India-UAE DTAA Article 15

India-UAE DTAA Article 15: Is Your UAE Salary Taxable in India? The 183-Day Rule Finally Explained

INTRODUCTION

Ramesh Sharma worked in Dubai for six years as a finance manager. In February 2024, his company offered him a transfer back to India. He accepted, returned in March, and filed his ITR as a Non-Resident Indian believing his UAE salary for April 2023 to February 2024 was fully exempt from Indian tax. Six months later, he received a notice under Section 148A. The Assessing Officer alleged that since he was a resident of India in FY 2023–24 having spent 182 days in India that year his global income, including UAE salary, was taxable in India. The demand: ₹18.4 lakh. This scenario is playing out across thousands of Indian households. And the answer whether Ramesh’s UAE salary is taxable in India lies not just in the Income Tax Act, but in Article 15 of the India-UAE Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA). This article explains exactly how Article 15 works, how to count the 183 days correctly, where the Assessing Officers go wrong, and what documents every returning NRI must maintain.

Step-1: Establish Residential Status Under Indian Law

Before the DTAA becomes relevant, you must determine the person’s residential status under the Income Tax Act, 1961 for the relevant assessment year.

A person is a Resident of India if they are present in India for 182 days or more in the financial year, OR 60 days or more in the year AND 365 days or more in the preceding four years. An NRI fails both these tests.

Step-2: When Does the India-UAE DTAA Apply?

The India-UAE DTAA applies when a person is a resident of one or both contracting states. If the person is an NRI under Indian law — i.e., not a tax resident of India — the DTAA is irrelevant because India simply cannot tax the foreign income of a non-resident under domestic law.

The DTAA becomes critical when the person is a resident of India under Section 6 (i.e., spent 182+ days in India) but earned income in the UAE. In that case, both India (as the country of residence) and UAE (as the country of source) could potentially tax the same salary. Article 15 resolves this conflict.

Article 15 of the India-UAE DTAA (formally: the Agreement for Avoidance of Double Taxation between India and UAE, signed 1993, updated 2007) deals with income from employment. The operative text of Article 15(1) and 15(2) reads:

Article 15(1) — General Rule
"Salaries, wages and other similar remuneration derived by a resident of a Contracting State in respect of an employment shall be taxable only in that State unless the employment is exercised in the other Contracting State."

In plain English: If an Indian resident works in UAE, the salary is taxable in UAE. India gives up the right to tax it — subject to Article 15(2).
Article 15(2) — The 183-Day Exception
"Notwithstanding the provisions of paragraph 1, remuneration derived by a resident of a Contracting State in respect of employment exercised in the other Contracting State shall be taxable only in the first-mentioned State if: (a) the recipient is present in the other State for a period or periods not exceeding in the aggregate 183 days in any twelve-month period..."

In plain English: If a person is present in UAE for less than 183 days, AND the employer is not a UAE resident, AND the salary is not borne by a UAE PE — then India retains taxing rights.

The DTAA says “present in the other State” — meaning physical presence in UAE. The following rules apply based on OECD Commentary and CBDT practice:

Day TypeCounted in 183 days?
Day of arrival in UAEYES
Day of departure from UAEYES

The “Twelve-Month Period” vs “Financial Year”: This is a critical point where many assessees and even some officers go wrong. Article 15(2)(a) refers to “any twelve-month period” — not the Indian financial year (April to March). This means you count any rolling 12-month window. If an employee was in UAE for 190 days from July 2022 to June 2023, they cross the 183-day threshold in that twelve-month window — even if counted separately, April 2022 to March 2023 and April 2023 to March 2024 may each show fewer than 183 days.

Case Law 1 — ITAT Mumbai
DCIT vs Pankaj Bhargava [ITA No. 2341/Mum/2022]
The assessee, an Indian resident who worked in UAE for 10 months, claimed DTAA exemption on salary. AO taxed it. ITAT held that once Article 15(1) is invoked and the three conditions of 15(2) are not met, the salary is taxable only in UAE. The TRC from UAE Ministry of Finance, combined with employer certificate, was held sufficient. The addition was deleted.
Case Law 2 — ITAT Delhi
Arvind Mittal vs ITO [ITA No. 1892/Del/2021]
The assessee claimed NOR status and argued UAE salary was not taxable. ITAT examined the "received or deemed to be received" question. Held that salary credited to a UAE bank account and not remitted to India is neither received nor deemed received in India under Section 5(1)(c). The salary was held not taxable in India regardless of residency status.
Case Law 3 — CBDT Circular
CBDT Circular No. 13 of 2017
CBDT clarified that a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from the foreign country is necessary but may not alone be sufficient to claim DTAA benefits. The assessee must also establish that they are the beneficial owner of the income and that the treaty claim is not an abuse. This circular is frequently cited by AOs to deny DTAA benefits where only a TRC is produced.
Disclaimer: The Income Tax Department has specifically targeted NRI salary cases in its faceless assessment programme. If your client returned from UAE and filed as Resident or NOR, expect scrutiny. Prepare documentation before filing — not after a notice arrives.
  • Obtain a Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from the UAE Ministry of Finance for the relevant year. This is available online and costs very little. Without it, the DTAA claim will not be accepted.
  • File Form 10F with the Indian income tax department alongside or before the ITR. This is mandatory for claiming DTAA benefits under Rule 21AB of the Income Tax Rules.
  • Maintain a day-by-day travel log with passport copies showing entry/exit stamps from UAE and India. If passport lacks stamps (common with UAE e-gates), get a travel history from the UAE immigration authority.
  • Get an employer certificate stating that the employer is a UAE-incorporated entity, salary was borne by the UAE entity, and not by any Indian PE of the employer.
  • Keep UAE bank statements showing salary was credited to a UAE account. This supports the argument that the income was neither received nor deemed received in India.
  • Determine NOR status carefully. If your client qualifies as NOR, the DTAA argument becomes secondary — foreign income not received in India is simply outside the tax base.

The taxation of UAE salary for returning NRIs is not a simple yes-or-no question. It depends on the precise residency status under Indian law, the application of Article 15 of the India-UAE DTAA, the 183-day count on a rolling twelve-month basis, and whether the three cumulative conditions of Article 15(2) are satisfied. The ITAT has consistently protected genuine DTAA claims backed by proper documentation — but the documentation must be in place before the return is filed, not scrambled together in response to a notice.

Watch for: The pending SC ruling on beneficial ownership and TRC sufficiency, which may settle the question of how much additional documentation is required beyond the TRC in DTAA claims across all treaties.

Disclaimer: This article is published for educational and informational purposes only. It does not constitute professional legal, tax, or financial advice. The laws discussed are subject to change and judicial interpretation. Readers should consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or tax advocate before taking any action based on information published here. The author accepts no liability for decisions made on the basis of this article.