Sunday, December 28, 2025

MCA Business Activity Codes for MGT-7 (2025)

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

Complete NIC-2008 Classification for MCA V3 Portal

(Applicable for FY 2024-25 onwards)

Why This Update Matters

With the complete shift to the MCA V3 portal, the Ministry of Corporate Affairs now requires companies to report their Principal and Ancillary Business Activities strictly using NIC-2008 numeric codes while filing Form MGT-7.

The earlier alphanumeric MCA codes (A1, C3, M2, etc.) are no longer in use.
As of December 2025, NIC-2025 has not been adopted for MGT-7.

This post serves as a single-page, practical reference for professionals and companies to select correct NIC-2008 codes and avoid filing errors.

Key Filing Rules (Read This First)

  • Only NIC-2008 numeric codes are accepted on MCA V3

  • Multiple business activities can be selected

  • Turnover percentage must total exactly 100%

  • Principal activity must align with financial statements and objects clause

NIC-2008 Business Activity Codes (MGT-7 Ready)

 Agriculture, Forestry & Fishing

01 Crop and animal production and allied activities
02 Forestry and logging
03 Fishing and aquaculture

Mining & Quarrying

05 Mining of coal and lignite
06 Extraction of crude petroleum and natural gas
07 Mining of metal ores
08 Other mining and quarrying
09 Mining support service activities

Manufacturing

10 Food products
11 Beverages
12 Tobacco products
13 Textiles
14 Wearing apparel
15 Leather and related products
16 Wood and cork products
17 Paper and paper products
18 Printing and recorded media
19 Coke and refined petroleum products
20 Chemicals and chemical products
21 Pharmaceuticals and medicinal products
22 Rubber and plastic products
23 Non-metallic mineral products
24 Basic metals
25 Fabricated metal products
26 Computer, electronic and optical products
27 Electrical equipment
28 Machinery and equipment n.e.c.
29 Motor vehicles, trailers and semi-trailers
30 Other transport equipment
31 Furniture
32 Other manufacturing
33 Repair and installation of machinery and equipment

Construction

41 Construction of buildings
42 Civil engineering (roads, bridges, utilities)
43 Specialized construction activities

Trade (Wholesale & Retail)

45 Wholesale and retail trade of motor vehicles
46 Wholesale trade (except motor vehicles)
47 Retail trade (except motor vehicles)

Information Technology & Communication

58 Publishing activities
61 Telecommunications
62 Computer programming, consultancy and related services
63 Information service activities (data hosting, web portals)

Finance & Insurance

64 Financial service activities (except insurance and pension funding)
65 Insurance and pension funding
66 Activities auxiliary to financial services and insurance

Real Estate

68 Real estate activities with own or leased property
68 Real estate activities on fee or contract basis

Professional, Scientific & Consultancy Services

69 Legal and accounting activities
70 Management consultancy
71 Architecture, engineering and technical testing
72 Scientific research and development
73 Advertising and market research
74 Other professional, scientific and technical activities
75 Veterinary activities

Education

85 Education (schools, colleges, training institutes, coaching)

Healthcare & Social Services

86 Hospital activities
87 Residential nursing and elderly care
88 Social work activities without accommodation

 How to Report in MGT-7 (V3)

  1. Identify actual revenue streams from financial statements

  2. Select relevant NIC-2008 codes from MCA dropdown

  3. Allocate turnover percentage for each activity

  4. Ensure total equals 100%

  5. Match principal activity with revenue and objects clause

Compliance Insight (Most Important)

MGT-7 filing is now NIC-centric, not legacy-code-centric.
Correct NIC-2008 selection ensures smooth acceptance and avoids future MCA queries.

Please write to us for Excel Shhet of NIC Code 

Step into 2026 with Zeal and Zest: Strategic Year-End Tax Planning under the Income Tax Act, 2025

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

As we welcome 2026, it’s the perfect moment for taxpayers, CAs, NRIs, and businesses to prepare proactively for the new financial year. The Income Tax Act, 2025, notified in August 2025, replaces the Income Tax Act, 1961, effective April 1, 2026 (FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27). This is more than a reform—it is a strategic opportunity to optimize taxes, align with digital compliance, and plan for AI-driven audits.

With 31st December 2025 approaching, year-end planning is no longer optional—it is the key to maximizing savings, minimizing risks, and stepping into 2026 confidently.

Why Year-End Planning Matters

  • Maximize Tax Savings: Decide on the old vs new regime, exemptions, and deductions before the year ends.

  • Audit Readiness: High cash transactions, turnover thresholds, and NRI compliance must be reconciled to avoid AI-driven scrutiny.

  • NRI Compliance: Verify PAN, DTAA filings, and overseas assets before 31st December to prevent refund delays or higher TDS.

  • Advance Tax Alignment: Proper planning ensures smooth quarterly installments for AY 2026-27.

Insight: Proactive year-end action allows taxpayers to leverage rebates, slab benefits, and prescriptive audit thresholds, ensuring both compliance and optimization.

New Tax Slabs & 87A Rebate (FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27)
Income Range (₹ lakh)Tax RatePlanning & Impact
0 – 40%Basic exemption increased from ₹3L → ₹4L; minimal compliance burden.
4 – 85%Marginal rate; document eligible deductions.
8 – 1210%₹60k rebate makes income ≤₹12L effectively tax-free; optimize via exemptions.
12 – 1615%Lower than old regime; medium-income taxpayers benefit from strategic investments.
16 – 2020%Upper-middle slab; plan salary structure and deductions to reduce effective tax.
20 – 2425%New slab; capital gains, high-income planning critical.
Above 2430%Top slab; surcharge capped at 25% for income >₹2Cr; early planning saves significant tax.

Impact: Careful regime selection and slab analysis can save ₹1–1.14 lakh for middle- and upper-middle-income taxpayers.

NRI Year-End Compliance Checklist

  1. PAN & Residency Verification:

    • Maintain PAN without Aadhaar using passport/OCI/Form 60.

    • Avoid refund withholding or automatic deactivation.

  2. DTAA & Foreign Tax Credit:

    • File Form 67 before 31st December 2025.

    • Reconcile under Clause 422 by March 31, 2026, to claim relief.

  3. Asset Reporting:

    • Disclose overseas assets in Schedule FA/TR.

    • Plan for ITR-U filing (up to 4 years) to correct errors voluntarily.

  4. Interest Income TDS:

    • NRIs with Indian income >₹15 lakh must quarterly e-verify PAN to avoid 20% TDS hike.

Tip: Year-end reconciliation ensures smooth filing for AY 2026-27 and avoids last-minute compliance issues.

Audit & Cash Thresholds — Year-End Preparation
CategoryThresholdYear-End Planning Insight
Business turnover₹1 crore (₹3 crore if ≥95% digital)Reconcile cash receipts/payments; prepare AIS/TIS reports before year-end.
Professional receipts₹50 lakhEnsure proper accounting of cash receipts to avoid triggering audit.
Cash receipts/payments>₹5 lakh/day or 5% of totalDocument all high-value cash inflows/outflows; reconcile with books.
Presumptive taxation (44AD/44ADA)≤₹3 crore (business) or ≤₹50 lakh (profession) with ≥95% digitalConsider switching to presumptive scheme if eligible for simplicity and audit exemption.

Impact: Pre-year-end documentation of cash, digital receipts, and bank reconciliations reduces audit risk and ensures compliance.

ITR Filing & Advance Tax Planning

  • Collect Form 16/16A, AIS/TIS, bank statements, capital gains reports.

  • Compute old vs new regime and decide best option for AY 2026-27.

  • NRIs attach passport/OCI for residency proof in ITR-2/3.

  • Advance Tax Planning:

    • 15% by June 15, 2026; remaining installments quarterly.

  • Pre-match 90% of data for AI-driven audit scrutiny (>₹50L turnover or high cash exposure).

Tip: Proactive planning before 31st December 2025 ensures maximal savings and smooth filing for AY 2026-27.

Year-End Action Timeline
PeriodKey Steps
Now – 31 Dec 2025Review income, deductions, exemptions; reconcile cash and bank transactions; finalize NRI residency and DTAA filings; decide regime choice; pre-match AIS/TIS data.
Jan – Mar 2026Deploy slab calculators, adjust salary structure, advise clients on regime opt-in, prepare software upgrades.
Apr 1, 2026Act becomes effective; start filing for FY 2025-26 / AY 2026-27.
Q2–Q4 2026Advance tax (June 15), audit reports (Oct 31), full ITR cycle under new slabs.

Reasoning & Impact: Year-end preparation ensures smooth transition, maximum savings, and audit-ready compliance in the digital-first era.

Strategic Takeaways

  1. Year-End Regime Selection: Compare old vs new slabs to optimize taxes.

  2. NRI Compliance: PAN, DTAA, and overseas assets must be reconciled before 31st December.

  3. Cash & Digital Transactions: Document high-value cash receipts/payments.

  4. Audit Readiness: Pre-match AIS, TIS, and bank data.

  5. Advance Planning: Optimize investments, salary structure, and deductions before the year ends.

Conclusion: The Income Tax Act, 2025 is a strategic opportunity. By acting before 31st December 2025, taxpayers, NRIs, and professionals will ensure maximum savings, smooth filing for AY 2026-27, and compliance in a transformative, AI-driven taxation environment.


 

 

Guide to Capital Goods under GST – Credit, Reversal, Sale, Loss, and Reporting

By CA Surekha S Ahuja

Introduction: Why Capital Goods Require Special Attention

In GST compliance, capital goods are not a one-time event—they demand lifecycle tracking. Businesses can claim full input tax credit (ITC) upfront, but the law expects tax neutrality to be maintained until the asset is finally:

  • Sold

  • Scrapped

  • Destroyed

  • Permanently removed from business use

Most GST disputes on capital goods arise not from legal ambiguity, but from missed reversals, incorrect valuation at the time of sale, or misreporting in annual returns (GSTR-9/9C). A disciplined approach ensures smooth audits, accurate ITC management, and minimal risk of penalties.

Capital Goods Definition & ITC Eligibility

  • Capital goods: Assets capitalized in books providing enduring business benefit. GST follows accounting character and economic substance, not just invoice description.

  • Repairs/maintenance: Restorative expenditure that does not improve/upgrade the asset is treated as repair, not capital goods, and does not trigger reversals.

Eligibility under Section 16 CGST Act:

  • ITC allowed if goods are used/intended for business and invoice, receipt, tax payment, and return filing conditions are satisfied.

  • Full ITC can be claimed in the year of purchase; spreading over useful life is not required.

  • Caution: GST component must not be capitalized for income-tax depreciation—doing so permanently blocks ITC.

When ITC Is Blocked or Denied (Section 17(5))

  • Assets used for personal purposes, immovable property on own account, or certain motor vehicles

  • Blocked at inception → no ITC available, even if later sold

Exempt or Mixed Supplies (Section 17(2) & Rule 43)

  • Partial/complete use for exempt supplies → proportionate ITC reversal

  • Rule 43: Monthly, asset-wise reversal over 60 months

  • Repairs excluded

  • Rule 44(6): 5% per quarter reduction method commonly used for sales or disposal

Reverse Charge on Capital Goods (Sections 9(3)/9(4))

  • GST under reverse charge must be paid in cash and reported in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d)

  • ITC available once paid (Section 16 conditions apply)

  • Subsequent sale/disposal treated like forward-charge goods

Sale, Disposal, Scrap, or Permanent Removal (Section 7 & 18(6))

  • Always a taxable supply, regardless of age or book value

  • GST liability = higher of:

    1. Tax on transaction value (Section 15)

    2. ITC attributable to remaining useful life

  • Remaining ITC: Original ITC × reduction (5% per quarter, Rule 44(6))

  • Applies even if sold in same financial year

Accounting loss or WDV does not reduce GST liability; paying GST only on sale price is a common audit trigger.

Loss, Destruction, Theft, or Write-off

  • ITC on destroyed/lost/stolen/written-off capital goods must be reversed (Section 18(6) + Rule 44(6))

  • No sale consideration required

  • Frequently missed reversal during audits

Insurance Claims

  • Compensation is not a supply → no GST

  • Exit of asset → ITC reversal mandatory

  • Reversal required even if insurance proceeds received

Step-by-Step GSTR Reporting Guide
EventGSTR-1GSTR-3BGSTR-9GSTR-9C
Sale of capital goodsB2B/B2CTable 3.1Taxable turnoverReconciling item
ITC reversal (Rule 43/18(6))Table 4(B)Report separatelyReconciling item
Reverse chargeTable 3.1(d)Report if applicableReconciling item

Tips:

  • Same-year sales → calculate remaining ITC using Rule 44(6)

  • Reverse ITC for loss, destruction, insurance claims even if no sale consideration

  • Misplacement in GSTR-9C = audit trigger

ITC Reversal Checklist – Insurance, Loss, and Disposal

  1. Insurance Claims: Reverse ITC; GST not applicable

  2. Loss/Theft: Reverse ITC; maintain asset register & proof

  3. Sale/Disposal/Scrap: Compare GST on sale vs. remaining ITC; pay higher

  4. Exempt/Mixed Supply: Monthly Rule 43 reversal till 60 months or disposal

  5. Documentation: Asset register, ITC calculations, invoices, insurance claims, destruction proofs

Numerical Illustrations

1. Sale after 3 Years (12 Quarters)

  • Purchase: ₹10,00,000 + GST 18% (₹1,80,000)

  • Sale: ₹4,00,000

  • Remaining ITC: 40% × ₹1,80,000 = ₹72,000

  • GST on sale: 18% × ₹4,00,000 = ₹72,000

  • GST payable = ₹72,000

2. Sale Same Year (1 Quarter)

  • Remaining ITC: 95% × 1,80,000 = ₹1,71,000

  • GST on sale = ₹90,000 → Pay higher = ₹1,71,000

3. Destruction w/ Insurance (2 Years)

  • Remaining ITC = 60% × 1,80,000 = ₹1,08,000

  • Reverse ITC = ₹1,08,000; GST = NIL

4. Exempt Supplies

  • ITC: ₹1,20,000

  • Monthly Rule 43 reversal = ₹2,000

  • Continue till 60 months or disposal

Common Errors & Audit Triggers

  • Claiming depreciation on GST

  • Ignoring Rule 43 reversals

  • Missing reversals on loss, destruction, or insurance claims

  • Paying GST only on sale price

  • Misreporting in GSTR-3B/9/9C

Result: Interest, penalties, and compliance failures

Professional Insights & Best Practices

GST on capital goods is lifecycle-based, not punitive. Full ITC upfront is allowed, but businesses must:

  • Track asset usage and lifecycle

  • Ensure timely ITC reversals

  • Maintain accurate GSTR-3B, 9, 9C reporting

  • Keep detailed supporting documentation

Outcome: Businesses aligning accounting, monthly filings, and annual reconciliations rarely face disputes and audit challenges.

Conclusion

Capital goods under GST require strategic lifecycle management. Proper understanding of ITC eligibility, reversals, sale/disposal, insurance treatment, and reporting not only ensures compliance but also protects businesses from audit disputes and penalties.

By following a structured approach—from purchase to exit—businesses can maximize tax benefits while maintaining full legal compliance. This comprehensive framework makes GST on capital goods a manageable and predictable process, turning what is often a compliance challenge into an operational advantage.


Saturday, December 27, 2025

Can Form 26QB TDS Be Paid If the Buyer’s Login ID Is Not Known

By CA Surekha S Ahuja

In property transactions, buyers frequently encounter a practical hurdle: the buyer has a PAN but does not have, or does not remember, the Income-tax portal login credentials. This often leads to confusion about whether TDS under Form 26QB can be paid at all.

The short answer is yes.
The Income-tax law does not make portal login a pre-condition for depositing TDS on purchase of property.

This article explains the legal position, permitted payment mechanisms, and post-payment compliance, in a clear and structured manner.

Statutory Requirement Under Section 194-IA

Section 194-IA of the Income-tax Act, 1961 mandates that:

  • Where the consideration for transfer of immovable property is ₹50 lakh or more

  • The buyer is required to deduct TDS at 1%

  • The deducted tax must be deposited through Form 26QB

Key statutory points:

  • TAN is not required

  • PAN of both buyer and seller is compulsory

  • TDS must be deposited within 30 days from the end of the month in which deduction is made

Notably, neither the Act nor the Rules prescribe login to the Income-tax portal as a condition for making the payment.

Practical Issue: Absence of Buyer Login Credentials

In real-life transactions, it is common that:

  • The buyer has never filed an income-tax return

  • No income-tax portal account has been created

  • Login credentials are forgotten or inaccessible

  • Property registration timelines are tight

This leads to the misconception that TDS payment cannot proceed without login access, which is incorrect.

Permissible Methods to Pay Form 26QB Without Buyer Login

The Income-tax Department has provided pre-login and alternate payment facilities to ensure smooth compliance.

Method 1: Income-tax Portal – Pre-Login e-Pay Tax Facility

This is the most direct and recommended route.

Procedure:

  1. Visit www.incometax.gov.in

  2. Select e-Pay Tax

  3. Choose Continue as Guest / Pre-Login Service

  4. Select TDS on Sale of Property – Form 26QB

  5. Enter:

    • Buyer PAN

    • Seller PAN

    • Property consideration

    • Date of payment or agreement

    • TDS amount (1%)

    • Property details

  6. Complete payment using net banking, debit card, or other enabled modes

Upon successful payment:

  • Form 26QB (challan-cum-statement) is generated

  • An acknowledgement number is issued

At this point, the buyer’s statutory obligation to deposit TDS stands fulfilled.

Method 2: TIN-NSDL / Bank-Based Payment Route

This method remains useful where portal access is difficult or where bank-assisted payment is preferred.

Procedure:

  1. Access the TIN-NSDL Form 26QB page

  2. Fill in buyer and seller PAN, property details, and TDS amount

  3. Generate challan

  4. Make payment through online banking or authorised bank channels

This route also does not require login to the Income-tax portal.

Post-Payment Compliance: What Follows After 26QB Payment

Credit to Seller

  • TDS reflects in the seller’s Form 26AS

  • Seller becomes eligible to claim credit in the return of income

Issuance of Form 16B

  • Buyer is required to download Form 16B (TDS certificate) from TRACES

  • This can be done after creating or retrieving portal credentials

  • Form 16B must be issued to the seller within the prescribed time

Importantly, Form 16B is not required at the time of TDS payment, but is a subsequent compliance.

Is Buyer Registration on Income-tax Portal Mandatory

  • Not mandatory for depositing TDS

  • However, advisable for post-payment compliances, including:

    • Downloading Form 16B

    • Responding to any future notices

    • Tracking TDS credits and filings

The buyer’s PAN itself acts as the user ID, and registration can be completed at any later stage.

Key Practical Precautions

  • Ensure accurate PAN details of both parties

  • Match consideration value with sale agreement

  • Deduct TDS at the time of payment or credit, whichever is earlier

  • Deposit TDS within the statutory timeline

  • Retain challan and acknowledgement details

Errors in PAN or amounts may lead to credit mismatch and rectification delays.

Concluding Note

Form 26QB compliance is transaction-centric, not login-centric.
The absence of buyer login credentials does not restrict or invalidate TDS payment, provided the statutory requirements are otherwise met.

Pre-login and alternate payment mechanisms ensure that property transactions are not stalled due to technical or access-related issues, while maintaining full legal compliance.


PAN Compliance for NRIs: Aadhaar Exemption and Strategic Year-End Guidance

 As the ITR-U filing deadline approaches, Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) have increasingly received notifications regarding PAN‑Aadhaar linking. While these notices may appear urgent, it is important to understand the legal requirements, implications, and structured compliance measures. This advisory outlines a comprehensive framework for NRIs to maintain compliance, safeguard refunds, and protect assets.

Legal Position: Aadhaar Exemption for NRIs

  • Section 139AA of the Income Tax Act, 1961 requires PAN to be linked with Aadhaar only for Indian residents.

  • NRIs, as defined under Section 6, are legally exempt from Aadhaar.

  • PAN held by NRIs remains valid indefinitely for tax filings, property transactions, and banking purposes.

  • Professional advisory: Responding to PAN-Aadhaar notifications may inadvertently flag the NRI as a resident, triggering automated scrutiny or administrative actions under Clause 422.

Automated Compliance Risks and NRI Considerations

Although Aadhaar is not applicable to NRIs, automated systems may flag notifications due to:

  1. Residency mismatch alerts arising from PAN communications.

  2. TDS discrepancies in rental, salary, or other income, as seen in Form 26AS or the Annual Information Statement (AIS).

  3. Capital gains or property transaction inconsistencies, potentially triggering administrative holds or asset liens.

Key principle: Accurate documentation and timely corrective filings prevent automated escalations, including blocked refunds or asset freezes.

Structured Compliance Action Plan for NRIs

Step 1: Maintain Documentation

  • Preserve proof of non-resident status: Passport, visa, and Tax Residency Certificate (TRC).

  • Archive all PAN-Aadhaar messages as evidence of exemption.

Step 2: Verify TDS and Income Reporting

  • Reconcile Form 26AS with AIS to identify and rectify discrepancies in rental, salary, or other income.

Step 3: File Corrective Returns if Necessary

  • File ITR-U under Section 139(8A) to address any discrepancies flagged by automated processes.

  • Ensure all exemptions and deductions are correctly claimed.

Step 4: Utilize DTAA Protections

  • Submit TRC and Form 10F to claim treaty-based TDS rates (typically 15% vs 30%).

  • Align rental and investment income with applicable treaties to avoid excess TDS.

Step 5: Professional Oversight

  • Engage qualified advisors to review filings and correspondence with the IT Department.

  • Address any communications formally and professionally to prevent misclassification or administrative errors.

Advisory Principles for NRIs

  • Do not respond to PAN-Aadhaar notifications.

  • Ensure all TDS and income reporting is accurate and reconciled.

  • Maintain comprehensive proof of NRI status and documentation for all financial transactions in India.

  • Consult professional advisors for any notices to mitigate automated penalties or asset restrictions.

Illustrative Risk Scenario

A Dubai-based NRI encountered a ₹18 lakh property lien due to a ₹2.5K TDS discrepancy on rental income. Responding to a PAN-Aadhaar message flagged residency, triggering automated escalation.

Professional takeaway: Strategic documentation, reconciliation, and timely corrective filing are essential to avoid such escalations.

Conclusion

NRIs are legally exempt from Aadhaar linking, and PAN remains fully valid. Effective compliance requires:

  • Structured documentation of NRI status

  • Accurate TDS and income reporting

  • Timely corrective filings, including ITR-U where needed

  • Utilization of DTAA protections (TRC + Form 10F)

  • Professional oversight and documentation of all departmental communications

By following a methodical, evidence-based approach, NRIs can manage Indian tax obligations confidently, avoid unnecessary automated scrutiny, and protect refunds and assets.

Clause 422, Income-tax Bill 2025: Why NRIs Must Now Treat Tax Reconciliation as Asset Protection

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

No panic. No noise. Just a quiet change in recovery law that every NRI with Indian assets should understand.

The proposed Income-tax Bill, 2025 introduces Clause 422, a provision that subtly but decisively reshapes the manner in which outstanding tax dues may be recovered. While the authority to recover taxes is not new, the speed and sequencing under the new framework marks a material shift, particularly for Non-Resident Indians (NRIs) who manage Indian assets and compliance remotely.

This note is intended as a professional advisory with an alert element — to help NRIs understand the change clearly, assess their exposure calmly, and take preventive steps where required.

Understanding Clause 422 — What Has Really Changed

Clause 422 consolidates and modernises the recovery provisions that earlier existed across multiple sections of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The most significant change is procedural compression.

Once a tax demand becomes legally enforceable, the tax authorities may initiate recovery actions such as attachment of bank accounts, fixed deposits, rental receivables, or immovable property, where recoverable dues exceed the prescribed threshold.

Importantly, this does not remove the taxpayer’s right to appeal, seek rectification, or obtain relief through due process. However, the practical time gap between demand crystallisation and recovery action has reduced.

Why This Matters More for NRIs

Most NRIs manage Indian tax matters in good faith, relying heavily on tax deducted at source and third-party reporting. While this model works in most cases, it also means that system-driven mismatches, rather than intentional defaults, are the primary source of exposure.

Typical areas where NRIs encounter issues include rental income where TDS under Section 195 is short or incorrectly deposited, property sales where TDS at 30 percent exceeds actual capital gains, refunds withheld due to automated verification or risk flags, and small interest or penalty demands that remain unnoticed on the e-filing portal.

Under Clause 422, unresolved mismatches — not intent — may lead to faster recovery actions.

How Risk Commonly Builds Up in Practice

Experience shows that recovery exposure rarely begins with large tax defaults. More often, it starts with a small difference, an untracked demand, or a pending clarification. In a fully digital environment, silence or delay is interpreted as non-response, allowing the system to move forward.

Clause 422 does not change the law’s intent; it changes the tempo.

Advisory Safeguards NRIs Should Implement

Periodic reconciliation of Form 26AS and AIS is now essential, not optional. This ensures that income, TDS credits, and system records are aligned and that no demand remains unnoticed.

Where income has been under-reported inadvertently or TDS credit has been missed, ITR-U provides a structured and lawful route to regularise matters. Used timely, it prevents minor gaps from maturing into recovery proceedings.

Equally important is maintaining complete DTAA documentation, including a valid Tax Residency Certificate and Form 10F. Proper treaty compliance often reduces excess TDS and avoids refund-driven mismatches that later convert into demands.

What Clause 422 Does Not Mean

Clause 422 does not permit arbitrary attachment of assets. It does not override appellate remedies or dilute taxpayer protections. Compliant taxpayers remain fully safeguarded.

The provision simply reflects an expectation of timely response and data accuracy in a technology-driven tax ecosystem.

Professional Perspective

Clause 422 reinforces a fundamental professional principle:

In a real-time tax system, timely reconciliation is the most effective form of asset protection.

For NRIs holding Indian real estate, rental portfolios, bank deposits, or repatriation-linked investments, compliance discipline is now a strategic necessity, not a procedural formality.

Conclusion

There is no cause for alarm.
There is, however, a clear reason for attentiveness.

Clause 422 does not introduce a new power; it reduces the cushion of time that taxpayers previously relied upon. NRIs who monitor, reconcile, and regularise their tax positions remain on solid ground. Those who delay may find that recovery mechanisms move faster than expected.

Calm compliance continues to be the strongest safeguard.



Thursday, December 25, 2025

India’s Cash Transaction Rules — Reality, Myths, and Strategic Compliance FY 2025–26

 By CA Surekha S Ahuja

Cash is legal only when it’s limited, documented, and traceable — the rules haven’t changed, but AI and SFT make every transaction accountable.

Why Social Media “Halla-Gulla”?

Despite social media frenzy, the laws themselves are not new:

  • Key provisions: Sections 269ST, 269SS/269T, 194N, 68, 69, 69A, 115BBE, and SFT reporting predate 2025.

  • No legislative changes were introduced in FY 2025–26.

  • Hype arises from AI-enabled enforcement, SFT-triggered notices, and high-visibility penalties, making existing rules appear stricter.

Insight: Understanding past, present, and forward-looking compliance strategy is essential to avoid risk.

Legacy Rules & Key Thresholds
Section / RuleLimit / TriggerAllowed / DisallowedEffective DateNotes
Sections 68 / 69 / 69A / 115BBEUnexplained cash, unrecorded investmentsCash allowed if source documented; disallowed if unexplained01-Apr-2017Penalty up to 84% for unexplained deposits; AI/SFT triggers notices
Section 269STCash receipt ≥ ₹2,00,000/day or transactionDisallowed beyond limit; allowed if < ₹2L01-Apr-2018Applies per person per day / transaction / occasion; penalty equal to cash received
Sections 269SS / 269TCash loan / repayment ≥ ₹20,000Disallowed above limit; allowed below1984 / 1989Requires formal agreement, PAN, repayment documentation
Section 194NCash withdrawal > ₹20,00,000 if ITR not filed 3 yrsTDS triggers; allowed if ITR filed01-Sep-2019Filing ITR avoids TDS; auditors should verify compliance
SFT Reporting (285BA / Rule 114E)Savings deposit > ₹10L, property > ₹30L, FDs > ₹10LMandatory reporting; non-reporting triggers noticeProgressive, FY 2022–23 onwardsAI matches PAN, triggers automatic notices

Allowed Cash Transactions — Permitted under the Act
Transaction TypeLimitConditionsReference / Notes
Business expenses / supplier payments≤ ₹10,000/person/dayMaintain invoices; allowed for deduction; above limit, deduction disallowedSec 40A(3)
Cash loans / repayments≤ ₹20,000/transactionPAN verification, agreement, repayment schedule requiredSec 269SS / 269T
Cash receipts from a person< ₹2,00,000/day/transaction/occasionAllowed if below thresholdSec 269ST
Salary / wagesNo explicit cash limitBank transfer preferred for traceability; above ₹20,000, maintain recordsSec 192
Rent payments≤ ₹1,00,000/month cashExempt from TDS under 194-IB if within limitSec 194-IB
Medical reimbursements / professional fees / incidental expenses≤ ₹10,000/person/dayProper bills/invoices; maintain recordsSec 269ST / Rule 114E

Insight: Limits differ per purpose; documentation and digital transactions preferred to reduce risk of notices or penalties.

High-Risk & Trigger Points

  • Savings account deposits > ₹10L/year → triggers SFT

  • Daily cash receipts ≥ ₹2L → 269ST penalties

  • Cash loans > ₹20,000 → Sections 269SS/269T penalties

  • Property transactions > ₹20,000 in cash → SFT / 269ST triggers

  • Non-filing of ITR → 194N TDS on withdrawals > ₹20L

  • Unexplained cash detected by AI / SFT → 115BBE + penalty

Auditor Role: Verify all cash-intensive transactions, reconcile with ITR & SFT, validate sources, ensure documentation.

AI & SFT Enforcement — Reality vs Social Media Myths

  • AI Monitoring: Detects unusual patterns across PAN, bank, property, FDs, mutual funds

  • SFT Expansion: Routine high-value transactions flagged automatically

  • Automatic Notices & Penalties: 115BBE / 269ST / 269SS / 269T triggers

  • Social Media Myths vs Reality

ClaimReality
“New rules in 2025”No new law; enforcement visibility increased
“All cash deposits taxed 84%”Only unexplained cash under Sections 68–69A / 115BBE
“ITD targets small taxpayers”Primarily high-value transactions flagged by SFT / AI
“Social media tips suffice”Professional guidance and documentation essential

Extended ITR Timeline — Strategic Importance

  • Four-year scrutiny ensures multi-year verification of transactions

  • Deterrence effect: discourages non-compliance

  • Auditor Role: Reconcile 4 years of cash deposits, loans, and property, validate sources, and provide advisory for mitigation

Compliance & Strategic Action — FY 2025–26

  1. Digitize transactions → NEFT, RTGS, UPI for amounts > ₹20k

  2. Document loans & advances → Agreements, PAN, repayment schedule

  3. Track SFT triggers → Maintain internal dashboards

  4. Maintain multi-year records → Reconcile past 4 years for ITR/SFT alignment

  5. Timely ITR filing → Avoid 194N TDS and AI/SFT notices

  6. Audit verification → Review cash-intensive operations and high-risk transactions

  7. Proactive advisory → Educate clients about AI, SFT, and cash handling limits

Key Takeaways

  • Hype ≠ new law; enforcement visibility and penalties have increased

  • Intent remains: transparency, compliance, black money prevention

  • Auditor & CA roles critical: verification, documentation, advisory

  • Strategic compliance: digitize, formalize, document, reconcile, and file ITR timely

  • Board-level awareness: implement structured internal controls and compliance workflows

Bottom Line: FY 2025–26 is where long-standing cash rules intersect with AI-powered enforcement, making it essential to understand thresholds, allowed/disallowed transactions, trigger points, and strategic compliance steps to mitigate penalties and reputational risk.



Form 67 & ITR Revision: Strategic Timeline for Disclosure of Foreign Assets

By CA Surekha S Ahuja

In the globalized financial landscape, Indian taxpayers holding foreign assets must navigate mandatory disclosure obligations carefully. Foreign asset reporting in Schedule FA is non-negotiable, and claiming Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) requires Form 67.

While earlier, we highlighted the importance of foreign asset compliance in posts like “Your Last Legal Window to Correct Past Returns – AY 2025–26 and Earlier Years”, this post adopts a strategic, timeline-based approach. It helps taxpayers, boards, and HNWI advisors ensure risk-free compliance, maximize FTC benefits, and mitigate penalties under Sec 271/271B.

Step 1: Identify Your Foreign Assets

Begin with a complete inventory of all foreign holdings:

  • Bank Accounts: Savings, current, term deposits abroad.

  • Financial Interests: Shares, bonds, mutual funds, partnerships in foreign entities.

  • Immovable Property: Land, buildings, commercial property abroad.

  • Other Financial Instruments: Life insurance policies, crypto assets, trusts overseas.

Board-level insight: Maintain a centralized foreign asset ledger to enable accurate compliance, risk assessment, and proactive tax planning.

Step 2: Determine the Need for Form 67

Form 67 is mandatory only for claiming FTC under Sec 90/91 (DTAA or unilateral credit). Key considerations:

  • FTC claim for taxes paid abroad.

  • Attachment of proof of taxes paid abroad.

  • Filing Form 67 along with revised or original ITR, not separately.

Strategic tip: Even without FTC, Schedule FA reporting is mandatory. Boards and HNWI advisors should verify full disclosure to avoid compliance gaps.

Step 3: Assess ITR Revision Requirement

If foreign assets or FTC were omitted in the original ITR, revision is mandatory under Sec 139(5):

  • Deadline for AY 2025–26: 31.12.2025.

  • ITR-U for the last 4 years: If FTC or foreign asset disclosure was missed, taxpayers can file Updated Returns (ITR-U) for prior Assessment Years.

Common scenarios requiring revision:

  • FTC not claimed previously.

  • Foreign bank accounts, dividends, or investments omitted.

  • FX gains/losses missed in earlier filings.

Board-level advisory: Early detection and revision mitigate penalties, interest, and audit risk. Quarterly internal reviews are recommended for multi-entity setups.

Step 4: Filing Form 67

Ensure accurate completion:

  • Include nature of asset, country, and taxes paid.

  • Attach supporting proof: bank statements, tax certificates, investment statements.

  • Cross-verify Form 67 vs revised ITR for consistency.

Pro Tip: Mismatches can trigger department scrutiny, delaying FTC claims.

Step 5: Filing Revised ITR / ITR-U

  • Select “Revised Return” or ITR-U in the portal.

  • Cross-check Form 67 vs Schedule FA disclosure.

  • Claim FTC under Sec 90/91 as per DTAA provisions.

  • Maintain documentation for audits and future assessments.

Step 6: Timeline for Strategic Compliance

StepApplicable Years / TimelineKey Advisory Insight
Identify foreign assetsOngoingCentralized ledger for HNWI / board-level review
Prepare Form 67Before filing/revisionVerify taxes paid abroad, ensure proof
File ITR-ULast 4 AYs (if disclosure missed)Mitigate past non-compliance
Revise ITRAY 2025–26 before 31.12.2025Avoid penalties, ensure portal compliance
Maintain documentsContinuousAudit-ready, support FX/FTC planning

Visual reminder: (Embed infographic showing last 4 years → ITR-U → AY 2025–26 revision → Form 67 → document trail)

Step 7: Strategic & Future-Facing Considerations

  1. Full Disclosure First: Even without FTC, Schedule FA reporting is mandatory.

  2. Document Trails: Maintain all proof for audits or voluntary disclosures.

  3. FX & FTC Planning: Track foreign exchange gains/losses to optimize tax outcomes in subsequent years.

  4. Board-Level Integration: Align foreign asset compliance with treasury, finance, and governance functions.

  5. Penalty Mitigation: Proactive disclosure avoids Sec 271/271B penalties and reduces litigation risk.

Advisory Angle: Form 67 and ITR revisions are not just compliance exercises—they are strategic risk management tools for boards, executives, and HNWI clients.

Conclusion

Timely identification of foreign assets, accurate filing of Form 67, and revision of ITR under Sec 139(5) or ITR-U for past years is critical for compliance and strategic tax management. Integrating this process into a board-level compliance framework transforms it into a forward-looking risk management and tax optimization strategy.

For further guidance, see our earlier post: “Your Last Legal Window to Correct Past Returns – AY 2025–26 and Earlier Years”