How to buy iShares Core US Aggregate Bond (AGG) ETF from India
AGG is iShares' US aggregate bond ETF — the BlackRock sibling of BND, tracking the same Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index at a 0.03% expense ratio. For an Indian investor, the structural awkwardness and tax punchline mirror BND's exactly.
Yes, an Indian resident can buy AGG — legally, under the RBI's Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS). AGG is iShares' Core US Aggregate Bond ETF: thousands of US investment-grade bonds tracking the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index at 0.03% expense — the BlackRock sibling of BND. What decides your outcome is that distributions are interest, not dividends, LRS room is finite, and Indian fixed income yields more.
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The 30-second version
- Legal and simple. Buy via India-facing platforms (Vested, INDmoney) or global brokers (Interactive Brokers, Rovia).
- Industry-leading cost. Expense 0.03% — matches BND. Tracks the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index.
- It pays interest, not dividends. Monthly distributions, ~4.5-5% gross yield. Tax treatment differs from VOO's dividends.
- India tax on gains: hold over 24 months for 12.5% LTCG; sell sooner and pay your slab rate. Section 112, not 112A.
- The trap most miss: directly-held AGG is a US-situs asset — above $60,000, the estate faces up to 40% US estate tax, no treaty relief.
Quick facts
| Can an Indian resident buy it? | Yes — fully legal under the LRS |
| Ticker / exchange | AGG / NYSE Arca |
| Issuer | iShares (BlackRock) |
| Expense ratio | 0.03% per year |
| Holdings | Thousands of investment-grade US bonds |
| Methodology | Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index, sampling |
| Inception | September 2003 |
| Distribution | Monthly interest, ~4.5-5% gross yield |
| Effective duration | ~6-7 years |
| India tax on gains | 12.5% LTCG after 24 months; else your slab (Section 112) |
| Estate-tax risk | US-situs above $60k means up to 40%, no treaty relief |
| Annual compliance | Schedule FA disclosure, every year you hold |
How to buy it — 3 steps
- Open an account and finish KYC. Pick an India-facing platform (Vested, INDmoney) or a global broker (Interactive Brokers, Rovia). File your W-8BEN during onboarding. New to this? Start with how to invest in US stocks from India.
- Fund it via the LRS. Remit under the LRS (cap: $250,000 per financial year). 20% TCS applies above ten lakh rupees — a creditable prepayment, not a cost. See LRS explained and the LRS and TCS calculator.
- Place the order. AGG trades around the hundred-dollar range — easily fractional, well within any LRS budget.
The tax that actually matters — interest, not dividends
This is where AGG diverges sharply from VOO. AGG distributes monthly, and those distributions are interest income, not dividends.
On the US side. US-source interest to non-residents is generally exempt under the portfolio interest exemption, and Treasury interest is exempt outright. But ETF distributions are blended — mixing exempt portfolio interest, taxable OID, short-term gains, and reclassified amounts disclosed only on Form 1042-S. Brokers commonly withhold at the treaty rate up to 25% and reconcile. Treat 25% US withholding as the conservative working assumption.
On the India side. The distribution is interest income, taxed at your slab rate in full. No Section 112/112A relief — those apply to gains on sale, not the coupon. Declare under "Income from other sources", claim US withholding via Form 67 (Form 44 from TY 2026-27) as foreign tax credit, pay the slab-rate balance.
| Step | What happens | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| US withholding on distribution | Broker withholds, often at treaty rate; reconciled on 1042-S | Up to 25%, conservatively assume 25% |
| India treatment | Interest added to total income | Your slab rate |
| Relief | Claim US tax as foreign tax credit | Via Form 67 (TY 2025-26); Form 44 from TY 2026-27 |
Worked example. 50 shares at 4.8% on ~$100 — annual $240. Broker withholds 25% = $60, net $180. In India declare full $240 as interest, pay slab tax ($75 at 30%+surcharge), claim $60 as FTC. Net another $15. 4.8% gross becomes ~3.4% net. Full mechanics: dividend withholding and Form 67.
Capital gains — Section 112
Your gains-side exposure on sale of AGG units is under Section 112 — same as any US-listed ETF:
| Holding period | Treatment | Rate |
|---|---|---|
| 24 months or less | Short-term | Your slab rate (up to roughly 30% plus surcharge) |
| More than 24 months | Long-term | 12.5%, no indexation |
The gain is computed in rupees, so a weaker rupee at sale amplifies the reported gain — on a low-return bond fund, the FX move can easily dwarf the coupon. Model with the US capital-gains calculator; full rules in how US stocks are taxed in India.
The $60,000 estate-tax trap
Directly-held AGG is a US-situs asset. If the holder dies with over $60,000 of US-situs assets, the estate faces US estate tax up to 40% — and the India-US treaty does not cover estate tax. For the stable leg of a portfolio, an ugly tail risk. Full detail: the $60,000 estate-tax trap.
What's actually in this ETF
AGG holds several thousand bonds — sampled replication of the Bloomberg US Aggregate Bond Index, weighted by market value. Effective duration ~6-7 years. Sector breakdown is indistinguishable from BND's.
| Sector | Approximate weight |
|---|---|
| US Treasuries | ~45% |
| Agency mortgage-backed securities | ~28% |
| Investment-grade corporate bonds | ~24% |
| Other (agency, sovereign, taxable muni) | ~3% |
Credit quality is overwhelmingly investment-grade — typically over 65% in AAA paper (Treasuries and agency MBS), the rest A and BBB corporate. No high-yield by design.
Alternatives — and the real question
The honest comparison is not AGG versus another US bond ETF; it is AGG versus the fixed-income options at home.
| Route | Expense | Yield | India tax on income | Estate-tax risk |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| AGG (US-listed, iShares) | 0.03% | ~4.5-5% USD | Slab rate on interest, FTC for US WHT | US-situs, $60k trap applies |
| BND (Vanguard sibling) | 0.03% | ~4.5-5% USD | Identical to AGG | Identical to AGG |
| Indian debt mutual fund | 0.3-1% | 7-7.5% INR | Slab rate (post-2023), but no FX, no Form 67 | None — Indian-domiciled |
| G-Secs (RBI Retail Direct) | None | 7-7.5% INR, sovereign-guaranteed | Slab rate on coupon, indexation gone for new buys | None — Indian-domiciled |
BND is essentially equivalent — same index, expense, and tax. AGG-versus-BND is brand, not return. The interesting alternatives are domestic. Indian debt MFs and G-Secs yield 200-300 bps more in INR, with no FX, no Form 67, no Schedule FA, no $60k trap. Indian fixed income lost indexation in 2023, but the gross yield differential still wins for most. See direct stocks vs US ETFs and best US ETFs for Indian investors.
Our take
Verdict: HOLD — AGG is structurally sound but an awkward holding for most Indian investors, and indistinguishable from BND on the metrics that matter.
- AGG vs BND is essentially neutral. Same index, same 0.03% expense, near-identical weights and duration. Pick AGG for the iShares brand or issuer-diversification if you already hold Vanguard; pick BND for Vanguard's structure. Performance differences are noise.
- LRS room is a precious one-shot. $250,000 per financial year. Spending finite LRS capacity on a 4.5% USD bond fund instead of high-conviction equity is hard to justify unless you are deliberately building a USD portfolio.
- Indian fixed income is cheaper for an Indian investor. G-Secs and debt MFs yield more in INR, with no FX risk, no FTC paperwork, no Schedule FA, no estate-tax trap. For pure income, domestic wins.
- It earns its place in a USD asset-allocation portfolio. If you already have meaningful USD assets — equity ETFs, RSUs, an offshore account — and want the bond leg in USD, AGG is one of two cheapest ways to do it. Otherwise, HOLD means: read this and probably allocate elsewhere.
Compliance note. Vested.blog is not a SEBI-registered Research Analyst. The above is an editorial opinion for educational illustration only — not investment advice and not a regulated stock recommendation. Vested.blog is published by Rovia; the publisher and its affiliates may hold positions in stocks discussed. Make your own decisions or consult a SEBI-registered advisor.
Risks to size for
- Duration risk. ~6-7 year duration means a 1% rise in yields is roughly a 6-7% price decline. AGG fell ~13% in 2022. "Safe" does not mean price-stable.
- US fiscal and credit risk. Treasuries are not politically risk-free — debt-ceiling theatre, downgrades, and term-premium repricings recur.
- FX risk. A weaker rupee helps on conversion, but reversals happen; a 5% INR appreciation wipes out a year of AGG's gross yield.
- Opportunity cost. The constraint is not "should I own bonds" but "should I own US bonds via my LRS quota". For pure yield, Indian debt is the better trade.
Two things people forget
- Schedule FA: disclose AGG every year you hold it — even at a loss. Non-disclosure carries Black Money Act penalties. Use the Schedule FA helper.
- Form 67 (Form 44 from TY 2026-27): file it to claim US withholding as FTC. Twelve monthly payouts means twelve reconciliation rows — keep the 1042-S handy.
Bottom line
Buying AGG from India is easy and legal — the iShares route into the same exposure BND offers from Vanguard. What needs thought: distributions are interest, not dividends — slab-rate in India, US withholding to reclaim — the LRS is finite, Indian fixed income yields more in INR, and AGG is a US-situs asset with a $60k estate-tax trap. The 0.03% expense ties it with BND as the cleanest US aggregate-bond vehicle; for most Indian investors that is necessary but not sufficient. For accounts and options, start at the US investing hub.
This article is general information, not personalised investment, tax, or legal advice. Rules, rates, and thresholds described here are as of 2026 and can change; verify the current position and consult a qualified advisor before acting.
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About the author

Co-Founder & Chief Product Officer, Rovia
IIT Bombay + IIM Calcutta. Founding PM at Aspora (NRI fintech). Writes on cross-border investing, payments, and taxation.
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