Recent Immigrant Services – Complete NRI Tax & FEMA Setup for Newly Relocated Indians
One-Stop NRI Tax, Banking & FEMA Compliance for Indians Who Have Just Moved Abroad
When an Indian resident relocates abroad for employment, business, higher education, or permanent settlement, a comprehensive set of tax, financial, and compliance changes must be made in India. This transition from Resident to NRI affects every aspect of your Indian financial life — bank accounts, mutual funds, property, insurance, and income tax obligations. Acting quickly and correctly in the first year abroad prevents years of compliance headaches and potential FEMA penalties.
Our Recent Immigrant Services provide a complete, one-stop solution for newly relocated Indians. We cover transition year residential status determination, income tax return filing for the departure year, conversion of resident bank accounts to NRO accounts, investment KYC updates, and setting up a clean annual NRI compliance structure for all subsequent years. These services connect seamlessly with our repatriation advisory and exempt income planning.
Our Services for Recently Relocated Indians
Departure Year Tax Return
Preparation of the income tax return for the financial year of departure — covering pre-departure Resident period (global income) and post-departure NRI period (India income only), with correct residential status split.
Bank Account Conversion
Advisory and procedural guidance for converting resident savings and fixed deposit accounts to NRO accounts, opening NRE accounts for foreign remittances, and planning FCNR deposits.
Mutual Fund & Demat KYC Update
Updating NRI status across all mutual fund folios (AMC-wise), re-designating resident demat accounts as NRI demat accounts, and coordinating with brokers for FEMA-compliant investment operations.
Property & Rental Income Compliance
Setting up correct TDS deduction on rental income received in India, drafting tenant instructions, and ensuring annual property income is correctly disclosed in NRI income tax returns.
FEMA Compliance Review
Comprehensive review of all Indian financial holdings for FEMA compliance — identifying assets requiring restructuring, reporting obligations, and transactions needing RBI approval post-departure.
Annual NRI Tax Management
Ongoing annual engagement covering income tax return filing, TDS credit reconciliation, refund tracking, lower TDS certificate renewals, and DTAA compliance for all subsequent years abroad.
First-Year Checklist for New NRIs
- Determine residential status for the transition financial year based on actual days in India
- Inform all banks to convert resident savings accounts to NRO accounts — operating resident accounts post-NRI status is a FEMA violation
- Open NRE account for receiving foreign remittances in India — NRE interest is fully tax-free
- Update NRI status at all mutual fund AMCs — failure to do so is a FEMA violation
- Re-designate resident demat account as NRI demat account with your broker
- Update PAN records and note the Aadhaar-PAN linking exemption for NRIs
- File departure year income tax return — covering all income for both resident and NRI periods
- Inform tenants (if rental property) about correct TDS deduction requirements for NRI landlords
- Review insurance policies — some have implications on NRI status; nominee updates may be needed
Frequently Asked Questions
From which financial year does a newly relocated Indian get NRI status for income tax?
Is there a deadline to convert resident accounts to NRO accounts after leaving India?
Can a new NRI continue to hold existing Indian mutual fund investments?
What TDS does a tenant deduct on rent paid to an NRI landlord?
What happens to PPF accounts and NSC when someone becomes an NRI?
Just Moved Abroad? Set Up Your NRI Compliance Correctly from Day One.
Our Recent Immigrant Services provide everything a newly relocated Indian needs — transition year tax return, bank account conversion, investment KYC updates, property compliance, and ongoing annual NRI tax management.
Contact Us TodayF.A.Q.
GSTR-9 is an annual GST return that summarizes all transactions reported during the financial year. It is required to ensure proper reconciliation and compliance with GST laws.
All regular GST-registered taxpayers are required to file GSTR-9, except composition dealers, casual taxable persons, and non-resident taxpayers.
The due date is generally 31st December following the end of the relevant financial year, unless extended by the government.
It includes details of outward supplies, inward supplies, input tax credit claimed, taxes paid, and adjustments made during the year.
GSTR-9 is mandatory for most regular taxpayers, but certain small taxpayers may get exemptions based on turnover thresholds notified by the government.
Late filing may result in penalties and late fees, along with potential compliance issues or notices from GST authorities.