Documents to retain
- identity and residence proof
- title chain
- sale/gift/inheritance instrument
- property classification evidence
- bank payment trail
- tax and registration records
The original-acquisition and source test.
Repatriating Indian Property Sale Proceeds is relevant for residents, NRIs, OCIs, families, property professionals and banks. This guide explains the original-acquisition and source test and converts the legal framework into a practical decision path.
| Step | Control |
|---|---|
| 1 | Classify buyer, seller, donor, donee or heir. |
| 2 | Classify the property and acquisition mode. |
| 3 | Check eligibility and any approval route. |
| 4 | Use the permitted payment and account channel. |
| 5 | Complete title, tax, registration and FEMA evidence. |
| 6 | Assess sale, gift or repatriation consequences. |
An NRI sells two flats purchased with inward remittance and one inherited house. Separate repatriation files avoid mixing legal bases.
Identify the person, transaction date and exact legal event before applying a limit or form.
No. Operational acceptance does not cure an impermissible underlying transaction.
Keep the legal-source note, transaction documents, bank trail, valuation/approval where relevant, filing acknowledgement and closure evidence.
Refresh it when residence, ownership, control, amount, activity, instrument terms or law changes.
Do not begin with a form, portal or commercial label. Identify the person, purpose, instrument and transaction date; confirm the substantive route; complete payment, reporting and evidence; and refresh the analysis when facts or law change.