As India strengthens its position as a global hub for technology, finance, consulting, and manufacturing, the inflow of expatriate professionals continues to rise. While the opportunities are abundant, expatriates and their employers often struggle with one key challenge — navigating India’s taxation, visa rules, and compliance landscape.
Whether you’re an expat moving to India for the first time or an HR/finance professional onboarding foreign employees, this guide simplifies everything you need to know.
1. Understanding Expatriate Status in India
An expatriate is a foreign national residing in India for employment, business, or project assignments. Expats in India may include:
- Foreign nationals employed by an Indian company
- Employees of overseas companies deputed or seconded to India
- Foreign workers on short-term or long-term projects
The duration of stay determines residency status, which directly impacts the tax liability in India.
2. Residency Status — The Foundation of Taxation
Under the Income Tax Act, individuals are classified as:
- Resident & Ordinarily Resident (ROR)
- Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR)
- Non-Resident (NR)
The 182-Day Rule
You are Resident for a financial year if:
- You stay in India 182 days or more, OR
- You satisfy alternate conditions based on cumulative stay over the past years.
Tax Implications Based on Status
Residency Status | Tax Liability |
ROR | Taxed on global income |
RNOR | Taxed only on Indian income + income from business controlled in India |
NR | Taxed only on income earned or received in India |
In short: More days in India = wider tax coverage.
3. Taxation of Expatriates in India
(A) Income from Employment
All income earned for services rendered in India is taxable, even if:
- Salary is paid outside India
- Salary is routed through the home-country payroll
Taxable components include:
- Basic salary
- Allowances (HRA, transportation, hardship, etc.)
- Perquisites (accommodation, company assets, etc.)
- Bonuses and incentives
(B) Applicable Tax Rates (FY 2025–26)
Income Range | Tax Rate |
Up to ₹3,00,000 | Nil |
₹3,00,001 – ₹6,00,000 | 5% |
₹6,00,001 – ₹9,00,000 | 10% |
₹9,00,001 – ₹12,00,000 | 15% |
₹12,00,001 – ₹15,00,000 | 20% |
Above ₹15,00,000 | 30% |
(Plus surcharge and cess)
(C) Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA)
India has DTAAs with 90+ countries, including:
USA, UK, France, Germany, Japan, Singapore, UAE, Australia, Netherlands, etc.
DTAA helps in avoiding double taxation through:
- Tax credit method
- Exemption method
- Reduced withholding tax rates
Mandatory documents:
- Tax Residency Certificate (TRC)
- Form 10F
- Declaration of no permanent establishment (if applicable)
4. Employer Compliance Responsibilities
Indian employers engaging expatriates must ensure:
1. TDS Compliance
Monthly tax deduction under Section 192.
2. PAN Registration
Foreign employees must obtain a PAN to file returns.
3. Form 16 & Annual Return Filing Support
4. FEMA & RBI Compliance
Applicable for salary remitted abroad or repatriation of funds.
5. Social Security (PF/ESIC)
If originating from a country with a Social Security Agreement (SSA) with India, PF exemptions may apply.
5. Visa Categories for Expatriates
Visa Type | Purpose | Validity |
Employment Visa | For taking up jobs in India | 1–5 years |
Business Visa | For meetings, investments, trade | 6 months–5 years |
Project Visa | For workers in steel/power sectors | Project duration |
Entry (X) Visa | For dependents of expatriates | Linked to principal visa |
Key Requirements
- Minimum annual salary: USD 25,000 (approx. ₹7 lakh)
- Foreign nationals must be employed by a legally registered Indian entity
- Visa conversions (e.g., business → employment) are generally not allowed within India
6. Additional Regulatory Requirements
1. FEMA
Regulates foreign currency transactions and salary repatriation.
2. PAN & TAN
Mandatory for tax filing and withholding compliance.
3. PF / ESIC
Applies unless exempt under SSA.
4. RBI Reporting
Mandatory for foreign remittances exceeding specified limits.
5. Annual ITR Filing
Deadline: 31st July (no audit cases).
7. How Aplite Advisors Supports Expatriates & Employers
We help expatriates and multinational companies navigate India’s complex tax and compliance framework with ease.
Our Services Include:
✔ Expatriate tax planning & ITR filing
✔ DTAA advisory & foreign tax credit optimisation
✔ PAN, FRRO & compliance registrations
✔ Payroll structuring, TDS, and employer compliance
✔ FEMA, RBI, and foreign remittance advisory
✔ Residency and visa-linked tax advisory
Result: Reduced tax exposure, full legal compliance, and stress-free expatriate management.
8. Case Study: How We Helped a European Executive in Pune
A senior executive of a European MNC faced double taxation due to salary being paid partially abroad.
What We Did:
- Conducted a DTAA-based review
- Restructured payroll allocation
- Filed rectified returns
Outcome:
- ₹2 lakh tax refund secured
- Payroll and tax inconsistencies corrected
- Zero double taxation going forward
9. Key Takeaways
- Residency determines taxability — track your stay days carefully
- DTAA benefits significantly reduce double taxation
- Maintain proper documentation
- Professional advisory ensures full compliance and optimal tax planning
📧 info@apliteadvisors.com
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Yes. If income is earned or received in India, filing an ITR is mandatory.
Yes. TRC + Form 10F + declaration are mandatory.
Yes, unless exempt under a Social Security Agreement (SSA).
Yes — but it remains taxable if services are performed in India (Section 9(1)(ii)).
Ideally before on boarding expatriates to structure payroll, tax, and visa compliance efficiently.

