A question I get far too often is ‘Will I come under extra scrutiny from the government/RBI/authorities if I invest overseas.’
Well, the short answer is no. Merely remitting money abroad and holding foreign assets does not cause income tax scrutiny or put you on a list for manual verification. You just have to comply with the required disclosures and file your taxes properly, as usual. The stories you hear are often a result of a lack of reporting, an impermissible use of funds, or violating certain FEMA/LRS rules. So let’s break it down.
This guide details what investments are allowed under LRS, why LRS doesn't cause extra scrutiny, and the compliance requirements you need to keep in mind while investing globally.
Table of contents
- What is LRS?
- What investments are permissible?
- What investments are not allowed?
- Will remittances under LRS result in extra scrutiny?
- What actually triggers scrutiny
- How to stay compliant
- How Paasa helps
What is LRS?
The Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) is a framework created by the Reserve Bank of India that allows resident Indians to legally send money abroad.
LRS allows every resident individual (including minors) to remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year (April - March) for permitted purposes such as investments, education, medical treatment, or travel.
All outward remittances under LRS are processed through authorised dealer banks and reported to the RBI, which tracks them against your PAN.
What investments are permissible under LRS?
Under the LRS, resident individuals can freely remit capital for the following investment purposes:
- Global Stocks, ETFs, and Mutual Funds (Overseas Portfolio Investment): You can invest in shares of listed overseas companies, global debt instruments, Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs), and mutual funds. This is the most common route used by Indian investors to build a diversified global portfolio.
- Purchasing Property Abroad: You are allowed to use your LRS limit to acquire immovable property (like residential or commercial real estate) outside India.
- Investing in Unlisted Companies or Startups (Overseas Direct Investment): You can invest in Wholly Owned Subsidiaries (WOS) or Joint Ventures (JV) abroad. However, these investments must comply with the broader Foreign Exchange Management (Overseas Investment) Rules, 2022.
As long as your investments fall into these approved categories, you are fully compliant with FEMA regulations and have no reason to fear regulatory scrutiny.
What investments are not allowed under LRS?
While LRS gives you flexibility to invest globally, there are clear restrictions on what Indian residents cannot use their LRS limit for. Knowing these boundaries helps avoid compliance issues, remittance rejections, and tax penalties.
Explicitly Prohibited
- Cryptocurrency: RBI has not recognised crypto as a permissible investment class. Most banks will reject remittances if the purpose is crypto trading or wallets.
- Margin Trading and Leveraged Products: Using LRS for leveraged trades, CFDs (contracts for difference), or margin accounts abroad is not allowed. Even if your broker platform offers these features by default, Indian investors cannot activate or use them.
- Speculative Derivatives: Options, futures, or exotic derivative contracts for speculative purposes fall outside permitted LRS use.
- Lottery or Gambling-Linked Instruments: Any products linked to betting, gambling, or lottery systems are explicitly barred under FEMA.
Grey Areas
Some products sit in an ambiguous space where banks may interpret rules differently:
- Structured Notes: Yield-enhanced debt products linked to equities or FX. Some banks treat these as derivatives and refuse remittances.
- Feeder Funds in Tax Havens: Offshore funds domiciled in tax-friendly jurisdictions (like Cayman) may face extra scrutiny.
- Pre-IPO Shares in Foreign Private Companies: Direct allocations can blur the line between portfolio investment and ODI (Overseas Direct Investment), triggering compliance concerns.
Will remittances under LRS result in extra scrutiny?
No. Remitting money under LRS does not automatically trigger an Income Tax audit or manual scrutiny.
The Income Tax Department only checks if the money you are sending abroad is legitimate, already taxed in India, and properly declared.
Here is how the system works:
How your remittances are tracked
When you remit money abroad, your bank reports the transaction to the government. This data automatically flows into your Annual Information Statement (AIS).
The tax department uses advanced analytics to match the data provided by banks with the data you provide in your Income Tax Return (ITR).
If the numbers align, the system moves on. Just sending money to a foreign brokerage account raises no red flags by itself.
What actually triggers tax scrutiny
Notices are triggered by mismatches, not by the act of remitting itself. You will only face extra scrutiny if you make one of these easily avoidable mistakes:
- Income-to-remittance mismatch: If your declared annual income in your ITR is ₹8 Lakhs, but you remitted ₹20 Lakhs under LRS in the same financial year, the system will flag the transaction because the source of the excess funds is unexplained.
- Ignoring Schedule FA: If your AIS shows an LRS transfer for overseas investments, but your Schedule FA in the ITR is left blank or incomplete, the system flags it as an undisclosed foreign asset (which can invite penalties under the Black Money Act).
- Failing to report foreign income: If your foreign investments yield dividends or you sell them for a capital gain, you must declare this income in Schedule FSI (Foreign Source Income) or Schedule CG (Capital Gains). Hiding this income triggers an alert.
As long as your declared income justifies the amount you are sending abroad and you fill out your Schedule FA, your global investment journey will be completely hassle-free.
How to stay compliant when using LRS for investments
To ensure your LRS investments pass the automated matching process without a hitch, you must declare your global holdings in your annual ITR.
As a resident Indian, you are required to fill out Schedule FA (Foreign Assets) in ITR-2 or ITR-3. You must list the foreign stocks, ETFs, or cash balances you hold as of the end of the calendar year.
As long as the assets acquired via your LRS remittance are accurately reported in Schedule FA, the tax department's automated system considers your file compliant.
Compliance Checklist
Beyond Schedule FA, here is a straightforward compliance checklist to ensure your global investments remain completely hassle-free:
1. Use the calendar year for Schedule FA
While the Indian financial year runs from April 1 to March 31, remember that your Schedule FA reporting must be strictly based on the calendar year (January 1 to December 31).
For example, if you buy a UCITS ETF in February 2026, it must be reported in the ITR filed for that same year, not pushed to the next assessment year.
2. Don't file ITR-1
Many salaried professionals are used to filing the simple ITR-1 form.
However, when you hold foreign stocks, ETFs, or even a fractional share abroad, you must file ITR-2 or ITR-3 (if you have business income).
Filing ITR-1 while holding global assets is an automatic trigger for a "defective return" notice.
3. Do not leave idle cash for more than 180 days
Under FEMA guidelines, if you remit money abroad for investment purposes, you cannot leave it sitting as idle cash in your foreign brokerage account indefinitely. The RBI requires that unused funds be either invested or repatriated back to your Indian bank account within 180 days.
4. Use the correct Purpose Code
When setting up your LRS transfer through your bank, you must declare the nature of the transaction. Always ensure your bank uses the correct Purpose Code (S0001 for Overseas Portfolio Investment). This ensures the transaction is correctly categorized by the RBI and automatically aligns with your Schedule FA filings, preventing automated mismatch alerts.
How Paasa helps
Reading about FEMA rules, bank purpose codes, and Schedule FA filings can make global investing sound like a full-time job. But it doesn't have to be.
That is exactly why Paasa exists. We built Paasa to bridge the gap between the complexity of global brokerages and the specific, everyday needs of Indian investors.
Instead of leaving you to figure out the compliance maze on your own, Paasa handles it for you.
Here is how we keep things simple:
- Guided LRS Remittances: Paasa automates the remittance steps and paperwork, making sure you use the correct purpose code so your transfers go through instantly and without bank rejections.
- Ready-Made Tax Reports: Paasa generates comprehensive, India-specific tax documents. There is no manual capital gains calculation or digging through historical FX rates, you simply hand the finalized report to your CA (or file your own taxes).
- Competitive FX rates: Banks often bury hidden markups in their currency exchange rates. Paasa ensures your capital is converted at transparent, highly competitive rates.
- Institutional Infrastructure, Local Context: Paasa runs on Interactive Brokers (IBKR), one of the world's largest brokerages. But instead of a complex professional trading terminal, you get a clean interface and a dedicated relationship manager who understands Indian tax realities.
Investing globally shouldn't mean wrestling with paperwork and tax anxiety. Understandably, many folks haven't done this before so the uncertainty creates a mental block, which manifests in questions like ‘Will I face extra scrutiny?’ The good news is with Paasa, you can focus on building your wealth, while we make sure you stay 100% compliant.


