Foreign Income Tax for Content Creators in India — USD Earnings, DTAA & Compliance
Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team
If you're a resident Indian content creator earning from foreign clients, all your worldwide income is taxable in India. Services to foreign clients qualify as 'export of services' under GST (zero-rated with LUT). If tax was withheld abroad, claim Foreign Tax Credit under DTAA.
Who this applies to
- Content Creators working with US, EU, or global clients
- Content Creators receiving payments in USD, EUR, or GBP
- Content Creators confused about FIRC, DTAA, and foreign tax credits
- Content Creators on international marketplaces or platforms
How this works for Content Creators
All foreign income is taxable in India for resident Indians. No exemption just because the client is abroad.
Services to foreign clients = 'export of services' under GST. File LUT → charge 0% GST → keep FIRC as proof.
If any country withheld tax, claim Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) by filing Form 67 before ITR due date.
India has DTAAs with 90+ countries — ensures you're not taxed twice on the same income.
Keep FIRC/BRC from your bank for every foreign receipt. Without this, export claims have no proof.
Convert foreign income to INR at SBI TT buying rate on the date of receipt for tax computation.
Common deductible tools for Content Creators
Commonly missed expenses
Real examples
Content Creator earning in USD
Receiving payments from US/EU clients via Wise or PayPal.
Content Creator with DTAA benefits
Claiming foreign tax credit for tax already withheld abroad.
What should you do?
File LUT at the start of each financial year. No exceptions if you have foreign clients.
Collect FIRC from your bank within 15 days of receiving foreign payment.
Foreign client withheld tax? File Form 67 for FTC — don't leave money on the table.
Use 44ADA if total receipts (Indian + foreign) are under ₹75L.
Mistakes to avoid
Not declaring foreign income — illegal and triggers scrutiny.
Missing FIRC collection — GST export claim fails without proof.
Not filing Form 67 for Foreign Tax Credit before ITR due date.
Using wrong conversion rate — must use SBI TT buying rate, not Google.
Thinking DTAA exempts income — it prevents double taxation, not taxation itself.
Documents you need
- FIRC or e-BRC for every foreign payment
- Form 67 for Foreign Tax Credit claims
- Tax Residency Certificate (if needed for DTAA)
- All foreign invoices with currency details
- Bank statements showing foreign remittances
- LUT acknowledgment under GST
Earning in USD but filing in INR?
Foreign income, DTAA, FIRC, export of services — it's confusing. We make it simple.