Saturday, March 28, 2026

AY 2025–26 Compliance Deadlines Missed: Complete Legal Guide on ITR-U, Penalties, Tax Audit Defaults & Recovery Strategy

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

The statutory timelines under the Income-tax Act, 1961 for AY 2025–26 have expired:

  • Tax Audit (Section 44AB): 10 November 2025
  • Return of Income (Section 139(1)): 10 December 2025
  • Transfer Pricing Report (Section 92E): 30 November 2025

Further:

  • Belated Return (Section 139(4)) was permissible up to 31 December 2025 — now closed

Accordingly, taxpayers are now within a post-default compliance regime, where filing survives only through the updated return mechanism under Section 139(8A).

Available Statutory Remedy (Current Position)

ParticularSectionTime LimitStatus
Belated Return139(4)31 December 2025Closed
Updated Return (ITR-U)139(8A)31 March 2028Available

Legal Position:
Post lapse of Section 139(4), filing is no longer a right but a restricted statutory concession with additional tax implications.

Year-wise Availability of Updated Return (Section 139(8A))

Assessment YearEnd of AYLast Date for ITR-U (24 months)
AY 2023–2431 March 202431 March 2026
AY 2024–2531 March 202531 March 2027
AY 2025–2631 March 202631 March 2028
AY 2026–2731 March 202731 March 2029

Professional Insight:
Section 139(8A) operates on a rolling 24-month window from the end of the relevant assessment year, making it critical to track year-specific expiry to avoid irreversible loss of compliance opportunity.

Immediate Consequences of Default

Interest Liability (Mandatory)

  • Section 234A: Delay in filing
  • Section 234B: Shortfall in advance tax
  • Section 234C: Deferment

Interest is mandatory and compensatory as held in Anjum M.H. Ghaswala v. CIT.

Late Filing Fee (Section 234F)

  • ₹5,000 (₹1,000 where income ≤ ₹5 lakh)
  • Statutory and non-waivable

Substantive Legal Impact

  • Loss of carry forward of losses (Section 80 r.w.s. 139(3))
  • Exposure to best judgment assessment (Section 144)

Penalty Exposure Matrix

DefaultSectionQuantum
Tax Audit Failure271B0.5% of turnover (max ₹1.5 lakh)
TP Report Non-Filing271BA₹1,00,000
TP Documentation Failure271G2% of transaction value
Under-reporting270A50%–200%

Waiver of Tax Audit Penalty (Section 271B read with Section 273B)

Penalty may be waived where reasonable cause is established.

Indicative Grounds

  • Auditor resignation or death
  • Technical or portal failure
  • Medical emergency
  • Data loss or unavoidable disruption

Documentation

  • Supporting evidence
  • Affidavit with chronology
  • Audit report (subsequently completed)

Penalty is not automatic where default is bona fide (CIT v. Bisauli Tractors).

Foreign Asset Disclosure (Schedule FA)

Mandatory for resident taxpayers.

Non-Disclosure Consequences

  • Applicability of the Black Money Act, 2015
  • Penalty up to ₹10 lakh per asset
  • Prosecution exposure

Remedy
Available only through Updated Return under Section 139(8A).

Updated Return – Section 139(8A)

ParameterDetails
Time LimitUp to 31 March 2028
Basis24 months from end of AY
Additional Tax25% (within 12 months), 50% thereafter

Restrictions

  • Cannot declare loss
  • No refund claim permitted
  • Not allowed where proceedings are pending

Interpretation:
A statutory compliance window for voluntary correction with additional tax cost.

Transfer Pricing Compliance (Section 92E)

Applicable to international and specified domestic transactions.

Documentation Requirements

  • FAR analysis
  • Benchmarking (TNMM/CUP)
  • Transaction-level records

Penalty Exposure

  • ₹1,00,000 (Section 271BA)
  • 2% of transaction value (Section 271G)

Trusts/NGOs (ITR-7) – Specific Implications

  • Denial of exemption under Sections 11 and 12
  • Registration exposure under Section 12AB
  • Penalties:
    • Section 234G: ₹200 per day
    • Section 271K: ₹10,000 to ₹1,00,000

Tax Audit Documentation (Section 44AB)

Essential records:

  • Forms 3CA / 3CB / 3CD
  • Financial statements
  • GST and TDS reconciliation
  • Bank, inventory and fixed asset registers

Practice Note:
Documentation forms the primary evidentiary base in assessment and penalty defence.

Recommended Action Framework

Immediate

  • Upload pending audit / transfer pricing reports
  • Compute and discharge tax liability

Execution

  • File Updated Return under Section 139(8A) within prescribed timeline

Parallel

  • Prepare and file waiver application under Section 271B with supporting evidence

Litigation Exposure (If Not Addressed)

RiskSectionConsequence
Best Judgment Assessment144Arbitrary determination
Penalty270AUp to 200% of tax
Prosecution276CCImprisonment up to 7 years

Key Professional Takeaways

  • Section 139(4) window has closed on 31 December 2025
  • Section 139(8A) remains the sole operative compliance route
  • Year-wise tracking of ITR-U deadlines is critical for practice
  • Interest and penalties are statutory and unavoidable
  • Defence depends on documentation and reasonable cause

Year-wise Updated Return (ITR-U) Availability

Assessment YearFinancial YearLast Date to File ITR-U
AY 2023–24FY 2022–2331 March 2026
AY 2024–25FY 2023–2431 March 2027
AY 2025–26FY 2024–2531 March 2028
AY 2026–27FY 2025–2631 March 2029
AY 2027–28FY 2026–2731 March 2030

Concluding Note

For AY 2025–26, the compliance framework has shifted from deadline adherence to structured legal recovery.

Timely utilisation of Section 139(8A), supported by robust documentation and strategic execution, is essential to mitigate exposure to penalty, prosecution, and prolonged litigation.

Final Professional Line

“In the post-deadline landscape, compliance is no longer about filing—it is about controlled correction within the statutory window.”


 

Thursday, March 26, 2026

Buyback Taxation & Rule 11UA: Does Valuation Apply When Company Fixes Price? (FY 2025–26 Onwards)

By CA Surekha Ahuja

Buyback taxation in India has undergone a structural shift under Budget 2026.

While the valuation framework under Rule 11UA continues without change, the taxation mechanism in the hands of shareholders moves away from the capital gains regime to a separate charging provision under Section 115BBQ.

This distinction is critical—not because valuation changes, but because tax character and computation framework change, impacting overall tax exposure and planning.

Executive Snapshot – What Changed from April 1, 2026?

PeriodTax Treatment
Up to March 31, 2026Section 46A – Taxable as Capital Gains
From April 1, 2026Section 115BBQ – Taxable as per specific provisions

Impact:
The shift alters the taxation framework in the hands of shareholders. Timing and structuring of buyback transactions therefore become important considerations.

I. Regulatory Framework: OLD vs NEW Buyback Tax Rules

A. Shareholder Taxation – Key Change

ParameterFY 2025–26 (OLD)FY 2026–27 (NEW)
Governing SectionSection 46ASection 115BBQ
Nature of IncomeCapital GainsIncome chargeable under Section 115BBQ
Tax TreatmentAs per capital gains provisionsAs per specific provisions of Section 115BBQ
IndexationAs per capital gains provisions (where applicable)Not available unless specifically provided
DeductionsAs per capital gains provisionsNot available except as specifically provided
ApplicabilityUp to 31 March 2026From 1 April 2026

B. Rule 11UA Valuation – No Change

ElementFY 2025–26FY 2026–27
Seller (Section 50CA)FMV deemed as consideration (where applicable)Same
Company (Section 56(2)(x))FMV differential taxable (where applicable)Same
Valuation Formula(A − L) / PESame

Key Insight:
Rule 11UA continues to govern valuation. The change is limited to shareholder taxation.

II. Impact Illustration – Buyback Tax Comparison

Case Study: ABC Pvt Ltd
FMV ₹140 | Buyback Price ₹120 | Shares: 2,000

Computation

ParticularsAmount
FMV Gap₹20 × 2,000 = ₹40,000
Total Buyback Receipt₹2,40,000

Tax Impact Comparison

Fiscal YearShareholder TaxCompany Tax (Section 56)Overall Impact
FY 2025–26 (OLD)Taxable under capital gains provisions (fact-dependent)May apply on FMV differentialFact-dependent
FY 2026–27 (NEW)Taxable under Section 115BBQMay apply on FMV differentialPotentially different outcome depending on provisions

III. Key Legal Positions

IssuePosition
Applicability of Rule 11UA post April 2026Continues unchanged
Whether buyback is “transfer”Covered within Section 2(47); implications depend on facts
Whether company-determined price is sufficientNo – FMV provisions prevail where applicable
Minority shareholder reliefNo specific exemption under the Act

IV. Statutory Transition Matrix

FrameworkFY 2025–26FY 2026–27
Shareholder TaxSection 46A – Capital GainsSection 115BBQ
FMV DeemingSection 50CASection 50CA
Company TaxSection 56(2)(x)Section 56(2)(x)
PenaltyAs per applicable provisionsSection 270A (where applicable)
ReassessmentAs per Section 149As per Section 149

V. Compliance Framework 

StepRequirement
1Valuation date aligned with transfer
2Assets (A) as per Rule 11UA
3Liabilities (L) as per Rule 11UA
4FMV = (A − L) / Paid-up Equity
5Ensure defensible transaction value
6Maintain valuation documentation

VI. Risk Comparison

Risk FactorFY 2025–26FY 2026–27
Scrutiny TriggerFMV mismatchFMV mismatch + anti-abuse review
Penalty ExposureAs per applicable provisionsSection 270A
Reopening RiskAs per Section 149As per Section 149

VII. FAQs

QuestionAnswer
What changed from April 1, 2026?Shareholder taxation shifts to Section 115BBQ
Does Rule 11UA change?No
Does timing matter?Yes
Is company still taxable?Section 56(2)(x) may apply

VIII. Professional Verdict

PeriodConclusion
FY 2025–26Rule 11UA + Capital Gains framework
FY 2026–27Rule 11UA + Section 115BBQ framework

Strategic Insight

Timing of buyback should be evaluated based on applicable provisions, valuation, and transaction structure.

Professional Note

There is no minority shareholder threshold or validation trigger under the Income-tax Act.
The provisions of Rule 11UA, Sections 50CA, 56(2)(x), and 115BBQ apply based on transaction conditions, irrespective of shareholding percentage.

“The valuation rule remains constant—only the taxation framework shifts.”




Tuesday, March 24, 2026

New Income‑tax Rules from April 2026: The Ultimate Threshold & Rate Guide for Taxpayers

 By CA surekha Ahuja

From 1 April 2026, a new set of income‑tax rules will start reshaping how individuals earn, spend, invest, and comply with tax laws in India. These changes are not just cosmetic. They revise key thresholds, simplify some tax collection at source (TCS) rates, and modernise long‑ignored exemptions that had lost relevance in today’s cost structure.

This guide is a one‑stop, reader‑friendly reference for individual taxpayers.

You’ll find answers to:

  • What exactly is changing from April 2026?
  • How do tax thresholds and rates look before vs after?
  • What practical steps should you take to avoid penalties and mistakes?

Use this article when planning your salary structure, cash usage, investments, foreign remittances and high‑value purchases.

1. The Big Picture: Why April 2026 Matters

Three big ideas sit behind the new Income‑tax Rules 2026:

  • Clarity: Moving towards a single “Tax Year” concept and more logical PAN/TCS rules so that forms, AIS and notices are easier to understand.
  • Realism: Updating ancient salary exemptions (like children’s education and hostel allowance) to meaningful amounts that reflect today’s school and hostel fees.
  • Focus: Reducing low‑value reporting noise so that the system focuses on high‑risk, high‑value cash, property and investment transactions.

Everything else—revised limits, new exemptions, and procedural changes—flows from these three goals.


2. Quick Threshold & Rate Change Matrix (Taxpayer View)

A. PAN, Cash, Property, Vehicles, Hotels

These rules affect how your high‑value consumption and cash usage link to your PAN and AIS.

Area / Item

Earlier Threshold / Rule

New Threshold / Rule (from April 2026)

What It Means for You

Cash transactions – PAN requirement

PAN often needed for larger cash deposits (e.g. single deposits ≥ ₹50,000) and aggregate limits around ₹10 lakh per year in practice.

PAN required when total annual cash deposits/withdrawals exceed ₹10 lakh per bank (consolidated yearly cap).

Ordinary cash users face fewer formalities, but frequent or heavy cash handlers become clearly visible. Splitting cash into many smaller deposits to dodge the ₹10 lakh line is unsafe and detectable.

Immovable property – PAN (reporting)

PAN mandatory for purchase/sale of immovable property ≥ ₹10 lakh (separate from TDS rules).

PAN required for property transactions above ₹20 lakh (as indicated in the new framework). Note: TDS on purchase from a resident still kicks in only at ₹50 lakh under section 194‑IA.

Property deals above ₹20 lakh will be closely tracked via PAN and AIS. For smaller properties, PAN friction reduces slightly, but quoting PAN remains advisable. Don’t confuse this with the ₹50 lakh TDS threshold, which continues to apply.

Motor vehicle purchase – PAN

PAN generally needed for most car purchases, with limited value distinction.

PAN mandatory for vehicles priced above ₹6 lakh.

Two‑wheelers and low‑cost vehicles may fall outside mandatory PAN, but mid‑ to high‑end vehicles are fully traceable. Avoid large cash‑heavy deals, especially around this limit.

Hotel / travel – PAN (cash payments)

PAN required for hotel bills ≥ ₹50,000 and selected foreign travel spends.

PAN required where cash payments exceed ₹1 lakh to hotels or travel operators.

Cash payments above ₹1 lakh will inevitably link to your PAN. Splitting a large cash bill into multiple smaller invoices to stay under ₹1 lakh is highly risky behaviour.

Key takeaway:
Treat ₹10 lakh cash per bank per year as a hard line, and assume property above ₹20 lakh and vehicles above ₹6 lakh will be clearly visible against your PAN.

B. Salary Exemptions & Perquisites (Salaried Employees)

Several exemptions under the salary head are being modernised, mainly under the “income not included in total income” provisions and perquisite rules.

Area / Item

Earlier Threshold / Rate

New Threshold / Rate

What It Means for Salaried Taxpayers

Children’s education allowance

₹100 per month per child (max 2).

₹3,000 per month per child.

A token allowance finally becomes meaningful. With the right salary structuring, this can materially reduce tax for parents—provided they genuinely incur education expenses and keep fee records.

Hostel expenditure allowance

₹300 per month per child (max 2).

₹9,000 per month per child.

For children staying in hostels, the exemption now reflects realistic hostel fees. You will need hostel bills in the child’s name to support the claim.

Meal vouchers / cards

Low tax‑free per‑day allowance (often around ₹50–₹75 in practice).

₹200 per meal / day tax‑free.

A more generous cap for digital meal cards. Only compliant, traceable meal instruments qualify; plain cash or untracked allowances remain taxable salary.

Corporate gifts from employer

Generally tax‑free up to ₹5,000 per year; excess treated as perquisite.

Tax‑free up to ₹15,000 per year.

Rewards, performance gifts and festival hampers can be more generous without extra tax if total non‑cash gifts stay within ₹15,000 per employee per year and are properly tracked.

Home‑to‑office commute

Typically treated as a taxable perquisite unless clearly for official duty.

No longer treated as a perquisite when employer provides commute benefits in the notified manner.

Employer‑provided bus, cab or defined commute reimbursements can become tax‑free. Useful for employees in major cities—subject to strict adherence to the prescribed structure.

Employer medical loans / support

Mixed treatment; no clear specific exempt loan cap.

Tax‑exempt medical loans up to ₹2 lakh.

Emergency medical loans from your employer up to ₹2 lakh can be tax‑free, if they meet the prescribed conditions and are properly documented (medical reports, loan agreement, etc.).

Key salary takeaway
Ask HR or Payroll to re‑design your CTC so you benefit from the new limits on education, hostel, meals, commute, medical loans and gifts. But remember:

  • Every exemption should be backed by policies, declarations and bills.
  • Inflated, fake or undocumented claims can trigger additional tax, interest and penalties at both employee and employer level.

C. Mutual Funds, Information Reporting & AIS

Area / Item

Earlier Position

New Position

What It Means for You

Mutual fund SFT reporting

Asset management companies reported many transactions at relatively low or varied thresholds; AIS often contained numerous small entries for SIPs and switches.

No SFT reporting for mutual fund investments below ₹10 lakh per year per PAN; higher‑value investments continue to be reported in detail.

Small SIP investors will see a cleaner AIS with fewer “micro” entries. Higher‑value investors (₹10 lakh+ per year) will be fully visible, so their MF investments must align with declared income and known sources of funds.


D. TCS on Foreign Remittances & Overseas Tours

Area / Item

Earlier Threshold / Rate

New Threshold / Rate (from April 2026)

What It Means for You

LRS remittances for education / medical treatment

Multiple TCS rates (0.5%, 5%, 20%) depending on purpose and amount; frequent changes caused confusion at banks and for taxpayers.

Flat 2% TCS on such remittances above ₹10 lakh.

Funding foreign education or medical treatment becomes simpler and easier on cash‑flow. The 2% TCS is a pre‑paid tax credit—ensure it appears in AIS and is fully claimed in your ITR.

Overseas tour packages – TCS

Typically 5% beyond ₹7 lakh; earlier proposals for higher rates created significant anxiety.

Flat 2% TCS on the package value.

Most overseas tour packages will now attract 2% TCS. This is easier to understand and plan for. Always capture TCS details from tour operators and cross‑check in AIS before filing your return.

Practical tip
TCS is not an extra cost if you file your income‑tax return correctly. Treat it as advance tax credit. If you don’t claim TCS, you effectively give the government an interest‑free loan.

E. Capital Market Changes: Share Buybacks, Dividend Interest, STT

These changes primarily affect active equity investors and traders.

Area / Item

Earlier Position

New Position

What It Means for Investors & Traders

Share buybacks (tax incidence)

Buyback tax was paid by the company; shareholders generally received buyback proceeds exempt from tax.

Buyback proceeds taxed as capital gains in the shareholder’s hands in more situations.

Investors will now bear capital gains tax on buyback proceeds directly. Buyback‑centric “tax‑efficient” strategies lose some edge. Always compare buybacks with regular dividends and open‑market sales on a post‑tax basis.

Interest on loans for dividend‑oriented investing

Certain interest expenses could be claimed against dividend income in limited scenarios.

Interest on borrowing purely for dividend income is no longer deductible.

Leveraged “dividend capture” strategies lose their tax advantage. Re‑calculate your effective returns on such strategies; in many cases, they may now be unattractive.

STT on futures

Securities transaction tax (STT) on futures was lower than 0.05%.

STT on futures increased to 0.05%.

Slightly higher trading costs for futures traders, which can materially impact high‑frequency or high‑volume strategies. Build this into your cost and breakeven calculations.

STT on options

STT on options was lower than 0.15%.

STT on options increased to 0.15%.

Options trading becomes more expensive at the margin. Premium‑based and intraday options strategies must be recalibrated for the higher friction cost.

 

F. NRI Property Purchases – TDS Without TAN

This is a procedural but very practical change for resident buyers.

Area / Item

Earlier Position

New Position

What It Means for Property Buyers

Buying property from an NRI – TDS process

Resident buyer usually had to obtain a TAN, deduct TDS under section 195, deposit it, and file quarterly TDS returns—complicated for one‑off purchases.

No TAN required for standard NRI property purchases; TDS can be deducted and deposited using the buyer’s PAN through a simplified online process.

Buying a property from an NRI becomes procedurally simpler. However, TDS obligations—correct rate, correct base, and timely deposit—remain fully in force. Wrong deduction or delay still attracts interest and penalties.

Important caution for NRI deals

Even though TAN is no longer needed in many standard NRI property transactions:

  • You must still compute the correct TDS rate based on whether the gain is long‑term or short‑term and whether a DTAA applies.
  • Check if the NRI seller has obtained a lower‑deduction / nil‑deduction certificate from the department.
  • Deduct and deposit TDS on time and keep all documents—sale agreement, payment proofs, TDS challans, and computation—for future reference.

3. Beyond Numbers: How to Behave Under the New Rules

The tables summarise what is changing. Your real advantage comes from changing how you act.

3.1 Salary earners: use new exemptions wisely, not aggressively

  • Ask your employer to re‑structure your CTC to take advantage of higher limits on children’s education, hostel allowance, meal benefits, commute, medical loans and gifts.
  • Keep evidence: school and hostel fee receipts, medical documents, and consistency between payslip, Form 16 and your ITR.
  • Be extra careful with HRA claims when paying rent to parents or spouse: you need a proper rent agreement, rent actually paid via bank, and the rent declared as income in their ITR.

3.2 Cash users: treat ₹10 lakh per bank as a red line

  • Annual cash deposits/withdrawals beyond ₹10 lakh in a single bank will stand out and link directly to your PAN.
  • Large cash use must be explainable (business turnover, known cash‑based activities, documented withdrawals).
  • Avoid splitting, rotating or “layering” cash just to appear below reporting thresholds—that is exactly the kind of behaviour automated systems are designed to find.

3.3 Investors: re‑run your post‑tax return numbers

  • If you rely heavily on share buybackshigh‑dividend stocks funded by loans, or aggressive futures and options trading, your net economics change from April 2026.
  • Slight adjustments in STT and loss of interest deductions can significantly reduce net returns.
  • In many cases, a simpler long‑term equity or mutual fund SIP strategy may now compare more favourably to leveraged or arbitrage‑heavy approaches.

3.4 Travellers & overseas spenders: build TCS into your plan

  • For foreign education, medical remittances and overseas tour packages, plan for 2% TCS as the working norm.
  • Keep a record of all TCS entries from banks and tour operators and match them with your AIS.
  • Always claim TCS as tax credit in your ITR so that your final tax burden reflects these pre‑paid amounts.

4. A Simple 10‑Step Checklist for Taxpayers (From April 2026)

  1. Think in “Tax Year”: Start using “Tax Year 2026‑27” in your own records instead of only FY/AY.
  2. Review your payslip: Ensure that new allowances and higher limits actually appear in your CTC and payslips.
  3. Regularise HRA & rent claims: Especially with parents/spouse as landlords—document the arrangement and ensure rent is declared on their side.
  4. Monitor cash usage: Keep annual cash deposits/withdrawals per bank under control and fully explainable.
  5. Scan AIS every year: Verify that all TDS, TCS and SFT entries are accurate and complete before filing.
  6. Claim all TCS credits: From LRS remittances, overseas tour packages and other big spends; don’t leave pre‑paid tax unclaimed.
  7. Re‑run investment maths: Incorporate higher STT and the new tax treatment of buybacks and dividend‑related interest into your portfolio strategy.
  8. Plan NRI property deals early: Get clarity on TDS rate, DTAA implications and certificates before signing or paying.
  9. File on time: Use any extra time in the calendar for reconciliation and corrections, not procrastination.
  10. Maintain strong records: In a more data‑driven regime, good documentation is your best protection against disputes.