Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Virtual Digital Assets (VDAs) in India – Tax & Compliance Guide - Fin.Year 2025–26- Asst Year 2026–27

 BY CA Surekha S Ahuja

Financial Year 2025–26 | Assessment Year 2026–27

Statutory Architecture – A Self-Contained Code with Anti-Abuse Intent

The Indian VDA framework is not an extension of existing tax principles—it is a ring-fenced, code-driven regime.

The legislative backbone rests on:

  • Section 2(47A) of the Income-tax Act 1961

  • Section 115BBH of the Income-tax Act 1961

  • Section 194S of the Income-tax Act 1961

  • Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act 1961

Read holistically, these provisions establish a closed taxation system where:

  • Classification disputes are largely irrelevant

  • Deductions are legislatively denied

  • Losses are intentionally ring-fenced

  • Reporting is transaction-specific and traceable

The legislative intent is unmistakable:

Tax certainty for the State, compliance burden for the taxpayer.

Definition and Scope – Intentionally Wide, Practically Expansive

The definition under Section 2(47A) of the Income-tax Act 1961 uses expansive language—“any information, code, number or token generated through cryptographic means.”

This ensures automatic inclusion of:

  • Cryptocurrencies and stablecoins

  • NFTs and fractional tokens

  • DeFi governance tokens

  • Staking and reward-based assets

The exclusions—fiat currency, securities under Securities Contracts Regulation Act 1956, and CBDCs issued by Reserve Bank of India—create a boundary line that is conceptually clear but practically porous.

Interpretational Tension:
Hybrid tokens with profit rights or governance rights may trigger disputes between “security” vs “VDA,” particularly in cross-border listings.

Section 115BBH – The Core Charging & Computation Provision

The scheme under Section 115BBH of the Income-tax Act 1961 must be read as a non obstante code overriding all general provisions.

Key Legal Characteristics

  • Flat 30 percent tax (plus surcharge and cess)

  • Applies to any income from transfer

  • Overrides head of income classification

  • Denies deduction of any expenditure or allowance

  • Restricts loss utilisation

This represents a departure from fundamental tax jurisprudence, where net income—not gross receipts—is ordinarily taxed.

Computation Discipline – Where Most Litigation Will Arise

The absence of detailed computational rules shifts the burden to the taxpayer.

Cost of Acquisition – Narrow Interpretation

Only actual purchase cost is permissible.
All ancillary costs stand disallowed due to the explicit bar in Section 115BBH.

Practical Exposure:

  • Gas fees

  • Platform charges

  • Wallet transfer costs

Any attempt to capitalise these may be challenged as indirect deduction.

Methodology – FIFO as De Facto Standard

While not codified, FIFO has become the accepted audit and compliance standard.

Deviation without disclosure may attract:

  • Allegation of manipulation

  • Rejection of computation

  • Recasting of income

Complex Transaction Categories – High Litigation Sensitivity

The statute is silent on emerging categories, creating interpretational exposure:

  • Airdrops – taxable at receipt vs at transfer

  • Staking rewards – income vs accretion

  • Token swaps – one transfer vs dual transfers

  • Liquidity pool exits – composite transactions

Professional Position:
Each case must be backed by documented methodology and consistent treatment, not opportunistic tax positions.

Loss Restriction – Legislative Ring-Fencing

The denial of set-off and carry forward is not incidental—it is structural.

The provisions override general principles under Section 70 of the Income-tax Act 1961 and Section 71 of the Income-tax Act 1961.

Resulting Impact:

  • Economic losses remain tax-inefficient

  • High volatility is not tax-recognised

  • Tax liability becomes asymmetrical

Section 194S – Withholding as a Surveillance Tool

The withholding mechanism under Section 194S of the Income-tax Act 1961 is designed not merely for tax collection but for data capture and traceability.

Structural Issues

  • TDS on gross consideration, not income

  • Applies even in non-cash transactions

  • Creates liquidity blockage

High-Risk Zones

  • Crypto-to-crypto trades

  • P2P transfers

  • Transactions through non-compliant exchanges

Failure attracts consequences under Section 201 of the Income-tax Act 1961 and interest under Section 201(1A) of the Income-tax Act 1961.

Gift Taxation – Anti-Avoidance Backstop

The applicability of Section 56(2)(x) of the Income-tax Act 1961 ensures that value transfers without consideration do not escape taxation.

The absence of prescribed valuation rules makes FMV determination a potential dispute area, especially in volatile markets.

PMLA Overlay – Compliance Beyond Taxation

The inclusion of VDA ecosystem within the Prevention of Money Laundering Act 2002 framework, monitored by Financial Intelligence Unit India, transforms VDA compliance into a financial surveillance regime.

Implications for Taxpayers

  • KYC traceability

  • Transaction monitoring

  • Cross-verification with tax filings

Critical Insight:
Mismatch between AML data and tax disclosures is now a primary trigger for deep scrutiny.

Return Filing & Disclosure – The Real Battlefield

The introduction of Schedule VDA has shifted compliance from summary reporting to granular transaction-level disclosure.

Core Requirements

  • Date-wise acquisition and transfer

  • Cost and sale value

  • TDS details

Foreign holdings must be reported, failing which exposure may extend beyond the Income-tax Act.

AIS Reconciliation is Non-Negotiable.
Any mismatch is algorithmically flagged for scrutiny.

Scrutiny & Litigation – Defence Framework

Departmental enquiries in FY 2025–26 are increasingly data-driven and technology-backed.

Primary Triggers

  • AIS mismatch

  • High-value trading patterns

  • Offshore exchange usage

  • Inconsistent reporting

Litigation-Ready Documentation

A defensible case must include:

  • Exchange transaction reports

  • Wallet ownership proof

  • Blockchain transaction hashes

  • FIFO computation sheets

  • Bank and fund flow trail

Legal Positioning Strategy

  • Emphasise strict interpretation of Section 115BBH

  • Demonstrate consistency in methodology

  • Avoid aggressive or artificial claims

The defence must be fact-backed first, law-supported next.

Tax Audit & Business Characterisation

Where trading assumes commercial scale, audit under Section 44AB of the Income-tax Act 1961 may apply.

However, Section 115BBH continues to govern computation, creating a structural mismatch between classification and taxation.

Turnover determination remains an evolving issue, requiring professional judgement and documentation.

Penalty & Prosecution – Real and Increasing

Exposure under Section 270A of the Income-tax Act 1961 can extend to:

  • Fifty percent of tax (under-reporting)

  • Two hundred percent (misreporting)

Coupled with interest and potential prosecution, the regime is deterrence-driven.

PMLA non-compliance adds a parallel layer of enforcement with severe consequences including attachment and arrest.

Key Risk Areas – FY 2025–26 Trend Analysis

The Department is focusing on:

  • Crypto-to-crypto transactions

  • P2P activity outside exchanges

  • Offshore wallets

  • Non-disclosure in foreign asset schedules

  • TDS mismatches

These are no longer audit risks—they are systematically tracked data points.

Strategic Planning – What Still Works

Despite restrictive provisions, certain approaches remain viable:

  • Timing of disposals to optimise overall tax position

  • Structured intra-family transfers within legal exemptions

  • Ensuring seamless TDS credit flow

  • Maintaining consistency in computation

Aggressive structuring, expense claims, or artificial losses are highly vulnerable in litigation.

Professional Caution – The Real Advisory Shift

The VDA regime marks a shift from tax planning to compliance engineering.

The role of the professional is no longer limited to computation, but extends to:

  • Designing documentation frameworks

  • Ensuring audit trails

  • Managing litigation preparedness

Closing Insight – The Reality of VDA Taxation

The Indian VDA framework is deliberately stringent, data-driven, and enforcement-oriented.

It is not designed to incentivise participation—it is designed to tax, track, and verify.In this regime, interpretation may support your position—but only documentation will sustain it.



 

Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Finance Bill, 2026 — Pricing Non-Compliance, Enabling Closure

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

A shift from prolonged litigation to structured, cost-based resolution

The Income-tax Act, 2025, as refined by the Finance Bill, 2026, reflects a deliberate and mature shift in India’s tax administration.

This is not a reform driven merely by simplification or rate adjustments. It is a restructuring of compliance behaviour—where the law now seeks to price non-compliance rationally while offering clearly defined pathways to closure.

The direction is unmistakable:

Certainty is available—provided it is consciously chosen and appropriately paid for.

At the same time, the framework preserves discipline by drawing a firm boundary where flexibility is not intended.

Updated Return Post-Notice — A Statutory Window for Closure

The updated return mechanism has been meaningfully extended to cover cases where reassessment proceedings have already commenced
(section 139 8A read with the reassessment framework).

Upon payment of:

  • Tax and interest

  • Applicable additional tax

  • A further levy on the tax and interest base

the taxpayer may declare the income and conclude the matter.

The implications are clear:

  • The disclosure attains finality

  • Exposure to misreporting consequences on such income is neutralised

  • No appellate recourse survives for the disclosed portion

Professional perspective:
This is, in substance, a statutory mechanism for paid closure within the assessment process.

It recognises that matters involving clear factual omissions or data mismatches are better resolved through certainty rather than prolonged adjudication.

Unexplained Income — From Excessive Burden to Enforceable Taxation

The taxation framework for unexplained income
(earlier under the 69 series, now aligned with provisions such as sections 102 to 106)
has been recalibrated.

The revised regime retains a higher-than-normal rate, but at a level that is practically enforceable, with the earlier standalone penalty structure integrated into the misreporting framework.

Professional perspective:
This represents a correction in design.

A provision perceived as excessive invites resistance. A provision that is firm yet proportionate encourages compliance.

The expected outcome is a shift towards acceptance at the assessment stage, reducing unnecessary appellate burden.

Penalty Immunity — Integrating Settlement Within the Statute

The extension of penalty immunity to misreporting cases
(aligned with provisions akin to section 270AA and the consolidated framework under section 439 11)
introduces a structured route for resolution.

Where the taxpayer:

  • Pays tax and interest

  • Discharges additional tax at prescribed levels

  • Does not pursue appellate remedies

the statute grants:

  • Immunity from penalty

  • Protection from prosecution

Professional perspective:
This embeds the economics of settlement directly into the statute.

It enables a taxpayer to take an informed call—whether to litigate or conclude, based on a defined financial outcome.

This is not a concessionary window; the cost of closure is calibrated to ensure that deterrence remains intact.

Block Assessment — Confining Scope to Demonstrable Linkage

The framework governing block assessments in “other person” cases
(earlier akin to section 153C, now under sections such as 295 296)
has been refined to emphasise traceability.

  • Where income is clearly attributable to a specific year, assessment is confined to that year

  • In the absence of such clarity, the broader block continues to apply

The extended limitation period ensures that investigative effectiveness is maintained.

Professional perspective:
This reflects a move from broad exposure based on trigger events to targeted assessment grounded in evidence.

The practical implication is straightforward—documentation quality will determine the extent of exposure.

Delay Fees — A Non-Negotiable Compliance Discipline

While flexibility has been introduced in tax and penalty matters, procedural delays remain outside its scope.

Statutory fees continue to apply strictly in cases of delay, including:

  • Filing of income tax returns (section 234F)

  • Filing of TDS statements (section 234E)

  • Compliance with audit timelines

These levies:

  • Are mandatory and non-discretionary

  • Do not fall within immunity provisions

  • Must be discharged as a condition of compliance

Professional perspective:
The distinction is deliberate:

Substantive defaults may be resolved through structured mechanisms.
Procedural delays are priced without exception.

This reinforces the principle that timeliness is non-negotiable.

The Emerging Framework

Across these amendments, a clear structure emerges:

  • Non-compliance is quantified, not left open-ended

  • Closure mechanisms are embedded within the statute

  • Litigation is no longer the default response

  • Procedural discipline remains strictly enforced

The law now offers defined decision points, each with known financial consequences.

Final Thought

The Finance Bill, 2026 does not dilute the law—it makes it operationally sharper and more outcome-driven.

It recognises that:

  • Excessive penalisation does not ensure recovery

  • Prolonged litigation serves limited purpose

  • Compliance improves when outcomes are predictable and time-bound

At the same time, it preserves a clear boundary:

Flexibility exists in resolving disputes.
It does not exist in meeting timelines.

For professionals, the shift is equally significant. The role now extends beyond interpretation to strategic judgment—knowing when to contest and when to conclude.

In the evolving regime, that judgment will define effective tax advisory.



Saturday, March 14, 2026

31 March Closing vs Life’s Final Audit

An Accounting Reflection from the Words of Young Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji

March is the most defining month for accountants. Ledgers are reconciled, provisions are reviewed, disclosures are verified and finally the books of accounts are closed for the financial year.

Every professional understands the discipline of year-end closing:

  • Every transaction must be recorded.

  • Every liability must be recognised.

  • Every asset must be verified.

  • Nothing material should remain unaccounted.

Because once the Balance Sheet is finalised on 31 March, it reflects the true financial position of the enterprise.

Yet while financial years close on a fixed date, life never announces its closing date.

In today’s world of wars, global tensions and sudden uncertainties, this truth appears even more relevant.

Centuries ago, when Guru Nanak was still a young child, his teacher asked him to write on a wooden tablet (पट्टी) as part of learning. Instead of ordinary letters, Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji uttered words of timeless wisdom, later preserved in the Guru Granth Sahib:

पट्टी लिखी धरमसाल होई।
ज्ञान कलम लिख लेखा होई॥

In simple yet profound terms, the message was this:

Let Dharma be the school,
let Wisdom be the pen,
and let life itself become the ledger where the true account is written.

For those in the accounting profession, this metaphor is remarkably powerful. It reminds us that beyond financial records, every human life quietly maintains its own ledger of actions.

The Real Balance Sheet of Life

Just as accounting divides entries between Assets and Liabilities, life too builds a silent balance sheet.

Assets of LifeLiabilities of Life
TruthEgo
IntegrityGreed
CompassionAnger
ServiceAttachment
HumilitySelf-interest

Over time, these entries determine the true balance of a life lived.

Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji reminds us further:

लेखा लिखि न चलई साथि।
किआ लेखा किआ गुणि गाथ॥

The worldly accounts we maintain — wealth, titles and possessions — do not accompany us. What ultimately remains is only the record of our deeds and virtues.

A Reflection at Year-End

As accountants prepare the final financial statements for the year, the process itself offers a deeper reminder.

Financial accounts are audited every year.

But life too faces a final audit — without notice.

Financial years close on 31 March.
The closing of life’s ledger may come any day.

Perhaps the most timeless accounting principle was spoken centuries ago by a young Sri Guru Nanak Dev Ji:

ज्ञान कलम लिख लेखा होई॥

Let wisdom be the pen that writes the account of life

Friday, March 13, 2026

Section 194T Year-End Compliance: Challan Payment, Advance Tax Alignment and Key Cautions -II

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

As FY 2025–26 closes on 31 March 2026, partnership firms and LLPs crediting remuneration or interest to partners must ensure proper compliance with Section 194T.

Since the statutory framework has already been discussed earlier, the focus here is only on practical execution points
TDS challan payment, balancing partner advance tax with TDS, key planning tips, and caution areas.

Procedure for Payment of TDS (Section 194T)

Where TDS is deducted on partner payments in March 2026, the tax must be deposited by 30 April 2026 using Challan ITNS 281.

Payment Steps

  1. Access the Income Tax e-payment portal and select Challan ITNS 281.

  2. Enter the following details carefully:

FieldEntry
Nature of paymentTDS payable
Section code194T
Payment type200 – Regular TDS
Financial year2025–26
Assessment year2026–27
TANFirm’s TAN
  1. Enter the TDS amount and complete payment through net banking.

After payment, the system generates a Challan Identification Number (CIN), which must be quoted in Form 26Q while filing the quarterly TDS return.

Balancing Partner Advance Tax with TDS

A practical issue arises because partners must discharge advance tax by 15 March, whereas many firms determine remuneration or interest only at year end.

This creates a timing mismatch.

Timing of CreditImpact on Partner
Before 15 MarchTDS can be factored into advance tax
After 15 MarchPartner may overpay advance tax
After year endTDS usually results in refund

Practical approach

Where remuneration is reasonably predictable, firms should share estimated partner income before 15 March so that partners can align their advance tax payments.
Even provisional estimates help avoid unnecessary refunds and cash flow strain.

Practical Tax Planning Tips

Balance remuneration and profit share

Remuneration and interest attract TDS, whereas profit share is exempt in the partner’s hands under Section 10(2A). A balanced structure helps manage TDS outflow.

Track the ₹20,000 threshold

TDS applies only when aggregate payments to a partner exceed ₹20,000 during the financial year. Monitoring this threshold avoids unnecessary deduction.

Review partner payments before finalisation

Determining remuneration earlier reduces the risk of TDS oversight and advance tax mismatch.

Ensure partnership deed flexibility

Profit-linked remuneration clauses provide greater flexibility than rigid fixed remuneration provisions.

Key Caution Points

Credit entries also trigger TDS

Even if remuneration is only credited to the partner’s capital account, TDS must still be deducted.

Disallowance under Section 40(b) does not remove TDS obligation

If remuneration exceeds the limits under Section 40(b), the excess may be disallowed in the firm’s computation, but TDS must still be deducted on the full amount credited.

Correct section selection in challan

Incorrect section reporting may delay TDS credit in the partner’s Form 26AS.

Maintain clear segregation in partner accounts

Entry TypeTDS Applicability
Profit shareNo
RemunerationYes
InterestYes
Capital withdrawalNo

Proper classification reduces the risk of disputes.

Quick Compliance Reminder

Before closing FY 2025–26, firms should ensure:

• remuneration authorised in the partnership deed
• partner-wise payments reviewed against the ₹20,000 threshold
• TDS deducted correctly
• challan deposited by 30 April 2026
• TDS return filed in Form 26Q by 31 May 2026.

Final Professional Insight

Section 194T primarily introduces reporting and withholding discipline for partner remuneration and interest.

Smooth compliance depends on three simple actions:

• timely deposit of TDS through Challan ITNS 281
• coordination between firm TDS and partner advance tax planning
• clear segregation of partner account entries.

With these steps in place, firms can complete the year-end closing without refund mismatches, penalties, or compliance disputes.



Thursday, March 12, 2026

Section 194T (Effective 1 April 2025): Guidance for Partnership Firms Before the Last Advance Tax Installment

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

The introduction of Section 194T by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024, effective 1 April 2025, marks a fundamental shift in the tax compliance framework governing partnership firms and LLPs.

For decades, payments made by firms to partners—whether in the form of interest on capital or remuneration to working partners—were taxable in the hands of partners under Section 28(v) but escaped the TDS regime entirely.

The legislature has now addressed this gap by introducing mandatory tax deduction at source on such payments.

This development has particular significance as the last installment of advance tax approaches, because many firms finalize remuneration and interest adjustments near year-end. Without careful planning, such adjustments may trigger TDS defaults, interest liability, and potential disallowances.

Accordingly, firms must now evaluate partner payments with a structured legal approach that integrates Section 194T with Sections 40(b), 44AD, 28(v), and the broader TDS framework.

This guidance note provides a comprehensive and practical interpretation of the provision, with analytical reasoning, scenario analysis, and compliance insights designed to prevent any default risk.

Statutory Framework of Section 194T

Section 194T requires a partnership firm or LLP to deduct tax at source when making certain payments to its partners.

The payments covered include:

  • salary

  • remuneration

  • commission

  • bonus

  • interest on capital or loan

  • any similar payment in consideration of services rendered by a partner.

These categories broadly mirror the terminology used in Section 40(b) which governs deductibility of partner remuneration and interest in computing firm income.

Rate and Threshold

ParticularsRequirement
Specified payments to partnersTDS @ 10%
Aggregate payment up to ₹20,000 per partner per financial yearNo TDS required
No PAN furnished20% TDS (Section 206AA)

Time of Deduction

Tax must be deducted at the earlier of:

  • credit of the amount to the partner’s account (including capital account), or

  • actual payment.

Therefore, mere credit entries—even without cash payment—trigger the TDS obligation.

Reasoning Behind the Provision

The legislative objective behind Section 194T is to integrate partner remuneration and interest into the information reporting and tax collection framework.

Historically:

  • firms could credit partner remuneration at year-end

  • the tax department had limited visibility over such payments until returns were filed

  • collection of tax depended entirely on partner compliance.

By introducing TDS, the law now ensures:

Earlier positionPosition after Section 194T
No withholding mechanismMandatory withholding
Limited reportingFull TDS reporting through Form 26Q
Tax collected at return stageTax collected during the year

Thus Section 194T functions primarily as a tax collection and reporting mechanism, not as a new tax levy.

Core Legal Principle — TDS Trigger Is the Payment Itself

The most important interpretational principle of Section 194T is that the obligation to deduct tax depends on the nature of payment, not on the method of income computation of the firm.

Consequently, the section applies irrespective of whether:

SituationApplicability
The firm opts for presumptive taxation under Section 44ADYes
The firm maintains full books of accountIrrelevant
The payment is allowable under Section 40(b)Irrelevant
The partner claims presumptive taxationIrrelevant

The character of payment alone determines applicability.

Interaction with Section 44AD (Presumptive Taxation)

A common misunderstanding arises where firms adopting Section 44AD believe that because profits are computed presumptively and partner remuneration is not separately deducted, TDS should not apply.

Such interpretation is legally incorrect.

Section 44AD merely determines how the firm computes its taxable income. It does not alter the existence or character of payments made to partners.

Even in a presumptive regime:

  • remuneration remains remuneration

  • interest remains interest.

Thus the moment such payment is credited or paid, Section 194T becomes operational.

The absence of books of account or reliance on presumptive computation does not negate the factual existence of the payment.

Relationship with Section 40(b) – Allowability vs TDS

Section 40(b) governs the deductibility of remuneration and interest in the hands of the firm.

However, Section 194T operates independently of deductibility.

Illustration

ParticularsAmount
Interest paid to partner₹1,50,000
Maximum allowable under Section 40(b)₹1,20,000
Disallowed portion₹30,000

Even though ₹30,000 is disallowed in the firm’s computation, TDS must still be deducted on the entire ₹1,50,000.

The disallowance affects tax computation, not TDS obligation.

Payments Covered and Not Covered

Understanding the precise scope of Section 194T is essential.

Nature of PaymentTDS ApplicabilityReason
Salary or remuneration to partnerYesExplicitly covered
Interest on partner capitalYesExplicitly covered
Commission to partnerYesExplicitly covered
Bonus to partnerYesExplicitly covered
Share of profitNoExempt under Section 10(2A)
Return of capitalNoCapital transaction
Partner drawingsNoWithdrawal of capital/profit

Thus pure profit share distributions remain outside the TDS regime.

Important Practical Scenarios

Pure Capital Withdrawals

Where partners merely withdraw amounts from their capital accounts without any remuneration or interest credit, such withdrawals represent distribution of profits or capital.

In such cases Section 194T should not apply, provided there is no underlying remuneration or interest entry.

However, substance prevails over form. If remuneration is credited and then withdrawn, it remains remuneration for TDS purposes.

Composite Partner Accounts

Many firms maintain a single partner current account containing:

  • profit share

  • remuneration

  • interest

  • drawings.

In such cases the firm must segregate each component.

ComponentTDS requirement
Profit shareNo
InterestYes
RemunerationYes

Failure to maintain such segregation may expose the firm to disputes.

Remuneration Exceeding Partnership Deed Limits

Even if remuneration exceeds limits prescribed in the partnership deed or under Section 40(b), the payment still retains the character of remuneration.

Therefore TDS must be deducted on the full amount actually paid.

Partner Claiming Presumptive Taxation

If the partner opts for Section 44AD or 44ADA in his own return, it does not affect the firm’s TDS obligation.

The partner may claim credit or refund of TDS while filing the return.

Availability of Form 15G / 15H and Form 13

Many taxpayers ask whether TDS under Section 194T can be avoided through declarations or lower deduction certificates.

The position requires careful understanding.

ProvisionApplicability under 194T
Form 15G / Form 15HNot applicable
Lower or Nil TDS certificate (Form 13)Generally not available in practice
ReasonSection 197 does not presently list 194T

Thus once the threshold is crossed, deduction of tax becomes mandatory.

Consequences of Non-Compliance

Failure to deduct or deposit TDS may trigger multiple consequences.

SectionConsequence
Section 201(1)Assessee deemed in default
Section 201(1A)Interest liability
Section 221Penalty
Section 271CPenalty equal to TDS
Section 234ELate filing fee for TDS returns
Section 40(a)(ia)Possible disallowance of expenditure

Thus a single lapse can lead to cascading financial exposure.

Strategic Planning to Reduce TDS Exposure

While Section 194T cannot be ignored, certain legitimate structuring approaches may reduce unnecessary TDS outflow.

Profit Share Model

Since profit share is exempt in the hands of partners, firms may rely more on profit distribution instead of fixed remuneration, particularly in small firms.

Controlled Remuneration

Firms may limit remuneration to remain within the ₹20,000 annual threshold where commercially feasible.

Flexible Deed Provisions

Partnership deeds providing mandatory fixed remuneration may trigger unavoidable TDS obligations. Flexible clauses allow better tax planning.

Treatment in the Hands of the Partner

Although TDS is deducted by the firm, the final tax liability rests with the partner.

Partner situationResult
Income below basic exemptionFull refund possible
Presumptive taxation claimedTDS adjusted against liability
High deductions availableRefund likely

Therefore, in many cases TDS becomes merely a temporary cash flow adjustment rather than a permanent tax burden.

Advance Tax Planning Implications

With Section 194T in force, firms and partners must re-evaluate advance tax obligations.

Key considerations include:

  • monitoring partner payments during the year

  • adjusting advance tax based on TDS deducted

  • avoiding year-end remuneration credits without TDS deduction.

Failure to do so may trigger interest under Sections 234B and 234C.

Compliance Approach for Firms

The safest compliance strategy involves:

StepAction
Review partnership deedIdentify remuneration clauses
Track partner paymentsMonitor aggregate amount
Deduct TDS when threshold crossedApply correct rate
Deposit TDS within due dateAvoid interest liability
File TDS returnsEnsure Form 26Q reporting
Issue Form 16AEnable partner credit

Professional Conclusion

Section 194T transforms partner remuneration and interest from internal accounting adjustments into regulated TDS transactions.

From FY 2025-26 onward, partnership firms and LLPs must treat such payments with the same level of compliance discipline applicable to other TDS provisions.

The safest professional approach is:

  • clear distinction between profit share and remuneration

  • continuous monitoring of partner accounts

  • early advance tax planning.

In essence, Section 194T does not increase the tax burden, but it significantly increases the compliance responsibility of partnership firms.

When properly understood and planned, the provision can be managed smoothly without creating any default, interest exposure, or litigation risk.



Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Beyond Buy–Borrow–Die: Why the World’s Oldest Wealth Wisdom Now Points Back to India

By CA Surekha S Ahuja 

Wealth strategies come and go with financial fashion. But the principles that sustain families, nations, and civilizations rarely change.”

In recent years, global finance has popularised a phrase called Buy–Borrow–Die (BBD)—a concept often associated with ultra-wealthy investors who accumulate appreciating assets, borrow against them rather than selling, and eventually pass those assets across generations.

To many observers, the strategy appears to be a modern innovation of sophisticated financial planning.

But the philosophy behind it is far older.

For centuries, merchant families, trading communities, and business houses across civilizations quietly followed the same principle:

Build assets patiently. Preserve them carefully. Allow them to grow across generations.

Long before modern finance gave it a name, this discipline formed the backbone of enduring wealth.

Today, as the world enters a new phase of uncertainty, that old wisdom is becoming relevant again.

And increasingly, it is pointing toward an important conclusion for Indian families worldwide.

A world entering a new phase of uncertainty

The global economic environment is changing in profound ways.

Geopolitical tensions are rising. Trade relationships are being reshaped. Supply chains are being redesigned as nations focus on economic resilience and strategic independence.

In such an environment, wealth planning cannot depend only on chasing global financial centres or short-term market opportunities.

The real question becomes deeper:

Where should long-term wealth grow so that it remains resilient across generations?

For millions of Indian families living across borders, this question is becoming increasingly important.

The powerful bridge of the global Indian family

India today represents one of the most remarkable economic bridges in the world.

Millions of Indians live and work abroad—in North America, Europe, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and Australia—while their emotional and financial ties remain strongly connected to India.

This relationship is visible in a remarkable economic reality.

India consistently receives over 100 billion dollars annually in remittances, the largest such inflow in the world.

These flows represent the success of Indian professionals and entrepreneurs across continents.

But the deeper question is not how much money arrives.

The more important question is:

What do families build with that income?

The difference between comfort and security

When income rises, families naturally focus on improving their quality of life—better homes, education, and financial comfort.

There is nothing wrong with enjoying prosperity.

However, history reveals a critical distinction.

Income spent creates comfort.

Income converted into productive assets creates security.

Businesses expand. Investments compound. Income-generating assets continue producing value long after the original income has been earned.

Over time, these assets become the true foundation of family stability.

What Buy–Borrow–Die really teaches

Much of the global debate around Buy–Borrow–Die focuses on its use by extremely wealthy individuals to defer taxes.

But focusing only on that aspect misses the deeper insight.

The core principle behind the concept is simple:

Wealth that remains invested in productive assets continues to compound.

Frequent selling interrupts that compounding.

Long-term ownership strengthens it.

In essence, the real lesson behind BBD is not borrowing or financial engineering.

It is something much simpler:

Patient ownership of productive assets across generations.

This philosophy has sustained successful business families for centuries.

Why India matters more than ever

In a world of uncertainty, economies with certain structural strengths become especially important for long-term wealth creation.

India possesses several of these advantages.

A vast domestic market ensures sustained demand.
A young population supports long-term growth.
Infrastructure development is accelerating productivity.
Entrepreneurial energy continues to generate innovation and enterprise.

Together, these forces create something powerful:

A long runway for economic growth.

For Indian families earning globally, this creates a unique opportunity.

Earn across the world—but allow wealth to grow in a developing and resilient economy.

When personal wealth strengthens a nation

Capital invested productively within a growing economy does more than build individual fortunes.

Investment in businesses creates employment.
Investment in enterprises fuels innovation.
Investment in financial markets deepens economic strength.
Investment in infrastructure improves productivity.

In such an environment, personal prosperity and national development move in the same direction.

Few forces are more powerful for long-term economic progress.

A timeless wealth framework

Instead of focusing only on complex financial strategies, families may benefit from returning to a simpler and more enduring philosophy:

Earn. Build. Preserve. Pass On.

Earn through skill, enterprise, and global opportunity.

Build productive assets.

Preserve capital with patience and discipline.

Pass on not only wealth but responsibility to the next generation.

This approach combines modern financial thinking with timeless wisdom.

The cultural insight behind it

Indian civilisation has long viewed wealth within a broader ethical framework.

The classical concept of Artha (wealth) was always linked to Dharma (responsibility).

Wealth was meant to be created ethically, preserved wisely, and transferred across generations in a way that strengthened both family and society.

When wealth follows this path, it becomes more than financial success.

It becomes a force of stability and progress.

The question every family must ask

In uncertain times, the most important financial question is not:

“How much did we earn this year?”

The deeper question is:

“What lasting foundation did we build with what we earned?”

Income spent disappears.

Income invested can support generations.

Final reflection

The philosophy behind Buy–Borrow–Die may have gained attention in modern financial debates, but its essence is far older and far simpler.

It reminds us that patient ownership of productive assets is the foundation of enduring prosperity.

For Indian families across the world—whether parents remain in India or children build careers abroad—the opportunity today is unique.

Earn across the world.
Build patiently.
Preserve wisely.
Let wealth grow where it strengthens both family and nation.

Because the greatest legacy is not wealth that merely survives generations—

it is wealth that rises with the nation it belongs to.