Property is usually the first thing NRIs think about when they consider putting money into India. A flat in Bangalore, an apartment in Pune, a villa plot in Hyderabad — it feels tangible, familiar, and emotionally reassuring in a way that financial instruments don’t.
But buying property in India as an NRI is a different game from buying as a resident. FEMA governs what you can buy, how you can pay, and what happens when you sell. The tax treatment is heavier. The hidden costs are real. And the management-from-abroad challenge is something most property guides don’t talk about until you’re already in.
This guide covers what you need to know — the rules, the costs, the process, and the honest question you should answer before signing anything.
What NRIs Can and Cannot Buy
Let’s start with the non-negotiable boundaries under FEMA:
You CAN buy
Residential property and commercial property. There’s no limit on the number of properties. No prior approval from RBI is required. NRIs and OCI cardholders have the same rights here.
You CANNOT buy
Agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses. This restriction is absolute — there’s no exemption, no workaround, and attempting to buy through a resident’s name (benami transaction) is a criminal offence under the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988. The penalty under FEMA for violations can be up to three times the transaction value.
The one exception
You can acquire agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses through inheritance or as a gift from a person resident in India. But you cannot purchase them.
How Payment Must Work
Every rupee of your property purchase must flow through authorised banking channels. Cash transactions are not permitted under FEMA. Here’s how the payment routing works:
NRE account
Funded from your overseas earnings. If you buy property using NRE funds, the sale proceeds later are fully repatriable (after paying applicable taxes). This is the cleanest route for NRIs who may want to bring the money back abroad eventually.
NRO account
Funded from Indian income sources (rent, dividends, interest). Sale proceeds from NRO-funded purchases are repatriable up to USD 1 million per financial year, after tax compliance. Understanding the difference between NRE and NRO matters here — it determines your repatriation flexibility years down the line.
Home loans
NRIs can avail housing loans from Indian banks and housing finance companies. The loan is disbursed in rupees, and EMIs must be paid through NRE/NRO accounts. Loan eligibility depends on your age, income, country of residence, and the property’s value — typically 75–85% of the property value.
FCNR account
Foreign currency fixed deposits. Can also be used for property purchases.
What you cannot do
Pay in foreign currency directly to the seller. Accept cash payments or make cash payments at any stage. Use funds from accounts not designated as NRE/NRO/FCNR.
The Costs Nobody Mentions Upfront
The listed price of the property is only part of what you’ll pay. Here’s the full picture:
Stamp duty
A state government tax on the property’s market value or agreement value, whichever is higher. Rates vary significantly by state — from 3% in Andhra Pradesh to 7–8% in Maharashtra and Delhi. On a ₹1 crore property in Mumbai, that’s ₹6–7 lakh before you’ve received the keys.
Registration fee
Typically 1% of the property value, paid to the government for legally recording the transaction.
GST
Applies only to under-construction properties. Completed properties with an occupancy certificate are GST-exempt. For under-construction properties, GST is 5% (without input tax credit) or 1% for affordable housing.
Brokerage
If you’re buying through a broker, expect 1–2% of the property value.
Legal fees
For title verification, sale deed preparation, and registration. Budget ₹25,000–₹1,00,000 depending on the complexity of the transaction and the city.
Power of Attorney costs
If you can’t be present for registration, you’ll need a PoA for someone in India to execute on your behalf. The PoA needs to be notarised and apostilled in your country of residence, then registered in India. Cost: ₹5,000–₹20,000 for the process.
Total entry cost
Due Diligence: What to Verify Before You Sign
This is where NRI property purchases go wrong most often — because you’re doing due diligence from 8,000 kilometres away. Here’s what must be verified:
Title verification
Get a property lawyer in India to verify the title chain for at least the last 30 years. This confirms the seller has clear, undisputed ownership. In India, land records are often poorly maintained, and title disputes can surface years after purchase.
Encumbrance certificate
This confirms the property has no legal dues, mortgages, or pending litigation. Obtain it from the Sub-Registrar’s office for the last 30 years.
RERA registration
If buying an under-construction property, verify the project is registered under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act on the official RERA portal. RERA registration means the developer has submitted all approvals and can’t divert funds to other projects. Never buy an unregistered under-construction project.
Approved building plan
Confirm the construction plan is approved by the local municipal authority and that the builder hasn’t deviated from it. Unauthorised construction can result in demolition orders.
Occupancy certificate / Completion certificate
For ready-to-move properties, confirm the builder has received these certificates from the local authority.
Physical verification
Have someone you trust physically inspect the property. Photographs and video calls are helpful but not sufficient. Check for encroachments, boundary disputes with neighbours, and the actual condition of the building.
Seller's NRI/resident status
If the seller is also an NRI, the TDS obligations change — the buyer must deduct TDS under Section 195 on the full sale consideration, not just the gain. This is a common surprise that can delay transactions.
Managing Property from Abroad: The Reality
This is the part most property guides skip, and it’s the part that matters most for NRIs.
Rental income
If you buy to rent out, your tenant is legally required to deduct TDS at 31.2% (30% plus cess) on the rent from the very first rupee — there’s no threshold exemption for NRI landlords. On ₹30,000 monthly rent, your tenant deducts ₹9,360 and deposits it with the government. You receive ₹20,640. After maintenance, society charges, and property management, net yields often fall to 1.5–2.5%.
Tenant management
Finding reliable tenants, collecting rent, handling maintenance, dealing with disputes — all from a different time zone. Many NRIs appoint a property manager or rely on family, but neither is without complications.
Maintenance and upkeep
Properties need attention. Water damage during monsoons, painting, plumbing, electrical issues — and you can’t pop over on a weekend to sort it out.
Regulatory compliance
Rental income must be declared in your Indian ITR (filed using ITR-2). You’ll need to pay advance tax if your total tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 in a year.
When you sell
The buyer must deduct TDS at 20% of the full sale consideration (not just the profit) if the property is held long-term. On a ₹1 crore sale, that’s ₹20 lakh withheld immediately — even if your actual capital gains tax liability is much lower. You claim the excess back when filing your ITR, but the refund can take 12–18 months. We’ve covered the full capital gains picture for NRIs in detail.
The Honest Question: Should You Buy Property in India?
Most property guides give you the rules and then wish you luck. We think you deserve an honest framework for deciding whether property in India is right for you specifically.
Property makes sense when
You’re buying a home you’ll personally use when you return to India. You’ve found a commercial property with strong rental yields (6–9%). You’ve inherited property and want to hold it. You have a clear emotional reason — a home near family — and you understand the financial trade-offs.
Property may not be the best use of your money when
Your primary goal is wealth creation (equity mutual funds have historically delivered 12–15% CAGR vs 6–8% for residential property, subject to market risks). You won’t be in India to manage the property. You’re buying because “property always goes up” without running the actual numbers. You haven’t accounted for the 8–12% entry costs, the rental TDS reality, or the exit friction.
The most financially efficient approach for many NRIs isn’t property or financial instruments — it’s a combination. A structured investment portfolio for long-term wealth creation, with property reserved for specific, intentional goals.
If you’re considering property in India — or wondering whether your money would work harder elsewhere — our team helps NRIs across the US, UK, UAE, Canada, Australia, and Singapore make that decision with real numbers, not assumptions.
Frequently Asked Questions
Disclaimer: This blog is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, legal, or tax advice. Property transactions involve complex regulatory requirements under FEMA, the Income Tax Act, and state-specific laws. Stamp duty rates, GST provisions, and tax rules are subject to change. Property values and rental yields vary by location and are not guaranteed. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks — read all scheme-related documents carefully. Please consult a qualified financial advisor and legal professional before making property or investment decisions. We specialise in Indian financial planning; for legal and tax implications in your country of residence, please consult local professionals.