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Form 92 – Quarterly Statement by Specified Fund / Stock Broker for Non-Residents
Purpose:
Form 92 is a quarterly statement required to be furnished by specified funds or stock brokers in respect of non-resident clients, as prescribed under Rule 157 of the Income-tax Rules. The primary objective of the form is to enable the Income Tax Department to obtain structured, standardised, and verifiable information relating to non-resident investors for monitoring, compliance, and information exchange purposes.
Who Should File:
Frequency & Due Dates:
Sl.no | Quarter | Period | Due Date |
1 | Q1 | April – June | On or before 15th July |
2 | Q2 | July – September | On or before 15th October |
3 | Q3 | October – December | On or before 15th January |
4 | Q4 | January – March | On or before 15th April |
Structure of Form 92:
Part A: Particulars of the Specified Fund / Stock Broker
Part B: Details of Non-Residents
Verification Section:
Annexures:
Annexure A-1 – Declaration received from the non-resident as referred to in Rule 157 (1)(c)(iii) or Rule 157(3)(b)(iii), as applicable.
Documents Required to File Form 92:
(No other supporting documents are required to be uploaded.)
Filing Count:
Filing is quarterly and depends on the number of non-resident clients dealt with during the relevant quarter. Multiple non-residents can be reported in a single Form 92 for a quarter. Historically, filings are higher in the case of large specified funds and active stock brokers.
Process Flow for Filing Form 92:
Outcome of Processed Form 92:
Brief Note on Broad or Qualitative Changes Proposed:
Structured Part-wise Format: Introduction of Part A and Part B clearly segregates filer particulars and non-resident details.
Expanded Contact and Address Fields: Inclusion of detailed address, email, and contact information improves accuracy and traceability.
Annexure-based Attachments: Mandatory declarations are shifted to a clearly defined annexure (A-1) for standardisation.
Pre-filling of Data: Certain particulars are pre-filled by the system to the extent available, reducing errors and compliance burden.
Digital-first Design: The form is fully aligned for electronic filing, verification, and processing through the e-Filing portal.
Challenges and Solutions:
1. Challenge: Variations in identification details of non-residents across jurisdictions.
Solution: Provision for furnishing either TIN or a government-issued unique identification number ensures flexibility and completeness.
2. Challenge: Managing quarterly compliance for entities with large non-resident portfolios.
Solution: Ability to report multiple non-residents in a single quarterly form and system-supported pre-filling reduces manual effort.
Common Changes Made Across Forms:
1. Mandatory electronic filing through the e-Filing portal
Form 92 is required to be furnished online through the Income-tax Department’s e-Filing portal, ensuring faster submission, acknowledgement generation, and electronic tracking of filing status.
2. Structured Part-wise format for clarity and consistency
The form has been reorganised into Part A (Specified Fund/Stock Broker details) and Part B (Non-resident details), providing a clear segregation of reporting entity information and non-resident particulars.
3. Standardisation of identification and contact fields
Separate and clearly defined fields have been introduced for PAN, address, email ID, contact number (with country code), and category of filer, improving data accuracy and system validation.
4. Alignment with updated statutory framework
The form has been aligned with the updated provisions of the Income-tax Act, 2025 and Rule 157, replacing legacy references and ensuring consistency with the revised legal framework.
5. Annexure-based reporting of declarations
Declarations from non-residents are now required to be furnished as a separate annexure (Annexure A-1), reducing clutter in the main form and enabling streamlined electronic attachment handling.
6. System-supported pre-filling of information
Certain particulars in the form are pre-filled to the extent available in the Department’s database, minimising manual entry, errors, and compliance burden.
7. Enhanced data capture for non-resident identification
Clear provision has been made to capture either the Tax Identification Number (TIN) or, where unavailable, a unique identification number issued by the country of residence, ensuring comprehensive reporting of non-resident details.
Quarterly non-resident reporting in Form 92 mandates structured electronic filing, annexure declarations, and standardized identity details. Quarterly reporting in Form 92 requires specified funds and stock brokers dealing with non-resident clients to furnish standardised information under Rule 157 through the Income-tax Department's electronic filing system. The form is submitted quarterly, may include multiple non-residents in one return, and is intended to support monitoring, compliance, verification of residency particulars, and information exchange for cross-border investments. Form 92 uses a structured Part A and Part B format, requires Annexure A-1 declarations from each non-resident, and calls for PAN details of the filer, with no other supporting documents to be uploaded.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.