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How NRIs Can Start Investing in India from Abroad (2026)

May 4, 2026
How NRIs Can Start Investing in India from Abroad

Table of Contents

You’ve decided that investing in India makes sense. (If you’re still weighing up the opportunity, start with “why India is worth investing in and what your options are“.

Now comes the part that stops most NRIs in their tracks: how do you actually set it all up from abroad — without flying to India, without drowning in paperwork, and without making a mistake that sets you back by weeks?
That’s what this guide covers. Not what to invest in. Not why India’s economy is growing. Just the practical setup — what’s required, what’s involved at each step, and where most people get stuck along the way.

The Setup Checklist — Four Things You Need

Before you can put a single rupee into any Indian investment, you need four things in place:

  1. An NRE or NRO bank account — your gateway for moving money into Indian investments.
  2. A PAN card — your financial identity for all transactions and tax compliance in India.
  3. Completed KYC verification — mandated by SEBI before any mutual fund or stock investment.
  4. FATCA and CRS declarations — confirming your global tax residency under international reporting standards.

That’s the full list. No hidden requirements. But each step has its own nuances, and the details change depending on which country you’re in. Let’s walk through what’s involved.

Step 1 — Open the Right Bank Account

This is your foundation, and getting it wrong here creates problems that ripple through everything else.

Under FEMA (Foreign Exchange Management Act), NRIs cannot use a regular Indian savings account for investments. If you still have an old resident account from before you moved abroad, you’re legally required to convert it. Continuing to operate it as-is is a FEMA violation — and we’ve seen NRIs run into compliance issues years later because they skipped this step.

You need either an NRE account (for money earned abroad — tax-free interest, fully repatriable) or an NRO account (for income earned in India — taxable interest, repatriation capped at USD 1 million per year). The right choice depends on where your money is coming from, what you plan to do with it, and whether you’ll need to move funds back abroad. “which account type suits your situation

The process, documentation, and timelines for opening these accounts vary significantly depending on the bank and the country you’re in. Some banks have overseas branches that simplify things. Others require couriered documents and can take weeks. Choosing the wrong bank or submitting incomplete documentation is one of the biggest time-wasters we see.

We handle NRE/NRO account setup for NRIs regularly — we know which banks work best for which countries, and we’ll make sure your documents are right before anything gets submitted. If you’d like help with this, get in touch.

Step 2 — Get Your PAN Card

Your PAN (Permanent Account Number) is your financial identity in India. Without it, you can’t invest in mutual funds, buy stocks, open fixed deposits, or file a tax return. It’s non-negotiable.
If you already have a PAN from when you lived in India, there are two things to verify: that the name matches your passport exactly (even a small mismatch causes problems later), and that your status has been updated to “Non-Resident.” Both are easy to get wrong and surprisingly common.
If you need a new PAN, the application process involves specific forms, supporting documents, and in most cases, physical paperwork that needs to be sent to India. The requirements differ for Indian citizens abroad versus OCI holders versus foreign nationals — and small errors in the application (wrong form type, incorrect assessing officer code, unsigned documents) lead to rejections and delays.

This is one of the steps our team handles end-to-end for NRIs. We manage the application, make sure every document is correct, and follow up until your PAN is issued — so you don’t need to navigate the process yourself or worry about rejections. Reach out and we’ll take care of it.

Step 3 — Complete KYC (This Is Where Most NRIs Get Stuck)

KYC (Know Your Customer) is SEBI-mandated verification that must be completed before you can invest in any Indian mutual fund or open a demat account for stocks. It involves identity verification, address proof, and tax residency declarations under FATCA and CRS.

Here’s the good news: KYC is centralised in India. Complete it once, and it’s valid across every fund house. You never need to repeat it.
Here’s the reality: the process differs meaningfully depending on where you live, and this is where most NRIs either get stuck or give up entirely.
The documentation requirements, attestation rules, and verification methods change based on your country of residence. Some NRIs can complete everything digitally. Others need embassy-attested documents physically couriered to India. US and Canada-based NRIs face an additional layer — certain fund houses won’t accept investors from these countries at all, due to complex international reporting requirements.

SEBI has also been updating KYC norms since 2024, with new validation requirements and evolving deadlines. What worked a year ago may not work now.

This is exactly the kind of complexity we simplify for NRIs every day. Your country, your documents, your specific situation — they all affect how the process works. We’ve helped NRIs across 30+ countries get KYC-compliant smoothly, and we know exactly what’s needed for each location. Rather than spending weeks on trial-and-error submissions and rejection emails, let us handle it. It’s one of the things we do best.

Step 4 — Make Your First Investment

Once your account, PAN, and KYC are sorted, the investing itself is the easy part.
For most NRIs starting out, we recommend a Systematic Investment Plan (SIP) in a diversified equity mutual fund. A SIP automates your investing — a fixed amount goes in every month — and removes the pressure of trying to time the market from a different time zone.
Why this works so well for NRIs: your money is professionally managed, diversified across dozens of companies, and you don’t need to track the Indian market daily. SIPs also benefit from rupee cost averaging — you naturally buy more units when prices are low and fewer when prices are high.

The bigger decision is which fund to start with, and that depends on your goals, your risk appetite, and your time horizon. There’s no one-size-fits-all answer. “choosing the right mutual fund” 

This is where a conversation with our team adds real value. We’ll help you choose a starting point that’s tailored to your situation — not a generic recommendation from a blog. Get in touch and we’ll walk you through it.

What About Taxes?

You don’t need to become a tax expert, but you do need to understand the basics — and more importantly, you need your investments structured correctly from day one so you’re not overpaying later. “how NRI capital gains tax works

The key things to know: any income earned in India is taxable, TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) is automatically deducted by fund houses and brokers, and India has Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements with over 90 countries to prevent you from being taxed twice on the same income.

Tax structuring is one of the areas where we add the most value. The right account type, fund selection, and holding strategy can significantly reduce your tax burden over time — and it’s much easier to get this right at the start than to fix it later.

What Trips NRIs Up Most Often

After helping hundreds of NRIs through this process, we see the same stumbling blocks:
  • Not converting old resident accounts — a FEMA compliance issue that surfaces years later and creates real headaches.
  • Document mismatches — your PAN, passport, and bank records must match exactly. A small spelling difference gets your KYC rejected and costs you weeks.
  • Going in blind on KYC — every country has different requirements. NRIs who start without knowing what their specific country needs waste time on rejected submissions.
  • Waiting for the “perfect” time to invest — markets move up and down by nature. A SIP removes this problem entirely. The best time to start was yesterday. The second best time is now.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. The entire process — bank account opening, PAN application, KYC, and starting investments — can be done remotely from any country. Our team handles the end-to-end setup for NRIs so you don’t need to navigate it alone.
Very little. Mutual fund SIPs start from as little as ₹500 per month (roughly USD 6). You don’t need a large sum — consistency matters far more than the starting amount.
You can still invest, but your options are more limited. Not all Indian fund houses accept US/Canada-based NRIs due to international reporting requirements. We know exactly which ones do and can get you set up with the right providers quickly.
If everything goes smoothly and documents are submitted correctly the first time, most NRIs are investment-ready within 3–4 weeks. With our team handling the process, it’s typically faster — because we eliminate the common errors that cause rejections and delays.
No. KYC is centralised in India. Complete it once, and your status is valid across all fund houses. You only need to do it once — and we make sure it’s done right the first time.

Let Us Handle the Setup

The process is straightforward once you know exactly what’s needed — but that’s the catch. The “exactly” part changes based on your country, your bank, your documents, and your goals.
That’s what we do. We take NRIs from “I want to invest in India” to “my first SIP is running” — handling the account setup, PAN, KYC, and compliance so you don’t have to figure it out alone.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute financial, tax, or legal advice. Tax laws and FEMA regulations are subject to change. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks — please read all scheme-related documents carefully. Consult a SEBI-registered investment advisor and a qualified tax professional before making investment decisions.

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