Non-Resident Indians face a specific and compounded version of property disputes. The property is in India; the owner is abroad. Years — sometimes decades — pass between visits. Relatives or caretakers who were entrusted with the property use that access to create adverse possession claims, encumbrances, or fraudulent conveyances. Meanwhile, the NRI navigates Indian legal requirements from a different time zone, with limited ability to appear personally in court.
Raghuvanshi Vaidya & Partners has handled NRI property matters in Indore for over 19 years — including disputes involving ancestral land, inherited urban property, pre-purchase due diligence for NRI buyers, and Power of Attorney (POA) mandates from clients in the US, UK, UAE, Canada, and Australia. We maintain communication across time zones and handle Indian proceedings fully on behalf of clients who cannot be present.
Key Legal Framework for NRI Property in India
What law governs NRI property rights?
FEMA 1999 (Foreign Exchange Management Act):Regulates what property NRIs can acquire, hold, and repatriate proceeds from. NRIs can generally buy immovable property in India (except agricultural land, plantation, and farmhouse) without RBI approval. Repatriation of sale proceeds is subject to limits and RBI regulations.Transfer of Property Act 1882:Governs sale, mortgage, lease, and gift of immovable property — applies equally to NRIs.Registration Act 1908:Deeds executed abroad must be notarized by a Notary Public in that country, then apostilled (if that country is a Hague Convention signatory), before being used in Indian courts or for Indian registration.Indian Succession Act 1925:Governs succession to property of Christians, Parsis, and others not covered by Hindu/Muslim personal law. Relevant where NRI decedents have left property in India.Hindu Succession Act 1956 (amended 2005):For Hindu NRIs — daughters have equal coparcenary rights in ancestral property regardless of when the property was acquired.
Common NRI Property Problems
Power of Attorney — What NRIs Must Know
Related Reading:
The difference between General POA and Special POA
A General Power of Attorney (GPA) gives wide authority — to sell, mortgage, lease, litigate, collect rent. GPAs are routinely abused. The Supreme Court in Suraj Lamp & Industries v State of Haryana (2012) held that GPA-based property transactions cannot substitute registered sale deeds and do not confer title.
A Special Power of Attorney (SPA) limits authority to a specific act — “to appear in Case No. X before the District Court Indore and do all things necessary for the conduct of the said case.” SPAs are safer, more enforceable, and the form we recommend for litigation mandates.
Execution abroad: Both GPA and SPA executed outside India must be notarized by a local Notary Public, then apostilled at the relevant authority (e.g., for the US: Secretary of State; for UAE: Ministry of Foreign Affairs). Once apostilled, they are ready for use in India without further authentication.
Can an NRI Appear in Indian Courts by Video Conference?
Yes — after the Supreme Court’s landmark directions in Swapnil Tripathi v Supreme Court of India (2018) and the COVID-era normalization of virtual proceedings, most Indian courts including the MP High Court and District Court Indore allow parties and witnesses to appear via video conference. Oral testimony from abroad is recorded through the Indian Consulate or via court-approved video conferencing facilities. We coordinate all technical requirements on our end.
Related Reading: Related Reading: Property Disputes in Indore: Types of Cases and Legal Remedies · Can an NRI File a Property Case from Abroad? A Complete Guide
Related Reading: Related Reading: Property Disputes in Indore: Legal Remedies and Courts · NRI Property Law in India: Disputes, POA, and FEMA
Frequently Asked Questions
Related Reading: Related Reading: Property Disputes in Indore: Legal Remedies · NRI Property Law in India: Disputes, POA, and FEMA
Can I buy property in India on a foreign passport?
If you are an NRI (Indian citizen living abroad) — yes, freely, subject to FEMA rules. If you are a foreign national of non-Indian origin — generally no, without specific RBI approval. OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) cardholders are treated as NRIs for most property acquisition purposes.
Can I repatriate sale proceeds from India to my foreign bank account?
Yes, subject to FEMA Regulation 3. The property must have been acquired legitimately (not agricultural land); the sale proceeds can be remitted up to the original purchase price from a Non-Resident Ordinary (NRO) account in two tranches of USD 1 million per financial year. Profit (capital gain) is taxable in India. We advise on FEMA compliance and coordinate with CAs for the tax and banking side.
What if I have no documents — family members say the property was always theirs?
This is more common than you might expect. Even without formal documents, evidence of hereditary possession, old revenue records (khatoni), property tax receipts in a family member’s name, old utility connections, and oral testimony of neighbors can establish the right. We conduct a full documentary investigation before advising on the strength of the claim.








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