Monday, June 15, 2026

NRE Interest Taxability Decoded: When Is NRE, FCNR and RFC Interest Exempt and When Does Tax Begin

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

Many NRIs and returning Indians assume that interest remains exempt so long as the bank account continues to be labelled as an NRE account. The law, however, focuses not merely on the account name but on the residential status of the account holder, FEMA provisions and specific exemptions under the Income Tax Act. A misunderstanding of these rules can result in unnecessary tax payments, missed exemptions or avoidable scrutiny.

Every year, thousands of NRIs:

  • Return to India permanently.
  • Become Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR).
  • Continue operating NRE accounts after returning.
  • Hold FCNR deposits and RFC accounts simultaneously.

The resulting question is simple:

Is the interest exempt or taxable?

The answer is not determined by the name of the account alone.

Instead, the answer depends upon:

  1. FEMA residential status.
  2. Type of account or deposit.
  3. Availability of RNOR benefits.
  4. Applicability of Sections 10(4)(ii) and 10(15)(iv)(fa).

The Law at a Glance

Section 10(4)(ii)

Section 10(4)(ii) exempts:

Interest on moneys standing to the credit of an individual in a Non Resident External Account maintained in accordance with FEMA and the rules made thereunder.

The provision effectively requires two conditions:

ConditionRequirement
Account ConditionValid NRE account maintained as per FEMA and RBI regulations
Residential Status ConditionHolder should qualify as a person resident outside India under FEMA

Failure of either condition may result in loss of exemption.

The Most Important Principle

NRE Exemption Is Status Based and Not Account Based

This is perhaps the most important takeaway from the entire discussion.

Many taxpayers believe:

My bank still shows the account as NRE. Therefore the interest must be exempt.

The law does not operate in this manner.

The exemption follows the legal status of the account holder and not merely the nomenclature used by the bank.

Accordingly:

  • An account may continue to be called NRE.
  • Yet the exemption may cease because FEMA status has changed.

Understanding FEMA and Income Tax Residency

A major source of confusion is the difference between FEMA residency and Income Tax residency.

ParticularsFEMAIncome Tax Act
Primary TestPurpose and intention of stayPhysical presence and day count
RelevanceNRE exemptionTaxability of income
Change in StatusCan change immediately upon permanent returnDetermined under Section 6

Thus, a person returning permanently to India may become resident under FEMA immediately even though he may still qualify as a non-resident under the Income Tax Act for that year.

For NRE interest, FEMA status assumes greater significance.

Complete Taxability Matrix

Status of IndividualNRE InterestFCNR InterestRFC Interest
Non ResidentExemptExemptNot Applicable
RNORGenerally TaxableGenerally Exempt subject to conditionsGenerally Exempt
RORTaxableTaxableTaxable

This table captures the broad position applicable in most situations.

NRE vs FCNR vs RFC: Understanding the Difference

ParticularsNRE AccountFCNR DepositRFC Account
Governing ProvisionSection 10(4)(ii)Section 10(15)(iv)(fa)Section 10(15)(iv)(fa)
Requires FEMA Non Resident StatusYesNot alwaysNo
Benefit During RNORGenerally unavailableGenerally availableGenerally available
Taxable During RORYesYesYes

This distinction is frequently overlooked and often leads to incorrect tax reporting.

Common Practical Situations

Situation 1: NRI Continues to Reside Abroad

Where an individual continues to remain a person resident outside India under FEMA and maintains a valid NRE account:

Result: NRE interest generally remains exempt under Section 10(4)(ii).

Situation 2: NRI Returns Permanently to India

Suppose an individual returns to India:

  • For employment.
  • To start a business.
  • To settle permanently.
  • Without a definite intention of returning abroad.

In such cases, FEMA residential status may change immediately.

Result: Future NRE interest may no longer qualify for exemption under Section 10(4)(ii).

Situation 3: Returning Indian Becomes RNOR

Many taxpayers assume RNOR status automatically preserves NRE exemption.

This is incorrect.

Deposit TypeTaxability During RNOR
NRE DepositGenerally Taxable
Resident DepositTaxable
RFC AccountGenerally Exempt
FCNR DepositGenerally Exempt subject to conditions

RNOR status alone is not sufficient.

The nature of the deposit also matters.

Practical Illustration

Illustration

Mr. A returns permanently to India on 1 October 2026.

His NRE fixed deposit earns interest of Rs 4,00,000 during FY 2026-27.

PeriodTax Treatment
April to SeptemberGenerally Exempt
October to MarchGenerally Taxable

Where proper records are available, a reasonable allocation between exempt and taxable periods may be maintained.

Five Common Errors Made by Returning NRIs

ErrorConsequence
Assuming NRE means permanently exemptIncorrect reporting
Ignoring FEMA statusTax exposure
Confusing RNOR with exemptionIncorrect tax position
Delaying account redesignationCompliance issues
Missing RFC planning opportunitiesUnnecessary tax cost

Practical Takeaway

Whenever an NRI returns to India, the following questions should be examined immediately:

  1. Has FEMA residential status changed?
  2. Is RNOR status available?
  3. Are FCNR deposits being held?
  4. Should balances be transferred to an RFC account?
  5. Has the bank been informed of the change in status?

A review at this stage often prevents years of avoidable tax disputes.

Conclusion

The taxation of NRE interest is governed by one fundamental principle:

The exemption belongs to the status of the account holder and not merely to the name of the account.

An NRE account does not remain exempt simply because the bank has not redesignated it. Equally, the tax treatment cannot be determined solely by the residential status under the Income Tax Act.

A proper analysis requires consideration of FEMA status, the nature of the deposit, RNOR eligibility and the specific exemptions contained in Sections 10(4)(ii) and 10(15)(iv)(fa).

For most returning Indians, the real tax planning opportunity lies not in retaining the NRE label but in understanding how FEMA, RNOR, FCNR and RFC provisions interact. A timely review of these aspects can often make the difference between preserving a legitimate exemption and creating an avoidable tax liability.