The Foreign Assets of Small Taxpayers Disclosure Scheme, 2026
A One-Time Opportunity to Clean Up Undisclosed Foreign Assets at Concessional Cost
The Finance Bill, 2026 introduces Chapter IV – The Foreign Assets of Small Taxpayers Disclosure Scheme, 2026 (“the Scheme”). This is a targeted compliance window for small taxpayers who have foreign assets or foreign income that were never disclosed in their Indian tax returns.
Unlike the harsh regime of the Black Money Act, 2015, this Scheme offers a much lighter financial outgo and immunity from prosecution, provided the taxpayer fits within the monetary thresholds.
This is not a general amnesty. It is a carefully designed relief for small-value foreign non-compliances.
1. Why this Scheme is significant
Under the Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) Act, 2015, consequences are severe:
- Tax at 30% of value
- Penalty up to 300% of tax
- Prosecution
- No limitation period
- Aggressive enforcement on foreign assets
Many small taxpayers today face problems due to:
- Old foreign bank accounts opened during employment abroad
- ESOP accounts, brokerage accounts, pension accounts not disclosed
- Assets acquired when NRI, but not reported after becoming resident
- Genuine tax-paid money invested abroad, but Schedule FA not filled
- Inherited or dormant foreign assets
The Government has recognised that not all foreign non-disclosures are black money. Hence, this calibrated relief.
2. Who can use this Scheme? (Section 115)
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- You are currently a resident, OR
- You are a non-resident / RNOR now, but were resident when:
- The foreign income arose, OR
- The foreign asset was acquired.
This is crucial. Even current NRIs may be eligible.
3. What can be disclosed? (Section 116)
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- You did not file a return earlier, OR
- You filed return but did not disclose foreign asset/income, OR
- The asset/income has escaped assessment.
In short: any undisclosed foreign asset or foreign income for any past year.
4. Two categories of relief under the Scheme (Section 117)
Category 1 – Undisclosed foreign asset / foreign income (small value)
| Particulars | Relief |
|---|---|
| Applies when | Aggregate of undisclosed foreign asset + income ≤ ₹1 crore |
| Tax payable | 30% of asset value (as on 31 March 2026) + 30% of foreign income |
| Penalty | 100% of the above tax |
| Effective cost | 60% of value/income |
| Immunity | Yes, from Black Money Act penalty & prosecution |
Category 2 – Genuine assets not reported in Schedule FA
| Particulars | Relief |
|---|---|
| Applies when | Asset ≤ ₹5 crore |
| Situation |
Asset acquired:
|
| Amount payable | Flat fee of ₹1,00,000 No tax, no penalty |
| Immunity | Yes |
This is meant for compliance failures, not tax evasion.
5. How valuation works
For Category 1 cases, tax is on Fair Market Value of asset as on 31 March 2026.
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6. Procedure to declare (Sections 118–119)
- File electronic declaration in prescribed form
- Department verifies eligibility
- Order issued within 1 month
- Pay amount within 2 months
- Additional 2 months allowed with 1% monthly interest
- On payment, certificate issued
- Certificate is conclusive
7. What happens after you declare? (Sections 120–123)
- Declared amount not added to total income
- Cannot be reopened later
- No rectification/revision claims allowed
- Amount paid non-refundable
- Immunity from penalty and prosecution under Black Money Act
8. When the Scheme is NOT available (Section 124)
- Asset represents proceeds of crime (PMLA cases)
- Assessment already completed under Black Money Act
9. Impact on ongoing assessments (Section 125)
If assessment is pending, AO must consider the declaration while finalising. This can save taxpayers already under scrutiny.
10. Practical examples
- Example 1: Old NRI bank account not disclosed – Pay ₹1 lakh only
- Example 2: ESOP brokerage account – Pay ₹1 lakh only
- Example 3: Undisclosed foreign deposit – Pay ~₹42 lakh
- Example 4: Foreign asset ₹1.8 crore – Scheme not available
Conclusion
The Foreign Assets of Small Taxpayers Disclosure Scheme, 2026 is not an amnesty. It is a compliance correction window designed with surgical precision to help genuine small taxpayers regularise foreign reporting failures without facing the draconian Black Money Act.
