20+ real questions, straight answers from an ex-Wall St NRI in Mumbai. Filter by topic below or jump to ask.
This is one of the most common traps NRIs fall into when moving to the US. Four options, honestly.
First — what is a PFIC? Indian mutual funds are classified as Passive Foreign Investment Companies (PFICs) under US tax law. The IRS treats them punitively because they're foreign investment vehicles not subject to US tax reporting. Individual stocks and ETFs structured as equities may not be PFICs — but most Indian mutual funds are.
Option (a) — Sell everything now. Cleanest outcome but painful if you have large unrealised gains. You pay Indian capital gains tax (10% LTCG above ₹1L, 15% STCG) plus US tax with a Foreign Tax Credit offset. The FTC reduces double taxation but doesn't eliminate it entirely. If your gains are modest, this is often the right call — take the pain now, avoid the PFIC regime entirely.
Option (b) — Declare and pay under the excess distribution regime later. Sounds appealing but is usually the worst outcome. When you eventually sell, the IRS calculates tax at the highest marginal rate for every year you held the fund, plus interest. On a 5-year hold this can easily exceed what you'd pay selling today.
Option (c) — Mark-to-Market (MTM) election. You pay tax on unrealised gains each year at ordinary income rates. Not pleasant, but avoids the brutal excess distribution calculation. For someone uncertain about their timeline in the US, MTM gives you the most flexibility. You make this election on your US tax return for the year you became a US tax resident.
Option (d) — Transfer to parents. Does not solve the problem. The PFIC taint follows the asset, not the holder. Your parents would inherit the same issue if they're ever US tax residents, and gifting has its own complexities.
Your ETFs and individual stocks in Zerodha are a separate question — individual stocks are not PFICs. Some Indian ETFs may qualify depending on their structure. Your CPA needs to assess each holding individually.
You don't have to sell. Transfer your entire portfolio to a broker that accepts India-resident accounts via an ACATS transfer. No sale, no capital gains event — positions move exactly as they are.
Best option: Schwab International. Accepts Indian addresses, no freeze issues, familiar interface, $0 minimum. Open the Schwab account first, then initiate the ACATS transfer from inside Schwab — not from Robinhood's side. Schwab contacts Robinhood directly.
Alternative: Interactive Brokers (IBKR). More powerful platform, also accepts India-resident accounts. Better if you trade actively or want options. UI is more complex than Schwab.
Paasa is worth knowing — built specifically for NRIs returning to India, handles India tax documentation, has a Robinhood-like interface. No crypto though.
For crypto — it doesn't move via ACATS. Enable crypto withdrawals in Robinhood (Settings → Crypto → Enable Withdrawals, takes 2-5 days to unlock), then transfer to Coinbase or Kraken — both accept India-resident accounts. Note: India taxes crypto gains at a flat 30% with no cost basis deduction.
On US tax: moving to India doesn't remove your US tax obligation on US-source income. As a US citizen or Green Card holder you still file US taxes every year. Capital gains from US stocks are taxable in the US regardless of where you live.
Your bank is correct on the forms required. For NRO repatriation of FD maturity proceeds and inherited funds, here's exactly what you need:
Form A2 — mandatory for all outward remittances from India above $10,000. This is the RBI's basic outward remittance form. Your bank has given you this correctly.
OTT/LRS declaration — also correct. Confirms the transfer falls under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme ($250,000 annual limit for residents, $1M for NROs with CA certificate).
Purpose code S1301 — "Remittance for family maintenance and savings" is the correct purpose code for NRO repatriation of personal funds. Your bank has this right.
Form 145/146 — these are not required for NRO account repatriation of FD maturity proceeds or inherited PPF/FD funds. These forms relate to specific categories of repatriation that don't apply to your situation. Your bank is correct to say you don't need them.
The FX rate matters here. On a repatriation of ₹1.96 crore (~$235,000), the difference between your bank's wire rate and an optimised transfer service can be ₹3-6 lakh. Compare rates before wiring.
Two routes — and the choice depends on your parents' age and whether they have pre-existing conditions.
Route 1: US-issued visitor insurance (the default for most NRIs). VisitorsCoverage, IMG Patriot America, IMG GlobeHopper Senior, Atlas America (WorldTrips), Seven Corners RoundTrip, Trawick Safe Travels — all US-licensed, accept B1/B2 visitors, pay US hospitals directly. $50-120/month for healthy parents in their 60s. For parents 70+, IMG GlobeHopper Senior or Seven Corners (no age cap) are the right options. Buy before they board their flight — premiums are the same whether 1 day or 60 days before.
Route 2: Indian travel insurance from Niva Bupa, Star Health, or Bajaj Allianz. Cheaper but limited overseas coverage and reimbursement-based (you pay the US hospital upfront, file a claim later). For a healthy parent 60s on a 1-month visit, this can work. For older parents or any pre-existing conditions, route 1 is dramatically better.
US healthcare costs for an uninsured visitor are brutal — a 3-day ER visit can run $15,000-50,000. A coronary stent procedure: $80,000-150,000. Don't economise on coverage limit; $100,000 minimum.
The basic numbers are stable — what trips most NRIs is the gold rule and the laptop allowance. Here's the current set, valid as of April 2026.
Duty-free passenger allowance: ₹50,000 for adults, ₹15,000 for under-12s, on goods other than restricted items. This applies if you stay in India under 365 days.
Gold: 20g (or ₹50,000 worth, whichever is lower) for men. 40g (or ₹1 lakh worth) for women. Must be worn on your person or carried with original purchase receipts. Loose gold bars or biscuits attract duty regardless.
Alcohol: 2 litres total, any combination of bottles. Past that, duty kicks in around 60-150% depending on category.
Electronics: 1 laptop is allowed in addition to other allowances. Phones, cameras, tablets count against the ₹50,000 allowance — a new iPhone 16 Pro alone exceeds it. Used personal-use items typically pass without question; brand-new sealed boxes raise red flags.
Cigarettes/cigars: 100 cigarettes, 25 cigars, or 125g of tobacco.
Prescription medication: always carry in original packaging with a doctor's letter — particularly for narcotics, controlled substances, or anything injectable. Indian customs is strict on this regardless of declared value.
Both your friend and your cousin are partly right — the answer depends on age.
Under 20: mandatory re-issue (also called re-stamping or transcription) every time the passport is renewed. The new passport number must be linked to your OCI in MEA's records.
Age 20 to 50: mandatory re-issue once when the new passport is issued — typically the renewal at age 20 or thereabouts.
After age 50: not strictly required by current rules, but most consulates still recommend filing the re-issue to keep records clean. Some immigration officers in India have been known to flag mismatched passport numbers regardless of age.
Where most applications fail: photo and signature specs. Photo must be 2x2 inches, white background, full face, no glasses, no smile. JPEG 200KB-1MB at 600x600 pixels. Signature on plain white paper, black ink only, scanned at 10-50KB. Photo/signature mismatch is the single biggest rejection reason.
Don't cash out. The 10% early-withdrawal penalty plus full US ordinary-income tax can vaporise 35-45% of a 401(k) if you're under 59.5 — on $250K that's $90K-115K straight to the IRS.
401(k) — leave it or roll it. Fidelity, Vanguard, and Schwab all support India addresses for retirement accounts even when they freeze brokerage accounts. You can leave the 401(k) where it is and continue managing remotely. Better: roll the 401(k) into a Traditional IRA for more flexibility. Roth conversion is the powerful move — see RNOR below.
IRA — use the RNOR window. When you return to India you get 2-3 financial years as Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident. During RNOR, foreign income (US 401(k) and IRA distributions and conversions) is generally not taxed in India. This means you can do partial Roth conversions paying only US tax at potentially lower brackets. After RNOR ends, India taxes worldwide income — Roth-converted money continues to grow US-tax-free, India-tax-free until you draw it.
HSA — keep it open, use it sparingly. You can keep using the HSA for qualified medical expenses (US or international). But you can no longer contribute. India does not have an equivalent and does not recognise HSA tax-advantaged status — distributions for non-medical use after age 65 are taxed in India as regular income. For most people, drain the HSA via legitimate US medical expenses before or shortly after the move.
Book the moment you have the I-20. Slots in Mumbai, Delhi, Hyderabad, Chennai, and Bangalore fill in days during peak F1 season (May-July for fall intake).
Sequence:
Timing rules: the F1 interview can be scheduled up to 365 days before the I-20 program start date. Visa stamping itself happens within 120 days of the start date — if interview is earlier, the visa is issued only 120 days out.
If your home consulate is full: US consulates in Hyderabad, Chennai, Bangalore, and Mumbai (and Kolkata for east-side applicants) accept interview transfers from anywhere in India. Track availability at ustraveldocs.com/in — refresh dynamically. The US Embassy adds emergency slots in tranches; the trick is to refresh Tuesday and Thursday mornings when most batches drop.
One carry-on for documents, one check-in for groceries and home things, one check-in for clothes and personal. Here's what actually matters.
Carry-on (never check): passport with F1 visa, I-20, admit letter, SEVIS receipt, loan sanction copy, financial proof, all original mark-sheets and transcripts (universities ask for originals at orientation), prescription medication for 6 months in original packaging with doctor's letter, USD 1,000-1,500 cash, prescription glasses spare pair, USB-C and Type A India-to-US plug adaptors, laptop.
Check-in #1 — kitchen and groceries: Indian groceries cost 3-5x more in the US. Pack: masala packets (garam masala, sambar powder, rasam powder, MTR ready mixes), atta (5-10 kg if your bag allows), dal (toor, moong), basmati rice (10kg, despite the weight — US basmati is genuinely worse), ghee (2-3 jars), tea (loose-leaf masala chai), papad packets, pickle, dry nuts. Skip: cooking oil (heavy, available cheap), salt and sugar (everywhere).
Check-in #2 — clothes, bedding, formal: 1 fitted bed-sheet set (US sheets feel different in the first week), one formal Indian outfit (cultural events, weddings, photos), 4-5 T-shirts, 2-3 jeans, 4-5 underwear, gym wear, light jacket. Skip heavy winter clothes — Walmart, Costco, Target, and Old Navy are dramatically cheaper than India for jackets, boots, gloves.
Skip entirely: heavy textbooks (digital usually fine), kitchen utensils (cheaper at US Indian stores or Amazon), hairdryers and irons (110V/220V mismatch), bulky bedding sets (Walmart $30 bundles work), most Indian electronics (won't run on US 110V).
Pre-load an Airalo eSIM for the destination so you have data the moment you land — Uber, university orientation portal, your bank's verification all need a working number on day one.
Felt every word of this when I read the original thread. The state of NRI banking in India in 2026 has improved, but only at a few banks. The "mess" pattern is real because most public-sector banks haven't modernised, and even the private ones have sharp edges nobody warns you about. Here's what actually works in 2026.
Banks supporting 100% online NRI account opening with video KYC: ICICI, HDFC, Kotak, IDFC First, Axis, Federal Bank. Documents needed: passport, valid visa or OCI card, overseas address proof, recent photo, and PAN (or PAN application). US/Canada citizens face slightly more friction due to FATCA — expect 7 to 15 business days. Other corridors (UAE, UK, Singapore, Australia) typically complete in 3 to 7 days. Avoid public-sector banks like SBI for online opening unless you have very specific reasons (existing relationship, pension routing).
Zero-balance NRI accounts exist: IDFC First Bank and Federal Bank both offer zero-minimum-balance NRE/NRO accounts. Yes Bank does on select NRI products. Public-sector banks generally do not. Most ICICI/HDFC/Kotak bundles need ₹10,000 monthly average; non-maintenance fee is ₹400 to ₹600 per month. SBI is ₹3,000 quarterly average for metro.
The FATCA/CRS declaration is automatic, not optional: every Indian bank, mutual fund, brokerage collects this from NRI customers. It identifies whether you are a US person or tax-resident in another country. The bank then reports your account balance and interest to CBDT, which forwards to the IRS (FATCA) or relevant tax authority (CRS). The form is one page. It does NOT create new tax — just identifies reporting status. Many NRIs panic when they get a CAMS or KFintech email about this; nothing to panic about, but it does mean your own US tax filings (Form 8938, FBAR, Form 8621) need to be in order.
The Indian-mobile-number trap: RBI rules effectively force most NRI banking flows to go through an Indian SIM (UPI registration, OTP for net banking, sometimes the bank app itself). Two workarounds: keep an Indian SIM on roaming or annual recharge, OR use a service like JioPostpaid (it stays active without recharge for 90+ days). Some banks now support international OTP — ask explicitly before opening.
What about NRO vs NRE in 2026? NRE = money you earned ABROAD, brought to India. Fully repatriable. Interest tax-free in India. NRO = money you earn IN India (rent, dividends, gifts). Limited repatriation ($1M/year cap), interest taxable at 30% TDS. Most NRIs need both — banks usually bundle NRE + NRO as a combo NRI account package.
Five patterns that catch NRIs out repeatedly when setting up Indian banking. Each one is a real-money or compliance mistake; each one is fixable if caught early. The fix is on the canonical Banking page; the framing here is "what NOT to do" — sometimes that lands harder than positive prescription.
1. Opening only NRE. NRE is for foreign earnings transferred to India. If you receive ANY rupee income inside India — rent from a flat, dividends from a Demat account, a relative's gift, a one-time bank-credit on closing an old account — you legally cannot deposit it into NRE. Doing so is a FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) violation. The fix is straightforward: open NRE + NRO together. Most banks bundle them as a combo. Without an NRO, you have no legal landing zone for India-source money.
2. Using NRO for foreign salary. The reverse mistake. If your US/UK/UAE employer wires salary directly into your NRO account because you set it up first or NRO was the only one you had, that money is now stuck under the $1 million / year repatriation cap and earns interest taxable at 30% TDS. Foreign income belongs in NRE (or in your foreign-country account). Routing it through NRO is avoidable tax friction at best, and locked capital at worst.
3. Picking a bank without FATCA awareness. If you hold a US passport, green card, or Canadian citizenship, four major Indian banks — HDFC, ICICI, SBI, Axis — require an in-person India visit to activate mutual-fund investing. Kotak is the only major exception that solves this fully online. NRIs routinely open at HDFC or ICICI for everyday banking, then realise 12 months later that their mutual-fund SIPs require a Mumbai office visit. The fix is to pick the bank stack with FATCA in mind from day one: Kotak for investing access, ICICI or HDFC for everyday banking + branches + credit cards. Two accounts, two specific roles.
4. Forgetting to convert NRE → resident when crossing 182 days back in India. Tax residency under Section 6 of the Income Tax Act flips year by year. The day you cross 182 days of physical presence in India in a financial year (April–March), you become a resident for that year — and continuing to hold NRE/NRO is a FEMA violation. Banks expect you to convert NRE to RFC (Resident Foreign Currency) or regular savings within 30 days of status change. Most NRIs forget this entirely on their first move-back year. Count your days here →
5. Skipping FCNR despite holding large USD savings. If you have $50K+ idle in USD that you won't touch for 2-5 years, FCNR (Foreign Currency Non-Resident) deposits are designed exactly for you. They hold the deposit in foreign currency (USD/GBP/EUR/AUD), pay tax-free interest in India, survive any rupee depreciation, and the principal is repatriable. Most NRIs default to NRE FDs out of habit and silently take the FX hit when the rupee weakens. The math sometimes favours NRE FDs (higher INR rates can offset moderate INR depreciation), but you should run the comparison consciously, not skip FCNR by accident.
NRIs hold credit cards in two countries simultaneously — that's where most of these mistakes hide. Five recurring patterns I see in 2026, each costing real money.
1. Chasing US miles without checking FX markup. US points cards (Amex Platinum, Chase Sapphire Reserve, Citi Strata Premier) earn 1-3 points per dollar — but most charge a 3% foreign transaction fee on India spend. On $30,000 of annual India spend, that's $900 lost to FX markup, which wipes out the value of most cardholder rewards. The fix: use a 0% foreign-transaction card for India spend (Schwab Debit, Capital One Venture, Wise Card), and save the points cards for US/UK domestic use only. Run the math before assuming "earning points everywhere" makes sense.
2. Applying for an Indian card without CIBIL (Credit Information Bureau India Limited) history. Premium Indian cards (HDFC Infinia, Axis Magnus, ICICI Sapphiro) need a 750+ CIBIL score, which you can't have without prior Indian credit. The fix: start with an FD-backed secured card (ICICI Sapphiro against an NRO FD, Kotak NRI Royale, IDFC FIRST WOW). The card uses your fixed deposit as collateral, you spend on it, the activity builds your CIBIL, and 12-24 months later you qualify for a premium unsecured card. NRIs who skip this step get rejected on the first try and burn 6 months waiting before reapplying.
3. Paying joining fees for cards you'll barely use. HDFC Infinia (₹12,500 joining fee), Axis Magnus (₹12,500), ICICI Emeralde (₹12,000) — premium cards only break even on rewards if you spend ₹5-10 lakh per year domestically. NRIs who visit India twice a year typically spend under ₹2 lakh on the Indian card. For that pattern, a no-fee FD-backed card with Priority Pass lounge access (ICICI Sapphiro entry-level, Kotak Mojo) often delivers more total value than the premium card you're aspiring to. Match card to your actual usage, not your aspirational usage.
4. Ignoring lounge-access caps. "Unlimited domestic lounge access" sounds great until you read the fine print: many premium cards limit to 8 visits per year via Priority Pass, or 4 international visits with a guest cap, or domestic-only on the primary card while add-on cardholders get nothing. NRIs who fly through Mumbai/Delhi 6+ times per year hit these caps quickly. Read the schedule of charges and the lounge-program terms before picking. HDFC Infinia and Diners Club Black have the most generous unlimited-lounge tiers; many "premium" cards downgrade you to limited Priority Pass.
5. Mistaking 0% forex cards for cheap remittance. A zero-markup card (Wise Card, Capital One Venture) lets you SPEND in foreign currency at near-mid-market rates. It does NOT let you SEND money home cheaply — that needs a dedicated remittance service like Wise, Remitly, or XE. The card pays the merchant; the remittance service moves cash to your Indian account. Different rails, different fees, different speed. NRIs who try to "send money to family" by paying via 0% forex card end up with worse rates than a Wise transfer. Compare actual remittance rates →
The biggest application friction for NRIs isn't credit history — it's the address requirement. Most premium Indian cards still require an Indian residential address for KYC. Here's how the application logistics actually break down in 2026.
If you have NO Indian address, start here: only three NRI-specific cards realistically accept your NRE/NRO bank account address as the sole address — ICICI NRI Sapphiro, Kotak NRI Royale, and IDFC FIRST WOW!. These are the only cards you can apply for end-to-end without setting foot in India. All three are FD-backed (you pledge an NRE or NRO fixed deposit as collateral). Credit limit is typically 80–90% of the FD value. The FD continues to earn interest while it backs the card.
If you have an Indian address (or can use a family member's), the rest of the premium card universe opens up — HDFC Infinia, HDFC Diners Club Black, Axis Magnus, SBI Prime/Elite, etc. KYC rules permit using a family member's residential address if you hold an NRE/NRO account at that same bank, but the address must be verifiable (utility bill or bank statement in the family member's name). Some banks ask the family member to come in for branch verification; others do it via video KYC. Confirm with the relationship manager before submitting.
Aadhaar-linked Indian mobile is required for most premium cards. HDFC, Axis, SBI all send OTP for application + ongoing transactions to an Aadhaar-linked Indian mobile number. There's no workaround on this — get an Indian SIM on your next India visit and keep it active. JioPostpaid stays active for 90+ days without recharge, which is the practical workaround for NRIs who visit twice a year. Some banks now support international OTP on Indian mobile numbers if you set roaming explicitly — ask before assuming.
Payment is always via autopay from your NRE or NRO account. All NRI credit cards (FD-backed or otherwise) require auto-debit setup at issuance. You can't pay from a foreign bank wire each month — that doesn't scale and the bank won't approve. The autopay link to NRE/NRO is part of why the FD-backed structure exists: the bank has direct access to recover dues if you default, and you don't have to remember monthly transfers.
GIFT City is India's only International Financial Services Centre (IFSC) — Gujarat International Finance Tec-City, in Gandhinagar. It sits on Indian soil but operates under a separate regulator (IFSCA) with a deemed-non-resident framework: transactions inside it are treated as offshore for tax and FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) purposes. For NRIs, that legal architecture is the whole point.
Five practical doors for individual NRIs in 2026:
1. USD fixed deposits at IFSC Banking Units (IBUs). Most major Indian banks — HDFC, ICICI, Kotak, SBI, Axis, Federal Bank, Bank of Baroda, IndusInd — operate IBUs at GIFT City. They take USD (and EUR/GBP) deposits inside the IFSC zone. Rates are typically 50–75 basis points higher than the same bank's FCNR rate for matching tenors, with the same tax-free-in-India treatment for non-residents. This is the most useful door for almost every NRI carrying idle foreign currency.
2. Alternative Investment Funds (AIFs) — Cat I/II/III, domiciled at IFSC. Tax pass-through at fund level, no Indian fund-level tax. Common Cat II structures hold private credit, real-estate debt, structured equity. Cat III runs hedge / long-short / quant. Minimum investment is generally $150K (₹1Cr equivalent), so this is HNI territory — not for everyone.
3. GIFT Nifty USD-denominated futures. SGX (Singapore Exchange) used to host the SGX Nifty contract; that liquidity moved to NSE IFSC in July 2023 as "GIFT Nifty." It trades almost 21 hours a day in USD, and gives NRIs direct USD-settled exposure to Indian equities without rupee conversion.
4. IFSC Insurance Office (IIO). Term life and savings policies written in USD, EUR, or GBP. Useful for NRIs who'd rather have premiums paid and payouts made in foreign currency than in rupees. Several major Indian insurers (HDFC Life, ICICI Prudential, Tata AIA, Max Life) have set up IIO arms.
5. Family Investment Fund (FIF). A structured cross-border investment vehicle introduced in 2022 — viable above roughly $5–10M family wealth, intended for HNI families that want a single GIFT City vehicle to hold global investments under one structure.
Where it makes sense to start: for almost every NRI carrying $25K+ in idle USD savings, the IBU USD FD is the easy first move — same risk profile as FCNR, with measurably higher yield. AIFs and FIFs are for the HNI segment; GIFT Nifty and IIO are useful for narrower use-cases. Read the full GIFT City for NRIs page for bank-by-bank rate comparison and account-opening steps.
Both products do the same fundamental job — let a non-resident hold USD (or EUR/GBP) inside an Indian bank, earn interest tax-free in India, and avoid rupee conversion risk. The difference is where they sit.
FCNR (Foreign Currency Non-Resident) deposits are held at any Indian bank branch in India proper, under standard RBI rules. IFSC Banking Unit (IBU) USD FDs are held by the same banks but inside the GIFT City IFSC zone, under IFSCA rules. The legal home is different; the underlying credit is the same bank.
Where IBU FDs are typically better (mid-2026 illustrative rates):
Where FCNR may suit better:
What's identical: tax-free interest in India for non-residents, rupee-depreciation hedge (deposit held in foreign currency), and no DICGC insurance cover — Indian deposit insurance only covers resident balances up to ₹5 lakh, neither FCNR nor IBU FDs are covered.
Other things to confirm with the bank before parking money: premature-withdrawal terms (IBU rules can be stricter), how the rate quoted is "stayed" or "scheduled" if you break early, FX conversion steps if your funds are sitting elsewhere, and whether interest can be repatriated to your foreign account or only credited to a linked NRE.
No. Angel tax — the levy under Section 56(2)(viib) of the Income Tax Act on share premium received above 'fair market value' — was abolished in Budget 2024 and the abolition continues in 2026.
Before 2024, this provision penalised both Indian and NRI-backed startups when shares were issued above an Income Tax Officer–determined FMV. Valuations got reopened years later and the tax was levied retroactively in many cases. It was the single biggest deterrent for NRI angel cheques into Indian companies.
Since the Budget 2024 abolition, startups no longer face fund-level angel tax on cheques received at any subscribed valuation. Investing as an NRI in an Indian startup is now substantially cleaner from a tax-shock perspective.
Two separate compliance bars still apply — don't confuse them with the old angel tax:
Mostly yes for serious participation in 2026. Most established Indian angel platforms — LetsVenture, Indian Angel Network (IAN) — operate under SEBI's CAT 1 AIF (Alternative Investment Fund) framework, which requires Accredited Investor status:
Historically enforcement was inconsistent — many platforms onboarded NRIs without rigorous accreditation checks. SEBI's September 2025 revised AIF circular tightened this: angel funds must primarily raise from Accredited Investors only, with a transition period ending September 8, 2026 for existing funds. Verification is now hardening across platforms.
What this means for NRIs in 2026:
Some retail-friendly platforms remain. Tyke (₹5,000 minimums) operates under a SEBI consultative paper rather than final regulations — a real grey area that could tighten further. AngelList India accepts $1,000 ticket sizes through syndicate-led SPVs. These work for first-time exposure but aren't long-term scaffolding.
For meaningful angel exposure, plan to qualify. The ₹25-lakh-over-5-years threshold is achievable across multiple smaller cheques. Most serious NRI angels reach it within 18–24 months of starting.
All three SEBI Alternative Investment Fund categories accept NRI capital under FEMA's automatic route from NRE/NRO accounts, but they differ sharply in what they invest in, minimum tickets, and tax treatment.
Category I — Angel / VC / SME / Social impact. Early-stage startups, SMEs, social-impact funds. Tax pass-through — no tax at fund level, you're taxed in your hands at applicable capital-gains rates. Angel Funds within Cat I have a ₹25 lakh minimum; conventional Cat I VC funds typically ₹1 crore.
Category II — PE / Growth / Real Estate / Private Credit. No leverage permitted. ₹1 crore minimum. Most institutional VC and PE funds — Blume Ventures, Accel India Cat II vehicles, Kalaari, Pravega — sit here. Tax pass-through at fund level for the underlying asset class. This is the largest category by AUM and where most professional NRI LPs deploy.
Category III — Hedge / Quant / Long-Short / Derivatives. Complex strategies with leverage permitted. ₹1 crore minimum. NOT pass-through — the fund pays tax at the highest marginal rate (~43.92% in 2026 with surcharges) for non-equity gains, and only post-tax distributions reach you.
Practical guidance for NRIs:
Tax depends on whether the shares are unlisted (typical at exit-via-acquisition or secondary), listed (post-IPO), and how long you held them.
Unlisted shares — held 24+ months (long-term): 12.5% LTCG without indexation. The indexation benefit was removed in Budget 2024. This is the standard exit-tax rate for most successful angel rounds that go through a strategic acquisition or buyback.
Unlisted shares — held under 24 months (short-term): taxed at your applicable income slab rate. For higher-tax-bracket NRIs this can be 30%+, so wait for the LTCG window where possible.
Post-IPO listed shares — held over 12 months: LTCG at 12.5% on gains above ₹1.25 lakh per financial year.
Listed shares — held under 12 months: STCG at 20% (revised from 15% in Budget 2024).
AIF Category I and Category II gains: tax pass-through — you're taxed at the same applicable rates as direct holdings, no fund-level tax. AIF Cat III is NOT pass-through — see qa-18.
Loss set-off: capital losses on failed startups can be set off against other capital gains in the same year, and carried forward for up to 8 years. Important given the 70%+ failure rate of early-stage portfolios.
TDS: 10% is typically withheld at sale; you reconcile via your annual ITR.
FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act) reporting depends on whether you invest through a SEBI-regulated platform or write a direct cheque into the company.
Platform investments — LetsVenture, AngelList India, IAN, Tyke, AIF subscriptions: the platform or fund manager handles all FEMA reporting on your behalf. You sign a one-page FEMA declaration confirming your NRI status and that funds are sourced from an NRE or NRO account. The SPV / fund manager files all subsequent forms (FC-GPR, FLA return, etc.) — you do nothing further from a FEMA standpoint. This is the cleanest path for first-time and even repeat NRI investors.
Direct cheques into a startup (primary equity wired straight into the company's bank account): the Indian company must file Form FC-GPR (Foreign Currency-Gross Provisional Return) with the RBI through their AD bank within 30 days of share allotment, along with valuation certificate, board resolution, and your KYC documents. Non-filing carries penalties on the company.
Annual obligation: the Indian company files an annual FLA (Foreign Liabilities and Assets) return to the RBI capturing all foreign-resident shareholders. You don't file this — they do.
Sectors: most startup sectors are FEMA automatic route — no RBI prior approval needed. Restricted sectors (defence manufacturing, atomic energy, lottery, gambling, certain real estate, tobacco categories) are off-limits or require approval-route clearance, which adds 4–8 weeks.
US NRIs only: Indian startup holdings need to be reported on FBAR (FinCEN 114) if total foreign accounts exceed $10K, and on Form 8938 if thresholds are met. Get a dual-country CPA — Indian compliance is cleaner than the US side.
Ask on Reddit and I'll answer it — and add it to this page. Or email directly. I cover banking, transfers, tax, investing, moving back to India, and everything in between.