Foreign equity and overseas accounts must be reported in your Indian return — and missing Schedule FA can trigger heavy penalties. We get the perquisite, capital gains, forex and disclosures right, and make sure you are not taxed twice.
Perquisite tax when they vest, capital gains when you sell — computed with the right fair-market value and forex conversion.
Foreign shares, bank accounts and assets disclosed correctly — the single most common reason people get notices.
Foreign tax already withheld is claimed as credit under DTAA with Form 44, so you are not taxed on the same income twice.
Holding RSUs/ESOPs from a US or global employer, in India as Resident or RNOR.
Foreign bank accounts, brokerage or shares that must be disclosed in Schedule FA.
Worked abroad, moved back, and now hold foreign equity and accounts to report.
No hourly billing, no surprises — all-inclusive · CA-reviewed.
If you are a Resident or RNOR, yes — foreign equity and accounts must be disclosed in Schedule FA, and the income (perquisite on vesting, gains on sale, dividends) reported. We handle this precisely.
Schedule FA is the part of the return that discloses foreign assets. Missing it is the most common trigger for notices, and under the Black Money Act the penalties can be severe — so it must be done correctly.
Both. On vesting, the value is taxed as a perquisite (salary). On sale, the gain over the vesting value is a capital gain. We compute each with the correct FMV and exchange rates.
Not on the same income twice. We claim foreign tax credit under the India–US DTAA using Form 44, so the US tax withheld is set off against your Indian liability.
Yes for a standard return with RSU/ESOP and Schedule FA. Large or complex portfolios are quoted upfront before any work starts.