The bank statement arrives in your email.
You scroll through. Something catches your eye. A transaction labeled TDS. The amount is huge. Much larger than you expected.
You check your NRO account. The bank deducted over ₹2 lakh as tax on your fixed deposit interest. But your total Indian income for the year is only ₹3 lakh. Below the taxable limit.
You should have paid zero tax. Instead, you paid ₹2 lakh.
Your stomach drops.
That money is yours. Not the government’s. But getting it back feels like a maze. Forms. Portals. Deadlines. Verification.
I have been there. Staring at Form 26AS. Wondering where my money went. Wishing I had known the process earlier.
Here is the truth.
Claiming a TDS refund as an NRI is not complicated. It is systematic. You follow steps. You file correctly. You get your money back.
Let me walk you through exactly how.
What Is TDS for NRIs and Why Refunds Happen
TDS means Tax Deducted at Source.
Think of it as advance tax. When you earn money in India, the person paying you deducts tax first. Then sends you the balance. The government holds that tax. You claim credit when filing your return.
For NRIs, the rates are higher. Much higher.
- NRO interest: 30 percent plus cess
- Property sale: 20 to 30 percent on capital gains
- Rent: 30 percent plus cess
- Dividends: 20 percent plus cess
But here is the catch.
Your actual tax liability may be lower. Much lower. Maybe your total income is below taxable limit. Maybe DTAA gives you lower rates. Maybe the buyer deducted on full sale value instead of just capital gains.
When that happens, you paid extra. The government owes you money.
That is a TDS refund.
When Do NRIs Usually Get TDS Refunds?
Let me give you real situations.
Case 1 – Income below taxable limit
You earn ₹2 lakh interest from NRO. Bank deducts 30 percent. Takes ₹60,000. But your total Indian income is ₹2 lakh. Below ₹2.5 lakh threshold. You owe zero tax. Refund due: ₹60,000.
Case 2 – DTAA not applied
You live in Singapore. India-Singapore treaty allows 15 percent on certain income. But bank deducted 30 percent because you did not submit documents. Refund due: 15 percent excess.
Case 3 – Property sale TDS on full value
You sell flat for ₹1 crore. Your capital gain is only ₹30 lakh. But buyer deducted 20 percent on full ₹1 crore. Took ₹20 lakh. Your actual tax is 20 percent of ₹30 lakh = ₹6 lakh. Refund due: ₹14 lakh.
Case 4 – Lower TDS certificate not used
You applied for lower deduction under Section 197. Got certificate for 10 percent. But deductor still deducted 30 percent. Refund due: 20 percent excess.
In each case, the money sits with government until you claim it.
Step 1 – Collect All TDS Documents
Before you do anything, gather your paperwork.
Form 16A
This is your TDS certificate for non-salary income. Banks issue it for NRO interest. Buyers issue it for property sale. Tenants issue it for rent.
Form 16B
Specific to property sale TDS. The buyer must give you this.
Form 26AS
Your tax passbook. Shows all TDS credited to your PAN. Login to income tax portal. Download it.
AIS – Annual Information Statement
More detailed than Form 26AS. Shows all your financial transactions. Interest. Dividends. Property sales. Check this too.
TIS – Taxpayer Information Summary
Consolidated view. Helps reconcile.
Bank statements
For the financial year. Shows interest credited. Shows TDS deducted.
PAN card
Keep it handy. You need the number everywhere.
Proof of income
If claiming income below taxable limit, you need evidence. Bank statements. Sale deeds. Rent agreements.
Organize everything in one folder. Digital copies. Physical copies. You will need both.
Step 2 – Verify TDS in Form 26AS and AIS
This step saves you from rejection.
Open the income tax portal. Go to Form 26AS. Check every TDS entry.
What to verify:
- Your name is spelled correctly
- Your PAN is correct
- The amount matches your records
- The deductor’s TAN is valid
- The financial year is correct
If something is missing, do not panic. Sometimes deductors file late. Wait a few weeks. Check again.
If still missing, contact the deductor. Bank. Buyer. Tenant. Ask them to file correctly.
AIS reconciliation:
Download AIS. Compare with Form 26AS. Sometimes small differences exist. If large differences, investigate.
Do not file return until all TDS appears in Form 26AS. If you claim credit for TDS not shown, your return gets flagged. Refund delayed.
I once helped an NRI who claimed ₹3 lakh refund. But one TDS entry was missing from Form 26AS. The buyer had not deposited the tax. Refund stuck for eight months. We had to chase the buyer. Get proof of deposit. File correction.
Check first. File later.
Step 3 – Calculate Your Actual Tax Liability
Now you figure out what you actually owe.
Step A – Add all Indian income
- NRO interest
- Rental income
- Capital gains
- Dividends
- Any other Indian source
Step B – Apply exemptions
- Basic exemption limit: ₹2.5 lakh for individuals below 60
- Senior citizen limits higher
- Deductions under Chapter VIA if applicable
Step C – Compute tax
- Slab rates for normal income
- Special rates for capital gains
- DTAA rates if applicable
Step D – Add cess
4 percent health and education cess.
Step E – Compare with TDS deducted
If TDS deducted > your actual tax liability, you get refund.
Simple math. But do it carefully.
Example:
NRO interest: ₹3 lakh TDS deducted by bank: ₹90,000 Your actual tax: Nil (below ₹2.5 lakh) Refund: ₹90,000
Example 2:
Property capital gain: ₹20 lakh TDS deducted by buyer: ₹6 lakh Your actual tax at 20 percent: ₹4 lakh Refund: ₹2 lakh
Calculate correctly. If you claim more than you should, scrutiny happens. If you claim less, you lose money.
Step 4 – File Your Income Tax Return (ITR)
This is the main event.
Choose the right ITR form
- ITR-2 – For most NRIs with income from capital gains, property, interest
- ITR-3 – If you have business or professional income
- ITR-1 – Only for residents. NRIs cannot use ITR-1.
Where to file
Income tax portal. incometax.gov.in
What to report
- All Indian income
- Claim TDS credit from Form 26AS
- Claim DTAA benefits if applicable
- Claim lower income if below threshold
While filing
- Each TDS entry must match Form 26AS
- Enter correct bank account for refund
- Verify all details before submit
Deadline: Usually 31 July for non-audit cases. Extended sometimes. Check current year deadline.
Do not miss deadline. Late filing means:
- Interest on tax due
- Penalty up to ₹10,000
- Refund delayed further
I filed my first NRI return in August once. Missed July deadline by two weeks. Got penalty notice for ₹5,000. Paid it. Learned my lesson.
Step 5 – Add Your Bank Details for Refund
The government needs to send your money somewhere.
Requirements
- Bank account must be in India
- Preferably NRO account
- Account must be pre-validated on income tax portal
- IFSC code correct
- Account holder name matching PAN
How to pre-validate
- Login to income tax portal
- Go to Profile → Bank Accounts
- Add your NRO account details
- Enter IFSC
- Submit
Small amount deposited for verification. You confirm. Account activated.
Why NRO?
Refunds are in Indian rupees. NRO accounts hold rupees. NRE holds foreign currency. Refund to NRE is possible but takes longer. Stick to NRO for simplicity.
Double check account number. One wrong digit and money goes elsewhere. Recovering it is nearly impossible.
Step 6 – E-Verify Your Return
Filing is not enough. You must verify.
Without verification, your return is invalid. No refund. No processing.
Verification options
- Aadhaar OTP – If Aadhaar linked to PAN. OTP sent to registered mobile. Instant verification.
- Net banking – Through linked bank account.
- DSC – Digital Signature Certificate. For professionals.
- ITR-V submission – Print form. Sign. Post to CPC Bengaluru. Takes weeks.
Timeline: Verify within 30 days of filing. If not verified, return considered never filed.
Best option: Aadhaar OTP. Takes two minutes. Instant confirmation.
I once helped an NRI who filed but did not verify. Thought it was automatic. Three months later, no refund. We checked. Return not verified. Filed again. Verified immediately. Refund came in six weeks.
Verify as soon as you file. Do not wait.
Step 7 – Track Your Refund Status
Now you wait. But you can track.
Method 1 – Income tax portal
- Login
- Go to e-Filing → Income Tax Returns → View Filed Returns
- Select assessment year
- Check status
Status shows:
- Verified
- Processed
- Refund issued
Method 2 – Refund banker portal
Some refunds handled by NSDL or Protean.
- Go to tinvis.finance.com
- Enter PAN and assessment year
- Check status
Method 3 – SMS and email
If you registered mobile and email, you get updates.
Typical timeline
- After verification: 30 to 60 days for processing
- Refund issued: Another 15 to 30 days
- Total: 45 to 90 days from filing
Delays happen. If over 120 days, follow up.
Special Scenario 1 – TDS Refund on NRO Interest
This is the most common NRI refund case.
The problem: Bank deducts 30 percent TDS on NRO interest. Always. They do not check your total income. They do not apply DTAA automatically.
The solution: File ITR. Show total income. If below taxable limit, claim full refund. If DTAA applies, claim lower rate.
Documents needed:
- Form 16A from bank
- Form 26AS showing TDS
- Bank statements showing interest
- DTAA documents if claiming treaty rate
Example:
Mrs. Mehta lives in UK. Her NRO FD earned ₹4 lakh interest. Bank deducted ₹1.2 lakh TDS.
Her total Indian income: ₹4 lakh.
UK-India DTAA allows 15 percent on interest. Her actual tax should be ₹60,000. Not ₹1.2 lakh.
She files ITR. Claims DTAA. Gets ₹60,000 refund.
Special Scenario 2 – TDS Refund on Property Sale
This is where the biggest refunds happen.
The problem: Buyer deducts TDS on full sale value. Not just capital gain. You pay tax on money that is not income.
Example: Mr. Sharma sells Delhi flat for ₹2 crore. He bought it for ₹1.2 crore in 2012. Indexed cost: approximately ₹2.1 crore. Actually, he has no gain. Small loss.
But buyer deducted 20 percent on ₹2 crore. Took ₹40 lakh.
Mr. Sharma’s actual tax liability: Zero. Refund due: ₹40 lakh.
The solution:
File ITR. Show full sale details. Compute capital gain correctly. Claim TDS credit. Get refund.
Documents needed:
- Sale deed
- Purchase deed
- Indexed cost calculation
- Form 16B from buyer
- Form 26AS showing TDS
This takes time. Property transactions get scrutiny. But refund comes if computation is correct.
Special Scenario 3 – Income Below Taxable Limit
The question: Can an NRI with income below ₹2.5 lakh get full TDS refund?
Answer: Yes. Absolutely.
Process
- Calculate total Indian income
- Confirm it is below taxable limit
- File ITR showing income
- Claim TDS credit
- Refund issued
Important: Even if income is below limit, you must file return. Refund is not automatic. The government does not know your total income unless you tell them.
Example: Mr. Khan works in Dubai. His NRO interest is ₹1.8 lakh. TDS deducted: ₹54,000.
He has no other Indian income.
He files ITR. Shows ₹1.8 lakh income. Below ₹2.5 lakh. No tax due. Claims ₹54,000 refund.
Refund arrives in three months.
Timeline for NRI TDS Refund
Here is what to expect.
After filing
- Day 1: Return filed
- Day 1: E-verified (if using Aadhaar OTP)
- Day 15 to 30: Return processed
- Day 30 to 60: Refund issued
- Day 60 to 75: Money in bank
Total: 2 to 3 months.
Delays happen if
- TDS not showing in Form 26AS
- Return selected for scrutiny
- Bank account not pre-validated
- Mismatch in income reported
If refund takes over 120 days, you get interest. 0.5 percent per month on refund amount.
How to Reduce Future TDS Instead of Claiming Refund
Waiting for refund is frustrating. Better to prevent excess deduction.
Option 1 – Apply for lower or nil TDS certificate
Form 13. Section 197.
Show estimated income. Get certificate specifying lower rate. Give to deductor. They deduct correctly.
Option 2 – Use DTAA benefits
Submit Tax Residency Certificate and Form 10F to deductor before payment. They apply treaty rate. No excess deduction.
Option 3 – Provide PAN to all deductors
Without PAN, TDS is 20 percent minimum. Give PAN to banks, buyers, tenants. Ensure they have it before deducting.
Option 4 – Inform deductors about correct computation
For property sale, share your cost details. Tell buyer the actual capital gain. They deduct on correct amount.
Planning ahead saves months of waiting.
Common Mistakes NRIs Make
Mistake 1 – Not filing ITR
Some NRIs think refund is automatic. It is not. No return, no refund.
Mistake 2 – Filing wrong ITR form
Using ITR-1 as NRI. Return rejected. Refund delayed.
Mistake 3 – Missing TDS credits
Not checking Form 26AS. Claiming TDS not shown. Return flagged.
Mistake 4 – Wrong bank account
Adding resident account instead of NRO. Refund rejected. Money stuck.
Mistake 5 – Ignoring DTAA
Not claiming treaty benefits. Paying higher tax. Waiting for refund later.
Mistake 6 – Late filing
Missing deadline. Penalties. Interest. Delayed refund.
Mistake 7 – Not verifying return
Filing but not verifying. Return invalid. No refund.
Conclusion
Here is what I want you to do.
Check your Form 26AS today. Look at the TDS amount. Compare with your actual income.
If TDS seems too high, you probably have refund due.
Do not let that money sit with the government. It is yours. You earned it. You just need to claim it.
Follow the seven steps:
- Collect documents
- Verify Form 26AS
- Calculate actual tax
- File ITR
- Add bank details
- E-verify
- Track status
That is it. Seven steps between you and your money.
Thousands of NRIs claim refunds every year. They get their money back. They invest it. They spend it. They save it.
You can too.
Start today. Open the portal. Download Form 26AS. See what is waiting for you.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can NRIs claim TDS refund without filing ITR?
No. Refund is not automatic. You must file income tax return and claim the excess TDS credit.
How long does TDS refund take for NRIs?
Typically 2 to 3 months after filing and verification. Delays happen if documents mismatch or scrutiny applies.
Can refund be credited to foreign bank account?
Refunds are issued in Indian rupees. They can be credited to NRO or NRE account. NRO is simpler and faster.
What if Form 26AS does not show my TDS?
Contact the deductor. Ask them to file correct statement. Do not claim TDS in return until it appears in Form 26AS.
Is there interest on delayed refund?
Yes. If refund takes over 120 days from filing, you get 0.5 percent interest per month on the refund amount.
Can NRIs get refund for TDS on property sale?
Yes. If buyer deducted on full value but your actual capital gain is lower, you can claim refund by filing ITR.
What is the deadline for NRI to file return and claim refund?
Usually 31 July for non-audit cases. Check current year deadline. Late filing reduces refund amount and attracts penalty.
Do I need CA to claim TDS refund as NRI?
Not mandatory. But recommended if you have property sale, multiple incomes, or DTAA claims. Mistakes cost money.
Can I get refund if my income is below taxable limit?
Yes. File return showing income below limit. Claim all TDS deducted. Full refund issued.
How to check refund status?
Login to income tax portal. Go to View Filed Returns. Check status. Also check refund banker portal with PAN.


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