DTAA (Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement) is a bilateral tax treaty between India and a partner country that allocates the right to tax specific categories of cross-border income — including dividends, interest, royalties, fees for technical services, employment income, and capital gains — so that the same income is not taxed in full by both countries simultaneously.
Definition
India has signed DTAAs with over 90 countries, each negotiated individually and published by the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) on the incometax.gov.in portal. Each treaty specifies for each income category whether the source country (India, where the income arises) or the residence country (where the recipient lives) has primary taxing rights, and at what rate. Where both countries may tax, the treaty mandates a relief mechanism — either a reduced withholding rate at source, or a foreign tax credit in the country of residence, or an exemption. The treaty rate overrides the domestic Indian rate if it is more beneficial; taxpayers must affirmatively elect treaty protection by submitting a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) issued by the overseas tax authority and, since 2013, Form 10F to the Indian payer or withholding agent.
Post-BEPS (Base Erosion and Profit Shifting), India has incorporated Principal Purpose Test (PPT) and Limitation of Benefits (LoB) provisions into many treaties via the Multilateral Instrument (MLI) — meaning treaty benefits can be denied if the principal purpose of a transaction is to obtain them without genuine economic substance in the treaty-partner country.
Why it matters for investors
For NRI investors, the DTAA is often the difference between a 30% TDS rate and a single-digit treaty rate. For example, on dividends paid by Indian companies to US residents, the India-US DTAA caps withholding at 15% (Article 10) versus the standard 20% (plus surcharge + cess) domestic rate. On interest from Indian debt funds, the India-UAE DTAA limits tax to 12.5% for UAE residents. These rate differences compound materially on large cross-border portfolios.
Capital gains treatment varies significantly by treaty: the India-Mauritius DTAA historically exempted capital gains from Indian equities entirely for Mauritius residents (amended from April 2017 to phase in Indian taxation); the India-Singapore DTAA similarly had grandfathering provisions. Post-amendment, gains on Indian listed equities accruing after 1 April 2017 are taxed in India regardless of treaty. Understanding which treaty provisions have sunset or been amended is critical for NRI investors structuring cross-border equity and debt holdings.
Worked example
Scenario: Vikram, an NRI in the UAE (no personal income tax jurisdiction), earns ₹5,00,000 in dividend income from his Indian equity holdings and ₹2,00,000 in interest from Indian bonds in FY 2024-25.
Without DTAA (domestic Indian rates):
- Dividend TDS: 20% + surcharge + cess ≈ 20.8% → TDS = ₹1,04,000 on ₹5L dividends
- Interest TDS: 30% (NRI rate for non-DTAA cases) → TDS = ₹60,000 on ₹2L interest
- Total TDS: ₹1,64,000
With India-UAE DTAA (Article 10 for dividends, Article 11 for interest):
- Dividend withholding: capped at 10% under treaty → TDS = ₹50,000 on ₹5L
- Interest withholding: capped at 12.5% under treaty → TDS = ₹25,000 on ₹2L
- Total TDS: ₹75,000
- Annual saving via DTAA: ₹89,000 (by furnishing TRC + Form 10F to payer)
Note: This example uses illustrative rates consistent with the India-UAE DTAA (as amended). Exact surcharge/cess calculations vary by income level. Past performance is not indicative of future returns.
See also
- FATCA — US-specific cross-border tax reporting obligation that interacts with DTAA for US-resident NRIs
- PIS — NRI equity investment framework; capital gains from PIS trades are subject to DTAA provisions
- LRS — remittance scheme; interest on NRE accounts is exempt domestically but may be subject to source-country tax depending on treaty
- NRI Tax Guide for India
- DTAA Treaties — Country-Wise Guide for NRI Investors
Primary source
CBDT — List of DTAAs entered into by India: incometax.gov.in — DTAA Agreements. Income-tax Act, 1961, Section 90 (relief under treaty) and Section 91 (unilateral relief): incometax.gov.in — Non-Resident Taxation.
Past performance is not indicative of future returns. Mutual fund investments are subject to market risks. Read all scheme-related documents carefully. ARN-314872. Content is informational and not investment advice.