ndsavla.in logo
Residential Status for PIO & OCI Cardholders in India – Tax Advisory | NDS Avla

Residential Status for PIO & OCI Cardholders – Indian Income Tax & FEMA Advisory

Expert Tax Guidance for Overseas Citizens of India and Persons of Indian Origin

Person of Indian Origin (PIO) and Overseas Citizen of India (OCI) cardholders hold foreign citizenship but maintain deep financial, property, and family ties in India. After the PIO card scheme merged into OCI in 2015, the OCI card is now the primary status for persons of Indian descent holding foreign passports. For income tax purposes, OCI cardholders are treated as foreign nationals — their residential status is determined by physical presence in India, not ancestry or OCI card status.

A key advantage available to OCI cardholders visiting India is that the secondary condition under Section 6(1)(b) uses the 182-day threshold instead of 60 days — the same relaxation given to Indian citizen NRIs. This makes it easier for OCI cardholders to visit India for extended periods without becoming Resident for tax purposes, preserving access to exempt income provisions and limiting Indian tax to Indian-source income only. This status directly affects return filing obligations and repatriation rights.

Our Services for PIO & OCI Cardholders

OCI Residential Status Advisory

Year-by-year determination of Indian income tax residential status for OCI cardholders based on actual days in India, fully utilizing the 182-day relaxation available under Section 6(1)(b).

PIO Legacy Tax Resolution

Resolution of historical compliance gaps for holders of the discontinued PIO card — including pending assessments, old refund claims, and inherited property tax issues.

OCI Property Taxation

Tax guidance on purchase, rental income, capital gains on sale, and inheritance of Indian property by OCI cardholders, including FEMA compliance for property transactions.

DTAA Benefits Advisory

Application of Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement provisions to prevent double taxation of Indian income — interest, dividends, rent, and capital gains — also taxed in the country of residence.

NRO Account & Repatriation

Guidance on NRO account operations, TDS management, and repatriation of funds under the USD 1 million annual limit available to OCI cardholders with Indian income.

Income Tax Return Filing

Preparation and e-filing of Indian income tax returns for OCI cardholders — rental income, capital gains, dividends, interest — with full DTAA benefit claims and TDS reconciliation.

OCI Cardholder vs. NRI – Tax & FEMA Differences

  • OCI cardholders are foreign nationals; NRIs are Indian citizens — but both are taxed identically on Indian-source income
  • Both OCI and NRI get the 182-day relaxation under Section 6(1)(b) — easier to maintain non-resident tax status
  • OCI cardholders cannot open NRE accounts (Indian citizens only); they can open NRO and FCNR accounts
  • Neither OCI nor NRI can purchase agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses in India without RBI approval
  • OCI cardholders can invest in Indian listed securities, mutual funds, and commercial/residential property
  • Inheritance of Indian property by OCI cardholders is permitted; repatriation follows FEMA rules
  • OCI cardholders can use PAN card (Form 49AA) for all Indian tax transactions

Frequently Asked Questions – PIO & OCI Residential Status

Is an OCI cardholder treated as an NRI for Indian income tax purposes?
Not exactly. OCI cardholders are foreign nationals — not Indian citizens. Their residential status is determined by counting days physically present in India, and they receive the 182-day relaxation under Section 6(1)(b) like NRIs. If they qualify as non-residents, they are taxed only on India-source income. Practically, the tax treatment is very similar to NRIs, but their banking options differ — OCI cardholders cannot hold NRE accounts, only NRO and FCNR accounts.
Can OCI cardholders open NRE accounts in Indian banks?
No. NRE (Non-Resident External) accounts are exclusively for Indian citizens who are non-residents under FEMA. OCI cardholders, being foreign nationals, can open NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary) accounts to receive Indian-source income — rent, dividends, pension, investment proceeds. They can also open FCNR (Foreign Currency Non-Resident) deposit accounts. NRE account interest is fully tax-free in India; NRO account interest is taxable at 30% with TDS deducted by the bank — a key difference when planning where to hold Indian savings.
Can OCI cardholders buy property in India?
Yes. OCI cardholders can purchase residential and commercial property in India under RBI general permission, without needing specific approval. However, they cannot purchase agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses without specific RBI permission. Sale proceeds from Indian property can be repatriated through the NRO account route (up to USD 1 million per year after payment of capital gains tax). This directly links to our repatriation services.
What happened to PIO cards after the 2015 merger with OCI?
In 2015, the Government of India merged the PIO card scheme with OCI. Existing PIO cardholders were advised to convert to OCI cards, and no new PIO cards are issued. For income tax purposes, the conversion from PIO to OCI does not change the substantive tax treatment — both were and are treated as foreign nationals. PIO cardholders who have not yet converted should do so, as PIO cards are no longer recognized for most official and financial purposes in India.

OCI Cardholder with Indian Income or Assets? Get Expert Advice.

Our specialists provide complete Indian tax and FEMA compliance for OCI cardholders and PIOs — residential status advisory, return filing, property transactions, and repatriation of funds.

Contact Us Today