I have recently moved from India to US for work. I still have money invested in mutual funds in India ~23 lakhs, PPF and FD 5 lakhs each. Would these incur additional taxes ? What should be my smart move to save money if withdrawal is needed.
Ans: You’ve done well by building investments in mutual funds, PPF, and FDs.
Even after moving abroad, maintaining your financial base in India shows maturity.
Now, it’s important to adjust for taxation, rules, and smart planning.
Let’s understand the full picture from a 360-degree perspective.
» Understanding Your Resident Status
– You’ve moved to the US for work.
– Your residential status in India changes to NRI (Non-Resident Indian).
– This change affects taxation on Indian investments.
– Your income earned in India is still taxable in India.
– You also need to report these in the US, as per US tax laws.
– Double taxation risk exists, but treaties reduce the burden.
» Tax Implications on Mutual Funds (India Side)
– You hold Rs 23 lakhs in Indian mutual funds.
– If they are equity mutual funds, taxation applies only on sale.
– LTCG above Rs 1.25 lakh is taxed at 12.5%.
– STCG is taxed at 20%.
– If they are debt funds, gains are taxed as per slab.
– No extra NRI surcharge in India for mutual funds.
– TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) applies for NRIs on redemption.
– Equity fund TDS is 10% on LTCG and 15% on STCG.
– Debt fund TDS is 30% flat on gains.
– This TDS is deducted before payout.
– TDS is not the final tax. You still must file return in India.
– You can claim refund if tax paid is more.
» Tax Implications in the US on Indian Mutual Funds
– US treats Indian mutual funds as PFICs (Passive Foreign Investment Companies).
– PFIC rules are complex and strict.
– Reporting is required under Form 8621.
– PFIC gains are taxed unfavourably with interest penalty.
– Gains can be treated as ordinary income, not capital gains.
– Tracking and filing PFIC taxes need a specialist CPA in the US.
– So, redemption of Indian mutual funds may trigger US tax complications.
– It may result in more tax in the US than in India.
» What Should You Do with Indian Mutual Funds?
– Don’t redeem without checking US tax consequences.
– If you need money, redeem only part—not full.
– Check if you can meet the need from FD or PPF.
– Redeem mutual funds only when other sources are not enough.
– Track cost of purchase and holding period.
– Work with a Certified Financial Planner and a US-based tax advisor.
– They can help reduce PFIC tax impact.
» Why Regular Funds with MFD + CFP is Better
– If you continue investing in India, prefer regular plans.
– Avoid direct funds as they give no guidance.
– As an NRI, your risk profile and taxation are complex.
– A Certified Financial Planner can adjust fund selection accordingly.
– They guide you on rebalancing and timing redemptions.
– Direct funds don’t offer any emotional or strategic help.
– Regular plans via MFD + CFP are safer and more efficient.
– You pay for service, but avoid bigger financial mistakes.
» Why You Should Avoid Index Funds as NRI
– Index funds are passive. They follow the market blindly.
– In volatile phases, they don’t protect downside.
– They also invest in poor-performing companies just due to weight.
– As an NRI, you need active risk management.
– Actively managed funds adjust allocation based on economic trends.
– Fund managers exit weak sectors and protect capital.
– Index funds lack this agility.
– Avoid them unless you are deeply involved in market tracking.
– For peace and performance, active funds are better.
» Tax Impact on PPF Account
– You can’t extend PPF account after NRI status.
– But existing PPF can continue till maturity.
– Interest is tax-free in India.
– But the US may tax PPF interest as income.
– That depends on your US tax filing and your CPA’s method.
– Don’t withdraw PPF unless urgent.
– Let it mature. Don’t invest fresh if not allowed.
» Tax Impact on Fixed Deposits
– Interest from FD is taxable in India for NRIs.
– TDS is 30% on interest earned.
– If interest exceeds Rs 5,000 annually, TDS applies.
– Declare FD interest in India and in the US.
– You may have to pay tax in US on global income.
– But India-US DTAA may give tax relief.
– Choose NRO FD if you retain it.
– You cannot hold resident FD once NRI.
– Inform the bank and convert account to NRO/NRE as needed.
» Currency Conversion and Repatriation Rules
– If you redeem mutual funds or FDs, check RBI repatriation limits.
– You can repatriate up to USD 1 million per financial year.
– Use form 15CA and 15CB (from a CA) for large transfers.
– Bank may also need FEMA compliance documents.
– Keep all KYC updated to avoid transaction delays.
» What to Do Before Redeeming Any Investment
– Confirm your Indian residential status change with all AMCs and banks.
– Update KYC to NRI status.
– Convert savings accounts to NRO/NRE if not yet done.
– Speak with your Certified Financial Planner in India.
– Speak with a CPA in the US.
– Create a plan for phased withdrawal if needed.
– Avoid full redemption unless funds are urgently needed.
» Smart Moves if Withdrawal is Needed
Use FD money first – It’s simple and avoids PFIC issues.
Avoid redeeming equity mutual funds unless really needed.
If you must redeem, do it in small parts.
Redeem funds with long holding first to reduce tax.
Choose funds with lower gains to minimise tax impact.
Avoid liquidating everything at once.
Use SIP stoppage instead of full exit if possible.
Keep all documents and transaction history ready.
Track TDS and file returns in India to claim refund if applicable.
» Emergency Access Planning
– Keep Rs 1–2 lakh in NRE savings account.
– Keep some liquid mutual fund units if PFIC tax is manageable.
– Avoid using PPF unless fully matured.
– If emergency is short-term, use US income or ask for support from US-side accounts.
– Avoid moving money unless critical need.
– Each repatriation from India to US carries cost and paperwork.
– Plan ahead for any such movement.
» Reassess Financial Goals Post-Move
– Your risk profile and priorities have now changed.
– India investments were made for Indian goals.
– Now, decide if you’ll return to India or settle in US.
– If you return, retaining mutual funds is fine.
– If staying in US, slowly move capital to US-compliant instruments.
– Avoid keeping too much in India that’s hard to monitor.
– A Certified Financial Planner can help restructure for new goals.
» Insurance and Estate Planning Now Becomes Important
– Ensure nominees on all Indian accounts are updated.
– Create a Will for Indian assets.
– Also consult a US lawyer for estate planning there.
– Avoid joint accounts if legal succession is unclear.
– Keep account access documents safe and accessible to spouse or family.
– Don’t leave assets scattered without clarity.
– Regularly update this list every year.
» Common Mistakes to Avoid
– Ignoring PFIC rules and ending up with huge US tax bills.
– Using direct mutual funds without tax strategy.
– Keeping resident accounts after becoming NRI.
– Not filing Indian tax return due to “NRI” status.
– Thinking Indian investments are tax-free in the US.
– Making fresh PPF contributions after becoming NRI.
– Redeeming all funds in panic without strategy.
» Final Insights
– You’ve done well by building multiple assets in India.
– Now, being in the US, the rules are different.
– Tax in India is still clear and manageable with proper planning.
– But US tax laws are complex and may penalise without correct reporting.
– Mutual fund redemptions, if needed, must be phased.
– PPF and FD should be left to mature unless urgent.
– Avoid direct and index funds now. Go only with active funds through a Certified Financial Planner.
– Don’t break investments without advice from both Indian CFP and US CPA.
– Review all assets, nominees, and goal alignment yearly.
– Keep your investment plan fluid and updated for your new life abroad.
Best Regards,
K. Ramalingam, MBA, CFP,
Chief Financial Planner,
www.holisticinvestment.in
https://www.youtube.com/@HolisticInvestment