Do you own a house or flat in India that you’ve rented out while living abroad? As an NRI, rental income from Indian property is fully taxable in India — and the tenant is legally required to deduct TDS before paying you rent. Understanding how to handle this correctly can save you significant money and keep you compliant with Indian tax law.
At NRI Tax CA, we handle NRI rental income ITR filings every year. This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know.
Is NRI Rental Income Taxable in India?
Yes, absolutely. Rental income from property situated in India is always taxable in India, regardless of your residential status. This applies whether you are NRI, RNOR, or full Resident. The property’s location — not your location — determines taxability.
TDS on NRI Rental Income: The Tenant’s Obligation
Here’s something many NRIs and their tenants don’t know: when a tenant pays rent to an NRI landlord, the tenant is legally required to deduct TDS at 30% (plus surcharge and cess) on the gross rent before paying. This is under Section 195 of the Income Tax Act.
Why does this matter? If your tenant doesn’t deduct TDS, both the tenant and you could face penalties. The tenant also cannot claim the rent as a business expense without TDS compliance.
The TDS rate for NRI rental income is typically 30% + 10% surcharge (if rent exceeds ₹50 lakh) + 4% health and education cess — making effective TDS up to 31.2% or higher on the gross rent.
Can the TDS Rate Be Reduced?
Yes — this is where significant planning opportunity exists. If your actual tax liability (after deductions) is lower than the TDS being deducted, you can apply for a Lower TDS Certificate under Section 197 (now filed via Form 128 / erstwhile Form 13). With this certificate, your tenant can deduct TDS at the lower rate specified by the Income Tax Department rather than the full 30%.
This is especially valuable when you have loan interest deductions, standard deduction, or other allowable expenses that reduce your taxable rental income significantly. Rather than waiting to claim a refund after filing ITR, get the Lower TDS Certificate upfront.
How Rental Income Is Computed for NRI ITR
Rental income falls under the head “Income from House Property” in your ITR. Here’s how it’s calculated:
Step 1: Gross Annual Value (GAV)
The Gross Annual Value is typically the actual rent received or receivable, whichever is higher. If the property was vacant for some months, only the rent for the let-out period counts.
Step 2: Deduct Municipal Taxes
Municipal taxes (property tax) paid to the local authority are deductible from GAV to arrive at Net Annual Value (NAV).
Step 3: Standard Deduction — 30%
You get a flat 30% deduction on NAV as “standard deduction” under Section 24(a). This covers repairs, maintenance, and all property expenses. No receipts needed — it’s automatic.
Step 4: Deduct Home Loan Interest (If Any)
If you have a home loan on the rented property, the entire interest paid is deductible under Section 24(b) — with no upper limit for let-out property (unlike self-occupied property which has a ₹2 lakh cap). This can dramatically reduce taxable rental income.
Taxable Income from House Property
= GAV − Municipal Taxes − 30% Standard Deduction − Home Loan Interest
This amount is added to your other India income (if any) and taxed at applicable slab rates.
Worked Example: NRI Rental Income Tax Calculation
Ananya lives in Dubai. She rents out her Mumbai flat for ₹40,000/month = ₹4,80,000/year.
- Gross Annual Value (GAV): ₹4,80,000
- Municipal taxes paid: ₹18,000
- Net Annual Value (NAV): ₹4,62,000
- Less 30% Standard Deduction: ₹1,38,600
- Less Home Loan Interest: ₹1,80,000
- Taxable House Property Income: ₹1,43,400
If this is Ananya’s only India income, it falls in the 5% slab. Her tax = ~₹7,170 — far less than the TDS of ₹1,49,760 (31.2% of ₹4,80,000) her tenant deducted. She should definitely file ITR to claim the refund.
Which ITR Form for NRI Rental Income?
NRIs with rental income from India must file ITR-2 (if no business income) or ITR-3 (if business income also present). ITR-1 (Sahaj) is not available to NRIs.
How to File NRI ITR with Rental Income: Step-by-Step
- Register on Income Tax e-Filing Portal (incometax.gov.in) with your PAN
- Link your PAN with Aadhaar (mandatory — may need OTP on Indian mobile)
- Collect TDS certificates: Ask your tenant for Form 16C (TDS certificate for rent) or check Form 26AS/AIS on the portal for auto-populated TDS credits
- Select ITR-2 and choose “Non-Resident” as residential status
- Fill Schedule HP (House Property) with rental income details, deductions
- Claim TDS credit from Form 26AS — this reduces your tax payable
- Verify and submit — e-verify using OTP (Indian mobile) or EVC or net banking
Bank Account for Refund: Use NRO Account
If you’re due a TDS refund (which is common given 30% TDS vs lower actual tax), you need an Indian NRO bank account linked to your PAN on the tax portal. Refunds are credited to Indian bank accounts only. NRE accounts cannot receive tax refunds directly.
Reporting Rental Income in Your Country of Residence
India taxes your rental income at source. Your country of residence may also require you to report this income. However, most countries have DTAA (Double Tax Avoidance Agreements) with India — so you can claim the Indian tax paid as a credit in your foreign tax return, avoiding double taxation.
For example, if you live in the UK and paid ₹7,170 in India tax, you report the rental income in your UK Self-Assessment return but claim the India tax as a foreign tax credit, so you pay only the difference (if UK rate is higher).
Penalties for Non-Filing
NRIs often think that since TDS was deducted, they don’t need to file an ITR. This is incorrect. If your total India income (including rental income) exceeds the basic exemption limit (₹2.5 lakh under old regime or ₹3 lakh under new regime), you are required to file an ITR — even if TDS has been fully deducted.
Penalties for non-filing include: late filing fee up to ₹5,000, interest on unpaid tax under Sections 234A/234B/234C, and potential scrutiny/notices from the Income Tax Department.
Multiple Properties: Additional Rules
If you own more than two properties, only up to two can be considered “self-occupied” (if not rented). All others are deemed to have a rental income even if vacant — this is called Annual Letting Value (ALV). For NRIs who own multiple Indian properties but live abroad, all properties are typically treated as let-out and annual value must be computed for each.
Let NRI Tax CA Handle Your Rental Income ITR
Filing ITR with rental income involves multiple schedules, TDS credit matching, and sometimes claiming refunds. We’ve helped hundreds of NRIs across USA, UAE, UK, Canada, and Singapore file accurate ITRs and claim maximum refunds.
Our NRI ITR filing service starts at ₹3,499, with rental income included. We handle the full process — from collecting your TDS certificates to filing and e-verification support.
Estimate your NRI rental income tax and TDS refund with our free NRI tax calculator. Our CA team at Bilash Paul & Associates can file your ITR-2 with rental income — enquire now.
📞 WhatsApp us at +91 89309 63079 or use our contact form. Tell us your property rental amount and we’ll handle the rest.




