Schedule FA is the disclosure section in the Indian Income Tax Return where a Resident-and-Ordinarily-Resident (ROR) taxpayer must report all foreign assets and accounts held during the previous year, regardless of whether any income was earned from them. The requirement was introduced under the Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) Act, 2015.
Schedule FA is filed by RORs only; NRI and RNOR taxpayers are exempt. Penalty for non-disclosure is Rs 10 lakh per year of default plus 30% tax on the underlying income, plus prosecution exposure under the Black Money Act.
What must be reported: Foreign bank accounts (any balance, even Rs 0), foreign immovable property, foreign equity / debt holdings, foreign mutual funds and ETFs, foreign trusts, foreign cash-value insurance, signing authority in foreign accounts. Both peak and closing balances, opening date, and source jurisdiction are required.
Schedule FA's depth catches many returning NRIs and Indian residents with US RSUs, ESPP, or broker accounts. Even forgetting to declare a closed account from earlier years can trigger inquiry.
Example 1: An ROR holds a 401(k) at Fidelity (peak balance USD 100,000), a Chase bank account (peak USD 5,000), and a Vanguard brokerage with 50 shares of AAPL (peak USD 8,000). All three accounts must be disclosed in Schedule FA each year until closed.
Example 2: An ROR forgot to declare a UK bank account from years ago when they were on a UK assignment, even though balance is Rs 5,000. Despite the small amount, the omission triggers Schedule FA non-compliance and Rs 10 lakh penalty per year of default. The penalty is independent of underlying income tax.
Common errors: US RSUs vest reporting; missing FCNR / NRE that became resident after re-designation; foreign-employer pension plans.
Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process; we do not provide personalized tax-disclosure advice. Consult a cross-border CA.