By CA Surekha Ahuja
Decoding the Interplay of Sections 234A, 139(8A), 140B and CBDT Circular No. 2/2015
The Controversy Revisited
The advent of updated returns under Section 139(8A) of Income-tax Act has introduced a structurally distinct compliance framework. However, it has also rekindled a fundamental question:
Does interest under Section 234A of Income-tax Act continue to run until the date of furnishing ITR-U, even where the tax liability stands discharged earlier?
This issue assumes practical significance in cases where:
- tax is paid (for instance, on 31.12.2025), but
- the updated return is furnished subsequently, and
- the CPC levies interest under section 234A up to the date of ITR-U filing.
The resolution lies not in a literal reading of a single provision, but in a harmonised construction of:
- Section 234A of Income-tax Act (charging provision),
- Section 139(8A) of Income-tax Act (enabling provision),
- Section 140B of Income-tax Act (computational code), and
- CBDT Circular No. 2/2015 (binding administrative interpretation).
Section 234A: Time-Based Levy with a Liability-Based Core
Section 234A(1) prescribes interest:
- from the date immediately following the due date under section 139(1),
- up to the date of furnishing of return,
- on the amount of tax payable after specified reductions.
At first glance, the provision is period-centric. However, the Supreme Court in CIT v. Prannoy Roy authoritatively clarified its true character:
- interest under section 234A is compensatory,
- it arises only in respect of tax remaining unpaid,
- where tax is fully discharged before the due date, no interest can be levied.
Thus, while the measure is time, the charge is deprivation of revenue.
This distinction becomes critical in ITR-U cases.
Section 139(8A) read with Section 140B: A Self-Contained Computational Code
The updated return regime under section 139(8A) is not merely an extended filing facility—it is embedded within a statutorily mandated recalibration mechanism under Section 140B of Income-tax Act.
Section 140B requires the assessee to compute and discharge:
- tax on updated income,
- interest under sections 234A, 234B and 234C,
- fee, where applicable, and
- additional income-tax at 25% or 50% of the aggregate of tax and interest.
In this structure:
- interest under section 234A is recomputed from the original due date up to the date of furnishing ITR-U,
- earlier payments of tax and interest are given credit,
- the resulting figure is not merely consequential—it becomes a determinant of additional tax liability.
Therefore, section 140B does not alter the nature of section 234A, but institutionalises its computation up to the filing date of the updated return.
CBDT Circular No. 2/2015: A Binding Limitation on the Interest Base
CBDT Circular No. 2/2015, issued in the wake of Prannoy Roy, provides:
- no interest under section 234A shall be charged on self-assessment tax paid before the due date under section 139(1).
Its legal effect is precise:
- it restricts the base on which interest is computed,
- it does not modify the statutory period,
- it applies irrespective of whether the return is ultimately filed on time, belatedly, or by way of ITR-U.
Equally important is its limitation:
- it does not extend to tax paid after the due date.
Reconciliation of Law: Principle vs. Computation
The apparent conflict is between:
- the compensatory doctrine (interest only on unpaid tax), and
- the statutory computation mandate under section 140B (interest till filing date).
A correct reconciliation yields the following:
- where tax is paid before the due date, the compensatory principle prevails, reinforced by the Circular;
- where tax is paid after the due date, the statutory computation under section 140B governs, and interest runs till the date of furnishing ITR-U.
Thus, section 140B does not override the Supreme Court ratio; it operates subject to it, but fully within its own computational domain where the Circular does not apply.
Scenario-wise Legal Position
1 Earlier Return Filed; Tax Paid Before Due Date
- Interest under section 234A is not leviable on such tax.
- At the stage of ITR-U, only incremental tax is subjected to recomputation.
- The protected portion cannot be brought back into the interest base.
Any contrary adjustment would be inconsistent with both the Supreme Court ruling and the binding Circular.
2 Earlier Return Filed; Tax Paid After Due Date
- Circular No. 2/2015 is inapplicable.
- Under section 140B, interest is recomputed up to the date of ITR-U filing on incremental tax.
While certain tribunal rulings suggest that interest should cease on payment of tax, such reasoning operates in the domain of general provisions.
In contrast, section 140B:
- expressly requires computation up to the filing date, and
- integrates interest into the base for additional tax.
Accordingly, the statutory framework assumes primacy.
3 No Earlier Return; Tax Paid Before Due Date
- Circular protection applies in full.
- Interest is computed only on tax remaining unpaid.
- The timing of filing (even if through ITR-U) does not revive interest liability.
This represents the clearest application of the compensatory doctrine.
4 No Earlier Return; Tax Paid After Due Date
- This constitutes the typical ITR-U scenario.
- Interest under section 234A runs from due date to the date of furnishing ITR-U.
- Such interest mandatorily forms part of the base for additional tax under section 140B.
In such cases, the argument for truncation of interest at the date of payment has minimal statutory support.
Judicial Position: Scope and Limits
The ratio in CIT v. Prannoy Roy continues to govern the field on the nature of section 234A.
However:
- its application is fully preserved only in cases covered by pre-due-date payment,
- its extension to post-due-date payment scenarios within the framework of section 140B is limited.
Tribunal decisions favouring cessation of interest upon payment must be read:
- in the context of regular return provisions, and
- with caution where a specific statutory computation mechanism exists.
Doctrinal Insight
The correct legal understanding lies in distinguishing between:
- charge of interest, and
- computation of interest.
Section 234A governs the charge.
Section 140B governs the computation in ITR-U cases.
Where the Circular applies, it restricts the charge itself.
Where it does not, the computation provision operates in full.
Conclusion
The law, when harmoniously construed, leads to a clear position:
- Interest under section 234A is compensatory and applies only to unpaid tax.
- Self-assessment tax paid before the due date is outside its ambit, in view of the Supreme Court decision and CBDT Circular No. 2/2015.
- Section 140B introduces a mandatory computation mechanism for updated returns, requiring interest to be determined up to the date of furnishing ITR-U.
- This mechanism does not override the exclusion of pre-due-date tax, but fully governs cases where tax is paid after the due date.
Accordingly, the timing of payment vis-à-vis the due date under section 139(1) is the determinative factor for interest liability under section 234A in ITR-U cases.



