Form 15CA and 15CB certification is a statutory requirement for all outward remittances by Non Resident Indians exceeding ₹5 lakhs from India. Whether the funds originate from a property sale, rental income, matured investments, or accumulated NRO balances, no bank will process the transfer without these documents in order. The obligation applies regardless of whether the remittance is structured as a single transfer or split across multiple transactions.
The certification process involves more than form submission. A Chartered Accountant must independently assess the taxability of the remittance, verify that applicable TDS has been deducted and deposited, determine the correct Part under Form 15CA, and certify compliance under Section 195(6) of the Income Tax Act. Where a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement applies, treaty documentation including Tax Residency Certificates and Form 10F must be validated and aligned with the stated remittance purpose.
Banks operating under AD Category-I authorisation are strict in their review. Incomplete documentation, mismatched TDS records, incorrect Part selection, or missing CA certification results in outright rejection, leaving sale proceeds or legacy balances stranded in NRO accounts for weeks or longer. A structured, pre verified approach to 15CA/15CB filing is not optional it is the difference between funds reaching your foreign account on schedule and an indefinite compliance hold.
Form 15CB certification and Form 15CA filing done before the bank asks for them.
When a CA certifies Form 15CB without thoroughly examining the source of funds, applicable tax provisions, and TDS history, banks often identify inconsistencies during their own review. A certification that does not accurately reflect the taxability of the remittance or the correct treaty position will be rejected at the bank counter, requiring the entire process to restart with corrected documentation.
The USD 1 million annual limit for NRO repatriation under FEMA is conditional on complete CA certification at each instance. Where certification is missing, partially completed, or does not cover all source transactions, banks will not process the remittance regardless of the overall limit available. Funds remain blocked in the NRO account until the certification is reissued and resubmitted in full.
Where treaty benefits are being claimed, the Tax Residency Certificate and Form 10F must specifically support the nature of the payment being remitted whether it is interest, rent, capital gains, or another income category. A mismatch between the DTAA documentation and the declared remittance purpose is a common basis for bank rejection, particularly when the remittance involves income from multiple sources filed under a single 15CA.
When NRIs structure large remittances across several transfers to manage liquidity or timing, each transaction that crosses the ₹5 lakh threshold requires its own 15CA/15CB certification. Treating split remittances as a single certified event or failing to file separate forms for each qualifying transaction results in incomplete compliance and bank level rejection of individual transfers within the series.
Even correctly prepared 15CA/15CB filings can be rejected at the bank if acknowledgement numbers are not properly linked, upload records on the income tax portal are not traceable, or if the bank's internal documentation checklist has requirements beyond the statutory minimum. Without pre validation with the receiving bank branch before submission, post filing rejections can add days or weeks to an already time sensitive remittance process.
Form 15CB is required when the remittance exceeds ₹5 lakhs in a financial year and is chargeable to tax in India. In such cases, a Chartered Accountant must certify the tax position before Form 15CA can be filed. Even where the remittance is not taxable, the source of funds must be documented and the correct Part of Form 15CA selected to reflect the exemption the certification requirement does not disappear simply because no tax is due on the transfer.
No. All remittances from NRO accounts that exceed the ₹5 lakh threshold require Form 15CA and, where applicable, Form 15CB before the bank will process the transfer. The USD 1 million annual limit under FEMA applies to repatriation of balances held in NRO accounts from legitimate sources such as property sale proceeds, rent, dividends, and matured investments but this limit is accessible only when the certification and documentation requirements are fully met for each individual remittance.
A bank rejection does not invalidate the filed documents but does require the underlying issue to be identified and rectified before resubmission. Common causes include portal acknowledgement numbers that cannot be traced, a mismatch between the certified amount and the remittance instruction, or missing DTAA documentation. The correction process requires the CA to review the rejection basis, amend the relevant document, refile where necessary, and recoordinate with the bank adding days or weeks to the timeline depending on the nature of the error.
Where India has a Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement with the NRI's country of residence, treaty provisions may reduce or eliminate the withholding tax applicable to the remittance. To claim treaty benefits, the NRI must provide a valid Tax Residency Certificate issued by the foreign tax authority and a completed Form 10F. The CA certifying Form 15CB must verify these documents, confirm their applicability to the income category being remitted, and reflect the treaty rate in the certification. Incomplete or expired DTAA documentation will result in the standard withholding rate being applied.