For years, many NRIs struggled to use UPI because it required an Indian mobile number linked to a bank account. But things have changed. Today, eligible NRIs can activate UPI on their NRE or NRO accounts and make instant payments in India through supported banks and UPI apps even while living abroad.
However, not every NRI qualifies automatically. Eligibility depends on factors such as your bank, registered mobile number, country of residence, and whether your NRE or NRO account is linked correctly. This often creates confusion about which banks support UPI, whether an international mobile number works, which apps can be used, and how to complete the activation process.
This guide answers all those questions. You’ll learn who can use UPI, the eligibility requirements, supported banks and countries, how to activate UPI on your NRE or NRO account step by step, common issues you may face, and practical tips to start making secure UPI payments from anywhere in the world.
Key Takeaways
Eligible NRIs can activate UPI on their NRE or NRO account using a registered international mobile number through participating banks.
You don’t need an Indian SIM card if your bank supports UPI registration with an international mobile number.
Before activating UPI, make sure your KYC is complete, your mobile number is updated, and your NRE or NRO account is active.
Most activation issues can be resolved by verifying your bank details, registered mobile number, and account eligibility.
Once activated, UPI allows NRIs to make fast and secure payments, transfer money, and pay bills directly from their NRE or NRO account.
What Is UPI for NRIs?
UPI for NRIs is the extension of India’s real-time payments system the Unified Payments Interface to Non-Resident Indian account holders, using their international mobile number instead of an Indian one. In simple terms, it lets you link your NRE or NRO bank account to a UPI app using the phone number you actually use in the US, UK, UAE, or wherever you live, and transact in Indian Rupees instantly, 24/7.
It works the same way UPI works for resident Indians: your bank account gets mapped to a Virtual Payment Address (VPA), authenticated with a UPI PIN, and every transaction is verified through two-factor authentication. The only real difference from resident UPI is the registration step instead of an Indian mobile number tied to your account; the system now accepts approved international numbers, provided your bank has enabled the feature.
Can NRIs Use UPI?
Yes. NPCI has enabled UPI for NRIs holding NRE or NRO accounts, with international mobile numbers from a defined list of countries. This isn’t a grey-area workaround, it’s an officially sanctioned facility, fully compliant with RBI and FEMA regulations, as long as you’re using the right account type for the right purpose.
Who Is Eligible?
- NRE account holders — fully eligible, and this is the more commonly used account for UPI among NRIs since it’s freely repatriable.
- NRO account holders — also eligible, useful if you’re managing India-sourced income like rent or dividends.
- OCI and PIO cardholders — eligible if they hold a qualifying NRE/NRO account and meet the residency criteria under FEMA.
- Your international mobile number must belong to one of the NPCI-supported countries (see the table below).
Who Isn’t Eligible
- NRIs who only hold a regular resident savings account (not NRE/NRO) this is a compliance issue, not just a technical one.
- NRIs whose international number is registered from a country not yet on NPCI’s approved list.
- Anyone whose bank hasn’t yet enabled international number support, even if NPCI permits it at the network level.
Which Countries Support UPI for NRIs?
NPCI currently supports UPI for NRIs across 12 countries, chosen largely based on the size of the Indian diaspora in each region:
| Region | Supported Countries |
| North America | USA, Canada |
| Europe | UK, France |
| Gulf / Middle East | UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman |
| Asia-Pacific | Singapore, Malaysia, Hong Kong, Australia |
Countries like Germany, New Zealand, and South Africa aren’t on the approved list yet, and there’s no confirmed timeline for adding more. If you’re in one of these, you’ll need to keep an active Indian number for UPI for now.
Which Banks Support UPI on NRE & NRO Accounts?
NPCI enabling the feature doesn’t automatically mean every bank has switched it on — the rollout has been uneven. Here’s where things stand:
| Bank | NRE | NRO | International Number Support | Status |
| IDFC FIRST Bank | Yes | Yes | All 12 countries | Fully live |
| ICICI Bank | Yes | Yes | 10 countries | Fully live |
| HDFC Bank | Yes | Yes | 10 of 12 countries | Live, expanding |
| Axis Bank | Yes | Yes | Limited countries | Limited rollout — confirm with branch |
| Kotak Mahindra Bank | Yes | Yes | Most countries | Live via mobile app |
| SBI | Yes | Yes | Gradual rollout | Check with NRI branch |
If your bank isn’t listed here or shows limited rollout, call your NRI banking desk directly, availability changes frequently, and phone confirmation is more reliable than what’s printed on the website.
Which UPI Apps Can NRIs Use?
- BHIM — NPCI’s own app, supports international number registration by default.
- PhonePe — widely reported as the smoothest experience for NRIs; auto-detects country codes during registration.
- Google Pay — works, but you generally need the India version of the app rather than the one listed on your local app store.
- Paytm — supports international numbers, but reliably only for select banks like IDFC FIRST and ICICI.
- Bank-specific apps — such as ICICI iMobile or IDFC FIRST’s app — also support direct UPI setup for NRE/NRO accounts.
Why This Matters: Real Benefits of UPI for NRIs
- Speed — payments settle instantly, 24/7, unlike traditional wire transfers that can take a day or more and don’t run on weekends or Indian holidays.
- No forex charges on domestic spends — since the money is already sitting INR in your NRE/NRO account, there’s no currency conversion involved when you pay someone in India.
- One less reason to maintain a dead Indian SIM — you can finally let go of that backup number you’ve been paying to keep active purely for banking OTPs.
- Direct control over small, frequent payments — paying a domestic help, a relative’s medical bill, or a subscription in India no longer needs a middleman or a bank visit.
- Security — every transaction still goes through the same two-factor authentication and UPI PIN protection used by resident Indians, so you’re not trading safety for convenience.
Requirements Before Activating UPI
Before you activate UPI on NRE account or NRO account, make sure you have:
✔ PAN card linked to your account
✔ An active NRE or NRO account with an Indian bank
✔ Completed KYC with your bank
✔ Your international mobile number registered as the primary contact on file
✔ The debit card linked to that account (for PIN verification)
✔ A smartphone to download and run the UPI app
If your PAN isn’t linked or you’re applying for one from overseas, check our guide on PAN Card for NRIs to understand the application process and document requirements.
How to Activate UPI on NRE & NRO Account
Here’s the step-by-step process to activate UPI on your NRE or NRO account:
Step 1: Update Your International Mobile Number With Your Bank
Contact your bank’s NRI desk or use their online NRI portal to register your international number including the full country code as the primary number on your NRE/NRO account. This can take a few days to process, so do this before you plan to actually use UPI.
Step 2: Download a UPI App That Supports NRI Onboarding
Choose from BHIM, PhonePe, Google Pay (India version), or your bank’s own app, based on what your bank supports.
Step 3: Verify Your Mobile Number
Enter your international number with the country code. The app sends a verification SMS to confirm the number is active and linked to your account.
Step 4: Choose Your Bank
Select your bank from the list in the app. The system will automatically detect the NRE/NRO account linked to your registered number.
Step 5: Generate Your UPI PIN
Enter the last six digits and expiry date of your debit card to verify your identity, then set a 4- or 6-digit UPI PIN.
Step 6: Complete Your First Transaction
Send a small test payment or pay a bill to confirm everything’s working. New UPI profiles typically have a 24-hour cooling-off period with a lower transaction cap, so don’t be alarmed if your first transfer is capped lower than expected.
Common Questions About UPI Access for NRIs
Can NRIs Use UPI Without an Indian SIM?
Yes. Eligible NRIs can now use UPI without an Indian SIM card by linking their registered international mobile number to an NRE or NRO account with a participating bank. Once your bank verifies the number and your account is eligible, you can activate UPI and make payments in India without maintaining an Indian mobile connection.
Can NRIs Use UPI with an International Mobile Number?
Yes. NRIs from supported countries can activate UPI using their international mobile number if it is registered with a participating bank. During setup, the UPI app verifies the same number linked to your NRE or NRO account. If your bank supports this feature, you can complete the registration and use UPI just like a resident user.
Can NRIs Use Google Pay?
Yes. Eligible NRIs can use Google Pay after linking their NRE or NRO account and completing the verification process with their registered international mobile number. Availability may vary depending on your country, bank, and the version of Google Pay available in your region.
Can NRIs Use PhonePe?
Yes. PhonePe supports eligible NRIs through participating banks. After verifying your registered international mobile number and linking your NRE or NRO account, you can create a UPI PIN and use the app for payments, transfers, and bill payments in India.
Can NRIs Use the BHIM App?
Yes. BHIM, the official UPI app developed by NPCI, also supports eligible NRIs through participating banks. Once your account and international mobile number are verified, you can activate UPI, generate a UPI PIN, and start making secure digital payments in India.
NRE vs NRO for UPI
Both account types work for UPI, but they’re not interchangeable when it comes to what kind of money they should be moving. Here’s the comparison: NRE vs NRO Account
| Factor | NRE Account | NRO Account |
| Money Source | Foreign income remitted to India | India-sourced income (rent, dividends, etc.) |
| Tax Treatment | Interest is tax-free in India | Interest is taxable, subject to TDS |
| Receiving Money via UPI | Supported | Supported |
| Repatriation | Freely repatriable | Restricted, subject to limits and documentation |
| Best For UPI Use | Everyday payments funded by foreign earnings | Managing and spending India-sourced income |
UPI Transaction Limits for NRIs
| Limit Type | Amount |
| Daily transaction limit | Up to ₹1,00,000 (or 20 transactions, whichever comes first) |
| Per-transaction limit (P2P) | Typically up to ₹1,00,000, subject to bank policy |
| New UPI ID (first 24 hours) | Capped at ₹5,000 |
| Merchant payments | Generally aligned with standard UPI merchant limits set by RBI/NPCI |
These are network-level limits your specific bank may apply lower caps, so it’s worth checking your bank’s NRI banking terms for exact numbers.
Common Issues NRIs Face With UPI
- OTP delays — since the OTP travels internationally, there can be a short delay compared to domestic SMS delivery.
- Inconsistent bank app behavior — NPCI enabling the feature doesn’t guarantee a bug-free experience on every bank’s app; some international number registrations fail on the first attempt.
- App store restrictions — Google Pay in particular sometimes requires the India-region version of the app rather than what’s available locally.
- Confusion between account types — trying to use UPI with a regular resident savings account instead of an NRE/NRO account, which isn’t compliant.
- Number mismatch errors — if the number you enter in the UPI app doesn’t exactly match the one on file with your bank (including the country code format), registration will fail even though both numbers look identical to you.
- Slow bank-side updates — some NRIs report that their bank confirms the international number is “updated” on a call, but the change doesn’t actually reflect in the core banking system for several more days.
None of these are dealbreakers they’re mostly first-time setup friction. Once your number is correctly linked and your first transaction clears the 24-hour cooling-off period, most NRIs report the experience runs smoothly from that point on.If you’re still facing activation issues even after updating your registered mobile number and completing your KYC, you may need assistance from NRI banking experts to resolve account-related issues and complete the UPI activation process.
What If Your Bank Doesn’t Support International Numbers Yet?
If your current bank hasn’t rolled this out, you have three practical options: wait for their rollout (check in periodically, since coverage is expanding month to month), maintain an Indian number temporarily if you have access to one, or consider opening an NRE/NRO account with a bank that already supports international-number UPI, such as IDFC FIRST Bank or ICICI Bank, both of which allow digital account opening for NRIs from abroad. If you’re planning to return to India permanently, remember that your NRE account may also need to be converted to a resident account under RBI regulations. Learn more about the penalty for not converting an NRE account to a resident account and how to stay compliant.
If you’re returning to India permanently, you may also want to understand how an RFC Account for Returning NRIs can help you continue holding eligible foreign currency funds after your residential status changes.
Conclusion
UPI for NRIs has genuinely closed one of the most frustrating gaps in cross-border banking — no more holding on to a dying Indian SIM just to pay a utility bill or send money to family. If you already hold an NRE or NRO account, activating UPI is mostly a matter of getting your international number registered correctly with your bank and picking an app that supports it. Start with your bank’s NRI desk, confirm your country is on the supported list, and you could be making your first UPI payment from abroad within the week.
Not sure whether your NRE or NRO account is even set up correctly for this? Talk to our NRI banking team, and we’ll help you get UPI activated the right way.
Disclaimer
The content published on NriTaxs is intended for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal, tax, or financial advice. Readers are encouraged to consult qualified professionals before making any decisions based on the information provided.


