Tax / Foreign Income

Schedule FSI and TR

CA Nikhil Gupta·May 2026·4 min readTax / Foreign Income

Schedule FSI reports the income. Schedule TR reports the relief. Schedule FA may report the underlying foreign asset. All three should agree.

Quick View

Decision

Create one source-wise working that feeds every applicable foreign-income and foreign-asset schedule.

First action

List every foreign income source.

Core evidence

Foreign pay or income statements.

Main warning

Reporting only remitted income.

Why It Matters

Foreign salary, dividends, interest, rent and capital gains should be classified under the appropriate Indian income head before Schedule FSI is completed.

Schedule TR and Form 67 should reconcile to the foreign tax actually eligible for relief. Schedule FA is a separate asset disclosure and should not be omitted merely because income is reported.

Control Framework

AreaWhat to establishOperating rule
SourceSalary, interest, dividend, rent or gain.Use Indian income head.
CountrySource country and treaty.Avoid mixed baskets.
TaxForeign tax and Indian relief.Reconcile Form 67.
AssetRelated bank, security or property.Link Schedule FA.

Action Checklist

  1. List every foreign income source.
  2. Convert gross amounts consistently.
  3. Classify under Indian heads.
  4. Complete Schedule FSI.
  5. Reconcile Schedule TR and Form 67.
  6. Cross-check Schedule FA.

Practical Example

A resident earns foreign rent, pays local property tax and claims foreign tax credit. The rental computation, Schedule FSI, Schedule TR, Form 67 and foreign-property disclosure should all be traceable to one working.

Evidence to Keep

  • Foreign pay or income statements.
  • Broker and bank records.
  • Foreign tax certificate.
  • Currency conversion working.
  • Schedule FSI/TR reconciliation.
  • Schedule FA register.

Warning Signs

  • Reporting only remitted income.
  • Combining countries.
  • Using foreign taxable income as Indian taxable income without adjustment.
  • Claiming credit not reported in Form 67.
  • Omitting the underlying asset.

Detailed Review

Cross-border work should be reviewed as a connected chain: legal status, transaction route, money trail, ownership, taxation and reporting. A bank acceptance or portal upload proves only one part of that chain.

Prepare a dated chronology showing the first relevant event, each filing or payment, the applicable deadline, the person responsible and the final acknowledgement. A chronology is particularly important when status changed during the year or several advisers handled the transaction.

Use source documents rather than reconstructed summaries. Bank statements, contracts, valuations, official statements, tax certificates and portal acknowledgements should be retained in their original form, with an index explaining how each supports the conclusion.

Reconcile the numbers across systems. Share capital should agree with corporate and FEMA records; foreign income should agree with asset statements and tax credit; property proceeds should agree with title, withholding and bank remittance records.

Where a mistake exists, do not overwrite the original record. Preserve it, explain the error, complete the permitted correction or late-filing route and store the authority’s final response.

The Income Tax Act, 2025 applies from 1 April 2026. Workings should identify the tax year and avoid importing section references from the earlier Act without checking the transition.

Treaty relief should be documented separately from domestic-law residence and computation. A treaty claim may affect tax, but it does not automatically remove filing or disclosure obligations.

Escalation Route

Start with the bank, intermediary, employer, payer or portal that owns the operational record. Ask for a written response identifying the rejected field, missing document or legal basis.

If the matter involves a statutory default, complete the administrative correction and obtain qualified tax, FEMA, legal or regulatory advice on late filing, lower withholding, revised reporting or compounding. Preserve every acknowledgement.

Transaction Test

Before acting, write the transaction in one sentence using the legal parties, residence, instrument or income type, currency, date and amount. This simple description often exposes whether the proposed bank code, tax form or account route is inconsistent.

Prepare a responsibility matrix covering the taxpayer or entity, authorised dealer, intermediary, payer, chartered accountant, company secretary and legal adviser. Each person should own a defined document or filing rather than assuming another adviser has completed it.

Test the position under a downside scenario. Ask what happens if the bank rejects the remittance, the regulator queries valuation, the tax authority denies credit, the investor changes residence, the asset is sold or the family must claim after death.

For recurring compliance, create a monthly or quarterly reconciliation rather than waiting for year-end. Reconcile bank transactions, portal filings, cap table or holdings, income, tax withheld and outstanding queries.

The final file should include the conclusion and the rejected alternatives. Recording why another account, form, tax treatment or ownership structure was not used protects the decision from later hindsight.

The tax computation should show gross income, deductions, foreign tax, treaty article, Indian tax and credit limitation in separate columns.

Use the current tax-year return and do not carry old section numbers or form assumptions into a post-April 2026 filing.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is foreign income taxed only when remitted? â–¼
For applicable Indian residents, tax scope can extend beyond remittances.
What is Schedule TR? â–¼
It reports tax relief claimed for foreign taxes.
Does Schedule FSI replace Schedule FA? â–¼
No. Income and asset disclosure are separate.
Should gross or net income be used? â–¼
Start from gross income and apply the relevant Indian computation.