Friday, March 6, 2026

Form 15H Invalid for Rent TDS under Section 194-IB: Legal Guide for Tenants Before Filing Form 26QC

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

A Practical Compliance Guide for Tenants Before Filing Form 26QC

As the Form 26QC deadline approaches, many tenants paying rent above ₹50,000 per month face a recurring situation where landlords request them not to deduct TDS and instead provide Form 15H.

From a strict legal perspective under the Income-tax Act, 1961, this approach is incorrect.

Form 15H cannot waive TDS under Section 194-IB.

Where monthly rent exceeds ₹50,000, the tenant is required to deduct TDS at 5 percent, unless the landlord obtains a Lower or Nil Deduction Certificate under Section 197 through Form 13.

This obligation applies equally to salaried tenants, professionals, and all individual tenants, even if they normally discharge their taxes only through annual income tax return filing.

This note explains the legal position, compliance mechanism, practical solution through Form 13, and the safest approach for tenants to avoid penalties or disputes.

When TDS on Rent Becomes Mandatory

Section 194-IB applies where rent is paid by individuals or Hindu Undivided Families who are not liable for tax audit.

The provision was introduced to bring high-value rental transactions into the tax reporting framework without imposing complex compliance requirements on tenants.

Threshold Trigger

TDS becomes applicable when:

Monthly rent exceeds ₹50,000.

This rule applies even if the tenant:

  • is a salaried employee

  • does not maintain books of account

  • is not engaged in business or profession

  • files income tax returns only once annually

Once this threshold is crossed, the tenant becomes the person responsible for deducting tax at source.

Unique Deduction Mechanism under Section 194-IB

Section 194-IB provides a simplified deduction mechanism.

Unlike other TDS provisions, tenants are not required to deduct tax every month.

Instead, the law allows TDS to be deducted once at the end of the financial year or at the time of vacating the property, whichever occurs earlier.

Example

Monthly rent: ₹60,000
Annual rent: ₹7,20,000

TDS liability:

5 percent of ₹7,20,000 = ₹36,000

In most cases, the deduction is made from the final rent payment of the year.

Statutory Protection

The law specifically provides that:

TDS deducted under Section 194-IB cannot exceed the rent payable for the last month of tenancy.

This safeguard prevents situations where tenants must pay additional amounts from their own pocket.

Compliance Timeline

Once TDS is deducted, the tenant must complete the following compliance steps.

Compliance RequirementTimeline
Deduction of TDSEnd of financial year or termination of tenancy
Deposit of taxWithin 30 days using Form 26QC
Issue of TDS certificateForm 16C within 15 days

If the tenancy continues until 31 March, the Form 26QC filing deadline is typically 30 April.

With this deadline approaching, tenants should verify whether TDS obligations have been properly discharged.

Why Form 15H Is Not Valid for Rent TDS

Form 15H is governed by Section 197A of the Income-tax Act, which allows certain taxpayers to declare that their total income is below the taxable limit and therefore TDS should not be deducted.

However, this declaration is permitted only for specific TDS provisions explicitly listed in the law.

Examples include:

  • interest income under Section 194A

  • certain dividend or investment incomes

Legal Position

Section 194-IB is not included in the list of sections covered under Section 197A.

Consequently, Form 15H cannot legally be used to avoid rent TDS under Section 194-IB.

Landlord CategoryValidity of Form 15H
Resident senior citizenNot valid
Resident individual below 60Not valid
Non-resident landlordNot permitted

Therefore, accepting Form 15H does not provide legal protection to the tenant.

Correct Legal Solution: Lower Deduction Certificate under Section 197

Where the landlord’s tax liability is genuinely lower than the standard TDS rate, the appropriate mechanism provided by law is Section 197.

Under this provision, the landlord may apply to the Income Tax Department for a Lower or Nil Deduction Certificate using Form 13.

Once issued, the certificate specifies:

  • the applicable rate of deduction

  • the financial year for which the certificate is valid

The tenant is then required to deduct tax strictly according to the certificate rate.

This provides complete statutory protection to the tenant.

Applicability Even Where the Tenant Is Salaried

A common misconception is that Form 13 is relevant only for business taxpayers.

In reality, Section 197 relates to the income recipient (the landlord) and not the person making payment.

Therefore, the certificate remains fully valid even where the tenant:

  • is a salaried employee

  • is not required to file TDS returns regularly

  • pays tax only through annual return filing

Once a valid certificate is issued, the tenant simply follows the rate mentioned in the certificate.

Basic Process for Applying for Form 13

The application is made online through the Income Tax portal and generally requires minimal documentation.

Documents commonly required

  • PAN of the landlord

  • copy of rent agreement

  • previous income tax return

  • estimated income for the year

Filing steps

  1. Login to the Income Tax portal

  2. Select Application for Lower or Nil TDS Certificate

  3. File Form 13 under Section 197

  4. Upload supporting documents and submit

The processing period generally ranges from two to six weeks depending on jurisdiction.

Consequences of Non-Compliance

If the tenant fails to deduct TDS despite crossing the threshold, the following consequences may arise.

DefaultLegal consequence
Failure to deduct TDSInterest under Section 201
PenaltyUp to 100 percent of TDS amount
Late depositInterest at 1.5 percent per month
Serious defaultsProsecution provisions

Example

Monthly rent: ₹60,000
Annual TDS: ₹36,000

Failure to deduct may result in tax demand, interest, and penalties that can exceed the original TDS amount.

Immediate Compliance Checklist for Tenants

Before filing Form 26QC, tenants should verify the following:

  • Confirm whether monthly rent exceeds ₹50,000

  • Calculate total rent paid during the financial year

  • Deduct TDS at 5 percent from the final rent payment

  • Deposit tax using Form 26QC within the prescribed timeline

  • Issue Form 16C to the landlord

Where the landlord’s tax liability is lower, the correct approach is to request Form 13 under Section 197 rather than Form 15H.

Final Professional View

Section 194-IB was introduced to ensure proper reporting of high-value rental payments while keeping compliance simple for tenants.

Although Form 15H is valid for certain interest incomes, it cannot legally waive TDS on rent under Section 194-IB.

Where a lower deduction is justified, the correct mechanism is Form 13 under Section 197, which authorizes the Income Tax Department to allow reduced or nil TDS based on the landlord’s actual tax liability.

For tenants, the safest compliance rule remains straightforward:

Either deduct TDS at 5 percent or rely on a valid Form 13 certificate issued under Section 197.

Following this approach ensures complete legal compliance, avoids penalties, and protects both tenant and landlord from future tax disputes.



Tuesday, March 3, 2026

OCI, Employment, Universities, FEMA, Pension & Retirement Safety

By CA Surekha S Ahuja 

The Most Authoritative 2026 Legal Guide for Former Indian Citizens Holding Foreign Passports

(A Complete, Myth-Free, University-Focused, Retirement-Secure Master Note)

If you are a former Indian citizen holding a foreign passport — especially a professor, academic, researcher, consultant, or private sector professional — this is the most comprehensive legal guide you will read in 2026.

It integrates:

  • Citizenship law

  • OCI framework

  • DU / JNU / Central & State University eligibility

  • FEMA salary & repatriation rules

  • Income-tax & Black Money disclosures

  • PF / NPS / pension eligibility

  • Retirement documentation safeguards

  • Full penalty exposure under all relevant Acts

This is not a summary. This is the definitive position.

The Legal Foundation: Citizenship & OCI

Governing law:
Citizenship Act, 1955

Under Section 7A, a former Indian citizen may register as an Overseas Citizen of India (OCI).

OCI is not dual citizenship, but it grants:

  • Lifelong multiple-entry visa

  • Right to reside indefinitely in India

  • Permission to work in private sector

  • Eligibility for academic positions (subject to regulations)

  • No need for employment visa

OCI can be cancelled only under Section 7D for fraud, terrorism, or prohibited activity.

There is no automatic cancellation for teaching, employment, or long service.

The Biggest Myths Destroyed

Let us eliminate fear first.

Myth 1: OCI cannot teach in Indian universities

False.

Universities governed by:
University Grants Commission

Under the UGC Regulations 2018, there is no blanket bar on OCI faculty.

Recruitment advertisements issued by:

  • Jawaharlal Nehru University

  • Delhi University

have explicitly permitted OCI candidates in recent cycles.

Academic posts ≠ civil services.

Myth 2: 20–25 years of non-disclosure creates criminal liability

No statute provides retrospective criminalization of past lawful service rendered before the 2005 OCI regime matured.

Before 2005:

  • PIO and employment visa regimes applied.

  • OCI did not exist in current form.

There is:

  • No mass review

  • No pension confiscation

  • No automatic prosecution

At most, documentation clarification may be requested.

Myth 3: Pension or PF can be cancelled at retirement

There is no provision under:

Employees' Provident Funds and Miscellaneous Provisions Act, 1952

or any pension rule that cancels benefits solely because a person holds OCI.

If service was rendered and salary paid legally, retirement dues stand.

Delays may occur only due to documentation mismatch — not due to OCI status itself.

University Employment: The Real Legal Position

Academic Posts vs Government Posts

Under Article 16 of the Constitution:

Only citizens are eligible for civil services and certain sovereign functions.

However:

Teaching in Central or State Universities is not equivalent to IAS/IPS or constitutional posts.

Universities like:

  • Jawaharlal Nehru University

  • Delhi University

have recruited OCI candidates consistent with UGC norms.

There is no separate FRRO approval required for standard faculty roles.

Where OCI Actually Has Restrictions

Under:

Foreigners Act, 1946

OCI holders cannot undertake without permission:

  • Missionary activities

  • Research in restricted areas

  • Journalism in protected zones

Violation under Section 14:

  • Up to 5 years imprisonment

  • Fine

  • Possible deportation

Regular teaching does not fall under restricted activity.

FEMA Compliance: The Most Ignored Risk

Governing law:
Foreign Exchange Management Act, 1999

This is where most technical violations occur.

Residential Status Under FEMA

If physically present in India for more than 182 days in a financial year → Resident under FEMA.

Consequences:

  • Salary must be credited to Resident Savings Account.

  • Not NRE account.

Routing resident salary to NRE account may trigger Section 13 penalty:

  • Up to 3 times the amount involved

  • ₹5,000 per day for continuing contravention

This is administrative, not criminal — but financially significant.

Salary & Pension Repatriation

Permitted up to USD 250,000 per financial year under RBI regulations.

Requires:

  • Proper banking channel

  • Form 15CA / 15CB (if applicable)

University salary, PF withdrawals, pension, gratuity — all repatriable within limits.

Income Tax & Black Money Exposure

Governed by:

Income-tax Act, 1961
Black Money Act, 2015

If Resident (ROR):

  • Global income taxable

  • Foreign assets must be disclosed in Schedule FA

Penalty for non-disclosure:

  • ₹10 lakh per year under Black Money Act

  • Severe prosecution in extreme cases

If RNOR:

  • Foreign income shielded for limited period

University salary is usually TDS-compliant. The risk lies in foreign asset disclosure — not academic income.

Pension, PF, NPS & Investment Eligibility

Employees’ Provident Fund

OCI employees are eligible.
Withdrawal allowed.
Repatriation allowed within FEMA limits.

No citizenship-based cancellation.

National Pension System (NPS)

Regulated by:

Pension Fund Regulatory and Development Authority

OCI/PIO may open and continue NPS subject to:

  • Valid KYC

  • Compliance with FEMA

  • Indian bank account

If residential status changes, NPS can continue but subject to RBI rules.

Public Provident Fund (PPF)

If opened as resident before acquiring foreign citizenship:

  • Can continue till maturity

  • Cannot extend beyond original 15-year block

Investment Restrictions for OCI

Cannot:

  • Purchase agricultural land

  • Hold certain defence-sensitive positions

Can:

  • Invest in mutual funds

  • Hold shares

  • Invest in listed securities

  • Participate in automatic FDI routes

All subject to FEMA reporting.

Retirement Risk Analysis (Reality-Based)

Realistic Risks

RiskReality
HR seeks OCI documentationAdministrative
PF office seeks updated KYCNormal compliance
Tax department scrutinyOnly if foreign assets undisclosed
Pension cancellationNo statutory basis
Deportation for long serviceNo precedent without violation

There is no known systemic cancellation of retirement benefits for long-serving OCI faculty.

OCI vs Indian Citizenship — Strategic Choice
AspectOCICitizenship
University teachingAllowedAllowed
Civil servicesNot allowedAllowed
Voting rightsNoYes
Foreign passport retentionYesNo
Retirement securitySameSame

For academics and private professionals, OCI is typically sufficient.

Citizenship switch is necessary only if one desires sovereign government posts.

The Master Compliance Checklist (Retirement-Proof)

✔ Obtain OCI (if not already)
✔ Update university HR records
✔ Ensure correct FEMA bank classification
✔ File ITR annually
✔ Disclose foreign assets (if resident)
✔ Maintain PF/NPS records
✔ Avoid restricted activities
✔ Regularize repatriation documentation
✔ Conduct retirement documentation audit one year prior

Final Verdict — March 2026

For former Indian citizens holding foreign passports:

There is:

No automatic teaching ban
No pension cancellation provision
No retrospective criminalization for past service
No PF disqualification
No NPS prohibition

The real risks are only:

  • FEMA misrouting of salary

  • Tax non-disclosure

  • Engaging in restricted activities

Compliance is administrative, not existential.

Thousands of OCI professionals — including faculty in premier institutions — continue service, retire smoothly, and receive full dues.

Fear is misplaced. Non-compliance is the only real danger.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Residential Status under Section 6 – Why Every March Determines Your Global Tax Exposure

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

(FY 2025–26 Master Guide with Multi-Year Planning Framework)

Residential status for FY 2025–26 (1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026) under Section 6 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 determines one decisive outcome:

  • Non-Resident (NR) → Only India-sourced income taxable

  • Resident (ROR) → Global income taxable in India

  • RNOR → Limited foreign income exposure

As on 3 March 2026, barely ~24 days remain in the financial year.
For globally mobile professionals, founders, expatriates and HNIs, precise day management can alter effective tax exposure by 20 to 30 percent or more.

March is not merely year-end.
It is jurisdiction determination month.

PART I – Core Legal Tests under Section 6(1)

An individual becomes Resident if any one of the following is satisfied:

1. 182-Day Rule – Section 6(1)(a)

Presence in India for 182 days or more during FY 2025-26.

2. 60 + 365 Rule – Section 6(1)(c)

Presence in India for:

  • 60 days or more in FY 2025-26, AND

  • 365 days or more in the preceding four financial years.

If neither test is met → Non-Resident.

Most residency errors arise from ignoring the 60-day trigger.

PART II – Powerful Exceptions That Change the Equation

Employment Exception – Explanation 1(a)

If an Indian citizen leaves India for employment outside India:

  • The 60-day threshold is replaced with 182 days.

Meaning:
Residency triggers only if 182 days are crossed.

Structural Advantage

  • Applies every future year after genuine employment departure.

  • No statutory expiry.

  • No October 2 cutoff in law.

  • Perpetual shield if conditions remain valid.

This is the golden residency buffer.

PIO / Visiting Citizen Exception – Explanation 1(b)

Indian citizens or Persons of Indian Origin visiting India may also enjoy the 182-day threshold, subject to income conditions.

PART III – Deemed Residency Override – Section 6(1A)

Even if NR under basic tests:

An Indian citizen becomes Deemed Resident if:

  • India income (excluding foreign sources) exceeds ₹15 lakh, AND

  • He is not liable to tax in any other country.

Such person becomes RNOR under Section 6(6).

Foreign Sources Defined

Income accruing or arising outside India, excluding income from a business or profession controlled from India.

This provision targets zero-tax jurisdiction structures.

PART IV – FY 2025-26 Tactical Scenario Matrix

(As on 3 March 2026 – ~24 Days Remaining)

Days Already in IndiaMax Additional DaysNon-Employment StatusEmployment Exception StatusDeemed Risk (>₹15L India Income, No Foreign Tax)
< 380–24NR (<60 total)NR (<182)Possible RNOR
38–590Resident if 60 crossedNRDeemed check
60–1570–24ResidentNR (<182)Review
158–1810Resident risk (182 trigger)Resident if 182 crossed
≥182AnyResidentResident

Immediate Professional Insight

  • 38–59 days → Extreme 60-day risk zone

  • 158–181 days → Extreme 182-day risk zone

  • Below 38 days → Monitor but controlled

PART V – Multi-Year Structural Planning

Table 1 – Non-Employment Departure (60-Day Risk Every Year)

FYDays Already SpentSafe Max StayStatus if Stayed Abroad
2025-2630<30 more (<60 total)NR
2026-270<60NR
2027-280<60NR

Every year resets. Discipline required annually.

Table 2 – Employment Departure (182-Day Shield Every Year)

FYDays Already SpentSafe Max StayStatus
2025-2630<152 moreNR
2026-27100<82 moreNR
2027-28150<32 moreNR

Employment exit creates a structural advantage.

Table 3 – Deemed Residency Trap (Even if <60 Days)

India Income (ex-foreign)Foreign Tax LiabilityStatus
≤ ₹15LAnyNR
> ₹15LNoDeemed RNOR
> ₹15LYes (documented)NR

Staying under 60 days alone does not guarantee safety.

PART VI – Case Illustrations

Case 1 – Non-Employment Exit (Left 3 March 2022)

FY 2025-26: 30 days spent → Stay abroad → NR.
FY 2026-27: Reset → Must again stay below 60 days.

No buffer. Annual discipline mandatory.

Case 2 – Employment Emigrant (Left August 2022 for Dubai Job)

FY 2025-26: 100 days spent → Still NR (<182).
FY 2026-27: 120 days vacation → Still NR.

Perpetual 182-day shield.

Case 3 – Late Non-Employment Exit (Left December 2022)

FY 2022-23: 275 days in India → Resident.
Future years: Only 60-day cap applies.

Departure timing has long-term consequences.

Case 4 – UAE High Earner (45 Days Stay Annually)

Under basic tests → NR.
But ₹20 lakh India income + no UAE tax liability → Deemed RNOR.

Solution: Obtain valid foreign Tax Residency Certificate.

PART VII – October 2 Benchmark (Planning Tool Only)

April 1 + 184 days ≈ October 2.

If departure occurs before this date and prior 365-day condition is met, mathematically:

  • 182 days cannot be reached.

  • 60+365 test may fail.

Important:

  • Not codified in statute.

  • Not judicially settled.

  • Only a mathematical planning benchmark.

  • Temporary COVID relaxations (CBDT Circular 2/2021) were exceptional, not permanent.

For FY 2026-27, October 2, 2026 becomes a practical planning reference.

PART VIII – Master March Planning Framework

Day Audit

  • Count arrival and departure midnights.

  • Transit counts.

  • Maintain travel log.

  • Reconcile with passport and immigration records.

Immediate Exit Guidance (As on 3 March 2026)

  • Non-employment cases with 38–59 days → Avoid further stay.

  • Any case with 158–181 days → Immediate exit advisable.

Income Strategy

  • Cap India income at ₹15 lakh where feasible.

  • Establish foreign tax residency documentation.

RNOR Arbitrage

In some cases, temporary RNOR may be acceptable:

  • Pure foreign passive income remains outside scope.

  • Transition planning possible.

Documentation Arsenal

Maintain:

  • Passport stamps

  • Employment contract

  • Foreign tax residency certificate

  • Overseas payroll records

  • Income computation workings

Edge Case

If preceding 4 financial years total stay is below 365 days:

  • The 60-day test automatically fails.

  • Rare but powerful structural protection.

PART IX – Tax Consequences Cascade
StatusTax ScopeMarginal ExposurePlanning Priority
NRIndia income only12.5–30%Highest
RNOR / Deemed+ India-controlled foreign business12.5–30%Medium
RORGlobal income30–42.7%Avoid where foreign income substantial

One extra vacation week can convert:

NR → ROR → Global taxation exposure.

Core Professional Insight

  • Employment exception = structural golden ticket.

  • Non-employment emigrants require surgical <60-day discipline.

  • Deemed residency traps high earners in zero-tax jurisdictions.

  • Each financial year resets on April 1.

  • Every March requires recalculation.

Residential status is not a compliance box.

It determines whether India taxes your global wealth.

Under Section 6 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, jurisdiction follows days — but strategy governs outcome.

Every March determines that line.

Plan deliberately.



Compliance Calendar March 2026

By Sandeep Ahuja & Co Team

March is not just another month — it is the financial year closure month, where tax positions, GST reconciliations, payroll closures, ROC filings, and advance tax converge.

This calendar is structured in the Casahuja.com professional tracker format — practical, compliance-driven, and team-executable.

CORE MONTHLY DEADLINES – March 2026
Due DateCompliance / Return / ActionRelevant Period / DetailsApplicable Law / FormTracker / Status
March 2 (Mon)TDS on Property / Rent / Contractor / Virtual Digital Asset (Govt deductors)January 2026 transactionsIncome-tax Rule 30, Forms 26QB / 26QC / 26QD / 26QE☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 7 (Sat)TDS / TCS Deposit (Non-Govt Deductors)February 2026Income-tax Rule 30☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 10 (Tue)Professional Tax (Salary PT – Haryana & applicable states)February 2026 SalaryState Professional Tax Acts☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 11 (Wed)GSTR-1 (Monthly Filers)February 2026 Outward SuppliesCGST Sec 37☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 13 (Fri)GSTR-1 (QRMP), GSTR-5 (NRTP), GSTR-6 (ISD)February 2026GST Rules 59(5), 61☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)EPF & ESI ContributionsFebruary 2026 WagesEPF Act 1952, ESI Act 1948☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)Final Advance Tax Installment (100%)FY 2025–26Income-tax Sec 211☐ Pending ☐ Paid ☐ Verified
March 15 (Sun)Form 13 – Lower / Nil TDS ApplicationFY 2025–26 / 2026–27Income-tax Sec 197☐ Applied ☐ Approved ☐ Pending
March 20 (Fri)GSTR-3B + GSTR-5A (OIDAR)February 2026CGST Sec 39☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 22 (Sun)GST CMP-08 (Composition)Q4 FY 2025–26CGST Sec 10☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 25 (Wed)GST Tax Payment (QRMP – if applicable)March 2026GST Rule 86B☐ Pending ☐ Paid ☐ Verified
March 30 (Sun)TDS on Property etc. (Govt Deductors)February 2026Income-tax Rule 30☐ Pending ☐ Filed ☐ Verified
March 31 (Mon)CMP-02 (Composition Scheme Opt-in)FY 2026–27CGST Sec 10(3)☐ Opted ☐ Not Applicable

YEAR-END & ANNUAL MANDATES (Critical Closures – FY 2025–26)
Due DateCompliance / ActionDetails / ApplicabilityLaw / FormTracker
March 31 (Mon)Updated Return u/s 139(8A)AY 2021–22 – Final OpportunityIncome-tax Sec 139(8A)☐ Filed ☐ Not Applicable
March 31 (Mon)MSME-1 Half-Yearly ReturnOct 2025–Mar 2026 dues to MSMEsMSMED Act 2006☐ Filed ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)DPT-3 (Loans/Deposits Return)FY 2025–26 reportingCompanies Act Sec 73, Rule 16☐ Filed ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)Annual Secretarial Compliance Report (Listed Cos)FY 2025–26SEBI LODR Reg 24(c)☐ Filed ☐ Not Applicable

LABOUR & PAYROLL COMPLIANCES
Due DateComplianceDetailsLaw / FormTracker
March 15 (Sun)Gratuity Fund ContributionFor applicable establishmentsPayment of Gratuity Act☐ Paid ☐ Not Applicable
March 31 (Mon)Statutory Bonus (if applicable)FY 2025–26Payment of Bonus Act 1965☐ Paid ☐ Pending
March 31 (Mon)Statutory Registers UpdateWages / Attendance / Muster RollLabour Codes 2020☐ Updated ☐ Audited

ROC / MCA & CORPORATE FILINGS
Due DateComplianceDetailsForm / RuleTracker
March 31 (Mon)ADT-1 (Auditor Appointment – if vacancy)During FY 2025–26Companies Act Sec 139(1)☐ Filed ☐ N/A
March 31 (Mon)INC-22A (ACTIVE) – if applicableBeneficial Ownership / StatusRule 25A☐ Filed ☐ N/A

CRITICAL YEAR-END ACTIONS (Not Just Filing – Strategic Closure)

ActionPractical FocusReferenceTracker
26AS / AIS / TDS ReconciliationMatch credits before ITR seasonIncome-tax Portal☐ Completed ☐ Pending
GSTR-9 / 9C / ITC-04 PreparationBooks vs GSTR-2A/2B reconciliationCGST Sec 44☐ Started ☐ Ongoing
Stock & Expense ClosurePhysical verification + ITC validationGST Audit Prep☐ Done ☐ Pending
Payroll ReconciliationTDS vs Books vs Form 24QIncome-tax☐ Verified ☐ Pending
Provisioning ReviewExpenses, MSME dues, related party balancesCompanies Act / Tax☐ Reviewed ☐ Pending

High-Risk Areas in March

  • Final advance tax miscalculation → Interest u/s 234B & 234C (1% per month)

  • GST interest @ 18% p.a. on delayed payment

  • MSME reporting mismatches → ROC penalty exposure

  • ITC reversal oversight during year-end closure

  • Books vs GST turnover mismatch → Future notices

Strategic View

March is not just about compliance. It determines:

  • Your audit smoothness

  • Your interest cost exposure

  • Your working capital accuracy

  • Your notice risk for next 3 years

A structured compliance tracker in March reduces 70% of litigation exposure in future. 

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Guidance Note Partner Remuneration & Interest Deductibility-Transition from the I Tax Act, 1961 to the I Tax Act, 2025

By CA Surekha S Ahuja 

Drafting Safeguards | Litigation Prevention | Strategic Tax Optimisation

Executive Overview

With effect from 1 April 2026, the Income-tax Act, 2025 replaces the Income-tax Act, 1961.

While the legislative structure has been simplified and sections renumbered, the substantive framework governing deductibility of partner remuneration and interest remains materially unchanged.

However, partnership taxation is uniquely document-driven.

A valid deduction under statute becomes disallowable if the partnership deed fails to authorise it properly.

The transition year (FY 2025–26) and deeds executed around March 2026 require heightened drafting precision.

This note provides:

• Legal continuity analysis
• Drafting standards
• Amendment advisories
• Transitional computation guidance
• Risk mapping
• Strategic tax planning considerations

Statutory Position – Continuity of Principle

A. Under the Income-tax Act, 1961 (Applicable up to 31 March 2026)

Section 40(b) permits deduction of:

  • Interest on capital/loans to partners (maximum 12% simple interest per annum)

  • Remuneration to working partners within prescribed limits

  • Only if authorised by the partnership deed

  • Only for period after execution of deed

  • Subject to book profit-based ceiling

Remuneration ceiling:

  • On loss or first ₹3,00,000 → ₹1,50,000 or 90% (whichever higher)

  • On balance → 60%

This is a restrictive provision overriding general deduction rules.

B. Under the Income-tax Act, 2025 (From 1 April 2026)

The new Act re-enacts the same deductibility policy under the business deduction framework (renumbered provision).

There is:

  • No change in 12% interest ceiling

  • No change in remuneration percentage limits

  • No dilution of deed authorisation requirement

  • Continuation of “working partner” condition

  • Express inclusion of LLP within “firm” definition

Therefore:

The legislative intent reflects continuity, not reform, in partnership deduction principles.

The Real Risk – Drafting, Not Law

The statute continues.
The vulnerability lies in deed wording.

Risk Classification

Deed LanguageRisk LevelAdvisory Position
“As per Section 40(b) as amended from time to time”LowGenerally safe
“As per Section 40(b) of Income-tax Act, 1961”ModerateAmendment advisable
Fixed remuneration without statutory linkageHighPotential disallowance
No reference to book profitHighComputation dispute risk

Tax authorities interpret deduction provisions strictly.
Reliance on implied statutory continuity may invite avoidable litigation.

The Transition Year – Technical Application

Where deed execution straddles repeal date:

  • Income up to 31 March 2026 → governed by 1961 Act

  • Income from 1 April 2026 → governed by 2025 Act

Computation should be:

  • Period-wise documented

  • Statute-linked

  • Audit defensible

Failure to document bifurcation may result in technical queries.

The Gold Standard Drafting Clause

Recommended Clause – Future-Proof and Transition-Safe

The partners shall be entitled to interest on capital and loans at a rate not exceeding the maximum permissible under the Income-tax law applicable for the relevant previous year, including Section 40(b) of the Income-tax Act, 1961 for periods prior to its repeal and the corresponding provisions of the Income-tax Act, 2025 or any statutory modification, re-enactment or replacement thereof, as amended from time to time.

Remuneration to working partners shall be computed strictly within limits prescribed under the applicable Income-tax law and shall relate only to the period subsequent to execution of this deed. Book profit shall have the meaning assigned under the applicable Income-tax statute.

This clause:

  • Covers both Acts seamlessly

  • Captures successor legislation

  • Links payments to statutory ceiling

  • Prevents literal restrictive interpretation

  • Avoids need for repeated amendment

When Amendment Is Necessary

Amendment is recommended if:

  • Deed rigidly refers only to 1961 Act

  • No “as amended” or successor wording

  • Remuneration clause vague

  • Working partner not defined

  • Interest rate cap not mentioned

Execution requirements:

  • Supplementary deed

  • Proper stamping under State Stamp Act

  • Registration where applicable

  • Prospective effect

Preferably complete before 31 March 2026.

Tax Planning Dimension

A. Profit Allocation Strategy

Firms are taxed at 30% plus surcharge.

Remuneration to partners shifts taxation to individual hands.

Optimisation requires:

  • Use of statutory ceiling fully where beneficial

  • Avoiding excess payment beyond allowable limits

  • Aligning remuneration with partner tax profiles

B. Interest Structuring

  • Clear distinction between capital and loan

  • Maintain ledger discipline

  • Avoid retrospective classification

C. High Profit Firms

For firms with book profits above ₹10–15 lakh:

  • Remuneration ceiling becomes substantial

  • Even technical disallowance may create significant tax impact

  • Preventive amendment is economically prudent

Common Disallowance Triggers

  • Payment prior to deed execution

  • Interest exceeding 12%

  • Remuneration not linked to statutory formula

  • No working partner evidence

  • Retrospective deed modification

  • Deed silent on profit basis

Professional Action Framework

Before 31 March 2026:

  1. Review all partnership and LLP deeds

  2. Categorise risk level

  3. Amend where necessary

  4. Update drafting templates

  5. Maintain computation documentation

  6. Educate clients proactively

After transition:

  • Monitor CBDT clarification on renumbered provisions

  • Align tax audit reporting references

  • Maintain documentation trail

Strategic Conclusion

The shift from the Income-tax Act, 1961 to the Income-tax Act, 2025 does not alter partnership deductibility philosophy.

But partnership taxation remains deed-centric.

Substantive compliance without documentary alignment is insufficient.

Firms that proactively review and refine their deeds before the repeal date will:

  • Preserve deductions

  • Avoid litigation

  • Optimise tax outflow

  • Demonstrate governance discipline

In partnership taxation:

Documentation is deduction.
Drafting is defence.
Proactivity is tax strategy.