A parent or relative has passed away in India, money is sitting in an Indian bank account, and you are an NRI trying to claim it from abroad. The death certificate is foreign, the heirs are scattered, and the bank keeps asking for more papers. This guide explains, step by step, how to legalise a foreign death certificate, prove you are a legal heir, deal with nominee and succession rules, release the funds, and repatriate the money out of India.
Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.
Quick answer
To release inherited money from an Indian bank as an NRI, first legalise the death certificate (apostille or consular attestation if issued abroad) and get a certified English translation if needed. If you are the registered nominee, the bank usually releases the balance against the death certificate, your KYC and its claim form. If there is no nominee, the bank may ask for a legal heir certificate, a will with probate, or a succession certificate from a court. Once funds reach an NRO account, you can repatriate them under RBI rules with the required forms and a CA certificate. Take legal and tax advice before any court process or large remittance.
This guide is for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs), Persons of Indian Origin and Overseas Citizens of India who need to claim inherited money held in India after a relative has died. It is most useful if you are dealing with one or more of these situations:
This guide covers bank balances, deposits and similar movable money. It does not cover the separate process of transferring inherited immovable property into your name. If land, a flat or a house is involved, also read our companion guide on NRI property mutation when your foreign address and KYC are stuck. Because the stakes here can be high and the rules vary, treat this as an information guide, not personal legal, tax or financial advice.
Make a single list of every Indian account, deposit and fund you know about: bank name, branch, account type and rough balance. Pull together the paperwork already at home, especially the original death certificate, any will, old passbooks and FD receipts.
Check whether the death certificate was issued in India or abroad. If it is foreign, note the country and the language; you will almost certainly need it legalised before an Indian bank will accept it. For Hague Apostille Convention countries this means an apostille; for others it usually means attestation by the Indian mission.
Email each bank's branch one clear question in writing: “What is your exact list of documents to settle a deceased account in my situation, and is there a registered nominee?” A written list protects you from repeated, shifting demands later.
Find out whether the deceased had named a nominee. If you are the nominee, the path is shorter. If there is no nominee, ask the bank specifically whether it will accept a legal heir certificate, or whether it insists on probate or a succession certificate, and at what amount that demand begins.
Start arranging your own KYC as a claimant: passport, OCI/PIO card if any, overseas address proof and PAN. Banks apply KYC strictly to NRI claimants, so getting this ready early prevents a last-minute hold.
Map out which legalisation and translation steps you need and who will do them. Apostille and attestation are done in the country where the certificate was issued, so identify that authority now. Arrange a certified English translation if the certificate is in another language.
Draft your covering letter to the bank using the template later in this guide. If the bank has mentioned probate or a succession certificate, line up a short paid consultation with an Indian lawyer before you commit to any court filing. Keep one tracker with every call, email and acknowledgement; it will save you weeks later.
| Document | What it proves | Where to get it |
|---|---|---|
| Death certificate (original) | Fact and date of death | Local registrar of births and deaths (India) or the foreign civil authority |
| Apostille or consular attestation on a foreign death certificate | The foreign certificate is legally valid for use in India | Competent authority / Indian mission in the country of issue |
| Certified English translation (if certificate is not in English) | The bank and any court can read the document | Authorised / sworn translator; notarised where required |
| Legal heir certificate or succession proof | Who the lawful heirs are | Tahsildar / revenue authority or court, depending on state and purpose |
| Will (if any) and probate / letters of administration | How the deceased wanted assets distributed; court confirmation of the will | Family records; competent civil court |
| Bank nomination record | Whether a nominee was registered and who it is | The bank branch; ask in writing |
| Bank's deceased-claim form and indemnity / declaration | Formal claim and the heirs' undertakings | The bank branch or its website |
| Claimant KYC (passport, OCI/PIO, overseas address proof, PAN) | Identity, NRI status and tax identity of the claimant | Your own documents |
| Account proof (passbook, FD receipt, statement) | The account and balance being claimed | Family records; the bank |
| Power of attorney (if a representative will act in India) | Authority for someone to act on your behalf | Executed abroad with apostille/attestation, or in India |
| NRO account details | Destination account to receive inherited funds before repatriation | Your authorised dealer (AD) bank in India |
| CA certificate and remittance forms (for repatriation) | Tax position dealt with; remittance compliant with FEMA | A qualified chartered accountant and your AD bank |
Write down every Indian account, deposit and fund. For each one note the bank, branch, account type and whether a nominee was registered. Then secure the death certificate. If it was issued in India, get several certified copies from the local registrar. If it was issued abroad, you will move to legalisation in the next step.
An Indian bank will rarely accept a foreign death certificate on its own. Get it legalised in the country where it was issued. For countries that are party to the Hague Apostille Convention, this means obtaining an apostille from the competent authority there. For other countries, it usually means attestation by the Indian embassy or consulate. If the certificate is not in English, also obtain a certified English translation. Keep multiple legalised sets, because the bank, a court and the tax process may each want one.
Banks differ widely, so do not guess. Send the branch a written request for its full, situation-specific document list and the timeline it follows for deceased claims. Ask three precise questions: is there a registered nominee; will a legal heir certificate be enough; and above what amount does it require probate or a succession certificate. A written reply stops the branch from adding new demands every visit.
If you are the registered nominee, the release is usually simpler. Submit the legalised death certificate, your KYC, the bank's claim form and the account proof. Remember, though, that a nominee is generally treated as a person who receives the money in trust for the lawful heirs, not necessarily as the final owner. If other heirs exist, you may still need to settle entitlements among yourselves, separately from the bank's release.
Without a nomination, the bank needs proof of who the heirs are. A legal heir certificate from the revenue authority is often the starting document; see our guide on how to apply for a legal heir certificate in 2026. For larger amounts or disputes, the bank may insist on a court document instead. Confirm which the bank will accept before you spend money on either.
If there is a valid will, the executor may need to obtain probate of that will. If there is no will, or the bank wants a court order to release debts and movable assets, a succession certificate may be the right instrument. The two are not interchangeable. Read our explainer on will, probate versus succession certificate in India and on how to apply for a succession certificate in 2026, then take legal advice on which fits your facts before filing in court.
Submit the bank's claim form with all supporting documents and any indemnity or declaration it requires. Get a dated acknowledgement for every submission. Note the bank's own stated turnaround time for settling deceased claims. If the branch sits on the file beyond that period without a clear reason, you move to the escalation ladder below.
Inherited money is usually credited to an NRO account first. To remit it abroad, your authorised dealer bank will require the prescribed remittance forms and a chartered accountant certificate confirming that the tax position has been handled. Repatriation of inherited funds is generally permitted under RBI rules subject to the annual limit and conditions. The exact forms, limit and documents change from time to time, so confirm the current procedure with your AD bank and a qualified CA before remitting.
| Stage | Action | Forum / Destination | Target timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Submit deceased-claim with legalised documents; get dated acknowledgement | Branch manager of the bank holding the account | As per the bank's stated deceased-claim timeline |
| 2 | Written complaint if the claim stalls without reason | Bank's nodal / principal grievance officer | As per the bank's grievance policy |
| 3 | Escalate an unresolved banking grievance | RBI Banking Ombudsman via the RBI complaint portal | After the bank's reply period lapses |
| 4 | RTI application for public-authority records (registrar, govt PF/pension, PSU) | CPIO of the relevant public authority | 30 days (RTI Act) |
| 5 | CPGRAMS grievance for a government department or PSU service failure | pgportal.gov.in — relevant ministry / department | Government service target timeline |
| 6 | Court action for probate, succession certificate, or a disputed claim | Competent civil court (with a lawyer) | Depends on the court and the dispute |
Replace the text in square brackets with your own details before sending.
To, The Branch Manager [Bank Name] [Branch Name and Address]
Date: [DD/MM/YYYY]
Subject: Settlement of deceased account / deposit of late [Name of Deceased]
— Account No(s): [XXXXXXXX] — request for document list and timeline
Respected Sir / Madam,
1. I am [Your Name], a Non-Resident Indian residing at [Overseas Address],
and a legal heir / registered nominee of the late [Name of Deceased], who passed away on [DD/MM/YYYY].
2. The following account(s) / deposit(s) are held at your branch:
a. [Account type], Account No: [XXXX], approximate balance: Rs [Amount]. [Add rows as needed]
3. I wish to claim / settle the above and request the following in writing:
(a) Your complete, situation-specific list of documents required to
settle this deceased claim.
(b) Whether a nominee is registered on the above account(s), and if so,
the name of the nominee.
(c) Whether a legal heir certificate is acceptable, or whether you
require probate or a succession certificate, and the amount
threshold at which such a court document is required.
(d) Your stated timeline for settling deceased claims.
4. I am attaching the documents currently available with me, listed in the
annexure below. I am ready to submit any further document on your confirmed list. As I am residing abroad, kindly accept correspondence by email at [Your Email] and, where permitted, documents through my authorised representative under a power of attorney.
5. Kindly acknowledge receipt of this letter and provide the requested
information at the earliest.
Yours faithfully,
[Your Full Name] [Relationship to deceased: legal heir / nominee] [Overseas Address] [Indian PAN] [Mobile / Email]
Enclosures (Annexure): A — Death certificate (apostilled / attested, with translation if any) B — Claimant KYC: passport, OCI/PIO card, overseas address proof, PAN C — Account proof: passbook / fixed deposit receipt / statement D — Will / legal heir certificate / succession proof [as available] E — Power of attorney [if a representative is acting in India]
The Right to Information Act, 2005 applies only to public authorities. In an inheritance claim, parts of your problem may touch a public authority, and there RTI is a genuinely useful lever:
To file, see our step-by-step guide on how to file an RTI online in India. If the public information officer does not reply within the statutory period, use our guide on filing a first appeal under RTI Section 19, and the overview of the first and second appeal process. For complex, layered government disputes, The RTI Playbook sets out broader strategies.
RTI has firm limits in this situation, and it is important not to rely on it for the core problem:
If immovable property is part of the estate, also work through our guide on NRI property mutation with a foreign address, and browse the wider NRI and Cross-Border practical guides for related cross-border problems.
Yes, but it usually has to be legalised first. A death certificate issued abroad is generally accepted in India once it carries an apostille (for Hague Convention countries) or consular attestation, plus a certified English translation if it is in another language. Indian banks then treat it like a domestic certificate for the claim. Always confirm the bank's exact requirement in writing, as practice varies by bank and branch.
Often not, for the release itself. A registered nominee can usually receive the balance after submitting the death certificate, KYC and the bank's claim form. But a nominee is generally treated as a trustee who holds the money for the lawful heirs, not necessarily as the final owner. So if there are other heirs, you may still need succession proof to settle who keeps the money. Confirm the bank's nominee process in writing.
Banks usually ask for probate, letters of administration or a succession certificate when there is no valid nomination, when the amount is large, when heirs dispute the claim, or when the documents are unclear. The threshold and exact requirement vary by bank, by the size of the balance, and by whether a will exists. Ask the bank in writing which court document it needs before you start any court process.
A will records how the deceased wanted assets distributed. Probate is a court order certifying that a will is genuine and can be acted upon. A succession certificate is a court document used mainly for debts and movable assets, such as bank balances and securities, when there is no will or where one is needed for collection. Which one you need depends on your facts and the bank's demand; take legal advice before filing in court.
Generally yes, subject to RBI rules under FEMA and tax compliance. Inherited funds are usually routed through an NRO account and remitted abroad within the annual limit prescribed by the RBI, after the bank obtains the required forms and a chartered accountant certificate confirming tax has been dealt with. The exact forms, limit and documents vary, so confirm the current procedure with your authorised dealer bank and a qualified CA.
Only in limited situations. RTI applies to public authorities, so it can help with records held by the local registrar of births and deaths, a government employer's provident or pension fund, or a public sector bank acting in a regulatory capacity. RTI does not apply to a private bank's internal commercial records, and it cannot force a bank to release funds. Use the bank's grievance process, the Banking Ombudsman, or a court for that.
First send a written complaint to the bank's nodal grievance officer and keep the acknowledgement. If you get no satisfactory reply within the bank's stated timeline, escalate to the RBI Banking Ombudsman through the RBI complaint portal. For a government provident fund, pension or a public authority record, you can also use CPGRAMS and an RTI application. A civil suit remains the final option for disputed amounts.