Stripe Foreign Income Tax in India — Compliance, DTAA & FIRC
Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team
Income from Stripe is treated as foreign income and is fully taxable in India for residents. If Stripe qualifies as export of services, GST is zero-rated with LUT. Keep FIRC/BRC as proof. If tax was withheld abroad, claim Foreign Tax Credit by filing Form 67.
Who this applies to
- Indian freelancers earning through Stripe
- Stripe earners receiving foreign currency payments
- Professionals confused about Stripe and DTAA/FIRC
- Stripe users needing export of services documentation
How this works for Stripe
All worldwide income is taxable in India for resident Indians — including Stripe income.
Stripe income from foreign sources qualifies as export of services. File LUT for zero-rated GST.
Keep FIRC/BRC from your bank for every foreign remittance — mandatory for export proof.
If any country withheld tax, file Form 67 before ITR due date to claim Foreign Tax Credit.
India has DTAAs with 90+ countries — prevents double taxation.
Convert foreign income to INR at SBI TT buying rate on receipt date.
Real examples
Stripe earner with LUT
Foreign income with proper export documentation.
Stripe earner claiming DTAA
Foreign tax withheld, claiming credit in India.
What should you do?
File LUT every FY if receiving foreign payments through Stripe.
Collect FIRC within 15 days of every foreign receipt.
Foreign tax withheld? File Form 67 — don't miss the deadline.
Use SBI TT buying rate for conversion, not Google or platform rates.
Mistakes to avoid
Not declaring Stripe foreign income at all.
Missing FIRC collection — export claim fails.
Not filing Form 67 for FTC before ITR deadline.
Wrong conversion rate — must use SBI TT buying rate.
Assuming DTAA exempts income — it prevents double tax, not all tax.
Documents you need
- FIRC/BRC for every foreign payment
- Form 67 for Foreign Tax Credit
- Stripe payout reports
- All invoices with currency details
- Bank statements showing foreign credits
- LUT acknowledgment (if GST registered)
Earning in USD but filing in INR?
Foreign income, DTAA, FIRC, export of services — it's confusing. We make it simple.