Sending money abroad has become easier than ever, whether it’s for your child’s education, overseas travel, investments, medical treatment, or supporting family members. But before you transfer funds outside India, there’s one tax rule you shouldn’t ignore: Tax Collected at Source (TCS) under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS). Many people mistakenly believe TCS is an additional tax or that the amount is permanently lost. In reality, TCS is generally adjustable against your final income tax liability and, in many cases, can even be claimed back as a refund. Understanding when TCS applies, the latest rates, available exemptions, and the refund process can help you avoid unnecessary confusion and better plan your foreign remittances. This guide explains everything you need to know about TCS on foreign remittances under LRS in 2026.
Key Takeaways
The TCS-free threshold is ₹10 lakh per financial year, combined across all remittances and all banks, except overseas tour packages.
Education and medical remittances attract just 2% TCS above ₹10 lakh, effective from 1 April 2026.
Foreign remittances funded through a recognised education loan remain fully exempt from TCS, regardless of the amount.
Investment, gift, and family maintenance remittances continue to attract 20% TCS on amounts exceeding ₹10 lakh.
TCS under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) applies only to resident Indians. NRIs remitting from NRO/NRE accounts are governed separately under FEMA.
TCS is an adjustable tax credit and can be claimed against your income tax liability or refunded through your Income Tax Return (ITR), if applicable.
What Is TCS on Foreign Remittance Under LRS?
Tax Collected at Source (TCS) on foreign remittance is an advance tax that banks and authorised dealers collect when a resident Indian sends money abroad under the RBI’s Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS). LRS allows resident individuals to remit up to USD 250,000 per financial year for permitted purposes education, medical treatment, travel, investments, gifts, and maintenance of relatives abroad. The bank deducts TCS at the time of transfer, deposits it with the government, and issues a certificate (Form 27D) confirming the deduction. It isn’t money you lose, it shows up in your Form 26AS and can be claimed back against your tax liability or refunded outright.
When Does TCS Apply on Foreign Remittances?
TCS on foreign remittance kicks in once your cumulative outward remittances under LRS in a financial year (April–March) cross ₹10 lakh, regardless of which bank or how many separate transfers you make. The ₹10 lakh threshold is calculated per PAN, across every purpose combined — so ₹4 lakh sent for education, ₹3 lakh for medical bills, and ₹4 lakh for a gift in the same year would together cross the threshold, even though each transfer looks small on its own. The one exception is overseas tour packages, where TCS applies from the very first rupee with no threshold at all.
Latest TCS Rates on Foreign Remittances (2026)
The table below reflects the revised LRS TCS rate structure effective from 1 April 2026:
| Purpose of Remittance | TCS Rate | Threshold |
| Education (self-funded) | 2% | Above ₹10 lakh |
| Education (via recognised education loan, Sec 80E) | 0% | No threshold — fully exempt |
| Medical treatment | 2% | Above ₹10 lakh |
| Overseas tour packages | 2% | From the first rupee |
| Investments, gifts, family maintenance, other purposes | 20% | Above ₹10 lakh |
| Any purpose, if PAN not furnished | Higher rate applies | Above ₹10 lakh |
International credit card spending while abroad continues to stay outside the LRS/TCS net for now, as the government has kept its classification as a remittance on hold since 2023.
Who Has to Pay TCS on Foreign Remittances?
TCS on foreign remittance applies to different categories of remitters as follows:
- Resident individuals: The primary category covered under LRS anyone remitting funds abroad for education, travel, medical treatment, investment, or gifting.
- NRIs: Not covered under LRS at all when remitting from their own NRO/NRE accounts (see the dedicated section below).
- Companies and firms: LRS is meant for individuals; companies remitting abroad follow separate RBI/FEMA approval routes rather than the LRS-TCS framework, though TCS can still apply in specific overseas investment contexts.
- HUF (Hindu Undivided Family): HUFs are generally not permitted to remit funds under LRS only resident individuals can use the scheme.
- Minors: LRS remittances can be made on behalf of a minor, but a resident individual (usually a parent or guardian) must be the remitter, and TCS applies the same way as it would to that individual’s own remittance.
Who Is Exempt from TCS on Foreign Remittance?
| Situation | TCS | Reason |
| Total remittances under ₹10 lakh in the FY | Nil | Below the exemption threshold |
| Education funded by a recognised education loan | Nil | Specifically exempted under Section 80E-linked loans |
| International credit card spends while overseas | Nil | Not currently classified as an LRS remittance |
| Purchase of foreign mutual funds/ETFs through domestic feeder route | Nil | Does not fall under LRS jurisdiction |
| NRI remitting from own NRO/NRE account | Nil (under 206C(1G)) | LRS applies only to resident individuals, not NRIs |
Does TCS Apply to NRIs?
This is where most people get confused, so it’s worth being precise: TCS on foreign remittance for NRIs under Section 206C(1G) applies only to remittances made under LRS and LRS, by RBI’s own definition, is a scheme for resident individuals. An NRI is not a resident under FEMA, so when an NRI repatriates funds from their own NRO or NRE account back to their country of residence, that transaction is not routed through LRS at all. It’s governed instead by FEMA’s separate repatriation rules, which involve their own compliance steps most notably Form 15CA/15CB and applicable TDS on NRO account withdrawals but not TCS under the LRS provision.
Where TCS does come into play for NRI families is on the other side of the transaction: if a resident parent, spouse, or relative in India remits money to an NRI abroad say, sending money to a child studying overseas the resident sender is the one making an LRS remittance, and TCS applies to them based on the purpose and amount, exactly as it would for any other resident. So the deduction is tied to the residential status of the person sending the money, not the person receiving it.
How to Calculate TCS on Foreign Remittances
TCS is calculated only on the amount that exceeds the ₹10 lakh threshold (except for tour packages, where it applies from the first rupee) not on the entire remittance.
Example 1: Education Remittance of ₹15 Lakh
Suppose a resident parent remits ₹15 lakh for their child’s tuition abroad, self-funded (no education loan). The first ₹10 lakh is exempt. TCS at 2% applies only to the remaining ₹5 lakh: ₹5,00,000 × 2% = ₹10,000 TCS. This amount reflects in Form 26AS and can be adjusted against the parent’s income tax liability.
Example 2: Investment Remittance
Suppose a resident individual remits ₹18 lakh to invest in US stocks through an overseas brokerage. The first ₹10 lakh is exempt; TCS at 20% applies to the remaining ₹8 lakh: ₹8,00,000 × 20% = ₹1,60,000 TCS. Since investment remittances don’t get the concessional 2% rate that education and medical purposes get, the upfront deduction is significantly higher, something investors should account for in their cash flow planning even though it’s fully claimable later.
Can You Claim a Refund of TCS?
Yes. TCS on foreign remittance is an advance tax, not a final one. When you file your Income Tax Return, the TCS deducted (visible in your Form 26AS and backed by the Form 27D certificate from your bank) is adjusted against your total tax liability for the year. If your actual tax liability is lower than the TCS collected which is common for salaried individuals whose tax is already covered through TDS the excess is refunded directly to your bank account after your return is processed. There’s no separate refund application; it happens automatically through the ITR filing and assessment process, provided the TCS entries in your return match your Form 26AS.
Documents Required for Foreign Remittance Under LRS
| Document | Purpose |
| PAN Card | Mandatory for LRS remittance and correct TCS rate application |
| A2 Form | Declaration for foreign exchange transactions under FEMA |
| LRS Declaration Form | Confirms the purpose of remittance and cumulative LRS usage for the year |
| Purpose-specific proof (admission letter, medical estimate, investment application, etc.) | Validates the stated purpose of the remittance |
| Form 27D (issued by bank after transfer) | TCS certificate used to claim credit while filing ITR |
Common Mistakes People Make While Sending Money Abroad
- Assuming the ₹10 lakh limit resets per bank: It doesn’t the threshold is cumulative across all banks and all purposes, combined per PAN.
- Not applying for an education loan when eligible: Missing out on the 0% TCS exemption simply because the remittance was self-funded instead of loan-routed.
- Forgetting to reconcile Form 26AS before filing ITR: Mismatches between what the bank reported and what’s claimed in the return can delay refunds.
- Ignoring cumulative tracking across the financial year: Several small remittances that individually look harmless can silently cross the ₹10 lakh threshold when added together.
- Confusing NRI remittances with resident LRS remittances: Assuming TCS applies (or doesn’t) without checking who is actually initiating the transfer the resident sender, not the recipient, determines TCS applicability.
Latest TCS Changes You Should Know in 2026
- Effective 1 April 2026, TCS on education and medical remittances dropped from 5% to 2% above ₹10 lakh.
- Overseas tour packages moved to a flat 2% rate from the first rupee, replacing the earlier tiered 5%/20% structure.
- The ₹10 lakh exemption threshold itself (raised from ₹7 lakh under Budget 2025) has been retained without further change in Budget 2026.
- Education loans from recognised financial institutions remain fully exempt from TCS, with no cap on amount.
- TCS on investment and gift remittances continues at 20% above ₹10 lakh, unchanged from earlier years.
Conclusion
TCS on foreign remittance isn’t an extra cost, it’s a cash-flow timing issue. Understanding which category your remittance falls into, tracking your cumulative LRS usage across the financial year, and reconciling your Form 26AS at tax time is what separates a smooth refund from a frustrating one. With the 2026 changes making education and medical transfers meaningfully cheaper upfront, it’s worth double-checking the purpose code your bank applies to your next remittance it can make a real difference to how much gets held back.
Ready to Plan Your Next Remittance?
If you’re sending money abroad this year, calculate your cumulative LRS usage before you transfer — it could save you from an unexpected TCS deduction at the bank counter. Consult a tax professional to confirm the right purpose code and loan structure for your situation.
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.


