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§01 · INSIGHTS · GLOSSARY · 4 MIN · NOTE

FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act)

FATCA is a US law requiring foreign financial institutions to identify and report US-person accounts to the IRS. Indian mutual fund investors must submit a FATCA self-declaration at KYC.

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Contents
  1. Definition
  2. Why it matters for investors
  3. Worked example
  4. See also
  5. Primary source

FATCA (Foreign Account Tax Compliance Act) is a United States federal law enacted in 2010 (as part of the HIRE Act) that requires foreign financial institutions (FFIs) worldwide to identify financial accounts held by US persons — citizens, green-card holders, or US-resident aliens — and report account details and balances to the US Internal Revenue Service (IRS), either directly or via their home country's tax authority under a bilateral Intergovernmental Agreement (IGA).

Definition

India and the United States signed a Model 1B IGA in 2015, under which Indian Reporting Financial Institutions (RFIs) — banks, mutual fund houses, depositories (NSDL, CDSL), insurance companies, and discretionary fund managers — report FATCA-relevant account information to India's Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT), which in turn transmits it to the IRS under the automatic exchange of information framework. CBDT Rule 114F-114H (Income-tax Rules, 1962) implements this obligation domestically.

From an investor's perspective, FATCA surfaces as a self-declaration form collected at KYC or account-opening time. The declaration requires: (a) confirmation of tax residency in each jurisdiction; (b) if US Person status applies, the US Taxpayer Identification Number (TIN / SSN / EIN); and (c) the investor's country of birth (used to flag potential renounced-citizen cases). Providing a false FATCA declaration is a punishable offence under Indian law and may attract penalties under US FATCA regulations.

Why it matters for investors

For the vast majority of Indian resident investors who have no US tax nexus, FATCA compliance is a one-time administrative step at account opening — it has no ongoing financial impact. However, for NRIs who are US persons (green-card holders, US citizens, or those meeting the Substantial Presence Test), FATCA has material financial implications. Their Indian mutual fund holdings, bank balances, and brokerage accounts are reportable to the IRS. This triggers US tax reporting obligations: US persons must typically declare foreign financial assets on FinCEN Form 114 (FBAR) and IRS Form 8938. Indian mutual funds held in normal pooled structures may be classified as Passive Foreign Investment Companies (PFICs) under US tax law, resulting in punitive tax treatment unless special elections (QEF or Mark-to-Market) are made annually.

FATCA compliance status of the investor also affects which products Indian institutions can offer. Some AMCs have stopped accepting fresh investments from US-resident NRIs specifically to avoid PFIC-related regulatory complexity — an investor's tax residency directly determines their product access.

Worked example

Scenario: Priya is an Indian-origin US green-card holder living in New Jersey. She has an NRE account in India with ₹40 lakh, and holds ₹15 lakh in Indian mutual funds through CAMS.

FATCA reporting chain:

  • Step 1 — At mutual fund KYC, Priya discloses US Person status and provides her US SSN on the FATCA self-declaration.
  • Step 2 — The AMC / KRA (KYC Registration Agency) flags her account as a Reportable Account under India's FATCA IGA.
  • Step 3 — CBDT receives aggregated account data (account number, balance, income, proceeds) from the AMC by May 31 of the following year.
  • Step 4 — CBDT transmits to IRS under the India-US FATCA IGA.
  • Step 5 — Priya must independently file FBAR (FinCEN 114) if aggregate foreign account balance exceeds USD 10,000 at any point in the year, and IRS Form 8938 if thresholds under FATCA are met. PFIC annual elections may apply to the mutual fund holdings.

Note: This example is illustrative. US tax obligations are complex and jurisdiction-specific. Past performance is not indicative of future returns.

See also

Primary source

CBDT Notification — Income-tax (14th Amendment) Rules, 2015 implementing FATCA (Rules 114F-114H): incometax.gov.in — FATCA/CRS Compliance. India-US IGA: irs.gov — FATCA Agreements.

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.

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