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Special Provisions for NRIs (Chapter XII-A) – N D Savla & Associates
NRI Tax Filing

Special Provisions for NRIs
Chapter XII-A, Sections 115C to 115I

Chapter XII-A concessional tax advisory — Section 115C foreign exchange asset classification, Section 115E concessional rates, Section 115F reinvestment exemption, Section 115H returning-NRI continuation, and Section 115I year-wise opt-out elections.

What Are the Special Provisions for NRIs Under Chapter XII-A?

Chapter XII-A of the Income Tax Act 1961 contains a dedicated set of seven sections — 115C, 115D, 115E, 115F, 115G, 115H, and 115I — that together create a concessional taxation regime for NRIs investing in specified Indian assets through convertible foreign exchange. The chapter was introduced to encourage NRI investment in the Indian capital market, offering simpler computation and concessional flat rates on two income heads: investment income from foreign exchange assets and long-term capital gains on transfer of such assets.

Chapter XII-A is asset-source-specific, not merely person-specific — the benefit applies only where the underlying Indian asset (shares, debentures, public company deposits, Central Government securities, or notified assets) was acquired through convertible foreign exchange remitted from abroad. Therefore, the foreign exchange asset classification must trace back to acquisition records, and casual assumptions that all Indian investments qualify lead to disallowance at scrutiny.

N D Savla & Associates handles every angle of Chapter XII-A work — Section 115C foreign exchange asset classification, Section 115D no-deduction computation, Section 115E concessional rate election, Section 115F reinvestment exemption planning within the six-month window, Section 115G filing-exemption analysis, Section 115H continuing benefit declaration for returning NRIs, and Section 115I year-wise opt-out elections. Furthermore, our practice connects with the wider NRI Tax Filing framework — residential status, filing return of income in India, exempt income for NRIs, and DTAA benefits.

The Chapter XII-A regime is opt-in, not mandatory. We run parallel computations under both Chapter XII-A and the slab-rate alternative every year — because where substantial Chapter VI-A deductions or favourable DTAA rates apply, the Section 115I opt-out can produce a materially lower tax outcome than defaulting into Section 115E rates.

When Should an NRI Use the Chapter XII-A Regime?

Chapter XII-A is relevant for any NRI holding qualifying foreign exchange assets, but the planning value sharpens in specific profiles where the right Section 115 election changes the tax outcome materially:

NRI Investor in Indian Listed Equity

Indian shares acquired through convertible foreign exchange — Section 115E concessional LTCG rate, Section 115F reinvestment timing on sale, and parallel comparison against Section 112A.

NRI Holder of Debentures & Corporate Deposits

Indian public company debentures and corporate deposits — interest income at the Section 115E concessional rate, with Section 115G filing carve-out where TDS already covers the full tax.

Returning NRI with Pre-Acquired Foreign Exchange Assets

Section 115H continuing benefit declaration in the first Resident-year ITR — preserves Section 115E rates on investment income from the original asset, until transfer or conversion.

NRI Selling & Reinvesting in Indian Capital Market

NRI transferring foreign exchange assets and reinvesting within six months in shares, debentures, deposits, or Central Government securities — full or proportionate Section 115F exemption.

NRI with High Chapter VI-A Deduction Potential

Section 80C, 80D, education loan interest, or charitable donations available — Section 115I opt-out election compares slab-rate outcome against Chapter XII-A on a year-by-year basis.

US/UK/Canada NRI Comparing DTAA Rates

NRI claiming DTAA treaty rate on Indian dividend or interest — comparing the DTAA rate against Section 115E to pick the lower outcome through Form 10F and TRC.

Our Chapter XII-A Advisory Services

Our Chapter XII-A practice runs section-by-section — every claim traces back to a specific Section 115 clause, and every election (opt-in, opt-out, or continuation) is documented through the prescribed declaration filed with the Indian return. The six service blocks below cover all seven Chapter XII-A sub-sections.

01

Section 115C Foreign Exchange Asset Classification

Section 115C is the definition clause — every Chapter XII-A benefit traces back to it. We confirm the NRI definition (Indian citizen or person of Indian origin, not Resident under Section 6, covering OCI card holders meeting the Indian-origin test), classify each asset against the foreign exchange asset universe (shares in an Indian company, debentures of an Indian public company, deposits with an Indian public company, Central Government securities, and notified assets), and trace the acquisition back to convertible foreign exchange remittance under FEMA. The audit trail from FEMA-compliant remittance to asset acquisition is the foundation of every Chapter XII-A claim.
Income Tax Act – Section 115C
02

Section 115D & 115E — No-Deduction Computation at Concessional Rates

Section 115D denies any deduction for expenditure or allowance against Chapter XII-A income — the gross amount becomes the taxable base, with no Section 80C, 80D, or broker fee deduction. Section 115E then applies concessional flat rates on the gross figure for both investment income (dividend, where taxable, interest on debentures, interest on deposits, interest on Central Government securities) and long-term capital gains on transfer of foreign exchange assets. Basic exemption does not apply, and surcharge plus health and education cess apply on top of the Section 115E rate — but the effective rate stays concessional compared to slab rates.
Income Tax Act – Section 115D, 115E
03

Section 115F Reinvestment Exemption Planning

Section 115F exempts long-term capital gains on transfer of a foreign exchange asset where the NRI reinvests net consideration in specified assets within six months. The reinvestment universe matches the Section 115C universe — shares of an Indian company, debentures of an Indian public company, deposits with an Indian public company, Central Government securities, or notified savings certificates. Full reinvestment exempts the entire LTCG; partial reinvestment grants proportionate exemption. We calendar the six-month deadline as a critical milestone, plan the new asset selection, and track the prescribed lock-in — because premature transfer or conversion of the new asset withdraws the exemption in the year of withdrawal.
Income Tax Act – Section 115F
04

Section 115G Filing-Exemption Analysis

Section 115G carves out a filing-exemption where two conditions stack: total Indian-sourced income consists only of foreign exchange asset investment income, foreign exchange asset LTCG, or both; and TDS has been correctly deducted at source under the prescribed rates. The carve-out is a TDS-final-tax model — Section 139(1) filing obligation is removed because TDS already discharged the tax. We still recommend voluntary filing in most cases — to claim refund of excess TDS, to apply the lower DTAA treaty rate through Form 10F and the Tax Residency Certificate, to carry forward losses, and to maintain a clean record for future repatriation.
Income Tax Act – Section 115G
05

Section 115H Continuing Benefit for Returning NRIs

Section 115H is one of the most underused tools for returning NRIs. The provision allows Chapter XII-A concessional treatment to continue even after the NRI becomes Resident — but only for investment income from the original foreign exchange asset, and only until the asset is transferred or converted into money. Long-term capital gains do not benefit from Section 115H — on sale after becoming Resident, the LTCG falls under normal Section 112 or 112A computation. The continuation requires a written declaration filed with the Indian return for the first assessment year as Resident; missing the declaration permanently forfeits the benefit. Our Returning Indian service builds this declaration into the first Resident-year filing checklist.
Income Tax Act – Section 115H
06

Section 115I Year-Wise Opt-Out Comparison

Section 115I gives every NRI the right to opt out of Chapter XII-A for any assessment year by filing a written declaration with the return. The opt-out works year-by-year — opting out for one year does not bind future years, and the NRI can return to Chapter XII-A in a subsequent year. The opt-out makes sense where substantial Chapter VI-A deductions are available, where slab-rate computation gives a lower outcome than Section 115E, or where the DTAA treaty rate is more favourable on the same income head. We run parallel computations under Chapter XII-A and the slab-rate alternative for every NRI client annually — quantitative comparison, not assumption, drives the election.
Income Tax Act – Section 115I

Our Broader NRI Tax and Compliance Services

Chapter XII-A is one lever in the wider NRI tax framework. Our complete NRI tax practice covers:

Common Questions on Chapter XII-A Special Provisions

What is Chapter XII-A of the Income Tax Act 1961?
Chapter XII-A of the Income Tax Act 1961 contains special provisions for certain incomes of Non-Resident Indians. It spans Sections 115C, 115D, 115E, 115F, 115G, 115H, and 115I. Together these sections create a concessional taxation regime for NRIs investing in specified Indian assets through convertible foreign exchange. The regime covers investment income and long-term capital gains on foreign exchange assets. Chapter XII-A was introduced to encourage NRI investment in the Indian capital market. Our NRI Tax Filing hub covers the wider compliance framework.
What is a foreign exchange asset under Section 115C?
Section 115C defines a foreign exchange asset as a specified asset acquired through convertible foreign exchange. Specified assets include shares in an Indian company, debentures of an Indian public company, deposits with an Indian public company, Central Government securities, and other notified assets. The acquisition must be made in convertible foreign exchange — typically remitted from abroad. Section 115C also defines investment income and convertible foreign exchange (as per FEMA rules). Our FEMA India Rules for NRI page covers the FEMA framework.
What is the concessional tax rate under Section 115E for NRI investment income?
Section 115E prescribes concessional flat rates for two heads of NRI income under Chapter XII-A. Investment income from foreign exchange assets is taxed at the prescribed flat rate without basic exemption benefit. Long-term capital gains on transfer of foreign exchange assets are taxed at a concessional flat rate. Slab rates and basic exemption do not apply. Furthermore, Section 115D denies any deduction for expenditure or allowance — the gross amount becomes the taxable base. Our Filing Return of Income in India service handles the return filing step.
How does Section 115F reinvestment exemption work?
Section 115F grants an exemption on long-term capital gains from transfer of a foreign exchange asset where the NRI reinvests net consideration in specified assets within six months of the transfer. The reinvestment can be in shares of an Indian company, debentures of an Indian public company, deposits with an Indian public company, Central Government securities, or notified savings certificates. Where only part of the consideration is reinvested, the exemption applies proportionately. The new asset must be held for the prescribed lock-in period. Our Capital Gains Tax Exemptions on Reinvestment page covers reinvestment frameworks.
When can an NRI skip filing the Indian income tax return under Section 115G?
Section 115G applies where two conditions are met. First, total Indian-sourced income consists only of investment income from foreign exchange assets, long-term capital gains on such transfer, or both. Second, TDS has been correctly deducted at source under the prescribed rates. Where both conditions apply, the NRI is not required to file under Section 139(1). However, voluntary filing is still permitted — for refund of excess TDS or DTAA treaty relief. Our ITR-2 Return Filing service covers the return filing mechanics.
Can the Chapter XII-A benefit continue after an NRI becomes a Resident?
Yes, Section 115H allows the Chapter XII-A concessional benefit to continue even after the NRI becomes a Resident. The continuation applies only to investment income from the original foreign exchange asset, and only until the asset is transferred or converted into money. The returning NRI must file a written declaration along with the Indian income tax return for the first assessment year as Resident. Long-term capital gains do not benefit from Section 115H continuation. Our Returning Indian service handles this transition planning.
Can an NRI opt out of Chapter XII-A and choose normal taxation?
Yes, Section 115I permits an NRI to opt out of Chapter XII-A for any assessment year by filing a written declaration with the Indian income tax return. Once opted out for a year, normal slab-rate taxation applies. The opt-out works year-by-year — choosing out for one year does not bind future years. The election may help where substantial Chapter VI-A deductions are available, where slab rates give a lower outcome, or where DTAA rates are more favourable. Our DTAA service handles the DTAA rate comparison.

Need a Chapter XII-A election review this year?

Talk to our NRI Tax team for the Section 115C–115I framework — concessional rate vs slab-rate vs DTAA computation, Section 115F reinvestment, and Section 115H returning-NRI declarations.

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