Living in India and earning in another currency? You have probably realized the value of keeping your earnings in foreign currency to pay for your overseas expenses. Instead of paying for FX conversion twice, one can open an EEFC (Exchange Earners’ Foreign Currency) account with an Indian bank.
The Reserve Bank of India made amendments to the Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999, allowing “opening, holding, and maintaining” Foreign Currency Accounts in India in May 2000. The regulations came into force a month later.
An EEFC account is an account maintained in foreign currency in India. Those based in India, but earn in foreign currency can open an EEFC account. Only an authorised dealer can open and maintain an EEFC account for you. An authorised dealer is a bank authorised to deal in foreign exchange. The authorised dealer can be private or state-run.
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An EEFC account allows you to credit 100% of your foreign currency earnings. It is, however, subject to a condition. On or before the last day of next month, the total accrual during the month will have to be converted into rupees. You can still retain foreign currency in the EEFC account for approved purposes or prior commitments.
For Example: If an individual has deposited $100 in his EEFC account during the month of May, he must, by the end of June, convert the balance amount then into Indian rupees. However, if he must make a payment of say $40 in July, he can retain that amount in the EEFC account and convert the balance amount of $60 to INR.
You can operate an EEFC account only as a current account. No interest is payable on such accounts.
As mentioned earlier, only the banks that deal with the foreign exchange can open EEFC accounts. Major Indian banks like ICICI, HDFC, Axis, IndusInd, and DBS, offer EEFC accounts.
One of the benefits of an EEFC account is that it avoids double-conversion costs for the customer. On payment in foreign currency, an account holder can hold the sum in the same currency without having to convert it into rupees. The conversion charges that banks levy can however be quite high. See below for how to avoid those.
For example: As an exporter, if you have to receive a payment of $10K, a normal current account will require you to convert the payment into rupees, for which your bank will charge a certain transaction charge. A few days later, if you need to make a payment for imports, you will again have to pay transaction charges to your bank for converting your rupees into foreign currency. An EEFC account can avoid these requirements.
Special Economic Zones (SEZ) cannot open EEFC accounts.
However, a unit located inside an SEZ can open such an account with an authorised dealer outside the SEZ, subject to these conditions:
There are two main problems that individuals and businesses face with an EEFC account:
Yes. Individuals (including freelancers) can open and maintain foreign currency accounts overseas. There is no requirement to remit all the foreign earnings back to India, unlike the EEFC account. Indian businesses can also maintain a foreign currency account overseas.
Winvesta offers secure multi-currency accounts in the UK for individuals and businesses. These e-money accounts are held with an FCA-regulated e-money institution. Your cash is safeguarded with Tier 1 banks like Barclays in the UK. Here are some advantages of the Winvesta Multi-currency account against the EEFC: