MU SG CH KY IN LEGAL GREY ZONE ILLEGAL GCA GUPTA CHANDAN & ASSOCIATES Professional Firm · New Delhi · Pan India Tax Havens 2026 Legal Planning vs Illegal Evasion…
The Era of Tax Haven Secrecy is Over: The OECD’s Common Reporting Standard (CRS) means India automatically receives account information from 100+ countries every year. The Multilateral Instrument (MLI) has added Principal Purpose Tests to India’s DTAAs. The Supreme Court ruled in January 2026 that GAAR overrides DTAA in indirect transfer cases. Pillar Two’s 15% global minimum tax limits the advantage of low-tax jurisdictions for large MNEs. Yet – tax havens and offshore structures are not illegal when used genuinely and disclosed properly. This guide explains exactly where the legal line is, what structures still work, and what the Indian tax authorities are targeting in 2026.
1. The Tax Spectrum: Planning → Avoidance → Evasion
Tax Planning
Using legal provisions as intended by the legislature. Claiming legitimate deductions, DTAA benefits with genuine residence, investing in lower-tax-eligible assets, structuring business for efficiency.
Tax Avoidance
Using legal structures to reduce tax in ways the law did not intend. Shell companies with no business substance, treaty shopping, round-tripping. Legal but attackable under GAAR and MLI.
Tax Evasion
Illegal concealment of taxable income or assets. Undisclosed foreign accounts, benami property, fake structures to hide income. Criminal offence under Black Money Act, PMLA, and ITA 2025.
The critical distinction — disclosure: The same offshore structure can be legal or illegal depending on one factor: disclosure. A Cayman Islands account held by an Indian resident is perfectly legal if disclosed in Schedule FA of their ITR, income reported in Schedule FSI, and taxes paid. The same account becomes a Black Money Act offence (§49/§51) if not disclosed. The global transparency architecture (CRS, FATCA, AEOI) has made non-disclosure practically impossible and detection near-certain.
2. What is a Tax Haven? Characteristics and Top Jurisdictions
A tax haven is a jurisdiction that offers low or zero taxes, limited financial transparency, and favorable regulatory environment for foreign entities. They are used for legitimate international business, asset protection, investment management, and – illegally – for concealing wealth from home country tax authorities.
Characteristics of a Tax Haven
Zero or very low corporate/income tax on foreign-sourced income
Financial secrecy laws – no automatic information sharing (historically)
Easy company formation with minimal substance requirements
Strong asset protection from foreign creditors/courts
No exchange controls on capital movements
Stable political and legal environment
Jurisdiction
Key Tax Advantage
India Relevance
Current Status
Mauritius
Historically: zero CGT on Indian securities; low WHT rates
Largest FPI route to India; DTAA revised 2016
DTAA revised: source-based CGT from 1 Apr 2017; GAAR; MLI PPT applies. Less advantageous now but DTAA still useful for genuine business.
Singapore
No CGT; India-Singapore DTAA; strong legal system
Second largest FPI route; holding company location
DTAA revised 2016: same as Mauritius. PPT under MLI. Still excellent for genuine Asian HQ structures with real substance.
Cayman Islands
Zero tax; no CRS (limited); AIF/hedge fund structures
Many Indian family offices/funds historically used Cayman; Finance Act 2026 allows MF relocation to GIFT City
Increasingly monitored; OECD greylist risk; GIFT City offers better regulated alternative for India funds
British Virgin Islands (BVI)
Zero tax; company formation ease; privacy historically
Shell company holding structures; round-tripping allegations
High GAAR risk for India-linked structures; CRS now applies to BVI; PMLA scrutiny for round-tripping
Netherlands / Luxembourg
Low effective tax on royalties/interest; participation exemption
IP holding structures; MNC treasury
MLI PPT test applies; OECD substance requirements; still used for genuine European HQ structures
CRS signatory; India-Switzerland automatic information exchange active since 2018; secrecy largely gone for Indian residents
Cyprus
Historically: India-Cyprus DTAA zero CGT on Indian shares
Eastern European holding structures for India
DTAA revised 2016; source-based CGT; blacklisted by India previously; limited utility now
Dubai (UAE)
Zero personal income tax; UAE territorial tax system
Indian diaspora; genuine relocation; family offices
Legitimate option for genuine relocation of Indian residents who become non-resident (FEMA / ITA exit provisions apply)
Ireland
12.5% corporate tax (standard); IP Box regime
Tech company holding; Pillar Two compliance
Pillar Two top-up tax applies for large MNEs; still used for genuine European operations
3. India’s DTAA Network – How to Use Treaties Legally
India has 94 active Double Taxation Avoidance Agreements (DTAAs) with countries worldwide, including all major economies and several former tax haven jurisdictions. DTAAs prevent the same income from being taxed in both India and the treaty partner country.
How DTAA Benefit Works – ITA 2025 Forms Required
A non-resident earning income in India can claim DTAA benefit (lower WHT rate or exemption) if:
They are a tax resident of a DTAA partner country
They obtain a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from their country’s tax authority → submit as Form 42(old Form 10FA) under §159(1)/(2), ITA 2025
They file a self-declaration with the Indian payer → Form 41(old Form 10F) under §159(8), ITA 2025
The Indian payer then deducts TDS at the DTAA rate (not the normal Indian rate) when paying the non-resident
Common DTAA Benefits for India-Linked Structures
Income Type
Without DTAA
With DTAA (typical)
Key Form (ITA 2025)
Dividends to NR
20% WHT
5–15% (varies by treaty)
Form 41 + Form 42
Interest to NR
20% WHT
10–15% (varies)
Form 41 + Form 42
Royalty/Tech fees to NR
20% WHT
10–15% (varies)
Form 41 + Form 42
Capital gains on shares (from Apr 2017)
10–12.5% LTCG
Source-based taxation – India taxes; most post-2016 DTAAs no longer exempt CGT for Indian shares
DTAA rarely helps for CGT now
Business profits (PE rule)
If PE exists in India – full Indian corporate tax
No PE → home country tax only; PE → India taxes only India-attributable profits
Structure agreements carefully
TRC is necessary but not sufficient: A Tax Residency Certificate (Form 42 / old Form 10FA) establishes that the claimant is a resident of the treaty country. But post-MLI, merely being resident is not enough – the PPT (Principal Purpose Test) under MLI can deny DTAA benefit if one of the principal purposes of the arrangement is to obtain the DTAA benefit. A genuine business presence in the treaty country (offices, employees, decision-making) significantly strengthens the position against PPT challenge.
4. GAAR – India’s Weapon Against Abusive Tax Avoidance
General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR) – §§178–184, ITA 2025(= Chapter X-A / §§95–102, ITA 1961):
GAAR applies from AY 2018-19 onwards. If an arrangement is declared an “impermissible avoidance arrangement,” the tax benefits from that arrangement can be denied, transactions re-characterised, and parties treated as if the arrangement did not exist.
When is an Arrangement “Impermissible”?
An arrangement is impermissible if it meets ALL of the following:
Main purpose or one of the main purposes is to obtain a tax benefit (not just coincidental)
AND one of the following characteristics is present:
Not at arm’s length – not as between persons dealing in good faith
Results in misuse or abuse of tax law provisions
Lacks commercial substance or reality
Was not entered into for bona fide business purposes
Supreme Court – January 2026: GAAR Trumps DTAA in Indirect Transfers:
The Supreme Court’s January 15, 2026 ruling (in the IRA / AAR case) confirmed that GAAR can override DTAA protection for arrangements that are structured primarily for tax avoidance. The Court upheld that the AAR (Authority for Advance Rulings – now Board for Advance Rulings) is empowered to reject applications where initial examination reveals prima facie tax avoidance, without entering into detailed adjudication. This significantly strengthens India’s anti-avoidance posture — a structure that technically qualifies for DTAA benefit can be denied that benefit under GAAR if it lacks business substance.
GAAR Safe Harbours – What is NOT Impermissible
Arrangement where tax benefit is not the “main purpose” (i.e., there are genuine commercial reasons)
Arrangement for obtaining benefit under a DTAA – if specifically permitted under DTAA (MLI grandfathering)
Arrangement without artificial or fictitious transactions
Business arrangements with genuine economic substance
Transactions below the GAAR monetary threshold (₹3 crore tax benefit)
How to document genuine business substance (GAAR defence): (1) Local employees in the treaty/haven jurisdiction performing real functions; (2) Local board meetings with independent decision-making; (3) Physical office space (not just registered address); (4) Contracts signed locally; (5) Cash flows reflecting actual business; (6) IP development genuinely happening in the offshore entity; (7) Transfer pricing documentation at arm’s length. The more real the business, the stronger the GAAR defence.
5. MLI/BEPS – How India is Closing DTAA Loopholes
India signed the OECD Multilateral Instrument (MLI) on BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting). The MLI entered into force for India on 1 October 2019 and simultaneously modifies multiple bilateral DTAAs without requiring renegotiation of each separately.
Key MLI Changes to India’s DTAAs
MLI Measure
What it Does
Impact on Tax Havens
PPT (Principal Purpose Test)
DTAA benefit denied if one of the principal purposes of an arrangement/transaction is to obtain the benefit
Shell company in Mauritius receiving dividends from India — PPT can deny 5% DTAA rate if no genuine business in Mauritius
LOB (Limitation on Benefits)
Restrict DTAA benefits to entities that are genuinely resident and connected with the treaty country
Pure holding companies with no local nexus may fail LOB test
Hybrid Mismatch Rules
Prevent deduction/no-inclusion outcomes (instrument treated as debt in one country, equity in another)
Prevents large MNEs from claiming no India PE when clearly operating here
Dispute Resolution
Mandatory Binding Arbitration (for certain DTAAs)
Faster resolution of double-taxation disputes for genuine MNEs
Not all India’s DTAAs are covered by MLI to the same extent: India listed its covered agreements under the MLI – approximately 25 of its 94 DTAAs. The DTAAs with most major partners (US, UK, Germany, France, Japan, Singapore, Mauritius) are covered by the MLI PPT provisions. India has not opted into the arbitration provision. Always verify whether the specific DTAA you are relying on is covered by the MLI and what specific articles India has adopted.
6. Mauritius, Singapore & Cyprus DTAA – What Changed in 2016
The 2016 renegotiation of India’s DTAAs with Mauritius, Singapore, and Cyprus was the single most significant event in India’s international tax history – closing decades of capital gains exemption abuse.
Treaty
Pre-2016 (Old Position)
Post-2016 (New Position)
Grandfathering
India-Mauritius DTAA
Capital gains on sale of Indian shares by Mauritius resident: TAXABLE ONLY IN MAURITIUS (which had zero CGT). Result: zero tax on Indian share gains through Mauritius structure.
Source-based taxation: India taxes capital gains on Indian shares. Transition: 50% concession April 2016–March 2017; full Indian taxation from 1 April 2017.
Investments made before 1 April 2017: grandfathered – old treaty treatment applies at time of sale
India-Singapore DTAA
Same as Mauritius (dependent on Mauritius DTAA treatment)
Source-based CGT from 1 April 2017; same transition as Mauritius
Investments before 1 April 2017: grandfathered
India-Cyprus DTAA
CGT on Indian shares: taxable only in Cyprus (historically)
Source-based CGT; Cyprus also had notification as “notified jurisdictional area” (blacklist) for a period – resolved with DTAA revision
Pre-April 2017 investments: grandfathered
What Mauritius and Singapore DTAAs still offer (post-2016): While the capital gains exemption for Indian shares is gone, these DTAAs still provide: (a) lower WHT rates on dividends (5–15% vs standard 20%), (b) reduced WHT on interest and royalties, (c) lower rates on certain business income, (d) PE protections for genuine operations. Singapore remains excellent for genuine Asian HQ structures. Mauritius remains useful for genuine African investment access and as a global fund jurisdiction.
7. CRS/AEOI – Your Foreign Accounts Are No Longer Secret
Common Reporting Standard (CRS) – Automatic Exchange of Financial Information:
India joined the OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS) in 2016. Under CRS, financial institutions in 100+ countries automatically report account details of Indian tax residents to Indian tax authorities every year – including: account balances, interest income, dividends, proceeds from asset sales, and account holder information.
India began receiving CRS data in 2017. Today, if an Indian resident has a bank account in Switzerland, Singapore, Mauritius, UAE, UK, or any of 100+ participating countries – the account details are automatically shared with India’s income tax department. Hiding foreign accounts from Indian authorities is practically impossible in 2026.
Reporting Framework
What is Reported to India
Countries Covered
CRS (Common Reporting Standard)
Financial account balances; interest/dividends/other income; proceeds from sale of financial assets; account holder name, address, TIN/PAN
100+ countries including UK, Switzerland, Singapore, Mauritius, Netherlands, Luxembourg, Cayman Islands, BVI, Bermuda, UAE, Jersey, Guernsey, Isle of Man
FATCA (US-India Agreement)
Accounts of Indian residents in US financial institutions; US accounts of Indian entities
USA (bilateral FATCA agreement)
Ring-fenced data sharing
India also exchanges Indian residents’ data with foreign authorities – mutual exchange
All CRS partner countries
What to do if you have undisclosed foreign accounts: The time to voluntarily disclose foreign accounts was during the one-time compliance windows (2015-16). No new amnesty window is open as of May 2026. If you have undisclosed foreign accounts – disclose immediately in Schedule FA of your current year ITR, file revised ITRs for accessible past years, and consult a CA immediately. Voluntary disclosure before detection by the IT department significantly reduces prosecution risk under the Black Money Act. Waiting for detection is the worst strategy – CRS data is flowing and IT department scrutiny is ongoing.
8. Pillar Two – The 15% Global Minimum Tax for Large MNEs
OECD/G20 Pillar Two – 15% Global Minimum Effective Tax Rate:
Pillar Two establishes a global minimum effective tax rate of 15% for Multinational Enterprises (MNEs) with consolidated annual revenue exceeding EUR 750 million (approximately ₹6,750 crore). It aims to prevent large corporations from shifting profits to low-tax or zero-tax jurisdictions. India is an active participant and implementing QDMTT.
Pillar Two Rule
How it Works
India Impact
Income Inclusion Rule (IIR)
Indian parent company pays top-up tax in India if its foreign subsidiary is taxed below 15% effective rate in the foreign jurisdiction
If an Indian MNE has a Cayman subsidiary taxed at 0% – Indian parent must pay a top-up to bring the overall rate to 15%
Undertaxed Profits Rule (UTPR)
Backup rule – if IIR is not collected by the parent country, other group companies in other countries can collect it
Ensures profits in tax havens are caught even if Indian parent doesn’t implement IIR
QDMTT (Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax)
India collects a domestic minimum tax on Indian operations of qualifying MNEs – ensuring India (not another country) gets the top-up tax
India implementing QDMTT – large foreign MNEs in India will pay at least 15% effective rate in India
Pillar Two threshold – most Indian businesses unaffected: Pillar Two applies only to MNEs with global revenues above EUR 750 million. Small and medium Indian businesses, family offices, HNIs, and even many large listed Indian companies are below this threshold. Pillar Two primarily impacts large Indian conglomerates with overseas subsidiaries and large foreign MNEs operating in India. For such entities, tax haven structures become far less effective from an overall group perspective – the savings in the haven are offset by top-up taxes paid elsewhere.
9. Black Money Act – The Price of Illegal Offshore Hiding
Violation
Provision
Consequence
Not disclosing foreign assets in Schedule FA of ITR
BMA §43 + §49
₹10L penalty per year + 6 months to 7 years RI
Wilful concealment / false information about foreign income/assets
BMA §51
3 to 10 years RI + fine – Rigorous Imprisonment; NOT covered by Finance Act 2026 decriminalisation
Tax on undisclosed foreign income/assets
BMA §41
30% flat tax on total value
Penalty on undisclosed foreign income/assets
BMA §42
300% of tax (= 90% of total value)
PMLA connection
PMLA §3/§4
ED attachment of all assets; RI 3-7 years under PMLA additional to BMA (if scheduled offence involved)
CRS + Black Money Act = Zero Safe Haven: Foreign accounts are auto-reported to India via CRS. India’s IT department runs CRS data against Schedule FA disclosures in ITRs. Mismatches trigger scrutiny notices. Black Money Act consequences are catastrophic (90% penalty + RI). The combination of automatic information exchange and severe penalties has effectively ended offshore secrecy for Indian residents. There is no jurisdiction left that provides genuine tax secrecy from India.
10. What is Still Legal – Legitimate Offshore Structures for Indians
Structure / Approach
Why It’s Legal
Requirements
NRI investment in India via DTAA-protected structure
Non-residents legitimately use their country of residence’s DTAA with India for reduced WHT on Indian income
Genuine non-residence; TRC (Form 42/old Form 10FA); Form 41 self-declaration; DTAA benefit claimed only for income taxable under DTAA
LRS remittances to foreign bank accounts / investments
Indian residents can remit up to $250,000/year under LRS for any capital account purpose
Disclose in Schedule FA of ITR; declare income from overseas investments in Schedule FSI; pay applicable Indian tax; FEMA compliance
Genuine relocation to no-tax/low-tax country (UAE, Singapore)
If Indian resident becomes genuinely non-resident (NRI) for tax and FEMA purposes – new country’s tax laws apply for new income earned after becoming NRI
Stay outside India 182+ days per year; notify Indian bank accounts; FEMA resident→NRI conversion; file last India ITR; ongoing disclosure of India-sourced income in India ITR; pay Indian tax on India-sourced income
Foreign holding company for genuine international business
MNC structure with real substance, employees, and decision-making outside India is legitimate
Substance requirements (employees, offices, local board decisions); arm’s length transfer pricing; country-by-country reporting if large MNE; GAAR documentation; MLI PPT test – genuine business purpose beyond India tax
GIFT City IFSC investments (NRIs)
GIFT City is “foreign territory” for FEMA; NRIs exempt from Indian CGT under Schedule VI Entry 11, ITA 2025 (= §10(4D), ITA 1961) – NR income from IFSC stock exchange transfers exempt
IFSCA-licensed entity; foreign currency account; invest through IFSC fund manager; Form 41/42 for DTAA benefit if applicable
DTAA benefit on foreign dividend, interest, royalty
Treaty-resident foreign company receiving income from India can claim DTAA withholding tax relief
Form 42 (TRC) + Form 41 (self-declaration); genuine residence in DTAA country; MLI PPT compliance; substance in home country
Transfer pricing at arm’s length for related party transactions
Cross-border related party transactions at arm’s length with documentation are legal and expected
Form 48 ITA 2025 (=Form 3CEB) – CA TP report; APA via Forms 50/51/52; contemporaneous documentation under TP rules
11. What is Illegal – Common Tax Haven Abuses India Targets
Illegal Structure / Abuse
Why it’s Illegal
Consequence
Round-tripping: Send black money to Mauritius/BVI, bring back as “FDI”
Source of funds is undisclosed Indian income → Black money laundering; fictitious foreign investment → PMLA + FEMA violation + Black Money Act
PMLA prosecution + BMA §51 (3-10yr RI) + FEMA adjudication + income tax on original concealed income + 200% penalty
Undisclosed foreign bank account (not in Schedule FA)
Violation of Black Money Act §43/§49/§51
BMA: 30% tax + 300% penalty + 7yr RI (§49) or 10yr RI (§51)
Shell company in BVI/Cayman with no substance claiming DTAA benefits
GAAR can deny DTAA benefit; MLI PPT applicable; no commercial substance = impermissible avoidance arrangement
Transfer pricing manipulation – payments to related offshore entities above arm’s length
Profit shifting to low-tax jurisdiction; §271AA penalty; TP adjustment
TP adjustment + 2% penalty on international transaction value + interest + potential prosecution for mis-statement
Hawala – routing money through informal channels to/from tax havens
FEMA violation; PMLA scheduled offence
FEMA compounding/penalty + PMLA prosecution + attachment of assets
Fake foreign income – creating fictitious overseas invoices to justify inward remittances
BNS forgery + cheating = PMLA scheduled offence; fictitious income = income tax fraud
PMLA prosecution + income tax prosecution + FEMA penalty
Benami foreign assets – holding foreign assets in relative/nominee names to hide Indian ownership
Black Money Act §49/§51; PBPT Act for Indian assets; PMLA if underlying offence involved
BMA: 300% penalty + RI; PMLA attachment; no grandfather protection
12. Practical Case Studies
Case 1: Mauritius FPI Structure – What Works and What Doesn’t in 2026
A Singapore-based fund manager wants to invest in Indian listed shares via a Mauritius entity.
Aspect
Post-2016 Position
Capital gains on sale of Indian shares
Taxable in India – source-based. Mauritius exemption gone post-April 2017. Pay Indian LTCG at 12.5% (§198 ITA 2025) or STCG at 15% (§196).
Dividend from Indian companies
India-Mauritius DTAA: 5% WHT (vs 20% standard). Still beneficial. Requires Form 42 (TRC) + Form 41 (self-declaration).
Interest on bonds
India-Mauritius DTAA: lower WHT. Still useful for bond investments.
MLI PPT challenge
If Mauritius entity has real fund management operations (not just a mailbox), PPT test likely passed.
Better alternative for capital gains?
GIFT City IFSC: NR investors exempt from Indian CGT on specified IFSC securities – Schedule VI Entry 11, ITA 2025 (= §10(4D), ITA 1961). No DTAA needed; no PPT risk; no Form 42 required.
Case 2: NRI Genuine Relocation to Dubai – Legal Tax Planning
Mr. Sharma (Indian entrepreneur) genuinely relocates to Dubai. Annual income: ₹5 crore from global digital business; ₹1 crore dividends from Indian listed companies; ₹50 lakh rental income from Delhi flat.
FEMA status: After 182+ days outside India → becomes NRI. Notify banks; convert SB account to NRO; convert investments per FEMA.
Global digital business income (post-Dubai relocation): If genuinely managed from Dubai – taxable in UAE (currently zero personal income tax). Not taxable in India as he is NRI earning from non-India sources. Legal if: genuine presence in UAE; no PE in India from the Indian-origin business.
Indian dividends (₹1 crore): Taxable in India at 20% (§207 ITA 2025 / §115A ITA 1961) as NR – no India-UAE DTAA benefit for dividends under current DTAA terms. Pay ₹20 lakh WHT.
Rental income (₹50 lakh Delhi flat): India-sourced income – taxable in India at NRI rates regardless of Dubai residence.
Disclosure: File ITR in India for India-sourced income (dividends + rent). Disclose Dubai bank accounts in Schedule FA. Legal and transparent. No Black Money Act issue.
India-exit considerations: Exit tax provisions apply to certain assets when Indian resident becomes non-resident – consult GCA before planning departure.
Case 3: BVI Shell Company – GAAR Attack
Promoters of an Indian company set up a BVI holding company to receive foreign investment and channel it back to India as “FDI” – avoiding FEMA restrictions and tax on actual income. No employees, no operations in BVI; only a registered agent address.
GAAR analysis: Main purpose = tax/FEMA avoidance. No commercial substance. No employees or operations. India-specific income being routed through BVI mailbox. → Impermissible avoidance arrangement.
GAAR consequences: Tax authorities can: (a) deny treaty benefits claimed, (b) re-characterise the arrangement as if BVI company does not exist, (c) treat the income as directly received by Indian promoter → full Indian income tax.
PMLA risk: If original funds flowing into BVI were from undisclosed Indian income → round-tripping → PMLA predicate offence (cheating + forgery in documentation) → ED involvement.
CRS consequence: BVI financial accounts auto-reported to India. Account holder identity revealed.
The fix: Genuine offshore business requires real substance – local employees, genuine business decisions, real economic activity. A BVI company that merely holds Indian assets with no real business function provides no legitimate tax benefit and is a significant legal risk in 2026.
13. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. Is using a tax haven illegal in India?
No – using a tax haven is NOT automatically illegal. It is legal to: invest offshore under LRS ($250,000/year), hold foreign accounts if disclosed in Schedule FA of ITR, set up genuine businesses in lower-tax jurisdictions with real operations, claim DTAA benefits with proper TRC (Form 42 / old Form 10FA) and self-declaration (Form 41 / old Form 10F). It becomes illegal when: income from offshore accounts is not disclosed in Indian ITR (Black Money Act §49/§51), the offshore structure has no genuine business and is used purely to avoid Indian tax (GAAR denial + potential prosecution), funds are routed through offshore structures to evade FEMA/tax in India without genuine foreign business (PMLA risk). Disclosure and substance are the two pillars of legality.
Q2. Does India-Mauritius DTAA still provide capital gains exemption on Indian shares?
No – not for investments made after 31 March 2017. The India-Mauritius DTAA was revised in 2016. From 1 April 2017 onwards, capital gains on sale of Indian shares through Mauritius are taxable in India (source-based taxation) at the applicable rates (12.5% LTCG under §198 ITA 2025 / §112A ITA 1961; 15% STCG under §196 ITA 2025 / §111A). The transition period (April 2016–March 2017) provided a 50% concession. Investments made before 1 April 2017 were grandfathered under the old treaty. The same change applies to India-Singapore and India-Cyprus DTAAs. The Mauritius DTAA still provides benefits on dividends (5% WHT), interest, and royalties – but the capital gains exemption that drove the massive Mauritius FPI inflow is gone.
Q3. I am an NRI with foreign accounts. What do I need to disclose in my ITR?
Non-resident Indians (NRIs) are taxed on India-sourced income only. However, disclosure requirements depend on your FEMA status: (a) If you are an NRI (non-resident under FEMA and IT Act) – you are taxed only on India-sourced income; Schedule FA disclosure of foreign assets is required only for assets held on the last day of the accounting year if you were a resident at any point during the year. (b) If you are RNOR (Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident) – you are taxed on India-sourced income + income received in India; limited Schedule FA disclosure applies. (c) If you are a Resident (ROR) – you are taxed on global income; all foreign accounts, investments, and properties MUST be declared in Schedule FA regardless of whether income was earned. Most diaspora Indians in the UAE, US, UK etc. who have been NRI for several years are either NRI or RNOR – consult a CA to confirm your exact residential status as it changes with number of days in India and affects your disclosure obligations significantly.
Q4. What is GAAR and how does it differ from normal tax law?
Normal tax law (Specific Anti-Avoidance Rules or SAARs) deals with specific identified transactions – e.g., the 2016 Mauritius DTAA change to deny CGT exemption is a SAAR. GAAR (§§178–184, ITA 2025= Chapter X-A / §§95–102, ITA 1961) is a broad catch-all: it allows the Income Tax Department to deny the tax benefit of any arrangement if it determines the main purpose is to obtain a tax benefit and the arrangement lacks commercial substance. GAAR applies from AY 2018-19. The Supreme Court confirmed in January 2026 that GAAR can override DTAA protection – meaning even if you technically qualify for a treaty benefit, GAAR can deny it if the arrangement’s main purpose is to get that benefit without genuine business substance. The ₹3 crore tax benefit threshold means GAAR is applied to significant arrangements, not everyday transactions. Any offshore structure involving India and claiming treaty benefits should be reviewed for GAAR risk.
Q5. Does Pillar Two affect my Indian business?
Only if your group’s consolidated global revenue exceeds EUR 750 million (approximately ₹6,750 crore). For the vast majority of Indian businesses – even large ones by Indian standards – Pillar Two does not directly apply. If you ARE above this threshold: (a) Your offshore subsidiaries in low-tax jurisdictions (below 15% ETR) may now be subject to top-up taxes under the IIR or UTPR; (b) India’s Qualified Domestic Minimum Top-up Tax (QDMTT) means your India operations will be subject to at least 15% effective tax rate; (c) Tax haven structures that previously saved significant tax for your group become far less effective – the savings in the haven are offset by top-up taxes elsewhere. For large Indian MNCs with Cayman, BVI, or zero-tax jurisdiction subsidiaries: get a Pillar Two effective tax rate analysis done immediately and reassess the structure with your international tax advisor.
GCA provides international tax advisory for Indian businesses and NRIs – DTAA benefit structuring (Form 41/42 under Income-tax Rules 2026), GAAR risk assessment for offshore structures, Pillar Two compliance readiness, transfer pricing documentation (Form 48 / Form 3CEB), Schedule FA/FSI ITR compliance for foreign assets, and NRI residential status planning. Pan-India, 100% digital, clients across India, UAE, USA, UK, Singapore, Australia.
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only. Not legal/tax advice. Based on Income Tax Act 2025, ITA 1961, Income-tax Rules 2026, Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) and Imposition of Tax Act 2015, PMLA 2002, FEMA 1999, OECD MLI (in force for India from 1 October 2019), Pillar Two GloBE Rules as at May 2026. GAAR: Chapter X-A, ITA 1961 (applicable from AY 2018-19). SC January 2026 ruling (GAAR trumps DTAA in indirect transfers). Mauritius/Singapore/Cyprus DTAA revisions: effective 1 April 2017. CRS/AEOI: India exchanges information with 100+ countries. Pillar Two: OECD/G20 Inclusive Framework; EUR 750M threshold. Form 41 (= old Form 10F; §159(8) ITA 2025), Form 42 (= old Form 10FA; §159(1)/(2) ITA 2025) from CBDT Form Mapping Guide (March 2026). Individual circumstances vary significantly – consult a qualified international tax professional for specific structure advice.
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