A Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) is a document issued by the tax authority of the country in which a person is resident, certifying that they are tax resident there for a given period. The TRC is the entry-key to claiming benefits under a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA).
For an NRI investing in India, the TRC matters because it lets them claim the lower DTAA rate (rather than the higher domestic Indian withholding rate) on Indian-source income — typically dividends, interest, and capital gains. Without a TRC, the Indian payer must apply the Indian Act rate; with a TRC plus Form 10F, the DTAA rate applies.
The TRC must contain specific data points laid out in CBDT rules: name, residential status, nationality, tax identification number, period of residency, address. Most countries have a one-page standard format; some require additional declarations.
Example 1: An NRI in the UAE receives Rs 5 lakh of dividend from an Indian-listed company in FY 2026-27. Under the Indian Act, the withholding rate is 20% + surcharge + cess. Under the India-UAE DTAA, the rate is 10%. By providing a UAE TRC + Form 10F to the payer, the NRI gets 10% withholding instead of ~22%.
Example 2: A US-resident NRI sells Indian listed equity in FY 2026-27 and triggers LTCG. The India-US DTAA preserves India's right to tax the capital gain, so the TRC does not reduce LTCG tax in this case — but it is still needed for dividend withholding.
Validity: TRC is issued for a specific tax year. Refresh it annually.
Disclaimer: Educational content from MintByte (ARN-314872, MFD). Examples are illustrative. SEBI Investment Adviser registration is in process; we do not provide personalized tax-treaty advice. Consult a cross-border CA for your situation.