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Decoding Residential Status for Taxation
Category: NRI Taxation, Posted on: 06/04/2024 , Posted By: SUMIT BIHANI
Visitor Count:137

BRIEF UNDERSTANDING OF THE RESIDENTIAL STATUS OF AN INDIVIDUAL

Understanding the residential status of individuals is crucial for effective tax assessment by the Income Tax Department, especially during the tax filing season. This determination forms the bedrock for evaluating a person's tax liability.

Meaning and Significance of Residential Status

The taxability of an individual in India is contingent on their residential status for a specific financial year, a term defined under Indian income tax laws. It's vital to distinguish this from an individual's citizenship. One can be a citizen of India but a non-resident for tax purposes, and vice versa. This article delves into how the residential status of an individual taxpayer is determined.

How to Determine Residential Status

Under Indian income tax laws, taxable persons fall into three categories:

  1. Resident
  2. Resident Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR)
  3. Non-Resident (NR)

 

The tax implications vary for each category. Before exploring these implications, it's crucial to understand the criteria for becoming a resident, an RNOR, or an NR.

Residential Status

Qualifying Conditions

Exceptions

Resident

·         Stay in India for 182 days or more in a financial year.

 

·         Stay in India for 365 days or more in the immediately preceding four years and 60 days or more in the relevant financial year.

·         If an Indian citizen or person of Indian origin leaves India for employment during a fiscal year, they qualify as a resident only if they stay in India for 182 days or more.

·          From the financial year 2020-21, this period is reduced to 120 days or more for individuals whose total income (excluding foreign sources) exceeds Rs 15 lakh.

Resident Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR)

·         1-Been a resident of India in at least 2 out of the 10 immediately preceding years.

·         2- Stayed in India for at least 730 days in the 7 immediately preceding years.

·         From FY 2020-21, a citizen of India or a person of Indian origin leaving India for employment will be a resident and ordinarily resident if staying in India for 182 days or more, provided their total income (excluding foreign sources) exceeds Rs 15 lakh.

(Note: Income from foreign sources refers to income accruing or arising outside India, excluding income derived from a business controlled in India or a profession set up in India.)

Non-Resident (NR)

An individual not satisfying the conditions for being a resident would be an NR for the year.     -

 

 

Taxability

Income Tax Liability

Resident

Tax is levied in India on the global income, including income earned both in India and outside India.

NR and RNOR

Tax liability is limited to income earned in India; individuals are not required to pay tax in India on foreign income. In cases of double taxation, the Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) can be utilized to prevent paying taxes twice.


 

 

 

 

 





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