Taxation of Foreign Stocks in India: A Complete Guide for Resident Investors:

Understand the tax implications, DTAA benefits, capital gains rules, and mandatory ITR disclosures applicable to Indian residents investing in foreign stocks and global securities.
Foreign Equity Taxation in India

Taxation of Foreign Stocks in India: A Complete Guide for Resident Investors
Nowadays, global investing is becoming increasingly accessible to Indian residents with the help of various platforms available to directly invest in global securities. Now it's easy to buy Apple shares or any other global securities for an Indian resident.
If you are holding any of the global securities and don’t know the tax consequences & mandatory reporting obligations, then this article is for you.
Who can invest?
Under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS), governed by the Reserve Bank of India (RBI), a resident individual can remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year for permissible current or capital account transactions.
This is the primary gateway for most retail investors to access international markets.
Note: Foreign securities are not covered under Section 112A. Hence, the Rs 1.25 lakh LTCG exemption available on Indian listed equities does NOT apply to foreign stocks.
Setting Off Capital Losses
Reporting and Compliance: Mandatory Disclosures
Schedules under ITR to be reported
Indian residents with foreign holdings must file ITR-2 or ITR-3 and fill the following schedules:
Key Compliances
- Applicable to all resident individuals
- Covers direct investment in foreign equities, ETFs, and mutual funds.
- Transactions must be routed through an authorised dealer bank.
| Holding Period | Gain Type | Tax Rate | Section |
| ≤ 24 months | Short-Term Capital Gain (STCG) | As per the income slab | Normal provisions |
| > 24 months | Long-Term Capital Gain (LTCG) | 12.5% (no indexation) | Section 112 |
- Short-term losses (on any asset, including foreign stocks) can be set off against any capital gains, short-term or long-term.
- Long-term losses (from foreign or domestic assets) can only be set off against long-term capital gains.
- Exemption Method: Income is taxed in one country while being fully exempt in the other.
- Tax Credit Method: Tax paid in the foreign country is credited against the tax liability in India, ensuring that the assessee does not pay full tax twice.
- A sum calculated on such doubly taxed income at the Indian rate of tax or
- The rate of tax of the said country, whichever is lower, or
- At the Indian rate of tax, if both the rates are equal.
| Investment Type | Holding Period | Gain Type | Tax Rate |
| Foreign Mutual Funds / ETFs | ≤ 24 months | STCG | Slab rate |
| Foreign Mutual Funds / ETFs | > 24 months | LTCG | 12.5% (no indexation) |
| Indian MFs investing in foreign stocks | ≤ 12 months | STCG | 20% |
| Indian MFs investing in foreign stocks | > 12 months | LTCG | 12.50% |
| Schedule | Purpose |
| Schedule FA | Disclose all foreign assets (stocks, mutual funds, ETFs), which is mandatory even if no gains are earned |
| Schedule FSI | Report all income from foreign sources (dividends, capital gains, interest) country-wise. |
| Schedule TR | Claim tax relief for taxes paid abroad (Foreign Tax Credit) |
| Capital Gains Schedule | Report gains/losses from the sale of foreign securities |
- Form 67: File before or along with ITR to claim Foreign Tax Credit under DTAA or Section 91
- Tax Residency Certificate (TRC): Obtain from the Indian Income Tax Department if needed for DTAA claims.
- Maintain proof of transactions, income, and taxes paid abroad, such as broker statements or tax certificates.
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