Moving from India to Canada 2026 | Financial Guide
Updated
IRCC recommends at least $13,757 CAD for a single applicant as proof of funds, but realistically you’ll want $15,000–$25,000 CAD available for your first three months while job hunting, covering rent deposits, groceries, transit, a phone plan, and basic furnishing. The single most important financial task before departure is converting your Indian savings accounts to NRO (Non-Resident Ordinary) or NRE (Non-Resident External) status as required by RBI rules — failure to convert can result in FEMA penalties, and NRE accounts offer the major advantage of tax-free interest in India plus full repatriation without limits.
Once you land, your first-week priorities are opening a newcomer bank account (CIBC, Scotiabank StartRight, and BMO NewStart all offer 1–3 years of free chequing), getting your SIN at Service Canada (required for employment and tax filing), and applying for a newcomer credit card to start building Canadian credit immediately. Use Wise for transferring money from India — the mid-market exchange rate and 0.5–1.5% fee beats bank wire markups of 2–4% on every transfer. File your first Canadian tax return even if you arrive mid-year: it unlocks the GST/HST credit ($350–$500/year), the Canada Child Benefit if you have children, and creates the income history that strengthens future financial applications.
Financial Pre-Departure Checklist
Task
Timeline
Details
Convert bank accounts to NRO/NRE
Before departure
RBI requires this for NRIs
Get international credit card
1-2 months before
Forex-friendly card for first few weeks
Arrange money transfer method
Before departure
Set up Wise, Remitly account
Get proof of funds letter
Before departure
For visa/border entry
Close unnecessary Indian accounts
Before/after
Keep 1-2 for receivables
Cancel Indian subscriptions
Before departure
Avoid charges
Get medical records
Before departure
For Canadian health insurance
Carry some CAD cash
Before departure
$500-$1,000 for first few days
First-Week Financial Setup
Action
Provider
Notes
Open Canadian bank account
CIBC, TD, RBC, or Scotiabank
Many offer newcomer packages
Get SIN (Social Insurance Number)
Service Canada
Needed for work and banking
Get a phone plan
Public Mobile, Fido, Koodo
$25-$45/month for basics
Apply for newcomer credit card
CIBC, BMO (no credit history needed)
Build credit immediately
Sign up for HISA
EQ Bank, Wealthsimple
Park emergency funds at 4%+
Best Newcomer Bank Accounts
Bank
Newcomer Package
Features
CIBC
Free chequing for 1 year
No minimum, free e-Transfers
Scotiabank (StartRight)
Free chequing for 1-3 years
International money transfer deals
TD
Free chequing for 6 months
Longest branch hours
RBC
Free chequing for 1 year
Largest ATM network
BMO
NewStart Program
Free chequing + credit card offer
HSBC
Global banking
Easier if you bank with HSBC in India
Transferring Money from India to Canada
Method
Exchange Rate
Fee
Speed
Best For
Wise (TransferWise)
Mid-market rate
0.5-1.5%
1-2 days
Best overall rate
Remitly
Close to mid-market
$4-$10
1-3 days
Convenience
ICICI Money2India (reverse)
Bank rate
Higher
2-5 days
ICICI customers
SBI/HDFC wire transfer
Bank rate (2-4% markup)
$15-$40
3-5 days
Large transfers
Western Union
Below mid-market
$5-$20
Same day-2 days
Cash pickup
Carry INR and convert in Canada
Airport/bank rate (poor)
High spread
Instant
Emergency only
LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) Rules
Rule
Details
Annual limit
$250,000 USD per financial year per person
TCS (Tax Collected at Source)
5% above ₹7 lakh ($10,000 USD) for education; 20% above ₹7 lakh for other purposes
TCS refund
Claimable on Indian tax return
Purpose
Education, maintenance, investments abroad
Documentation
PAN card, reason declaration, bank form
NRO vs NRE Accounts
Feature
NRO Account
NRE Account
Purpose
Indian income (rent, dividends)
Foreign income parked in India
Currency
INR
INR (from foreign currency)
Tax on interest (India)
Taxable (30% TDS)
Tax-free
Repatriation
Up to $1M/year (with CA certificate)
Fully repatriable, no limit
Joint account
With resident Indian
With another NRI only
Best for
Collecting Indian rental income, dividends
Sending money from Canada to India
Cost of Living Comparison: India vs Canada
Category
India (Major City, ₹/month)
Canada (Major City, CAD/month)
Rent (1-bed)
₹15,000-₹35,000
$1,500-$2,500
Groceries
₹8,000-₹15,000
$400-$700
Transportation
₹3,000-₹8,000
$100-$200 (transit pass)
Dining out (meal for 2)
₹800-₹2,000
$60-$100
Utilities
₹3,000-₹6,000
$150-$300
Healthcare
Variable (private)
$0 (public) + $50-$150 (supplemental)
Internet
₹500-₹1,500
$50-$80
Phone
₹300-₹1,000
$25-$55
Tax Considerations
Canadian Tax Obligations
Item
Details
Tax residence
Become Canadian tax resident on arrival date
Worldwide income
Report all income (Indian + Canadian) to CRA
Indian property rental income
Report in Canada; claim foreign tax credit
NRE interest
Tax-free in India but taxable in Canada
NRO interest
Taxed in India (30% TDS) + report in Canada (foreign tax credit)
Capital gains on Indian assets
Report in Canada; foreign tax credit for Indian taxes paid
Tax treaty
India-Canada DTAA prevents double taxation
Filing deadline
April 30 (employment income) or June 15 (self-employed)
Common Tax Mistakes for Indian Newcomers
Mistake
Consequence
Not reporting Indian rental income
CRA penalties + interest
Not disclosing foreign property (T1135)
$2,500 penalty if assets over $100,000 CAD
Not converting NRO/NRE properly
India’s FEMA penalties
Not claiming foreign tax credits
Double taxation
Selling Indian property without reporting
Major tax event in Canada
Building Credit in Canada
Step
Timeline
Details
1. Get a secured credit card
Week 1
Deposit $500-$1,000, get a credit limit
2. Or get a newcomer credit card
Week 1
CIBC, BMO, TD offer no-history cards
3. Use it for small purchases
Monthly
Spend 20-30% of limit
4. Pay full balance on time
Monthly
Never miss a payment
5. Get a phone plan in your name
Month 1
Builds credit history
6. Apply for regular credit card
Month 6-12
Use Credit Karma to check score
Expected credit score after 1 year
680-720 (if managed well)
Government Benefits for Newcomers
Benefit
Eligibility
Amount
GST/HST Credit
After filing first tax return
$350-$500/year (single)
Canada Child Benefit
PR/citizen with children
$600-$700+/month per child under 6
Climate Action Incentive
After filing taxes
$200-$400/year
Provincial health insurance
After 0-3 month waiting period
Free doctor/hospital visits
Settlement services
PR holders
Free language, job help, integration
Indian PPF, EPF, and NPS Considerations
Account
After Becoming NRI
PPF (Public Provident Fund)
Can continue until maturity; no new account opening
EPF (Employee Provident Fund)
Can withdraw; taxable in Canada
NPS (National Pension System)
Can continue; partial withdrawal rules apply
Life insurance (India)
Can continue; premiums payable from NRO
Mutual funds (India)
Can continue holding; new SIPs may be restricted
Real estate (India)
Can own; rental income taxable in both countries
Recommended Financial Setup Timeline
Timeline
Action
Month 1
Bank account, SIN, phone, newcomer credit card
Month 1-3
Emergency fund in HISA, job search
Month 3-6
Open TFSA, start investing (if employed), file T1135 if applicable
Month 6-12
Build credit score to 680+, RRSP if employer match
Year 1+
First Canadian tax return, claim GST credit, FHSA if planning to buy home
Year 2+
Review NRO/NRE accounts, consider consolidating Indian assets
The Bottom Line
Convert Indian accounts to NRO/NRE before departure, bring $15,000–$25,000 CAD, set up Wise for transfers, and open a newcomer bank account plus credit card in week one. File a Canadian tax return from year one to claim GST/HST credits and bank tuition credits, report all Indian income to the CRA (the India-Canada tax treaty prevents double taxation through foreign tax credits), and disclose Indian assets over $100,000 CAD on Form T1135 to avoid the $2,500 penalty. Start a TFSA as soon as you confirm Canadian tax-resident status.