The NRI buying plot in India legal checklist begins with FEMA compliance: you can purchase residential or commercial plots using NRE, NRO, or FCNR account funds, but agricultural and plantation land is strictly prohibited. You need a valid PAN card, an NRE or NRO account with an Indian bank, and a registered Power of Attorney if you cannot be present for registration. All payments must flow through banking channels; cash transactions are illegal and void the sale. Stamp duty and registration charges are identical to resident Indians, ranging from 5-7% plus 1% registration depending on state. Repatriation of sale proceeds is capped at USD 1 million per financial year for up to two residential properties. RERA registration of the layout is non-negotiable, and title verification through a minimum 30-year search is essential. Get these twelve items right, and the purchase is clean.
Key Takeaways
- NRIs can buy residential and commercial plots but cannot purchase agricultural or plantation land under FEMA.
- All payments must route through NRE, NRO, or FCNR accounts via proper banking channels only.
- Power of Attorney must be notarized at the Indian consulate and adjudicated within three months of arrival.
- Repatriation of sale proceeds is capped at USD 1 million per financial year for two properties.
- RERA registration and a minimum 30-year title search are non-negotiable safeguards for remote buyers.
The San Jose Wire Transfer That Went Sideways
That architect's mistake was not the money transfer itself. His NRE account was compliant, the funds were legitimate, and the developer was RERA-registered with Telangana RERA (registration number P02400005432). The breakdown happened at the Power of Attorney stage. See our guide on corner plot selection mistakes to avoid.
An NRI PoA for property transactions must be notarized at the Indian consulate or embassy in the country of residence. It then needs to be sent to India and adjudicated (stamped with applicable stamp duty) at the local sub-registrar's office within three months of execution. Miss that window, and the PoA becomes invalid for registration purposes. The architect's PoA arrived in Hyderabad four months after notarization. He had to execute a fresh one. See our guide on premium plots near Gachibowli.
◆ Part of our Investment & Legal Guide
This is the kind of procedural landmine that catches NRIs who treat Indian property purchases like online stock trades. The legal framework works, but it demands precision on timelines.
NRI Buying Plot in India: The FEMA Framework
Under the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999 (specifically FEMA Notification No. 21/2000-RB), NRIs and Persons of Indian Origin (now OCI cardholders) can purchase immovable property in India, subject to clear restrictions.
What NRIs Can Buy
- Residential plots in approved layouts and RERA-registered projects
- Commercial property including office spaces and retail plots
- Any number of residential or commercial properties (no cap on quantity)
What NRIs Cannot Buy
- Agricultural land of any type or size
- Farmhouse land even if located near urban areas
- Plantation property including tea, coffee, and rubber estates
Many NRI buyers assume that plots in peri-urban areas with NA (Non-Agricultural) conversion certificates are automatically safe. But NA conversion is a state revenue department process, not a FEMA clearance. If the land use in the revenue record still shows agricultural classification at the time of purchase, the transaction is technically non-compliant.
The Twelve-Document Checklist
Before signing any agreement to sell, an NRI buyer must have these documents verified and ready:
- Valid Indian Passport or OCI Card with current validity
- PAN Card (mandatory for property registration above Rs 10 lakh)
- NRE/NRO/FCNR account statements showing fund source for payment trail
- Address proof abroad (utility bill, bank statement, or driving licence)
- Passport-size photographs (minimum six copies for various submissions)
- Registered Power of Attorney if not personally present for registration
- Title deed of the plot (original, not photocopy, from the seller)
- Encumbrance Certificate covering minimum 30 years
- RERA registration certificate of the layout or project
- Approved layout plan from the local development authority (BDA, HMDA, LDA, DTCP)
- Khata/Patta certificate confirming property tax records in the seller's name
- No Objection Certificate from the layout developer if applicable
Payment Routes and Tax Implications
Every rupee paid for the plot must flow through banking channels. The RBI permits three account types for NRI property purchases:
- NRE Account: Funded by foreign earnings, freely repatriable. Best for NRIs planning to sell and repatriate later.
- NRO Account: Funded by Indian-source income (rent, dividends, pension). Repatriation capped at USD 1 million per financial year.
- FCNR Account: Foreign currency fixed deposits. Can be used for property purchases with full repatriation rights on maturity.
TDS on property purchase above Rs 50 lakh is 1% for resident sellers. When an NRI buys from another NRI, the buyer must deduct TDS at 20% (plus surcharge and cess) on capital gains, not on total consideration. This requires obtaining a TAN and filing TDS returns within 30 days.
For plots above Rs 3 crore, stamp duty alone ranges from Rs 15-21 lakh depending on the state. Karnataka charges 5% plus 1% cess. Telangana charges 6%. Uttar Pradesh charges 7%. Haryana charges 7% for men and 5% for women.
Repatriation: Getting Your Money Back Out
This is where many NRIs face unexpected friction. The RBI allows repatriation of sale proceeds under these conditions:
- Maximum two residential properties per NRI in a lifetime for repatriation
- Annual cap of USD 1 million per financial year under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme
- Original purchase must have been through NRE/FCNR funds for full repatriation; NRO-funded purchases have the USD 1 million annual cap
- Form 15CA and 15CB must be filed, with 15CB certified by a Chartered Accountant
- Tax clearance certificate from the Income Tax department may be required
Long-term capital gains tax at 20% with indexation applies if the plot is held for more than 24 months. Section 54F exemption is available if sale proceeds are invested in a residential property within the prescribed timeline.
The Registration Process for Remote Buyers
If an NRI is present in India, the registration process is identical to a resident buyer: appear at the sub-registrar's office, pay stamp duty and registration charges, and sign the sale deed in person.
For remote purchases via PoA, the process adds layers:
- PoA holder appears at the sub-registrar with the adjudicated PoA
- Original title documents, EC, and approved layout plans are presented
- Stamp duty is paid via demand draft or e-payment (most states now accept online payment)
- Registration charge of 1% (0.5% in Telangana) is paid separately
- Biometric verification of the PoA holder is completed
- Registered sale deed is available for collection within 3-7 working days
After registration, mutation of property records (Khata transfer in Karnataka, Pattadar Passbook update in Telangana) must be initiated separately at the local municipal or revenue office. This step is often delayed by NRIs and causes problems during resale.
Written from a quiet desk in Banjara Hills, Hyderabad, where the afternoon azaan from the nearby mosque mingles with the hum of a generator testing next door.