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NRE vs NRO Account — Complete Comparison for NRIs in 2026

Which account to open, when to use each, and how they affect your taxes

Priyanka May 25, 2026 20 min read

If you have moved abroad and still have financial ties to India — a flat generating rent, parents who need regular money, mutual fund investments, or simply savings you want to park — you need the right bank account. India's banking rules for NRIs revolve around two account types: NRE (Non-Resident External) and NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary). Choosing wrong can cost you lakhs in unnecessary taxes, block your ability to send money back, or even land you in regulatory trouble. This guide breaks down every aspect of both accounts, introduces the often-overlooked FCNR option, and helps you pick exactly the right setup for your situation.

1 What is an NRE Account? (Non-Resident External)

An NRE account is designed for NRIs who want to deposit their foreign earnings in India. When you send money from abroad to your NRE account, the foreign currency is converted to Indian Rupees at the prevailing exchange rate on the day of credit. The big advantages: the interest you earn is completely tax-free in India, and you can take your money back abroad anytime — both the principal and interest are fully repatriable.

Key Features of NRE Account

  • Source of funds: Only foreign income (salary, business income, investments abroad). You cannot deposit Indian-sourced income like rent or pension into an NRE account.
  • Currency: Maintained in INR, but funded through foreign currency remittances or transfers from other NRE/FCNR accounts.
  • Tax benefit: Interest earned on NRE savings and fixed deposits is 100% exempt from Indian income tax under Section 10(4)(ii) of the Income Tax Act.
  • Repatriation: Fully repatriable — both principal and interest can be transferred abroad without any limit or special approval.
  • Account types: Savings account, Current account, Fixed Deposit (FD), and Recurring Deposit (RD).
  • Who can open: NRIs (Indian citizens living abroad) and PIOs/OCIs (Persons of Indian Origin / Overseas Citizens of India).
  • Joint account: Can be held jointly only with another NRI/PIO. A resident Indian cannot be a joint holder (but can be a mandate holder or power of attorney).
  • Debit card & cheque book: Available. You can use the debit card in India during visits.
Why NRE Matters: If you are a software engineer in the US earning $120,000/year and you remit $2,000/month to India, the NRE account ensures that every rupee of interest you earn on that money is tax-free. On a 1-year NRE FD of Rs 50 lakh at 7.1%, you earn approximately Rs 3.55 lakh interest — with zero Indian tax. In an NRO account, TDS of Rs 1.1 lakh would be deducted on the same interest.
Important Caveat for US/UK NRIs: While NRE interest is tax-free in India, your country of residence may still tax it. The US taxes worldwide income, so American NRIs must report NRE interest on their US tax return (IRS Form 1040, Schedule B). Similarly, UK residents must declare it to HMRC. You can claim Foreign Tax Credit in those countries for any Indian tax paid — but since no Indian tax is paid on NRE interest, there is no credit to claim.

2 What is an NRO Account? (Non-Resident Ordinary)

An NRO account is meant for NRIs to manage income earned in India. If you own a property in India that generates rent, receive dividends from Indian stocks, get a pension from a former Indian employer, or earn any other income within India, the NRO account is where that money goes. Think of it as your Indian income bucket.

Key Features of NRO Account

  • Source of funds: Indian income (rent, pension, dividends, interest, matured investments, sale proceeds) AND foreign remittances. NRO is more flexible in terms of what money can come in.
  • Currency: Maintained in INR. Indian income is directly credited; foreign remittances are converted to INR.
  • Taxability: Interest earned on NRO accounts is fully taxable in India. Banks deduct TDS at 30% (plus 4% cess = 31.2% effective rate) on NRO interest.
  • Repatriation: Restricted — up to USD 1 million per financial year (approximately Rs 8.5 crore at current rates) after payment of applicable taxes. Requires Form 15CA/15CB for amounts above Rs 5 lakh.
  • Account types: Savings account, Current account, Fixed Deposit (FD), and Recurring Deposit (RD).
  • Who can open: NRIs and PIOs/OCIs. Your existing resident savings account is typically redesignated to NRO when you become an NRI.
  • Joint account: Can be held jointly with another NRI or even a resident Indian — more flexible than NRE in this regard.
  • Mandatory: If you have any Indian income source, you must have an NRO account. There is no alternative for receiving rent, dividends, or pension in India as an NRI.
The TDS Problem: The 30% TDS on NRO interest catches many NRIs off guard. If your total Indian income is below Rs 8 lakh (new regime), your effective tax rate could be much lower than 30%. In that case, you can file an Indian tax return and claim a refund for the excess TDS deducted. Alternatively, apply for a Section 197 lower TDS certificate from the Income Tax Officer to reduce TDS at source.
DTAA Benefit: If your country has a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) with India, TDS on NRO interest may be lower. For example, under India-US DTAA the rate is capped at 15%, and under India-Singapore DTAA at 15%. You need a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from your country and must file Form 10F on the Indian income tax portal to claim this benefit.

3 NRE vs NRO — The Master Comparison Table

This is the most comprehensive side-by-side comparison of NRE and NRO accounts. Bookmark this table — it covers every parameter that matters.

ParameterNRE AccountNRO Account
Full FormNon-Resident ExternalNon-Resident Ordinary
PurposePark foreign earnings in IndiaManage Indian income (rent, dividends, pension)
Source of FundsForeign income only — salary, business profits, investment returns earned abroadIndian income + foreign remittances both accepted
CurrencyMaintained in INR (funded via forex remittance)Maintained in INR (funded via Indian income or forex)
Interest Taxability (India) Tax-FREE (Section 10(4)(ii)) Fully TAXABLE (30% TDS)
TDS on InterestNil30% + 4% cess = 31.2% (can be reduced via DTAA)
RepatriationFully repatriable — principal + interest, no limitUp to USD 1 million/year after tax clearance
Joint Account with NRIYesYes
Joint Account with Resident IndianNot allowedAllowed
Loan Against FD (in India)Yes — up to 90% of FD valueYes — up to 90% of FD value
Loan Against FD (abroad)Yes — funds can be used abroadNot permitted
Nomination FacilityYesYes
Power of AttorneyAllowed for local payments & withdrawals (not for repatriation)Allowed for all operations including local payments
Savings Account Interest Rate3.0% – 4.0% p.a. (similar to resident rates)3.0% – 4.0% p.a. (similar to resident rates)
FD Interest Rate (1 year)6.8% – 7.5% p.a. (varies by bank)6.5% – 7.25% p.a. (varies by bank)
Minimum BalanceRs 10,000 – Rs 25,000 (varies by bank)Rs 10,000 – Rs 25,000 (varies by bank)
RBI GuidelinesFEMA — Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999FEMA — Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999
Conversion on Return to IndiaMust be redesignated as resident account or RFC accountBecomes a regular resident savings account
Best ForNRIs sending foreign salary/savings to IndiaNRIs with Indian income sources (rent, pension, dividends)
The Golden Rule: Foreign money coming IN to India goes into NRE. Indian money staying IN India goes into NRO. If you mix them up, you lose the tax benefit on NRE and may face regulatory scrutiny for depositing Indian income into a foreign-income account.

4 FCNR Account — The Third Option Most NRIs Miss

Beyond NRE and NRO, there is a third type of NRI deposit that is surprisingly underused: the FCNR (Foreign Currency Non-Resident) account. Unlike NRE where your foreign currency is immediately converted to INR, FCNR deposits are held in foreign currency itself — USD, GBP, EUR, JPY, CAD, or AUD. This eliminates currency conversion risk entirely.

FCNR Key Features

  • Currency: Held in foreign currency — no conversion to INR. When the deposit matures, you get back the same currency.
  • Deposit type: Only term deposits (Fixed Deposits) — minimum 1 year, maximum 5 years. No savings account option.
  • Tax in India: Interest is 100% exempt from Indian income tax, same as NRE.
  • Repatriation: Fully repatriable — principal + interest, no limit.
  • Currency risk: Zero. If you deposit USD 50,000 and the rupee depreciates from 85 to 90 during the tenure, you still get back USD 50,000 + interest in USD. With NRE, you would have gotten Rs 42.5 lakh on deposit but only USD 47,222 on withdrawal at the new rate.
  • Interest rates: Generally lower than NRE FD rates because the bank bears the currency risk. USD FCNR rates are typically 4.5% – 5.5% p.a.
  • Who should use it: NRIs who plan to eventually take their money back abroad, NRIs worried about INR depreciation, and those who want a safe USD-denominated fixed-income instrument.

NRE FD vs FCNR vs NRO FD — Comparison

ParameterNRE FDFCNR DepositNRO FD
Currency Held InINRForeign currency (USD, GBP, etc.)INR
Interest Rate (1 yr)6.8% – 7.5%4.5% – 5.5% (USD)6.5% – 7.25%
Tax in IndiaExemptExemptTaxable (30% TDS)
Currency RiskYes — exposed to INR fluctuationNone — held in foreign currencyYes — exposed to INR fluctuation
RepatriationFully repatriableFully repatriableUp to $1M/year after tax
Minimum Tenure1 year1 year7 days
Maximum Tenure10 years5 years10 years
Premature WithdrawalAllowed (penalty applies)Allowed (penalty applies)Allowed (penalty applies)
Best ForHigh INR returns, tax-freeCapital protection in foreign currencyIndian income that cannot go to NRE
When FCNR Wins: Between 2014 and 2024, the Indian Rupee depreciated from roughly Rs 60/USD to Rs 85/USD — a decline of over 40%. An NRI who deposited USD 100,000 in FCNR in 2014 preserved the full dollar value. The same amount in an NRE FD would have earned higher INR interest but lost value when converted back to dollars. If you plan to eventually return money abroad, FCNR protects against this erosion.

5 Which Account Should YOU Open?

The right choice depends on where your money comes from, what you want to do with it, and how long you plan to stay abroad. Here is a simple decision framework followed by real-world scenarios.

Decision Flowchart

Where is the money coming from?If from abroad (salary, overseas business) → NRE or FCNR. If from India (rent, pension, dividends) → NRO.
Do you want tax-free interest?Yes → NRE or FCNR. NRO interest is always taxable in India.
Will you send money back abroad?Yes, freely → NRE. Yes, but worried about INR depreciation → FCNR. Money stays in India → NRE or NRO both work.
Do you earn Indian income?Yes → You MUST open NRO (in addition to NRE/FCNR for foreign funds). No → NRE alone is sufficient.
Planning to return to India soon?Yes → Open both NRE and NRO. NRE FD will continue until maturity at the tax-free rate even after you become a resident.

Real-World Scenarios

Scenario 1: Software Engineer in the US

Rajesh works at Google in Mountain View, earns $180K/year, and sends $3,000/month to India for his parents and to build savings. He has no Indian income.

Open NRE Account + NRE FD

Tax-free interest, full repatriation. If worried about rupee depreciation, split between NRE FD and FCNR (USD).

Scenario 2: NRI with Rental Property in Bangalore

Meera lives in London. She owns a 2BHK flat in Whitefield that earns Rs 35,000/month rent. She also has mutual fund dividends of Rs 50,000/year.

Must Open NRO Account

Indian income must flow into NRO. Consider also opening NRE for any GBP savings she sends to India (to earn tax-free interest on that portion).

Scenario 3: Protecting Against INR Depreciation

Amit lives in Singapore and has SGD 200,000 in savings. He wants to earn better interest than Singapore banks offer (0.5%) but does not want to lose money if the rupee falls.

Open FCNR Deposit (SGD)

FCNR SGD deposit at ~3.5% is far better than Singapore savings accounts, and the principal is protected in SGD. Tax-free in India too.

Scenario 4: Planning to Return to India in 2 Years

Deepa is in Dubai, planning to move back to India by 2028. She has AED 500,000 in savings and earns rent from a Chennai apartment.

Open Both NRE + NRO

NRE FD for foreign savings (tax-free interest continues until maturity even after return). NRO for Chennai rent. Lock in 3-5 year NRE FDs now to enjoy tax-free interest beyond return date.

6 Interest Rates Comparison 2026

NRI deposit rates are competitive and often match or slightly exceed regular resident FD rates. Here is the latest comparison across major Indian banks for 2026.

NRE Fixed Deposit Rates (1 Year)

Bank1 Year NRE FD2 Year NRE FD5 Year NRE FDTax on Interest
SBI6.80%7.00%6.50%Nil
HDFC Bank7.10%7.35%7.00%Nil
ICICI Bank7.00%7.25%7.00%Nil
Axis Bank7.10%7.25%7.00%Nil
Kotak Mahindra7.20%7.30%6.90%Nil
IDFC First Bank7.50%7.50%7.25%Nil

NRO Fixed Deposit Rates (1 Year)

Bank1 Year NRO FD2 Year NRO FD5 Year NRO FDTDS Deducted
SBI6.80%7.00%6.50%31.2%
HDFC Bank7.00%7.25%7.00%31.2%
ICICI Bank6.90%7.10%7.00%31.2%
Axis Bank7.00%7.15%6.90%31.2%
Kotak Mahindra7.10%7.20%6.80%31.2%
IDFC First Bank7.25%7.50%7.25%31.2%

FCNR Deposit Rates by Currency

Currency1 Year FCNR2 Year FCNR3 Year FCNR5 Year FCNR
USD (US Dollar)5.00%5.15%5.00%4.75%
GBP (British Pound)5.25%5.35%5.15%4.90%
EUR (Euro)3.25%3.40%3.30%3.15%
SGD (Singapore Dollar)3.50%3.65%3.50%3.30%
AUD (Australian Dollar)4.75%4.85%4.70%4.50%
CAD (Canadian Dollar)4.50%4.65%4.50%4.30%

Rates are indicative as of May 2026 and vary by bank. FCNR rates are set by individual banks within RBI ceiling limits. Always verify current rates on your bank's NRI banking portal.

7 Tax Implications — Detailed Breakdown

Understanding the tax treatment is the single most important factor in choosing between NRE and NRO. Here is a country-by-country breakdown of how the interest is taxed.

Tax Treatment in India

Account TypeTaxable in India?TDS RateSection/Exemption
NRE Savings / FDNo — Fully Exempt0%Section 10(4)(ii)
FCNR DepositNo — Fully Exempt0%Section 10(15)(iv)(fa)
NRO Savings / FDYes — Fully Taxable30% + 4% cess = 31.2%Taxed under IFOS (Income from Other Sources)
NRO (with DTAA, US)Yes — Reduced Rate15% (under India-US DTAA)Requires TRC + Form 10F
NRO (with DTAA, UK)Yes — Reduced Rate15% (under India-UK DTAA)Requires TRC + Form 10F
NRO (with DTAA, Singapore)Yes — Reduced Rate15% (under India-SG DTAA)Requires TRC + Form 10F

Country-Specific Tax Rules for NRIs

United States (US NRIs): The US taxes worldwide income. NRE interest, while exempt in India, must be reported on your US tax return (Form 1040, Schedule B). Since India charges no tax on NRE interest, you get no Foreign Tax Credit to offset the US liability. Effective US tax on NRE interest depends on your US tax bracket (10% to 37%). For NRO interest, the 30% Indian TDS can be claimed as Foreign Tax Credit in the US, reducing double taxation.
United Kingdom (UK NRIs): UK residents are taxed on worldwide income. NRE interest must be declared to HMRC. You can claim Foreign Tax Credit for any Indian tax paid on NRO interest. Under the India-UK DTAA, NRO interest TDS is capped at 15%. The UK tax on NRE interest depends on your UK income bracket (Basic rate 20%, Higher rate 40%, Additional rate 45%).
UAE / Gulf Countries (GCC NRIs): The UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, and Bahrain have zero personal income tax. NRE interest is tax-free in India AND tax-free in your country of residence — truly zero tax. This makes NRE FDs an incredible deal for Gulf NRIs. NRO interest has 30% TDS in India, but under DTAA, this may be reduced (UAE-India DTAA caps interest TDS at 12.5%).
Canada / Australia (NRIs): Both countries tax worldwide income. NRE interest is taxable in Canada/Australia at your marginal rate. NRO TDS (30%) can be claimed as Foreign Tax Credit. Under India-Canada DTAA, NRO interest TDS is capped at 15%. Under India-Australia DTAA, it is capped at 15% as well.
Singapore (NRIs): Singapore taxes only income sourced in Singapore (territorial taxation). NRE and NRO interest earned in India is generally not taxable in Singapore unless the money is remitted to Singapore. Under India-Singapore DTAA, NRO interest TDS is capped at 15%.

8 How to Open NRE/NRO Account from Abroad

Most major Indian banks now offer fully online NRI account opening with video KYC — you do not need to visit India. Here is the step-by-step process and what you need.

Documents Required

  • PAN Card: Mandatory for all NRI accounts. If you do not have a PAN, apply online at NSDL/UTIITSL (takes 15-20 working days).
  • Indian Passport: Valid Indian passport (or OCI card for PIOs).
  • Visa / Work Permit: Valid visa of the country where you reside (for proof of NRI status).
  • Overseas Address Proof: Utility bill, bank statement, or driving license from your country of residence (within 3 months).
  • Passport-Size Photograph: Recent photograph (digital copy for online applications).
  • Indian Address Proof (optional): Aadhaar card (useful for e-verification of tax returns later).

Online Account Opening Process

  1. Visit the NRI banking portal of your preferred bank (e.g., SBI Global NRI, ICICI NRI, HDFC NRI Banking).
  2. Fill the online application form — select NRE, NRO, or both.
  3. Upload scanned copies of PAN, passport, visa, overseas address proof, and photograph.
  4. Complete Video KYC — a bank representative calls you via video for identity verification (takes 5-10 minutes). Available for most banks including SBI, HDFC, ICICI, Axis, and Kotak.
  5. E-sign or wet-sign documents (some banks accept digital signatures, others courier physical forms).
  6. Account activation — typically 3-7 working days after document verification.
  7. Receive debit card and internet banking credentials by courier or email.

Best Banks for NRI Accounts (2026)

BankOnline OpeningVideo KYCNRI FD RateNRI Services Rating
SBIYesYes6.80%Good — largest network, reliable. Slow customer service.
ICICI BankYesYes7.00%Excellent — best NRI digital platform (Money2India, iMobile).
HDFC BankYesYes7.10%Excellent — smooth process, good NRI dedicated support.
Axis BankYesYes7.10%Very Good — competitive rates, active NRI cell.
Kotak MahindraYesYes7.20%Very Good — higher FD rates, modern app.
IDFC First BankYesYes7.50%Good — best rates in market. Smaller branch network.

9 Transferring Money Between NRE and NRO

This is one of the most confusing areas for NRIs, and getting it wrong can create compliance headaches. Here are the exact rules.

NRE → NRO: Allowed freely. You can transfer any amount from your NRE account to your NRO account at any time. No paperwork, no limit, no tax implications.
NRO → NRE: NOT allowed. This is a common misconception. Once money enters an NRO account, it cannot be moved to an NRE account. NRO funds follow NRO repatriation rules.
NRE → Abroad: Allowed freely. Full repatriation of principal + interest via SWIFT transfer. No Form 15CA/15CB needed since no tax is applicable.
NRO → Abroad: Allowed up to $1M/year after tax. Requires Form 15CA (online declaration) and Form 15CB (CA certificate) for amounts exceeding Rs 5 lakh in a financial year.
FCNR → NRE: Allowed. FCNR maturity proceeds can be credited to your NRE account (after conversion to INR).
FCNR → Abroad: Allowed freely. Repatriation in the original foreign currency — no Form 15CA/15CB needed.
NRE → FCNR: Allowed. You can use NRE funds to open an FCNR deposit (the INR is converted to the desired foreign currency).

Repatriation from NRO — Step by Step

StepActionDetails
1Ensure taxes are paidAll applicable taxes on NRO income must be paid or TDS deducted. Check Form 26AS.
2File Form 15CA (Part C) onlineOn incometax.gov.in — declaration that tax has been paid on the remitted amount.
3Get Form 15CB from CAYour Chartered Accountant certifies the tax compliance. Required for amounts > Rs 5 lakh.
4Submit to bankProvide Form 15CA acknowledgement + Form 15CB to your bank's NRI cell.
5Bank processes SWIFT transferBank converts INR to desired currency and sends via SWIFT. Takes 2-5 working days.
Pro Tip: Since NRO → NRE transfer is not allowed, always plan your fund routing carefully. If you are sending money from abroad and might want to take it back, put it in NRE from the start. Money deposited in NRO for convenience cannot later be moved to NRE to enjoy tax-free status — the choice is permanent for that particular fund flow.

10 What Happens When You Return to India (RNOR Period)

Returning to India permanently triggers important changes in your bank accounts and tax status. Here is what happens to each account type and what actions you must take.

Account Changes on Becoming Resident

  • NRE Savings Account: Must be redesignated as a regular resident savings account or converted to a Resident Foreign Currency (RFC) account within a reasonable time after returning.
  • NRE Fixed Deposits: Can continue until maturity at the same interest rate and tax-free status. After maturity, the proceeds go into your resident account and any new FD will be a regular (taxable) FD. This is a major planning opportunity — lock in long-term NRE FDs before returning!
  • FCNR Deposits: Continue until maturity. Proceeds can be credited to your RFC account (in foreign currency) or resident INR account.
  • NRO Account: Redesignated as a regular resident savings account. No special action needed — the bank simply changes the account type.

RNOR Status — The Tax-Free Window

When you return to India after being an NRI for several years, you do not immediately become fully taxable on global income. You first get RNOR (Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident) status, which can last for 2 to 3 years. During this period:

  • Your foreign income (overseas salary, foreign investments, foreign rental income) remains tax-free in India.
  • Only income earned in India or received in India is taxable.
  • This is an excellent time to bring foreign assets to India or liquidate overseas investments without Indian tax implications.
Return Planning Checklist:
  • Lock in NRE FDs for the maximum tenure (5-10 years) before you return — interest remains tax-free until maturity.
  • Consider opening an RFC account to hold foreign currency earnings (this money can be freely used for foreign expenses or invested abroad).
  • Inform all banks about your change in residential status within the financial year of return.
  • Use the RNOR period to strategically repatriate foreign assets and investments to India.
  • Update your KYC with all banks — from NRI to resident documentation.

11 NRI Banking Checklist

Click each item to check it off as you complete your NRI banking setup. This covers everything from account opening to ongoing compliance.

  • Get a PAN card (if you do not have one) — apply online at NSDL or UTIITSL
  • Redesignate your existing Indian savings account to NRO (inform bank of NRI status change)
  • Open an NRE account for foreign salary/savings remittances
  • Consider FCNR deposits if you want to protect against INR depreciation
  • Set up internet banking and mobile banking for both NRE and NRO accounts
  • Register for international wire transfer facility (SWIFT) on your NRE account
  • Obtain Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from your country of residence for DTAA benefits
  • File Form 10F on the Indian income tax portal (incometax.gov.in) for DTAA benefits on NRO interest
  • Update nominee details on all NRI accounts and fixed deposits
  • Give Power of Attorney (POA) to a trusted person in India for local banking operations
  • File Indian income tax return every year if total Indian income exceeds Rs 3 lakh (new regime)
  • Track TDS via Form 26AS / AIS on the income tax portal — claim refund if excess TDS deducted

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I transfer money from NRE to NRO account?

Yes, you can freely transfer money from your NRE account to your NRO account — there is no limit and no paperwork. However, the reverse is NOT allowed. Once money enters an NRO account, it cannot be moved to NRE. NRO funds can only be repatriated abroad (up to USD 1 million per financial year) after paying applicable taxes and obtaining Form 15CA/15CB from the income tax portal and your Chartered Accountant respectively.

Is NRE FD interest taxable in India?

No. NRE fixed deposit interest is fully exempt from Indian income tax under Section 10(4)(ii) of the Income Tax Act. No TDS is deducted by the bank and you do not need to report it in your Indian tax return. However, US NRIs must report this interest on their US tax return since the US taxes worldwide income. Similarly, UK, Canadian, and Australian NRIs must declare it in their respective countries. Gulf-based NRIs enjoy a true double-zero since there is no income tax in UAE, Saudi Arabia, or other GCC countries.

What is the maximum repatriation from NRO account?

NRIs can repatriate up to USD 1 million per financial year (approximately Rs 8.5 crore at current exchange rates) from their NRO account, after all applicable taxes have been paid or TDS deducted. For amounts exceeding Rs 5 lakh in a financial year, you need Form 15CA (filed online by the remitter on incometax.gov.in) and Form 15CB (a certificate from a Chartered Accountant confirming tax compliance). The bank processes the SWIFT transfer after receiving these documents.

Should I open NRE or NRO account first as a new NRI?

If you are leaving India for the first time, your existing savings account must be redesignated as NRO — this is mandatory under FEMA guidelines. Your bank will do this when you update your residential status. If you want to send foreign earnings to India, open an NRE account — this gives you tax-free interest and full repatriation. So the answer is: NRO happens automatically (from your existing account), and NRE is the one you actively open. Most NRIs should have both.

What happens to NRE and NRO accounts when I return to India?

When you return permanently and become a tax resident, your NRE savings account must be redesignated as a regular resident savings account or converted to an RFC (Resident Foreign Currency) account. NRE FDs that are already locked in can continue until maturity at the contracted rate, and the interest remains tax-free until maturity — this is a valuable benefit. NRO accounts simply become regular resident savings accounts automatically. During the RNOR period (typically 2-3 years after return), your foreign income is still not taxable in India, giving you a window to bring assets home efficiently.

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