In an important decision, the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) Ahmedabad has given relief to Non-Resident Indians (NRIs).
The tribunal ruled that salary earned abroad will not be taxed in India, even if the money is later transferred to an Indian bank account.
This decision clears a major doubt for many NRIs working overseas.
What Was the Issue?
The case involved an NRI working in Seychelles for a foreign company.
Here’s what happened:
The person earned salary abroad
The money was first received in a foreign bank account
Later, it was transferred to an NRE account in India
The tax department argued that since the money came into India, it should be taxed.
NRI’s Argument Explained
The NRI challenged this claim and said:
The salary was earned outside India
It was also received outside India first
Transferring money to India later is just for convenience
According to him, this should not make the income taxable in India.
ITAT’s Final Verdict
The ITAT clearly ruled in favour of the NRI.
It said:
Salary is taxed based on where it is earned and first received
If both happen outside India, it is not taxable in India
The tribunal also clarified an important point:
Just transferring money to an Indian account does not mean the income was earned or received in India.
Key Insight: Income vs Money Transfer
The ITAT made a simple but important distinction:
Salary income → earned and received abroad
Money transfer to India → just movement of funds
So, even if the amount reaches India, it does not change the tax treatment.
What Experts Say
Tax experts have supported this decision.
According to Sanjay Kumar, the key factor is where the income is first received, not where it is finally deposited.
This reinforces an existing principle in tax law.
What This Means for NRIs
This ruling is a big relief for NRIs.
No tax in India on foreign salary
Freedom to transfer money to NRE accounts without worry
Clear guidance on how tax rules apply
Final Takeaway
If you are an NRI working abroad, your salary will not be taxed in India just because you bring it into the country.
The place where you earn and first receive your income matters the most—not where you transfer it later.




