Priyanka — Personal Finance Educator India
Priyanka Personal Finance

Smart Money · Simple Words · India

NRI Mutual Fund Investment Guide — How to Invest from Abroad in 2026

Complete guide for NRIs in USA, UK, UAE, Singapore, Canada — KYC process, platform selection, NRE vs NRO route, FATCA compliance, taxation, repatriation rules, and recommended portfolio strategies.

Indian mutual funds are one of the best ways for NRIs to grow wealth back home. With equity funds delivering 12-15% long-term CAGR and the Indian economy projected to grow at 6.5%+ in FY2026-27, the opportunity is significant. But the process is not straightforward — different countries face different restrictions, KYC requirements are more complex, TDS is mandatory on redemptions, and repatriation rules differ based on your account type. This guide walks you through every step, with country-specific details.

1. Can NRIs Invest in Indian Mutual Funds?

Yes, NRIs (Non-Resident Indians) and PIOs (Persons of Indian Origin) can invest in Indian mutual funds under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA) and SEBI regulations. However, the access level depends heavily on your country of residence.

USA & Canada NRIs — Restricted Access

Due to FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) and CRS (Common Reporting Standard) requirements, most Indian AMCs stopped accepting investments from US and Canada-based NRIs. The compliance burden of reporting to the IRS and CRA is expensive for fund houses. As of 2026, only these AMCs accept US/Canada NRI investments:

Important: Major AMCs like HDFC Mutual Fund, ICICI Prudential, Axis, Kotak, and Nippon India do NOT accept new investments from US/Canada NRIs. Existing holdings before you moved to the US are usually allowed to continue, but fresh purchases and SIPs are blocked.

UK, UAE, Singapore, Europe NRIs — Full Access

NRIs in these countries can invest in almost all Indian mutual fund schemes without restrictions. All major AMCs — HDFC, ICICI Prudential, SBI, Axis, Kotak, Nippon India, Mirae Asset, DSP, and others — accept investments from UK, UAE, Singapore, and most European countries.

Country-Wise Mutual Fund Access

CountryAMC AccessNo. of AMCs AvailableFATCA/CRS FilingKey Restriction
USARestricted5-6 AMCs onlyMandatory (IRS W-8BEN)Most AMCs reject US NRIs
CanadaRestricted5-6 AMCs onlyMandatory (CRA reporting)Same as US restrictions
UKFullAll 40+ AMCsCRS onlyNone significant
UAEFullAll 40+ AMCsCRS onlyNone (no local capital gains tax)
SingaporeFullAll 40+ AMCsCRS onlyNone significant
AustraliaFullAll 40+ AMCsCRS onlyNone significant
Germany/EUFullAll 40+ AMCsCRS onlyGDPR considerations
Priyanka's Tip: If you are a US NRI, the Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund (PPFAS) is the most popular choice — it has a good track record, accepts US investors, and files FATCA reports on your behalf. For diversification, combine it with SBI Nifty 50 Index Fund.

2. KYC & Documentation for NRI Mutual Fund Investment

KYC (Know Your Customer) is mandatory before you can invest in any mutual fund in India. NRI KYC is more detailed than resident KYC because of FEMA and FATCA compliance requirements.

Documents Required

DocumentDetailsRequired For
PAN CardValid Indian PAN (mandatory for all investments)All NRIs
Indian PassportValid or expired (with valid visa on current passport)All NRIs
OCI/PIO CardIf you hold OCI card instead of Indian passportOCI holders
Overseas Address ProofUtility bill, bank statement, or driving license from country of residenceAll NRIs
NRE/NRO Bank DetailsCancelled cheque or bank statement showing account number and IFSCAll NRIs
Passport-size PhotographsRecent photographs (2 copies)All NRIs
FATCA Self-DeclarationForm with US TIN/SSN and W-8BENUSA/Canada NRIs only
In-Person Verification (IPV)Video KYC or in-person at Indian embassy/consulate/bankAll NRIs

Step-by-Step KYC Process for NRIs

  1. Get PAN Card: If you do not already have one, apply through NSDL or UTIITSL portal online. You can provide your overseas address. PAN is mandatory for all mutual fund investments.
  2. Open NRE/NRO Bank Account: Open an NRE or NRO account with an Indian bank (SBI, HDFC Bank, ICICI Bank, Axis Bank). Many banks allow online account opening with video KYC for NRIs.
  3. Complete KYC Registration: Register through a SEBI-registered KRA (KYC Registration Agency) — CAMS, KFintech, or CDSL Ventures. Download the KYC form, fill it with your overseas address, and submit along with documents.
  4. In-Person Verification (IPV): This can be done via video call through platforms like Kuvera NRI, at an Indian bank branch (during your India visit), or at select Indian consulates/embassies abroad.
  5. Submit FATCA Declaration: All NRIs must submit the FATCA/CRS self-certification form declaring their tax residency. US/Canada NRIs must additionally provide their US TIN (SSN or ITIN) or Canadian SIN.
  6. KYC Verification: Once submitted, KYC is typically verified within 5-10 business days. You will receive a confirmation from the KRA. Check status on the CAMS or KFintech website using your PAN.
Pro Tip: If you are visiting India, complete your KYC in person at a bank branch or CAMS/KFintech office — it is the fastest route. Carry original passport, PAN card, and NRE/NRO cheque book. The entire process takes about 30 minutes.

3. Which Account to Use — NRE vs NRO for Mutual Funds

Your choice between NRE and NRO account for mutual fund investment has significant implications for taxation and repatriation. Here is a detailed comparison.

NRE Route — Invest Foreign Earnings

NRO Route — Invest Indian Income

NRE vs NRO — Detailed Comparison for Mutual Funds

FeatureNRE Account RouteNRO Account Route
Source of FundsForeign earnings onlyIndian income (rent, dividends, pension, sale proceeds)
Repatriation of PrincipalFully repatriable — no limitUp to USD 1M/year (with 15CA/15CB)
Repatriation of GainsFully repatriable (after TDS)Within USD 1M/year limit
TDS on Equity STCG20% TDS20% TDS
TDS on Equity LTCG12.5% TDS (above Rs 1.25 lakh)12.5% TDS (above Rs 1.25 lakh)
TDS on Debt Fund Gains30% TDS (at slab rates)30% TDS (at slab rates)
Documentation for RepatriationMinimal — bank processes directlyForm 15CA + Form 15CB (CA certificate)
Currency RiskYes (you convert foreign currency to INR on investment, and back on redemption)Already in INR — currency risk only on repatriation
Best ForLong-term wealth creation with repatriation flexibilityParking Indian income, investing rental proceeds
Recommendation: If you are investing your overseas salary or savings, always use the NRE route. It gives you unlimited repatriation and cleaner documentation. Use the NRO route only for Indian-sourced income like rental income or the proceeds of a property sale.

4. Best Platforms for NRI Mutual Fund Investment in 2026

Not all investment platforms available to resident Indians work for NRIs. Popular apps like Groww and Zerodha Coin have limited or no NRI support. Here are your best options.

Platform Comparison

PlatformDirect PlansUS/Canada NRINRE & NROSIP SupportFeesKYC Assistance
Kuvera NRIYesYesBothYesFree (direct plans)Full KYC + video IPV
MFCentralYesYesBothYesFreeBasic
AMC Websites (Direct)YesSelect AMCsBothYesFreeVaries by AMC
CAMS / KFintechYesYesBothYesFreeBasic
GrowwYesNoLimitedYesFreeLimited NRI support
Zerodha CoinYesNoNoYesFreeNo NRI support
INDmoney NRIYesYesBothYesFreeFull KYC + video IPV
Why Groww and Zerodha Don't Work for Most NRIs: Groww has limited NRI support and does not accept US/Canada NRIs for mutual fund investments. Zerodha Coin does not support NRI accounts at all — their demat-based model requires a resident trading account. If you used Groww or Zerodha before moving abroad, you must update your status and may need to switch platforms.

Recommended Approach by Country

5. Tax on Mutual Fund Returns for NRIs

NRIs pay the same capital gains tax rates as resident Indians. The critical difference is mandatory TDS — the AMC deducts tax before you receive your redemption proceeds. You cannot avoid this, but you can claim credit for it.

Capital Gains Tax Rates (FY 2026-27)

Fund TypeHolding PeriodTax RateTDS Rate for NRIsExemption
Equity Funds (STCG)Less than 12 months20%20% + surcharge + cessNone
Equity Funds (LTCG)12 months or more12.5%12.5% + surcharge + cessFirst Rs 1.25 lakh exempt per year
Debt Funds (all gains)Any periodAt slab rates (up to 30%)30% + surcharge + cessNone (no indexation benefit since 2023)
Hybrid Funds (equity >65%)Same as equitySame as equitySame as equitySame as equity
Hybrid Funds (equity <65%)Same as debtSame as debtSame as debtNone
Key Difference for NRIs: Unlike resident Indians where TDS is minimal or zero on mutual fund redemptions, NRI mutual fund redemptions attract mandatory TDS. The AMC deducts tax before crediting your NRE/NRO account. This means your received amount is always less than the NAV-based value. You can claim refund of excess TDS by filing an Indian ITR.

DTAA Benefits — Avoid Double Taxation

India has Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAA) with 90+ countries. If you pay tax on mutual fund gains in India, you can claim Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) in your country of residence to avoid being taxed twice on the same income.

CountryDTAA with IndiaCapital Gains ArticleHow to Claim CreditEffective Tax Outcome
USAYesArticle 13 — taxed in India, credit in USIRS Form 1116 (Foreign Tax Credit)Pay the higher of Indian or US rate
UKYesArticle 13 — taxed in India, credit in UKHMRC Self-Assessment returnPay the higher of Indian or UK rate
UAEYesArticle 13 — taxed in India onlyNo local tax (0% in UAE)Pay only Indian tax — most favorable
SingaporeYesArticle 13 — capital gains may be taxed in IndiaIRAS foreign tax credit claimSingapore generally does not tax foreign capital gains
CanadaYesArticle 13 — taxed in India, credit in CanadaCRA Form T2209Pay the higher of Indian or Canadian rate
UAE Advantage: Since UAE has no personal income tax and no capital gains tax, NRIs in UAE pay Indian tax only on their mutual fund gains. After TDS in India, the entire post-tax amount is yours. This makes UAE one of the most tax-efficient countries for NRI investing in India.

6. Repatriation Rules — Getting Money Back Abroad

After redeeming your mutual fund units, you need to transfer the proceeds back to your bank account abroad. The process differs based on whether you invested through NRE or NRO.

Repatriation via NRE Account

Repatriation via NRO Account

Step-by-Step Repatriation Process (NRO Route)

  1. Redeem Mutual Fund: Place redemption request through your platform or AMC. Proceeds credited to NRO account in 1-3 business days (equity) or 1-2 days (debt/liquid).
  2. Engage a CA: Hire a Chartered Accountant to issue Form 15CB. They will verify your tax payments, TDS deducted, and DTAA eligibility.
  3. File Form 15CA Online: Log into the income tax e-filing portal (incometax.gov.in) and file Form 15CA Part C (if 15CB is required). Upload the CA-signed 15CB.
  4. Submit to Bank: Share the filed Form 15CA acknowledgment and Form 15CB with your NRO bank branch. Request an outward remittance.
  5. Bank Processes Transfer: The bank verifies documents, deducts wire transfer charges, and initiates the SWIFT transfer to your overseas bank account.
Money-Saving Tip: If you have both NRE and NRO accounts, always invest through NRE when using foreign earnings. The repatriation process is much simpler, faster, and cheaper — no CA certificate, no Form 15CB, and no USD 1M limit.

7. Best Mutual Fund Categories for NRIs

NRIs should focus on low-maintenance, tax-efficient fund categories that do not require frequent monitoring across time zones. Here are the best options.

Recommended Fund Categories

Recommended Portfolio Allocation

Fund CategoryConservative NRI (Low Risk)Balanced NRI (Moderate)Aggressive NRI (High Growth)
Nifty 50 Index Fund40%30%20%
Flexi-Cap / Large-Cap Fund20%30%25%
Nifty Next 50 / Mid-Cap Fund0%15%25%
Small-Cap Fund0%0%15%
Debt / Liquid Fund30%15%5%
ELSS (if filing ITR in India)10%10%10%
Total100%100%100%
Expected CAGR (10-year)9-11%11-13%13-16%
Suitable ForRetirees, NRIs nearing returnWorking NRIs, 5-10 year horizonYoung NRIs, 10+ year horizon
For US NRIs with Limited AMC Access: A simple two-fund portfolio works well — 70% Parag Parikh Flexi Cap Fund + 30% SBI Nifty 50 Index Fund. This gives you diversified equity exposure through two AMCs that accept US investors, with a combined expense ratio under 0.5%.

8. Common Mistakes NRIs Make with Mutual Fund Investments

Based on common queries from NRI investors, here are the most frequent mistakes to avoid.

Mistake 1: Not Updating KYC When Moving Abroad
Many people move abroad for work but do not update their mutual fund KYC to NRI status. This is a FEMA violation. When you become an NRI (183+ days outside India in a financial year), you must notify your AMCs, update your address to overseas, convert your savings account to NRO, and link the NRO to your folio. Not doing this can cause problems during redemption and repatriation.
Mistake 2: Investing Through Resident Platforms After Becoming NRI
Continuing to invest through Groww, Zerodha, or other resident-only platforms after becoming an NRI is a compliance issue. These platforms do not support NRI accounts and will not generate proper TDS certificates. Switch to Kuvera NRI, MFCentral, or direct AMC routes.
Mistake 3: Ignoring DTAA Benefits
Many NRIs pay tax on mutual fund gains in both India (via TDS) and their country of residence, losing money to double taxation. India has DTAA agreements with 90+ countries — always claim Foreign Tax Credit in your country of residence using the TDS certificate from the AMC.
Mistake 4: Not Filing Indian ITR to Claim TDS Refund
TDS on NRI mutual fund redemptions is often higher than the actual tax liability (especially on LTCG below Rs 1.25 lakh, where actual tax is zero but TDS is still deducted). File an Indian ITR to claim refund of excess TDS. Use ITR-2 for capital gains income.
Mistake 5: Investing Lumpsum Without Rupee Cost Averaging
NRIs often invest large lumpsum amounts during India visits. This exposes you to market timing risk. Instead, use SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) through NRE/NRO auto-debit or STP (Systematic Transfer Plan) from a liquid fund to equity over 6-12 months.
Mistake 6: Not Considering Currency Risk
Indian mutual fund returns are in INR. If the rupee depreciates against your home currency (USD, GBP, EUR), your effective returns reduce. For example, 15% equity return in INR minus 3% INR depreciation = 12% effective return in USD. Factor this into your return expectations.

9. NRI Mutual Fund Investment Checklist

Click on each item to mark it as done. Use this checklist to ensure you have covered all the steps before and during your NRI mutual fund investment journey.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can US NRIs invest in Indian mutual funds?

Yes, but with restrictions. Due to FATCA compliance, only a handful of AMCs accept US-based NRIs — PPFAS Mutual Fund, SBI Mutual Fund, UTI Mutual Fund, Sundaram Mutual Fund, and Birla Sun Life (select schemes). Most large AMCs like HDFC, ICICI Prudential, Axis, and Kotak do not accept US NRIs. You must invest through NRE or NRO accounts and provide your US TIN (SSN or ITIN) along with a FATCA self-declaration.

Do NRIs pay higher tax on mutual fund gains?

No, the tax rates are identical to resident Indians — 20% STCG and 12.5% LTCG on equity funds, slab rates on debt funds. The key difference is mandatory TDS at source. AMCs deduct TDS before crediting your account, whereas resident Indians often receive the full amount and pay tax during ITR filing. NRIs can file an Indian ITR to claim refund of any excess TDS deducted.

Can I start a SIP as an NRI?

Yes, NRIs can start SIPs in Indian mutual funds. You need completed KYC, an NRE or NRO account with an auto-debit (ECS/NACH) mandate, and the AMC must accept NRI investors from your country. Platforms like Kuvera NRI and MFCentral support SIP setup. The minimum SIP amount is typically Rs 500-1,000 per month depending on the scheme.

What happens to my mutual funds if I become an NRI?

Your existing investments continue, but you must take these steps: (1) Inform all your AMCs about your change in residential status. (2) Update your KYC with overseas address. (3) Convert your savings account to NRO and link it to your folios. (4) Check if your current AMCs accept NRIs from your country — if not, existing holdings typically continue but fresh investments are blocked. (5) Update your tax status for TDS purposes. Failing to update can cause compliance issues during redemption.

Is it better to invest via NRE or NRO account?

For foreign earnings, NRE is strongly recommended — the principal and gains are fully repatriable with no limit, and the process is simple. NRO should be used only for investing Indian income (rent, dividends, sale proceeds). NRO repatriation is capped at USD 1 million/year and requires Form 15CA/15CB from a CA, adding cost and complexity. Most financial advisors recommend routing maximum investments through the NRE account.

Important Disclaimer

NRI mutual fund regulations, FEMA rules, FATCA/CRS requirements, and tax laws change frequently. The information on this page is for educational purposes only and does not constitute investment, tax, or legal advice. Your actual tax liability depends on your residential status, country of residence, DTAA provisions, and individual circumstances. Always consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor and a Chartered Accountant experienced in NRI taxation before making investment decisions.

See our full disclaimer for more details.

Follow Priyanka Finance for Daily Money TipsSubscribe on YouTube @priyankafinance for 60-second tax, SIP & investing videos. Follow on Instagram for daily reels.
YouTube Instagram LinkedIn X
Important Disclaimer: All content, calculators, government scheme details, tax slabs and investment information on this website are provided strictly for educational and informational purposes only. None of the information here constitutes financial, investment, tax, legal or insurance advice. Calculators use simplified models — actual returns, taxes and benefits depend on your individual situation, market conditions, and current law. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risk — please read all scheme-related documents carefully. Government scheme rules, eligibility limits, interest rates and tax slabs may change. Always verify the latest information on official websites and consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor, a chartered accountant for tax matters, and an insurance advisor before taking any financial action. We make no warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of the information and accept no liability for any loss arising from its use.