There’s a version of this story that plays out constantly. An NRI spends 15 years abroad, builds a decent corpus, sends money home regularly, and assumes everything is compounding nicely. Then they sit down with a proper financial advisor in India for the first time — and spend the next hour finding out about accounts that were structured wrong, a PPF they can’t extend, and tax they’ve been overpaying for years without knowing it.
The money was always there. The guidance wasn’t.
The PPF situation most NRIs discover too late
If you opened a PPF account before moving abroad, you can continue contributing to it and earning tax-exempt interest until it matures. That part most people know. What they don’t know is what happens after maturity.
A resident Indian can extend their PPF in blocks of five years indefinitely. An NRI cannot. Once your PPF account matures, it simply sits there earning the prevailing interest rate — but you cannot extend it, and you cannot open a new one. The account is essentially frozen in place.
This matters because a lot of NRIs treat their PPF as a long-term retirement instrument and keep mentally including it in their future planning as though it will keep growing on their terms. It won’t. Knowing this changes how you structure everything else around it — when to withdraw, how to redeploy, what to replace it with.
What RNOR status actually gives you — and how to not waste it
When you return to India after being an NRI for 9 out of the last 10 financial years, Indian tax law gives you a transitional status called RNOR — Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident. During this period, which typically lasts 2 to 3 years, your foreign income remains completely exempt from Indian tax.
Most returning NRIs either don’t know this exists or don’t plan around it. They return mid-financial year without thinking about the timing, convert their NRE accounts to resident accounts immediately, and start paying full Indian tax on global income from day one — when they didn’t have to.
Strategic RNOR planning looks like this: time your return to maximise the number of financial years you spend under RNOR status. Keep foreign income flowing during that window. Liquidate or restructure foreign assets before the RNOR period ends and full resident taxation kicks in. Two to three years of tax-free foreign income is not a small thing — on a meaningful corpus, it can run into several lakhs.
The gap between what NRIs need and what they usually get
Most NRIs in India interact with three types of financial people — a bank RM who calls during FD renewal season, a CA who files the ITR and nothing more, and a family friend who “knows about investments.” None of these is a financial advisor. None of them is looking at the full picture.
Real NRI financial planning in India requires someone who sits at the intersection of tax law, investment strategy, FEMA compliance, and your personal goals — and connects all of it into a single coherent plan. That’s a specific skill set. It’s not common. And it’s exactly why most NRIs are leaving money on the table without realising it.
The questions a good advisor asks before recommending anything
What is your current residency status — and what will it be in two years? Is your Indian income going into the right accounts? Have you filed ITR in India even in years when it wasn’t technically mandatory? Do you have a Lower Deduction Certificate ready for your property sale? When are you planning to return, and have you mapped out the tax implications of that timeline?
These are not complicated questions. But they are questions that require someone to actually care about your financial outcome — not their sales target for the quarter.
The difference between a good financial advisor and a mediocre one shows up not in bull markets, when everything looks fine. It shows up in the details — the form that wasn’t filed, the account that was structured wrong, the window that was missed. That’s where the real money is either saved or lost.