan on portal. Pay via net banking or debit card. Challan reflects in your account within 2-3 days.

If refund increased:

Additional refund will be processed after revised return is processed.

Step 7: Verify revised return

After filing, verify within 30 days using:

Aadhaar OTP (if mobile number linked). Net banking (most reliable for NRIs). EVC (Electronic Verification Code).

Without verification, revised return is invalid (same as original return rule).

Step 8: Track processing

Revised return goes to CPC for processing.

Processing time: 2-6 months typically. Status check: Login to portal > View Filed Returns.

If additional refund: Credited to your bank account.

If additional tax paid: Adjusted in your account.

Learn how to verify ITR remotely.

Deadlines for revised returns

Timing is critical. Miss the deadline and you need updated return (different rules, additional tax).

Standard deadline: Same as original return

For non-audit cases (most NRIs):

Original return deadline: July 31. Revised return deadline: July 31 (same year).

Example:

FY 2025-26 income. Original return filed: June 15, 2026. Revised return deadline: July 31, 2026.

You have only 45 days to discover errors and file revision if you filed in mid-June.

Extended deadline: Before assessment completion

Even after July 31, you can file revised return IF:

Assessment hasn't been completed by tax department. No assessment order issued yet.

Assessment typically takes 12-18 months after filing.

So technically, revised return can be filed for 12-18 months after original filing (till assessment completes).

But better to revise within July 31 (simpler, cleaner).

Updated return: After deadline

If you miss both July 31 and assessment completion:

You can still file "Updated Return" under Section 139(8A). Timeline: Within 2 years from end of relevant assessment year. Additional tax: 25% of tax due (if filed in first year) or 50% (if filed in second year).

Example:

FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27). Assessment year ends: March 31, 2027. Updated return window: Till March 31, 2029 (2 years).

Updated return is expensive (25-50% additional tax). Better to file revised return before deadline.

Real deadline scenario

Your situation:

Filed original ITR: July 28, 2026 (3 days before deadline). Discovered error: August 10, 2026 (after deadline).

Can you file revised return? Yes, but only if assessment hasn't started.

Better option: File updated return (pay 25% additional tax). Or check if assessment is still pending (file revised if possible).

Prevention: File original return early (May-June). Gives you buffer to discover errors and revise before July 31.

👉 Tip: We recommend NRIs file original returns by mid-June. This leaves 45 days to discover any errors and file revision before July 31 deadline. Late filers (end of July) have zero buffer for revisions.

Does filing revised return attract penalties?

This is the biggest concern. Let's clarify.

No penalty if filed before deadline

If you file revised return before July 31 (or before assessment):

No penalty for correction. No interest charges (if you pay additional tax due). Clean compliance record.

This is voluntary correction. Tax department appreciates it.

Interest on additional tax (if applicable)

If revised return shows additional tax due:

You must pay the tax. Interest under Section 234A applies: 1% per month from Aug 1 till payment date.

Example:

Original return (filed June 2026): Tax ₹40,000. Revised return (filed July 20, 2026): Tax ₹58,000 (additional ₹18,000). You pay ₹18,000 on July 22, 2026.

Interest: None (paid before Aug 1).

But if you pay in September: Interest: 1% per month on ₹18,000 for 2 months = ₹360.

No penalty, only minimal interest if you delay payment.

Penalty if revised after assessment or if concealment suspected

If you revise after assessment completes:

Not allowed (must file updated return instead). Updated return has 25-50% additional tax.

If tax department believes error was deliberate concealment:

Penalty under Section 270A: 50% of tax evaded (for under-reporting). 200% of tax evaded (for misreporting).

But for genuine errors corrected proactively: No such penalties. Voluntary revision proves good faith.

Real penalty scenario

Case 1: Genuine error, proactive revision

You forgot to report ₹1.5 lakh dividend. Original tax: ₹25,000. Revised tax: ₹37,000. You file revised return in July (before deadline). You pay additional ₹12,000 tax.

Penalty: ₹0. Interest: ₹0 (paid before Aug 1).

Case 2: Error discovered in notice

You didn't file revision. Tax department notices mismatch (via Form 26AS data). Issues notice after 18 months. Asks why you didn't report ₹1.5 lakh dividend.

Penalty: Possible 50% of ₹12,000 = ₹6,000. Interest: 1% per month for 18 months on ₹12,000 = ₹2,160.

Proactive revision saves ₹8,160 plus stress.

Special situations and complications

Some revision scenarios are trickier.

Revising from new regime to old regime

Very common revision scenario.

Original filing: New regime (no deductions). Tax: ₹65,000.

Discovery: You have home loan interest ₹2 lakh, Section 80C ₹1.5 lakh. Old regime would save ₹35,000.

Revised filing: Switch to old regime. Claim deductions. Revised tax: ₹30,000. Refund increased by ₹35,000.

This is allowed and quite common. Many NRIs default to new regime, then realize old regime is better.

Revising to add Schedule FA

If you filed as Resident/RNOR but forgot Schedule FA:

File revised return immediately. Add Schedule FA with all foreign asset details. Pay any additional tax if foreign income was also missed.

Why urgency matters:

Black Money Act penalties are severe. Proactive disclosure (before notice) shows good faith. Penalty reduced significantly.

Real case:

UK-based NRI filed as RNOR (correct status based on day count). Forgot to fill Schedule FA (foreign assets ₹85 lakh). We filed revised return 3 weeks later adding Schedule FA. No penalty (voluntary correction within deadline).

Had he waited and received notice: Penalty could have been ₹10 lakh.

Revising after receiving intimation u/s 143(1)

Section 143(1) intimation is the automated processing confirmation from CPC.

Shows: Tax calculated by system. Refund or demand. Any mismatches flagged.

If intimation shows errors:

You can file revised return (if deadline hasn't passed or assessment incomplete). Or respond to intimation explaining the error. Or file rectification request (for processing errors).

Example:

Intimation says: "You claimed ₹50,000 TDS but Form 26AS shows ₹38,000. Refund reduced accordingly." You realize: Correct TDS was ₹50,000 (tenant deposited late, now reflects in updated Form 26AS).

Response: File rectification request with updated Form 26AS. Or file revised return (if within timeline).

Revising multiple times

Can you revise a revised return?

Yes. You can file multiple revised returns for same year (before deadline or before assessment).

Each new revision supersedes the previous one.

Example:

Original return (June 5): Reported rental income only. Revised return 1 (June 20): Added capital gains (forgot in original). Revised return 2 (July 10): Corrected TDS amount (was wrong in revision 1).

All allowed. Final valid return: Revised return 2.

But avoid multiple revisions (creates confusion, increases processing delays). Better to get it right in one revision.

Revising when refund was already received

If your original return resulted in refund:

Refund might have been processed and credited already. Now you discover error (revised return shows lower refund or even tax due).

What happens:

File revised return showing correct tax. If tax is now due: Pay the difference via challan. If refund was too much: Department will adjust in your account or send demand notice.

You won't be asked to return refund immediately. It gets adjusted against revised liability.

How to handle specific error types

Let's get tactical on common corrections.

Correcting income amount

Original filing: Reported rental income ₹5.2 lakh. Error: Actual rental income was ₹6.8 lakh (missed 2 months rent).

In revised return:

Navigate to "Income from House Property." Edit gross rent: Change from ₹5.2 lakh to ₹6.8 lakh. System recalculates: Municipal tax deduction (if any). 30% standard deduction. Taxable rental income.

Tax recalculates automatically. Pay additional tax if due.

Adding missed income source

Original filing: Reported only rental income ₹6 lakh. Error: Forgot to report dividend income ₹85,000.

In revised return:

Navigate to "Income from Other Sources." Add new entry: Dividend income ₹85,000. Verify TDS on dividend (from Form 26AS).

System adds to total income. Recalculates tax.

Correcting capital gains calculation

Original filing: Reported LTCG ₹8 lakh (from property sale). Error: Forgot to apply indexation. Correct LTCG after indexation: ₹4.2 lakh.

In revised return:

Navigate to "Capital Gains." Edit property sale entry: Add indexed cost (instead of actual cost). System recalculates LTCG: Now ₹4.2 lakh instead of ₹8 lakh.

Tax reduces. Refund increases.

Changing tax regime

Original filing: New regime, tax ₹72,000. Correction: Switch to old regime with deductions.

In revised return:

At the beginning of ITR: Change regime selection from "New" to "Old." Fill deduction sections: Section 80C: ₹1.5 lakh. Section 80D: ₹25,000. Section 24(b) home loan interest: ₹2 lakh.

System recalculates tax under old regime. Revised tax: ₹32,000. Refund increased by ₹40,000.

Correcting TDS amount

Original filing: Claimed ₹45,000 rental TDS. Error: Form 26AS shows ₹38,000 (tenant reported less).

In revised return:

Navigate to TDS section. Edit TDS amount: Change from ₹45,000 to ₹38,000 (match Form 26AS exactly).

Recalculate: Refund reduces by ₹7,000.

Important: Always match Form 26AS, not your records. Your records might be wrong (tenant issue, bank delay). Form 26AS is what tax department sees.

How Belong handles revised returns for you

Let's talk about how we make revisions seamless.

Our revision service

Step 1: Error identification

You contact us: "I filed my return but just realized I forgot dividend income." Or: "I think I chose wrong regime."

We review: Your original return (we request acknowledgment number). Documents you have now (that were missed earlier). Form 26AS (to verify TDS).

We identify all errors (often we find additional errors you didn't spot).

Step 2: Impact analysis

We calculate: Additional tax due or increased refund. Interest (if any). Optimal corrections (sometimes we find deductions you missed that offset the new income).

Real case: NRI contacted us to revise (forgot ₹1.2 lakh dividend). We discovered he also missed claiming ₹2 lakh home loan interest. Net result after both corrections: Refund increased by ₹15,000 (instead of tax due ₹18,000).

Step 3: Revised return preparation

We prepare revised ITR with all corrections. We share draft with you for approval. You review and confirm.

Step 4: Filing and verification

We file revised return on portal. We verify digitally (using your net banking or Aadhaar). We track processing.

Step 5: Additional tax payment (if needed)

If additional tax is due: We generate challan. You pay via net banking (we guide you). Payment reflects in your account.

Step 6: Refund tracking

If refund increased: We track revised refund processing. We notify you when credited.

Entire process: 2-5 days typically from when you contact us.

What we charge for revisions

For our existing clients (we filed original return):

Revision: ₹1,500 (simple corrections like TDS, regime switch). Complex revision: ₹2,500 (adding capital gains, Schedule FA).

For new clients (someone else filed original, you come to us for revision):

Revision: ₹3,500 (we need to review entire original return first). Complex revision: ₹5,000 (major errors, multiple corrections).

Why we offer revision service:

Mistakes happen. We don't want clients to face penalties due to errors. Clean compliance is important for future years.

Real revision cases we handled

Case 1: Forgot capital gains

Singapore-based NRI filed ITR (rental income only). Realized 2 months later: forgot mutual fund redemption (₹3.8 lakh LTCG). We filed revised return. Added capital gains. Paid additional tax ₹22,000. No penalty.

Case 2: Wrong regime selection

Dubai-based NRI filed in new regime (default). Tax: ₹85,000. We reviewed: He had home loan interest ₹2.4 lakh, Section 80C ₹1.5 lakh. We filed revised return switching to old regime. Revised tax: ₹38,000. Refund increased by ₹47,000.

Case 3: TDS mismatch

USA-based NRI claimed ₹62,000 rental TDS (based on tenant's word). Form 26AS showed ₹48,000 (tenant deposited late, some quarters missing). We filed revised return matching Form 26AS exactly. Avoided processing delay and notice.

Case 4: Missed Schedule FA

UK-based NRI filed as RNOR (correct). Forgot Schedule FA (foreign assets ₹1.2 crore). We filed revised return adding complete Schedule FA. Proactive disclosure. No penalty.

Book Belong's revised return service.

Prevention: How to avoid needing revisions

Better to get it right the first time.

File original return early

Timeline we recommend:

Collect documents: April-May. Review and prepare ITR: June 1-15. File original return: Mid-June. Buffer for errors: June 15 - July 31 (45 days).

If you file on July 28: Zero buffer. Any error discovered means missing deadline or filing updated return (with 25% additional tax).

Use a checklist before filing

Before submitting original ITR, verify:

All income sources reported (rental, capital gains, interest, dividend, salary). All TDS amounts match Form 26AS exactly. All deductions claimed (if using old regime). Correct tax regime selected (calculate both, choose lower). Correct bank account for refund. Schedule FA filled (if Resident/RNOR with foreign assets >₹50 lakh). All sections reviewed carefully.

Take 24 hours between preparing and filing. Fresh review catches errors.

Cross-check with Form 26AS

Form 26AS is your friend.

Download it. Match every TDS entry with your ITR. If mismatch: Reconcile before filing original return (don't wait for revision).

Calculate both regimes

Before choosing regime:

Calculate tax under old regime (with all deductions). Calculate tax under new regime (no deductions). Choose lower tax regime.

Many revisions happen because NRIs blindly choose new regime without calculation.

Get professional help for complex cases

DIY filing works for simple cases: Only rental income or only interest income. No capital gains. No foreign assets. No regime confusion.

Hire professional for complex cases: Multiple income sources. Capital gains with indexation or exemptions. Schedule FA required. DTAA claims. Business income.

Cost of error far exceeds professional fee.

Example: Missing ₹2 lakh home loan deduction costs ₹40,000 in extra tax. Our filing fee: ₹4,500. Net savings: ₹35,500.

Your action plan: File revision correctly

Step 1: Identify error quickly

Review your filed ITR within 1-2 weeks. Cross-check with Form 26AS. Verify all income sources covered.

Step 2: Assess impact

Calculate additional tax due (or increased refund). Check if deadline has passed (July 31 or assessment completion).

Step 3: Decide: DIY or professional help

Simple correction (TDS amount, regime switch): DIY possible. Complex correction (capital gains, Schedule FA): Hire professional.

Step 4: File revised return

Prepare corrections. File on portal (mark as "Revised Return"). Pay additional tax if due. Verify within 30 days.

Step 5: Track processing

Monitor refund or demand. Respond to any notices promptly.

Or let us handle it.

You tell us the error. We prepare revised return. We file and verify. We track processing. We handle any follow-up.

Simple revision: ₹1,500 (for existing clients). Complex revision: ₹2,500-5,000.

Book Belong's revised return service.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I file revised return after July 31 deadline?

Yes, if assessment hasn't been completed by tax department (typically 12-18 months after filing). But better to revise before July 31 (cleaner process). After deadline and assessment: You need updated return (with 25-50% additional tax).

Is there any penalty for filing revised return?

No penalty if filed before deadline or before assessment completion. Only interest (1% per month) if additional tax is due and paid after Aug 1. Revised return shows good faith (voluntary correction).

Can I revise my return multiple times?

Yes. Multiple revisions allowed for same year (before deadline or before assessment). Each new revision supersedes previous one. But avoid multiple revisions (creates confusion). Better to get it right in one revision.

What if I already received refund but now realize error?

File revised return showing correct tax. If revised return shows tax due: Pay the difference via challan. Department adjusts refund already given against new liability. You don't need to return refund immediately.

Can I switch from new regime to old regime in revised return?

Yes. Very common revision. Calculate tax under both regimes. Choose lower tax regime in revised return. Claim all deductions if switching to old regime.

How long does revised return processing take?

Same as original return: 2-6 months typically. Sometimes faster if error is simple. Sometimes slower if major changes made. Track status on income tax portal.

Can Belong file revised return for me remotely?

Yes. We file revised returns for NRIs worldwide. Entire process remote (video call, email, cloud uploads). You never visit India or our office. Pricing: ₹1,500-5,000 depending on complexity.

Book Belong's revised return service.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Revised return rules, deadlines, and procedures are subject to change. Consult a qualified chartered accountant for your specific situation. Belong (getbelong.com) is a SEBI-registered investment advisor offering GIFT City-based investment products under IFSCA regulation and professional NRI tax filing services.

Ankur Choudhary

Ankur Choudhary
Ankur, an IIT Kanpur alumnus (2008) with 12+ years of experience in finance, is a SEBI-registered investment advisor and a 2x fintech entrepreneur. Currently, he serves as the CEO and co-founder of Belong. Passionate about writing on everything related to NRI finance, especially GIFT City’s offerings, Ankur has also co-authored the book Criconomics, which blends his love for numbers and cricket to analyse and predict match performances.