N D Savla & Associates – CA Firm in Mumbai

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Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) – N D Savla & Associates
LRS Advisory

Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) for Resident Indians
USD 250,000 Annual Outward Remittance, Form A2, TCS & FEMA Compliance

RBI LRS framework advisory — annual bandwidth planning, Form A2 declaration, purpose-code mapping, Section 206C(1G) TCS modelling, GIFT City IFSC routing, and FEMA Overseas Investment Rules coordination for Resident Indians.

Part of our FEMA & cross-border tax practice: FEMA India Rules Repatriation of Assets Filing Return of Income DTAA Benefits

What Is the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS)?

The Liberalised Remittance Scheme is the central RBI framework that allows every Resident Indian individual to send funds abroad legally up to USD 250,000 per financial year without prior RBI approval. It is the gateway for foreign education, medical treatment abroad, overseas travel, gifts to non-resident relatives, family maintenance, foreign investments, and overseas property purchase. The scheme operates under the Foreign Exchange Management Act 1999 and the related RBI Master Direction on the Liberalised Remittance Scheme.

LRS eligibility is restricted to Resident Indian individuals only — NRIs, OCI card holders living abroad, corporates, partnership firms, HUFs, and trusts cannot use LRS. The annual USD 250,000 limit is per individual and resets every April. A family of four eligible Resident Indians can collectively remit up to USD 1,000,000 in a financial year by pooling separate limits. Every LRS transaction requires Form A2 declaration at an Authorised Dealer bank, and Section 206C(1G) TCS is collected upfront at the time of debit.

N D Savla & Associates delivers complete LRS advisory under one roof — annual bandwidth planning across education, medical, travel, investments, and property; Form A2 preparation with the correct purpose code; LRS declaration drafting; Section 206C(1G) TCS modelling; Authorised Dealer bank coordination; GIFT City IFSC routing; Schedule FA disclosure for LRS-funded foreign assets; and annual TCS credit reconciliation in the Indian income tax return. Our practice connects with the wider FEMA India Rules framework — coordinating with repatriation of assets, filing return of income in India, and DTAA benefits.

LRS compliance runs across two statutes — FEMA for the outward remittance mechanics and the Income Tax Act for TCS and Schedule FA disclosure. A wrong purpose code on Form A2 triggers the higher residual TCS rate instead of the concessional rate; a missed Schedule FA entry triggers Black Money Act penalties. Our team coordinates both frameworks for every LRS engagement.

When Does LRS Advisory Become Critical?

LRS advisory matters for every Resident Indian with cross-border outflows, but there are specific profiles where getting it right changes the TCS outcome and compliance position materially:

Parent Funding Child's Overseas Education

Education-purpose LRS remittance attracts a concessional TCS rate. A Section 80E education loan reduces TCS further. Wrong purpose code on Form A2 defaults to the higher residual rate — a costly mistake.

Resident Indian Seeking Medical Treatment Abroad

Medical treatment abroad qualifies for a concessional TCS rate. Documentation includes hospital estimate, referral letter, and proof of relationship between remitter and patient. Purpose-code accuracy is critical.

Family Booking an Overseas Tour Package

Overseas tour programme packages attract TCS under Section 206C(1G) on the full package value, regardless of the LRS threshold. Structuring package vs component costs determines the TCS outcome.

Gift or Maintenance Remittances to Relatives Abroad

Gifts to non-resident relatives and maintenance for non-resident parents or children require family relationship documentation. Recurring maintenance must be tracked against the USD 250,000 annual ceiling across the year.

Resident Indian Investing in Foreign Equity or Overseas Property

Investment in foreign stocks, mutual funds, ETFs, or overseas immovable property through LRS requires FEMA Overseas Investment Rules 2022 compliance and mandatory Schedule FA disclosure in the Indian return.

Returning NRI Transitioning to LRS Framework

Once a returning NRI becomes Resident under FEMA, the USD one million NRO repatriation scheme stops applying. Outward remittances shift to LRS at USD 250,000. Bandwidth planning before and after return is essential.

Our Liberalised Remittance Scheme Advisory Services

Our LRS practice follows a structured eight-step workflow — purpose identification, TCS modelling, Form A2 preparation, bank coordination, SWIFT confirmation, GIFT City IFSC routing, annual bandwidth tracking, and TCS credit reconciliation. The six service blocks below cover the end-to-end advisory.

01

Purpose Identification & LRS Bandwidth Planning

Every LRS engagement starts with mapping all planned outward remittances for the financial year — education, medical, travel, gifts, maintenance, investments, and overseas property — against the USD 250,000 annual ceiling per Resident Indian. A single family can pool multiple members' LRS limits, so we build the annual plan across every eligible family member. The bandwidth plan identifies which remittances qualify for concessional TCS rates and which fall under the residual rate, and it tracks cumulative outflows across all Authorised Dealer banks throughout the year. The output is a structured LRS calendar that prevents limit breaches and avoids bank rejections mid-year.
02

Section 206C(1G) TCS Modelling & Rate Optimisation

Section 206C(1G) TCS is collected upfront by the Authorised Dealer bank at the time of debit — it is not an annual tax but a forward-loading mechanism. TCS rates differ by purpose: education remittances funded through a Section 80E loan attract the lowest rate, education through other sources and medical treatment attract a concessional rate, and the residual rate applies to investments, travel outside packaged tours, gifts, and most other heads. Overseas tour programme packages trigger TCS separately, regardless of the LRS threshold. We model the TCS exposure across all planned remittances, identify purpose-code optimisations, and confirm whether the Section 80E education-loan concession applies — before Form A2 is submitted to the bank.
Income Tax Act – Section 206C(1G)
03

Form A2 & Supporting Document Preparation

Form A2 is the central FEMA declaration for every LRS transaction — capturing purpose code, beneficiary details (IBAN, SWIFT BIC), remittance amount, source of funds, and remitter-beneficiary relationship. A wrong purpose code on Form A2 either triggers the higher residual TCS rate or causes the bank to reject the remittance entirely. We prepare Form A2 with the correct LRS purpose code alongside the LRS declaration confirming the USD 250,000 annual ceiling, and compile the purpose-specific supporting documents — admission letters, fee schedules, medical estimates, sale deeds, broker confirmations, or gift declarations. For minors, we coordinate the guardian's countersignature. Accurate documentation reduces bank processing time from days to hours.
FEMA 1999 – Form A2 & LRS Declaration
04

Authorised Dealer Bank Coordination & SWIFT Confirmation

After documents are ready, we coordinate directly with the Resident Indian's Authorised Dealer bank — submitting Form A2, the LRS declaration, and supporting documents, and responding to the bank's KYC and FEMA verification queries. The bank verifies documents, applies the Section 206C(1G) TCS rate, debits the rupee amount plus TCS, converts to foreign currency at the prevailing rate, and dispatches the SWIFT MT103 transfer to the beneficiary. We track the TCS challan, capture the SWIFT confirmation and the bank's outward remittance certificate, and confirm the Form 26AS and AIS entries reflect the remittance and TCS correctly. Clean documentation routinely reduces processing time to two to three business days.
05

GIFT City IFSC Routing & FEMA Overseas Investment Compliance

Resident Indians who invest in global funds, exchange-traded funds, or other instruments can route LRS remittances through the GIFT City International Financial Services Centre instead of directly to a foreign brokerage. The LRS limit and TCS rules still apply, but the IFSC route opens access to global products listed on IFSC exchanges and allows USD-denominated holdings within India. For investments routed directly abroad — foreign equity, foreign mutual funds, overseas immovable property — we ensure compliance with the FEMA Overseas Investment Rules 2022. We also handle Schedule FA preparation for every LRS-funded foreign asset in the Resident Indian's income tax return; failure to disclose attracts Black Money Act penalties and the Income Tax Department cross-checks Schedule FA against CRS and FATCA data.
FEMA Overseas Investment Rules 2022 · IFSCA Act 2019
06

Annual TCS Credit Reconciliation & Return Filing

TCS collected under Section 206C(1G) is not a final tax — it is creditable against the Resident Indian's total Indian tax liability. At year-end, we reconcile all Section 206C(1G) TCS amounts appearing in Form 26AS and the Annual Information Statement against the Resident Indian's income tax return. Where TCS exceeds actual liability, we process the refund claim. The AIS shows every LRS remittance reported by the Authorised Dealer bank — we cross-check all entries and resolve any discrepancies before the return is filed. Our Filing Return of Income in India service handles ITR-2 filing, where Schedule FA disclosure and TCS credit are both addressed. The LRS engagement runs as an annual compliance cycle — not a one-time transaction.

Our Broader FEMA, Tax, and Outward Remittance Services

LRS is the outward-remittance framework for Resident Indians — but it operates inside a wider cross-border compliance map. Our complete FEMA and international tax practice covers:

Common Questions on the Liberalised Remittance Scheme

What is the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) in India?
The Liberalised Remittance Scheme is an outward remittance framework introduced by the Reserve Bank of India in 2004 under the Foreign Exchange Management Act 1999. It allows every Resident Indian individual, including a minor, to remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year for permitted current account and capital account transactions without prior RBI approval. Permitted purposes include foreign education, medical treatment abroad, overseas travel, gifts to non-resident relatives, family maintenance, foreign investments, and overseas property purchase. LRS does not apply to NRIs, OCI card holders living abroad, corporates, partnership firms, HUFs, or trusts. Our FEMA India Rules page covers the broader FEMA framework.
What is the LRS limit and who is eligible?
The LRS limit is USD 250,000 per Resident Indian individual per financial year (April to March), and it resets every April. The limit is per individual — a family of four eligible Resident Indians can collectively remit USD 1,000,000 by pooling their separate limits. Eligibility is restricted to Resident Indian individuals only, including minors with a guardian countersignature on Form A2. NRIs use a separate framework — the USD one million scheme for NRO repatriation. Our Repatriation of Assets page covers the NRI USD one million scheme in detail.
What are the permitted and prohibited purposes under LRS?
Permitted purposes include education abroad, medical treatment abroad, overseas travel, gifts and donations to non-resident relatives and charitable institutions, maintenance of close relatives abroad, investment in foreign equity, mutual funds, bonds, and ETFs, and purchase of overseas immovable property. Prohibited purposes include lottery, sweepstakes, banned items, margin trading, foreign exchange speculative trading, cryptocurrency, and remittances to FATF non-cooperative jurisdictions. Form A2 must declare the exact purpose code — a wrong code triggers the higher residual TCS rate and may cause the bank to reject the remittance. Our Investments in India page covers parallel investment planning.
What is TCS on LRS under Section 206C(1G) of the Income Tax Act?
Section 206C(1G) requires the Authorised Dealer bank to collect Tax Collected at Source from the Resident Indian at the time of debit. TCS rates vary by purpose — education remittances funded through a Section 80E loan, education funded otherwise, medical treatment, and the residual head (investments, travel, gifts) attract different rates. The TCS threshold is cumulative per Resident Indian per financial year across all banks. The TCS amount appears in Form 26AS and the Annual Information Statement, and the Resident Indian claims credit in the Indian income tax return. Excess TCS is refunded after return processing. Our Filing Return of Income in India page handles the TCS reconciliation step.
What is Form A2 and what documents are required for an LRS remittance?
Form A2 is the outward remittance application form prescribed under FEMA. The Resident Indian completes Form A2 at the Authorised Dealer bank before every LRS transaction, declaring the purpose code, beneficiary details, remittance amount, and source of funds. Form A2 is accompanied by a separate LRS declaration confirming the remittance is within the USD 250,000 annual ceiling. Supporting documents include the Resident Indian's PAN card (mandatory), Indian passport copy, beneficiary foreign bank account details (IBAN, SWIFT BIC), and purpose-specific proof — admission letter for education, medical estimate for treatment, sale deed for property, broker confirmation for investment, or gift declaration. Our PAN Application page covers PAN prerequisites.
Can a Resident Indian invest in foreign stocks, mutual funds, and overseas property through LRS?
Yes — a Resident Indian can use LRS to invest in foreign equity, mutual funds, ETFs, bonds, and overseas immovable property within the USD 250,000 annual limit. The investment must comply with the FEMA Overseas Investment Rules 2022. Every LRS-funded foreign asset must be disclosed in Schedule FA of the Indian income tax return from the year of acquisition — non-disclosure attracts Black Money Act penalties and the Income Tax Department cross-checks Schedule FA against CRS and FATCA data. The GIFT City IFSC route is also available for global product access through IFSCA-registered platforms. Our ITR-2 Return Filing page covers Schedule FA mechanics.
How does LRS apply to a returning NRI who has just become Resident under FEMA?
Once a returning NRI becomes Resident under FEMA, the USD one million NRO repatriation scheme stops applying and LRS becomes the framework for all outward remittances. The annual outward remittance bandwidth shrinks from USD one million (as NRI) to USD 250,000 (as Resident). Foreign assets acquired during the NRI period do not count towards the LRS limit — only fresh post-Resident remittances count. Returning Indians should therefore complete major NRO repatriation in the pre-return months under the USD one million scheme, before FEMA Resident status takes effect. Our Returning Indian page covers pre-return bandwidth planning in detail.

Need end-to-end LRS advisory this financial year?

Talk to our FEMA and tax team — LRS bandwidth planning, Form A2, TCS modelling, GIFT City IFSC routing, and annual TCS credit reconciliation under one roof.

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