When you sell property in India, India taxes the gain. But your country of residence may also want a share. This calculator tells you exactly where you stand — and how much you actually owe in total.
Enter your numbers — we handle the cross-border tax maths
Both countries combined — what you actually pay in total
Steps to claim your foreign tax credit and avoid paying twice
Things every NRI selling property in India should know
Under virtually every DTAA treaty, when the asset is immovable property (land, flat, house) located in India, India gets to tax the gain first. Your country of residence then decides whether to tax it again — and whether to allow credit for what India already collected.
To claim DTAA benefits in India, you must provide a TRC from your country's tax authority. US residents get it from the IRS (Form 8802). UK residents from HMRC. Australian residents from ATO. Without a TRC, benefits may be denied.
India: ITR due by July 31 (or October 31 with audit). USA: Form 1040 due April 15 (can file for extension). UK: Self Assessment due January 31. Missing either deadline can result in losing FTC benefits — plan ahead.
The TDS deducted by your buyer at the time of sale is just a withholding. Your actual tax liability is calculated when you file your Indian ITR. If TDS was more than your actual tax, you get a refund. If less, you pay the balance. The foreign country's FTC calculation uses your actual final Indian tax — not the TDS amount.
Mistakes in FTC claims — wrong forms, wrong amounts, wrong currency conversion dates — can cost you more than the tax itself. NRiSimplify coordinates your India ITR, Form 15CA/15CB, and brief for your foreign country's CA.
Enquire now →Disclaimer: This calculator provides estimates based on DTAA treaty provisions, ITA 1961, and publicly available foreign tax rates as of FY 2025–26. US figures use 2024 IRS brackets; state rates are maximum marginal rates. DTAA application depends on residency status, treaty year, specific article interpretation, and individual circumstances. This is not tax advice — consult a qualified CA in India and a licensed tax advisor in your country of residence before filing.
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