The Complete Guide to Buying Property in India as an NRI
NRI investments in Indian real estate surged by approximately 35% in the past fiscal year, with remittances touching a record USD 135.46 billion in FY25. The opportunity is real. But so is the risk. An estimated 7 out of 10 properties in India carry some form of title defect — from broken ownership chains to undisclosed mortgages and pending court cases.
In our analysis of property documents across Andhra Pradesh and Telangana, we have found that NRI-owned properties face a distinct set of verification challenges. Distance makes it nearly impossible to visit government offices, verify documents in person, or attend registration. Reliance on Power of Attorney creates fraud exposure. And FEMA non-compliance penalties can reach three times the transaction value.
This guide covers everything an NRI needs to know before buying property in India — FEMA eligibility, required documents, the step-by-step buying process, the specific risks NRIs face, and how to verify property title remotely without visiting India.
<!-- IMAGE: hero - NRI reviewing property documents on laptop with Indian property documents and FEMA checklist visible -->What Is NRI Property Buying Under FEMA?
An NRI, as defined under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), 1999, is an Indian citizen who has resided outside India for more than 182 days during the preceding financial year. This definition determines eligibility for property transactions in India and carries specific compliance obligations that differ significantly from resident buyers.
Under FEMA, NRIs can purchase any number of residential and commercial properties in India without prior approval from the Reserve Bank of India. There is no upper limit on the number of properties an NRI can own. However, there are clear restrictions: NRIs cannot purchase agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses in India. These can only be acquired through inheritance or gift from a person resident in India.
Properties NRIs Can and Cannot Buy
Payment and Account Requirements
All payments for property purchases must be made in Indian rupees through authorized banking channels. Cash transactions are not permitted under FEMA. NRIs must route payments through one of these accounts:
- NRE Account (Non-Resident External): Funded from foreign earnings, fully repatriable
- NRO Account (Non-Resident Ordinary): Funded from Indian income sources, repatriation capped at USD 1 million per financial year
- FCNR Account (Foreign Currency Non-Resident): Fixed deposits in foreign currency
Non-compliance with FEMA payment rules can result in penalties up to three times the transaction amount (FEMA 1999, Section 13). This makes proper banking channel selection critical for every NRI property transaction.
What Documents Does an NRI Need to Buy Property in India?
Before initiating any property purchase, NRIs should gather these essential documents:
Special Power of Attorney — When and How to Use It
A Special Power of Attorney (SPA) is essential when an NRI cannot be physically present for property registration. Unlike a General Power of Attorney, an SPA limits the agent's authority to a specific property and specific actions — reducing the risk of misuse.
To create an SPA:
- Draft the document specifying the exact property, the authorized actions, and the agent's identity
- Sign the SPA at the Indian Embassy or Consulate in your country of residence
- Get it notarized and apostilled (or attested by the Embassy)
- Register the SPA at the Sub-Registrar office in India
Always prefer an SPA over a GPA. As the Punjab and Haryana High Court noted in 2025, General Powers of Attorney are frequently misused in NRI property transactions, with agents selling properties at grossly undervalued rates.
For a detailed understanding of what a legal opinion checks, read our guide on what each section of a legal opinion covers.
How Does the NRI Property Buying Process Work in India?
The property buying process for NRIs follows seven distinct steps. Each step has specific requirements that differ from resident purchases.
Step 1: Identify the property and verify RERA registration. If the property is under construction, check its RERA registration number on the state RERA portal. Under the Real Estate (Regulation and Development) Act, 2016, all residential projects above 500 square meters must be registered.
Step 2: Conduct legal due diligence. This is the most critical step. Verify the property title by examining the ownership chain, encumbrance certificates, court case records, property tax receipts, and mutation entries. Title verification should cover at least 30 years of ownership history.
Step 3: Negotiate and sign the Agreement to Sell. This document captures the agreed price, payment schedule, and conditions. Pay the advance (typically 10-20% of the property value) through your NRE/NRO account.
Step 4: Arrange financing. NRIs can avail home loans from Indian banks with loan-to-value ratios of 75-90%. Interest rates are typically 0.5-1% higher than resident rates. EMI repayment must be exclusively through NRE/NRO/FCNR accounts.
Step 5: Execute the Sale Deed at the Sub-Registrar office. This can be done in person or through a registered POA holder. Both the buyer (or POA holder) and seller must be present.
Step 6: Pay stamp duty and registration charges. Rates vary by state — typically 5-7% stamp duty plus 1-2% registration fee. As per the Registration Act, 1908, the sale deed must be registered within four months of execution.
Step 7: Complete mutation and update property tax records. Apply for mutation at the local municipal office to update ownership in revenue records.
Registration Without Physical Presence
If you are buying from abroad, your registered SPA holder can execute the sale deed and complete registration on your behalf. Ensure the SPA specifically authorizes registration at the relevant Sub-Registrar office and mentions the exact property details (survey number, area, boundaries).
Link your property verification to the buying process — verifying title before Step 3 prevents costly mistakes.
<!-- IMAGE: body-1 - Step-by-step flowchart of NRI property buying process from identification to mutation -->What Are the Biggest Risks NRIs Face When Buying Property?
The Supreme Court of India, in Samiullah vs State of Bihar, described the process of buying and selling property as "traumatic" for many Indians. For NRIs, the risks are amplified by distance, dependence on intermediaries, and limited ability to conduct on-ground verification.
Based on verifying properties purchased through Power of Attorney, we have identified three recurring patterns of title defects in NRI transactions: forged ownership documents, undisclosed encumbrances, and properties with active court cases that sellers fail to reveal.
Power of Attorney Fraud — The Biggest NRI Risk
The Punjab and Haryana High Court in 2025 termed the rise in NRI property fraud cases "disturbing," noting that such offences "affect public trust in the state's real estate ecosystem" and "cannot be equated with conventional criminal cases" (LiveLaw.in, 2025). In one documented case, property measuring 14 kanals and worth several crores was sold through impersonation for just Rs.30.20 lakh.
Common POA fraud patterns include:
- Unauthorized sale: The POA holder sells the property without the NRI's knowledge
- Mortgage fraud: The agent takes a loan against the property using the POA
- Impersonation: A third party impersonates the NRI owner using forged documents
- Undervaluation: Property sold at a fraction of market value, with the difference pocketed
How to Spot Red Flags Before It's Too Late
Watch for these warning signs during due diligence:
- The seller insists on a rushed timeline with no time for verification
- Multiple ownership transfers in a short period (chain of title instability)
- Encumbrance Certificate shows recent entries you cannot explain
- The property has no property tax payment history
- The seller cannot provide original documents (only photocopies)
- Discrepancies between survey records and actual property boundaries
- Active litigation visible in eCourt searches for the property address or survey number
Seven out of ten properties in India have some form of title defect. For NRIs investing billions from abroad, the Punjab and Haryana High Court's observation in 2025 carries weight: property fraud targeting NRIs has reached levels that undermine public trust in the real estate system. With NRI investment surging 35% year-on-year, the pool of potential targets is growing. The most effective protection is systematic title verification — checking ownership chains across 30+ years, searching 100+ courts for pending cases, and verifying encumbrance certificates and property tax records before signing any agreement.
How Can NRIs Verify Property Title from Abroad?
Title verification is the single most important step in any property transaction — and the one NRIs most often skip or delegate without oversight.
The traditional approach requires hiring a local lawyer, sending documents by courier, waiting 5-7 days for the lawyer to visit government offices, and paying $2,400 or more for a legal opinion. For NRIs in the US, this often means coordinating across time zones and trusting a process they cannot observe.
AI-powered property verification changes this equation entirely. The process works in three phases: upload your property documents (sale deeds, ECs, ownership records), the AI reads and analyzes every page — including handwritten Telugu and Hindi documents — and searches 100+ courts across India simultaneously. Within 30 minutes, you receive a 29-section legal opinion covering ownership chain analysis, encumbrance verification, court case searches, RERA compliance, property tax status, and risk assessment. The cost is Rs.749 ($24) per report, compared to $2,400 or more for a traditional lawyer visit from abroad.
What a 29-Section Legal Opinion Covers
A comprehensive legal opinion examines every aspect of property ownership and compliance. The 29 sections cover executive summary, basic property information, boundaries, development details, current ownership, chain of title analysis (with visual graph), encumbrances, legal clearances, land use compliance, building approvals, revenue records, tax dues, encumbrance certificates, litigation and restrictions, entity ownership checks, and a final legal opinion conclusion.
For a complete breakdown, read our guide on what each of the 29 sections checks.
This remote verification process gives NRIs the same level of due diligence as physically visiting India — at a fraction of the cost and time. Upload your documents from Dallas, Dubai, or London. Receive your legal opinion in 30 minutes. Make an informed decision based on verified facts, not assurances from intermediaries.
NRI vs Resident Property Buying — Key Differences
Understanding the differences between NRI and resident property transactions helps set realistic expectations for the buying process.
NRI buyers face higher TDS deductions, stricter payment routing requirements, and greater exposure to fraud due to distance. The property types available to NRIs are more limited, and the repatriation of sale proceeds involves additional compliance steps. These differences make thorough title verification even more important for NRI transactions.
FEMA Tax Rules and Repatriation for NRI Property
Understanding tax obligations before buying prevents surprises at the time of sale.
Capital Gains Tax Calculation
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NRIs can claim exemptions under:
- Section 54: Reinvest LTCG in another residential property in India (within 2 years of sale)
- Section 54EC: Invest LTCG in specified bonds (NHAI, REC) within 6 months, up to Rs.50 lakh
- Section 54F: Invest net sale consideration in residential property (if no other house owned)
How to Repatriate Sale Proceeds
NRIs can repatriate sale proceeds for up to two residential properties. The repatriation route depends on how the property was originally purchased:
- Purchased with NRE/FCNR funds: Full repatriation allowed after tax deduction
- Purchased with NRO funds: Repatriation capped at USD 1 million per financial year (inclusive of all NRO transfers)
- Inherited property: Repatriation up to USD 1 million per year from NRO
Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) benefits may apply for NRIs in countries with bilateral agreements — the US, UK, UAE, Canada, Australia, and Singapore all have DTAAs with India. Consult a tax advisor in both countries to avoid double taxation.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can NRI buy agricultural land in India?
No. Under FEMA 1999, NRIs cannot purchase agricultural land, plantation property, or farmhouses in India. These can only be acquired through inheritance or gift from a person resident in India. Attempting to buy agricultural land through a benami arrangement (using a resident's name) is a criminal offense under the Benami Transactions (Prohibition) Act, 1988.
Is it safe for NRI to invest in Indian property in 2026?
Indian real estate offers strong returns — property prices grew 6-16% across major cities in 2025, and rental yields average 3-5%. However, safety depends entirely on due diligence. With 7 out of 10 properties carrying title defects, investing without proper verification is risky. Title verification, RERA checks, and court case searches are essential before any purchase.
Can NRI buy property in India without visiting?
Yes. NRIs can purchase property remotely using a registered Special Power of Attorney. The SPA must be signed at the Indian Embassy or Consulate, notarized, and registered at the Sub-Registrar office in India. Title verification can also be done remotely using AI-powered platforms that search courts, government portals, and analyze documents without requiring physical presence.
What happens if an NRI violates FEMA rules?
FEMA violations carry penalties of up to three times the amount involved in the contravention. Additionally, the property transaction may be voided, funds may be frozen, and the NRI may face restrictions on future remittances. Always route payments through NRE/NRO accounts and retain banking proof of every transaction.
How long does NRI property registration take?
The registration process itself takes 1-2 days at the Sub-Registrar office. However, the end-to-end buying process — from property identification to mutation completion — typically takes 4-8 weeks. Title verification, document preparation, stamp duty payment, and mutation filing each add time. Remote purchases via POA may take longer due to document attestation requirements.
Conclusion
NRI property investment in India is growing faster than ever — record remittances, strong price appreciation, and emotional ties to homeland property make it attractive. But the risks are equally real. From FEMA non-compliance penalties to Power of Attorney fraud to undisclosed title defects, the cost of skipping due diligence far exceeds the cost of doing it right.
The foundation of any safe property transaction is title verification. Before signing an Agreement to Sell, before paying an advance, before delegating authority through a POA — verify the property title. Check the ownership chain, search for court cases, confirm encumbrance status, and validate RERA compliance.
Get a comprehensive AI-powered property verification report covering 29 sections of legal analysis — from ownership chain to court cases to risk assessment. Verify your property from anywhere in the world, in 30 minutes, for Rs.749.