Buying property back home,
with the maths done for you.
A plain-English guide to investing in Gujarat & Indian real estate as an NRI — paired with two calculators that convert your foreign salary into a real EMI and tell you whether renting or buying wins.
What NRI money is chasing in India right now
For years, Indians abroad bought property back home mostly out of sentiment — a flat for parents, a plot for retirement. That has shifted. A weaker rupee means a salary earned in dollars, pounds or dirhams stretches much further at home, and residential prices in India's second-tier cities have been climbing steadily rather than spiking and crashing. The result is a window where NRI buyers get both a currency advantage and a market that still has room to grow.
The heat is not evenly spread. Metro cores like South Mumbai or central Bengaluru are expensive and slow-moving. The genuine momentum is in tier-2 cities and the fast-developing corridors around them — and Gujarat sits near the centre of that story.
Where Gujarat stands
Surat has been one of the country's quiet outperformers, powered by its diamond and textile economy and a young population that keeps rental demand high. Ahmedabad's growth has spread along the SG Highway and the new metro line, with the GIFT City financial zone pulling in a different, higher-income tenant. Vadodara and Rajkot offer lower entry prices with steady appreciation, which suits an NRI buyer who wants a rental yield without a Mumbai-sized cheque.
| City / area | Typical apartment range* | Why NRIs look here |
|---|---|---|
| Surat (Vesu, Pal, Adajan) | ₹5,500–9,500 / sq.ft | Strong rental demand, business city |
| Ahmedabad (SG Highway, GIFT area) | ₹6,000–11,000 / sq.ft | Metro + financial-hub tenants |
| Vadodara | ₹4,500–7,500 / sq.ft | Lower entry, steady growth |
| Rajkot | ₹4,000–6,500 / sq.ft | Affordable, improving infrastructure |
*Indicative ranges only. Prices vary sharply by exact locality, project quality and floor. Always verify current rates locally before deciding.
Why the currency angle matters more than the price
The number most NRIs fixate on is the price per square foot. The number that actually decides the deal is the exchange rate. A ₹75-lakh flat costs roughly $90,000 at ₹83 to the dollar, but nearer $100,000 if the rupee strengthens to ₹75. Because your loan is repaid in rupees while your income arrives in another currency, every EMI is quietly a currency bet. The EMI calculator below is built around exactly this — it shows the monthly cost in both rupees and your home currency, so you see what you are really committing to each month.
Do the numbers before you fall for the flat
Both calculators run instantly in your browser — nothing is sent anywhere. Change the exchange rate and interest rate to today's real figures for an accurate result.
NRI Home Loan EMI Calculator
USD · GBP · CAD · AUD · AED → INRRent vs Buy Calculator
Where does buying overtake renting?These tools give estimates, not financial advice. They ignore taxes, maintenance, brokerage and stamp duty, which vary by state — treat the output as a starting point, then confirm with a qualified advisor.
How the EMI is worked out
The EMI uses the standard reducing-balance formula that every Indian bank applies: EMI = P·r·(1+r)ⁿ ÷ ((1+r)ⁿ − 1), where P is the loan amount, r is the monthly interest rate (annual ÷ 12 ÷ 100), and n is the number of monthly instalments. The home-currency figure is simply the rupee EMI divided by the exchange rate you enter — which is why keeping that rate current matters.
How rent vs buy is compared
The buy side adds up your down payment plus every EMI over the years you hold, then subtracts the property's estimated resale value (grown at your appreciation rate) to get a net cost. The rent side compounds your monthly rent upward each year by the rent-rise figure. Whichever line is lower for your holding period is the cheaper choice — and the verdict tells you the year buying pulls ahead.
How an NRI actually buys property in India
Check you're eligible
NRIs and OCIs can freely buy residential and commercial property in India. The one restriction: you cannot buy agricultural land, farmhouses or plantation property without special RBI permission.
Get your accounts & papers
You'll need an NRE/NRO bank account, a PAN card, passport and visa/OCI proof, and usually a Power of Attorney for someone trusted in India to sign on your behalf if you can't fly down.
Fund it the legal way
Payment must come through banking channels — from your NRE/NRO account or by inward remittance. Home loans are available to NRIs from most Indian banks, typically financing up to 75–80% of the value.
Verify the title & RERA
Check the project is registered with the state RERA authority, confirm a clear title, and have a local lawyer review documents. This is the step most remote buyers skip and later regret.
Register & pay duty
Stamp duty and registration charges apply at the state rate (Gujarat is around 4.9% stamp duty plus 1% registration). The sale deed is registered at the sub-registrar office.
Plan for tax & TDS
Rental income and capital gains are taxable in India, and TDS rules are far stricter when an NRI is the seller — see our guide to TDS on NRI property sales. A chartered accountant familiar with NRI rules is worth the fee here.