A complete 2026 map for foreign nationals โ non-NRI, non-OCI โ who want India exposure. Stocks, mutual funds, GIFT City IFSC, FX, property, tax. Each topic on its own page. Written by a Wall Street vet now in Mumbai who gets asked these questions weekly.
A friend of mine โ American, no Indian heritage, has visited Mumbai twice โ asked me this over dinner last month: "You keep writing about NRIs. But what about people like me? Can I actually buy India, or is this whole thing closed off to outsiders?"
It's a fair question. Most of the India-investing internet quietly assumes you're either an Indian citizen abroad or hold an OCI card. The rules for everyone else โ the genuine foreigners โ are different. Sometimes friendlier than people expect. Sometimes much harsher.
India's foreign-exchange law (FEMA) puts non-residents in three buckets, and the rules differ sharply across them. This section is for the third one.
Indian citizen living abroad. Easiest playbook โ full access to most Indian financial products via NRE/NRO accounts.
Foreign citizen of Indian origin holding the OCI card. Almost everything an NRI can do, including buying property.
Neither of the above. Pure foreigner. The pages below are for you.
If you're an NRI or OCI, your playbook is mostly easier than what's below. See our NRI banking guide and moving-back guide instead.
Prefer one continuous read? The same material is available as a single long-form guide: Investing in India as a Non-OCI Foreigner โ the complete guide โ ยท 14 min read, end-to-end. The pages below let you dip into specific topics; the guide is the linear read.
Pick the page that matches your question. If you're starting cold, the GIFT City page is the practical entry point โ that's where most retail foreign investors begin.
Bottom line. India is not closed to foreigners, but the route is not the same as for NRIs or OCIs. For most foreign nationals, the cleaner path is regulated market routes, especially GIFT City, where access, currency handling, and compliance are all more manageable than mainland India. The opportunity is real. The rules are real too. And almost nobody is explaining this clearly to non-Indian investors.
Amish Kapadia spent 28 years on Wall Street (Citibank โ FHLB Boston โ Sanwa โ JPMorgan โ Barclays โ Nomura) before moving back to Mumbai in 2023. He runs NRI Money Matters and writes about cross-border money for a living. Foreign-national questions like the ones in these pages come up weekly.
Not financial advice. Information accurate as of May 2026 but the IFSC regime in particular is moving fast โ verify current rules with a SEBI-registered adviser before you move capital. Tax rates and withholding thresholds are subject to change in each Union Budget. Some links on this site are affiliate links, which means we may earn a small commission at no extra cost to you if you make a purchase through them. This does not influence which products we recommend.