Converting NRE Account After Returning to India: NRI Guide

“Mani, I just landed in India for good. What do I do with my NRE account?”

I get this question at least five times a week.

And honestly? Most people ask it too late – after they’ve already made a mistake.

Here’s the reality. The moment you return to India permanently, you can’t just keep using your NRE and NRO accounts like nothing changed.

RBI and FEMA rules require you to convert them.

If you don’t? You risk frozen accounts, back-taxed interest, and penalties that can go up to 3x your account balance.

I’ve seen this happen to people in our BacktoIndia WhatsApp community. Smart, well-informed professionals who simply didn’t know the rules around account conversion.

This guide will walk you through exactly what to do, when to do it, and how to avoid the costly mistakes I’ve seen hundreds of returning NRIs make.

Why You Can’t Keep Your NRE/NRO Accounts After Returning

Let me start with the basics.

Under the Foreign Exchange Management Act (FEMA), NRE and NRO accounts are meant only for Non-Resident Indians. The moment you become a resident of India, you are no longer eligible to hold these accounts.

FEMA considers you a resident if you return to India with the intention to stay for more than 182 days. Notice the word “intention” – it’s not about completing 182 days. It’s about your plan when you land.

So if you’ve resigned from your overseas job, packed your bags, and moved your family back – you’re a resident from Day 1 under FEMA.

This is different from the Income Tax Act, which looks at actual physical days spent in India. We’ll get to that distinction later because it matters a lot for your tax planning.

The bottom line: inform your bank and start the conversion process as soon as you return.

What Happens to Each Account Type

Not all NRI accounts follow the same rules when you return. Let me break this down clearly.

Account TypeWhat Must HappenTimelineCan FDs Continue?
NRE SavingsConvert to Resident Savings OR transfer to RFC accountImmediately on returnNRE FDs can continue till maturity
NRO SavingsRe-designate as Resident SavingsImmediately on returnNRO FDs continue as Resident FDs
FCNR(B) DepositsCan continue till maturityNo immediate action neededYes, till original maturity date
Demat (NRI)Re-designate as Resident DematWithin a few monthsN/A

Let me explain each one in detail.

NRE Account Conversion: Your Options

When you return, your NRE savings account must be either:

Option A: Convert to a Regular Resident Savings Account

This is the simplest route. Your NRE savings account becomes a normal Indian savings account in rupees.

Your account number usually stays the same. The bank simply changes the account classification.

Option B: Transfer Funds to an RFC Account

If you have substantial foreign currency and want to avoid converting everything to rupees at once, you can move your NRE balance to a Resident Foreign Currency (RFC) account.

This lets you hold foreign currency in India and convert to rupees in stages when the exchange rate is favorable.

I’ve written a detailed guide on RFC accounts – I strongly recommend reading it if you have significant savings in foreign currency.

What about NRE Fixed Deposits?

This is where most bank RMs give wrong information. And it costs people lakhs.

Here’s the RBI rule: Your NRE FDs can continue until maturity at the originally contracted interest rate. The bank simply re-designates them as resident FDs.

They don’t need to be broken prematurely.

If you opened a 5-year NRE FD two years ago at 7.5%, and current resident FD rates are 6.5%, breaking that FD means you lose 1% per year on the remaining tenure. On a Rs. 50 lakh deposit, that’s Rs. 1.5 lakhs lost over 3 years.

Several members in our community have had to fight with bank staff to get this right. If your bank pushes you to break your NRE FD, cite the RBI Master Directions on deposit re-designation.

No penalty applies for premature withdrawal of NRE/FCNR deposits if you’re transferring to an RFC account.

NRO Account Conversion

NRO accounts are simpler to handle.

Your NRO savings account gets re-designated as a regular resident savings account. The account number stays the same. Your balance transfers automatically.

NRO fixed deposits also continue as resident FDs.

One thing changes: TDS treatment.

As an NRI, you were paying 30% TDS on NRO interest. As a resident, TDS drops to 10% (for interest above Rs. 40,000 per year). And if your total income is below the taxable limit, you can submit Form 15G to avoid TDS entirely.

So in many cases, the NRO conversion actually works in your favor from a tax perspective.

For more on how income tax works for returning NRIs, check our detailed guide.

FCNR(B) Deposits: The Exception

Good news here.

Your FCNR(B) deposits can continue until their original maturity date – even after you become a resident.

You don’t need to convert or close them immediately. They’ll mature in foreign currency as planned.

At maturity, you have two choices:

  • Transfer the proceeds to a resident savings account (converted to INR)
  • Transfer to an RFC account (stays in foreign currency)

The interest on FCNR deposits remains tax-free during your RNOR period. Once you become ROR (Resident and Ordinarily Resident), the interest becomes taxable.

Cannot create fresh FCNR deposits once you’re a resident though. Only existing ones are grandfathered.

Step-by-Step: How to Convert Your Accounts

Here’s the exact process I recommend. I’ve refined this based on feedback from thousands of returning NRIs.

Step 1: Make a complete list of all your Indian accounts

Before you do anything, list everything:

  • All savings accounts (NRE, NRO)
  • All fixed deposits (NRE FDs, NRO FDs, FCNR FDs)
  • Recurring deposits
  • Demat accounts
  • Mutual fund folios
  • PPF accounts (if any from before you became NRI)
  • Credit cards linked to NRI accounts

This inventory prevents you from missing something. I’ve seen people forget about an NRE FD at a smaller bank, only to have it flagged during a tax audit years later.

Step 2: Inform your bank(s) about your status change

Write a formal letter or email to each bank where you hold NRI accounts. State that:

  • You have returned to India permanently
  • Your residential status has changed from NRI to Resident
  • You request conversion/re-designation of all your accounts

Keep a copy of this communication. It establishes a paper trail if there are ever compliance questions later.

Many banks also have an online process. SBI, ICICI, and HDFC allow you to initiate the request through internet banking.

Step 3: Gather your documents

Most banks will ask for:

  • Passport (all pages showing travel history)
  • Proof of return (boarding pass, immigration stamps)
  • Updated Indian address proof (Aadhaar card, utility bill, rental agreement)
  • PAN card
  • Recent passport-size photographs
  • Resident Account Conversion Form (specific to each bank)
  • Declaration of change in residential status

If you don’t have an Aadhaar card yet, apply for one immediately. Most banks will accept a temporary enrollment slip while you wait.

Step 4: Visit the branch

Yes, most banks require an in-person visit for this.

Here’s what to do at the branch:

  • Submit the conversion form and documents
  • Give specific instructions for each FD (do NOT break NRE FDs – ask for re-designation)
  • Ask about opening an RFC account if you want to hold foreign currency
  • Update your KYC information
  • Request new debit card (your NRI debit card will be deactivated)
  • Update nominee details if needed

Bring originals of all documents. The bank will verify and return them.

Step 5: Handle linked services

After the account conversion, update:

  • Auto-debit mandates (SIPs, insurance premiums, loan EMIs)
  • UPI linked accounts
  • Online banking access (may need re-registration)
  • Your Demat/trading account status
  • Mutual fund KYC (through CAMS/KFintech)

Step 6: Get written confirmation

Ask the bank to confirm in writing:

  • Your account has been re-designated as resident
  • Your FDs have been re-designated (not broken) with the same interest rate
  • The date from which the conversion is effective

This confirmation is important for tax filing purposes.

The FEMA vs Income Tax Difference (This Is Important)

This confuses almost everyone. And getting it wrong can cost you money.

Under FEMA: You become a resident the moment you return to India with the intention to stay. It’s based on intent.

Under Income Tax Act: You become a resident only when you’ve physically stayed in India for 182 days or more in a financial year. It’s based on actual days.

Why does this matter?

Because your bank accounts follow FEMA rules. But your tax treatment follows the Income Tax Act.

So here’s what typically happens:

You return to India in, say, August 2025. Under FEMA, you’re a resident immediately. You need to convert your accounts.

But under Income Tax, you’re still NRI for FY 2025-26 if you don’t complete 182 days in India by March 31, 2026 (which you might not, depending on your return date).

This creates a window where your accounts are resident, but your tax status is still NRI. Interest on re-designated NRE FDs during this window may still be tax-free.

It’s nuanced. And it’s exactly why I always tell people: talk to a CA who understands cross-border taxation.

For understanding how the 182-day rule works in practice, read our detailed explainer.

RNOR Status: Your Tax Shield After Returning

When you first become a tax resident in India, you likely qualify as RNOR – Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident.

You get RNOR status if either of these is true:

  • You were NRI for at least 9 out of the 10 previous financial years, OR
  • You were in India for 729 days or less during the 7 years before the current year

For most NRIs who’ve been abroad 5+ years, RNOR lasts 2-3 financial years.

Why does this matter for your account conversion?

During RNOR, your foreign income is NOT taxable in India. Only Indian income is taxable.

This means:

  • Interest on RFC accounts is tax-free during RNOR
  • Interest on FCNR deposits is tax-free during RNOR
  • Your overseas rental income, foreign dividends, and US 401(k) withdrawals are not taxed in India
  • Capital gains from selling foreign assets are not taxed in India

That’s why I always say: plan your return timing carefully. Returning between October and March can sometimes give you an extra year of RNOR.

For a deeper understanding of NRI status changes and how they affect your taxes, check our guide.

Tax Impact on Interest After Conversion

Here’s a clear breakdown of what becomes taxable and when:

Account TypeDuring NRI PeriodDuring RNOR PeriodAfter Becoming ROR
NRE Savings/FD InterestTax-freeTaxable (once re-designated)Taxable at slab rate
NRO Savings/FD InterestTaxable at 30% TDSTaxable at slab rateTaxable at slab rate
FCNR Deposit InterestTax-freeTax-freeTaxable at slab rate
RFC Account InterestN/A (can’t open as NRI)Tax-freeTaxable at slab rate

The key insight: NRE FD interest that was earned before your status change remains tax-free.

Only the interest earned after re-designation becomes taxable.

If your NRE FD matures during your RNOR period, you may still get favorable tax treatment on the interest earned during RNOR – but this depends on the specific re-designation date and your tax status. Consult a CA for your exact situation.

For complete details on how DTAA can help reduce double taxation, see our guide.

Documents Checklist: What You Need for Conversion

Here’s a ready-to-use checklist:

  • [ ] Passport with valid Indian visa/stamp (all pages)
  • [ ] PAN card
  • [ ] Aadhaar card (or enrollment acknowledgment)
  • [ ] Proof of Indian address (utility bill, rental agreement, or Aadhaar)
  • [ ] Recent passport-size photographs (2-4)
  • [ ] Bank’s Resident Account Conversion Form
  • [ ] Declaration of change in residential status
  • [ ] Last visa copy (showing end of overseas employment/stay)
  • [ ] Boarding pass or travel record showing return date
  • [ ] List of all FDs with maturity dates and interest rates
  • [ ] FATCA/CRS declaration form (some banks require this)

Keep copies of everything you submit. Photograph or scan documents before handing originals to the bank.

Common Mistakes That Cost Returning NRIs Money

After eight years of helping NRIs through this process, these are the top mistakes I see:

Mistake 1: Letting the bank break your NRE FDs

This is the most expensive mistake. Bank staff often say “you need to close and rebook your FDs.” That’s wrong.

RBI rules clearly allow NRE FDs to continue at the contracted rate. Push back. Show them the RBI Master Direction if needed.

One member of our community had NRE FDs worth Rs. 80 lakhs across 4 banks. He saved over Rs. 4 lakhs by insisting on re-designation instead of premature closure.

Mistake 2: Delaying the conversion

Some people return in April and don’t inform their bank until December. During those 8 months, they’re operating NRE accounts as a resident – which is a FEMA violation.

If the bank discovers this during an audit, they can back-tax the interest earned during that period.

Mistake 3: Converting everything to rupees on Day 1

If you have $100,000 in your NRE account and convert it all to rupees on a bad exchange rate day, you could lose several lakhs compared to a staggered conversion through an RFC account.

Don’t rush. Consider the RFC account route for larger amounts.

Mistake 4: Ignoring RNOR benefits

Many NRIs don’t even know about RNOR status. They file their first return as a full resident and pay taxes on global income unnecessarily.

If you’ve been abroad for 5+ years, you almost certainly qualify for RNOR. This can save you lakhs in taxes each year for 2-3 years.

Mistake 5: Forgetting to update linked investments

You convert your bank account but forget to update your Demat, mutual funds, or insurance policies. This creates a mismatch that shows up during tax assessment.

Update everything: Demat accounts, mutual fund KYC, insurance policies, PPF (if applicable), and any linked auto-debits.

Mistake 6: Not handling joint accounts properly

If you had a joint NRE account with your spouse who is still abroad (still NRI), the bank needs a special undertaking. The account may need to be converted differently.

Discuss joint account scenarios with your bank before starting the process.

Bank-by-Bank Tips

Based on our community’s experience, here are quick notes on how major banks handle conversion:

SBI

  • Has a specific “Returning Indian” form
  • Usually smooth process if you go to the main branch
  • SBI NRI banking page has more details

ICICI Bank

  • Allows partial online initiation through internet banking
  • Good about re-designating NRE FDs without breaking them
  • Visit the ICICI Bank NRI branch for faster processing

HDFC Bank

  • Has a “Resident Savings Account Opening Form” for conversion
  • May take 2-3 branch visits for complete processing
  • Persistent but generally gets it done

Axis Bank

  • Online process available for some conversions
  • Responsive NRI helpline
  • Check Axis Bank NRI services for details

General tip: Visit the branch where your account was originally opened if possible. They have the primary records and can process faster.

What You Can Do After Becoming Resident

Here’s the silver lining. Once you’re a resident, several investment options open up that were restricted as an NRI:

  • Open a fresh PPF account (NRIs can’t open new PPF accounts)
  • Invest in government savings schemes like Sukanya Samriddhi, NSC, etc.
  • Intraday stock trading (restricted for NRIs)
  • Trade in currency derivatives and commodities
  • Invest in Sovereign Gold Bonds
  • Buy agricultural land (NRIs cannot buy agricultural land)
  • Start a proprietorship firm without restrictions

So while you’re dealing with the compliance side, also start thinking about investment options in India that can work for your new resident status.

Timeline: What to Do and When

Here’s a realistic timeline based on what works in practice:

Week 1-2 (Right after landing)

  • Make a list of all NRI accounts across all banks
  • Download conversion forms from bank websites
  • Gather documents
  • Apply for Aadhaar if you don’t have one

Week 3-4

  • Visit your primary bank and submit conversion paperwork
  • Give explicit written instructions for each FD (re-designate, NOT break)
  • Open RFC account if you want to hold foreign currency
  • Request new debit card

Month 2

  • Visit remaining banks and complete conversion
  • Update Demat account status
  • Update mutual fund KYC through CAMS/KFintech
  • Update insurance policy details

Month 3

  • Verify all conversions are reflected in your statements
  • Ensure online banking, UPI, and auto-debits are working
  • Set up new SIPs or investment plans as resident
  • Get written confirmation from all banks

Month 4-6

  • File ITR for the relevant financial year
  • Report any foreign assets in Schedule FA (if applicable)
  • Disclose foreign assets as required under the Black Money Act

What If You Might Go Back Abroad?

This is a common scenario. You’ve returned but you’re not 100% sure you’ll stay forever.

Under FEMA, residency is about intent. If you genuinely intend to stay in India, you’re a resident – even if there’s a possibility of going back.

But here’s the practical advice:

If there’s a reasonable chance you’ll move abroad again within 1-2 years:

  • Convert your accounts as required (compliance first)
  • Use RFC accounts to hold foreign currency (you can convert back to NRE if you become NRI again)
  • Don’t rush to sell foreign assets
  • Don’t close your overseas bank accounts (you can legally hold them)

If you do become NRI again, your resident accounts get converted back to NRO, and you can open fresh NRE accounts.

For more on managing your US bank accounts after moving to India, see our guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

How quickly do I need to convert my accounts?

There’s no specific grace period in FEMA regulations. Practically, banks expect you to do it within 1-3 months of returning. Do it as soon as possible – ideally within the first few weeks.

Will my account number change?

For savings accounts, no. The account number stays the same. The bank changes the classification internally. For FDs, some banks may issue new FD numbers while keeping the same terms.

Can I convert my NRE account online?

Some banks (like ICICI) allow partial online processing. But most require at least one in-person branch visit for document verification.

What happens to my NRE account if I don’t convert it?

Continuing to operate an NRE account as a resident is a FEMA violation. Penalties can go up to 3 times the amount involved or Rs. 2 lakhs, plus Rs. 5,000 per day for continuing violations.

Do I need to inform the Income Tax department separately?

No separate notification is required. You update your residential status when you file your ITR for that financial year.

What happens to auto-debit mandates on my NRE account?

Most auto-debits will continue to work after conversion. But verify this with your bank. SIPs, insurance premiums, and loan EMIs may need fresh mandates.

Can I keep my NRE account if I’m unsure about staying in India?

If you’ve returned with the intention to stay, FEMA requires conversion. “Uncertainty” isn’t a valid reason to delay. Convert your accounts and use RFC for flexibility. If you go back abroad, the accounts can be re-converted.

What about credit cards linked to NRI accounts?

NRI credit cards may be cancelled on status change. Apply for a resident credit card. Your CIBIL score will be important for this, so start building it early.

My spouse is still abroad. What happens to our joint NRE account?

If one holder becomes resident and the other is still NRI, the bank typically needs a special undertaking. The account may be re-designated based on the primary holder’s status. Discuss this specifically with your bank.

Do I need to close my US/UK/UAE bank accounts?

No. You can legally maintain overseas bank accounts after returning to India. But you must declare them in your ITR under Schedule FA (Foreign Assets) once you become ROR. Read about FBAR reporting requirements if you’re coming from the US.

Quick Reference: Conversion Checklist

Print this and check off as you go:

  • [ ] List all NRI accounts (savings, FDs, RDs, Demat, MF folios)
  • [ ] Write to each bank about status change
  • [ ] Gather all required documents
  • [ ] Visit primary bank – convert savings account
  • [ ] Give written instructions for each NRE FD (re-designate, not break)
  • [ ] Open RFC account if needed
  • [ ] Re-designate NRO account to resident
  • [ ] Update Demat account
  • [ ] Update mutual fund KYC
  • [ ] Update insurance policy details
  • [ ] Set up new debit card and online banking
  • [ ] Verify auto-debits are working
  • [ ] Get written confirmation from each bank
  • [ ] File ITR with correct residential status
  • [ ] Report foreign assets if applicable

Wrapping Up

Converting your NRE and NRO accounts to resident accounts is not complicated. But it requires you to be informed, organized, and assertive.

The biggest risks? Delaying the process and letting bank staff push you into breaking FDs prematurely.

The biggest savings? Understanding RNOR status and using RFC accounts strategically.

Take it one bank at a time. Follow the steps above. And don’t hesitate to push back if your bank gives you incorrect information – you know the RBI rules now.

Disclaimer: This article is for informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, tax, or legal advice. FEMA regulations and tax laws change frequently. Please consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or financial advisor for guidance specific to your situation. Refer to the RBI’s Master Directions on Deposits for the latest regulations.

Sources: Reserve Bank of India (RBI), FEMA Notification No. FEMA 10(R)/2015-RB, Income Tax Act 1961 Section 6, ICICI Bank, HDFC Bank, SBI, Deutsche Bank India.


If you’re planning your move back, join our WhatsApp community at https://backtoindia.com/groups – 20,000+ NRIs helping each other with real, lived experience. It’s free and volunteer-run.


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