Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
Rajakilpakkam & Sembakkam · IT Return practitioners
Income Tax E-Filing near Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop, Rajakilpakkam
IT Return cadence for Rajakilpakkam firms near Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop — backed by a 15+ year track record
Professional Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam (PIN 600073), Chennai — fixed fee, deterministic turnaround and archived working papers. Call 9566-068-468.
What is the legal status of Annual Information Statement feedback and how is it submitted in Rajakilpakkam, Chennai?
The feedback mechanism under the Annual Information Statement is articulated in CBDT Circular 8/2021 and operationalised through the e-filing portal. A taxpayer encountering a duplicate entry, an entry attributable to another permanent account number, an entry that is not taxable or a value that is incorrect may submit feedback selecting the appropriate option. The Taxpayer Information Summary refreshes to reflect the modified values once the feedback is processed. Feedback does not bind the Assessing Officer, but it documents the taxpayer's position and reduces the probability of a Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment. Independent source documentation should be retained regardless of feedback submission.
Applicable Laws & Rules
SectionSection 139(1) Income Tax Act 1961 — every person whose total income exceeds the basic exemption limit must furnish return on or before 31 July (non-audit), 31 October (Section 44AB audit) or 30 November (Section 92E transfer pricing).
SectionSection 234F Income Tax Act 1961 — late filing fee of ₹5,000 (₹1,000 if total income up to ₹5,00,000) for returns filed after the Section 139(1) due date but within the Section 139(4) belated window.
SectionSection 139(8A) read with Section 140B as amended by Finance Act 2025 — updated return ITR-U may be filed within 48 months from end of relevant assessment year with additional tax of 25%/50%/60%/70% across the four 12-month tranches.
Relevant Court Rulings
Bombay HC (2007)
Yashpal Sahni v. ACIT — TDS credit cannot be denied to a deductee merely because the deductor has defaulted in deposit or filing the TDS return; revenue must recover from the deductor under Section 201.
ITAT Mumbai (2023)
Shyamsundar Dalmia v. DCIT — addition based purely on AIS entries without independent corroboration is not sustainable; AIS is an input report from third parties and not an assessment by itself.
Transparent Pricing
Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam — Plans & Pricing
Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.
Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.
Why FilingPro?
Why Rajakilpakkam Clients Choose FilingPro
Expert IT Return in Rajakilpakkam — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.
Self-assessment paid before submission
Where Form 16 alone would leave a Section 140A shortfall — second-employer salary, late-discovered FD interest, off-market gain — the challan is paid before the return is uploaded. Section 234B interest accrual past 31st March is shut down at source.
Honest May-to-July calendar
Filing schedule is determined by source mix, not by client preference. Salary-only files in May, mixed-income June, business and audit July or October. The 31st July rush is a distribution problem, not a deadline problem, and we spread the load deliberately.
Section 154 and 143(1) follow-through
Section 143(1) intimations are reviewed within seven days of receipt. Where an adjustment is wrong, a Section 154 rectification or a response under the e-Proceedings facility is filed within the same engagement, not as a new ad-hoc job.
Practice continuity since the manual era
Same firm, same partners, returns filed every year for the same client groups since well before faceless assessment was introduced. When a Section 148 reassessment notice lands eight years out for a return signed today, the working paper is still here and the partner who signed it is still on the line.
Form 26AS + AIS + TIS Reconciled
Every Form 16/16A entry is matched to Form 26AS; every AIS SFT entry — interest, dividend, securities transactions, mutual fund redemptions — is reconciled to your bank statements and broker reports. Rajakilpakkam clients face zero Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustments.
Old vs New Regime Working
A side-by-side computation under Section 115BAC and the Old Regime is run for every Rajakilpakkam client. The lower-tax regime is selected; Form 10-IEA is filed where the New Regime is opted out by business taxpayers — once-in-lifetime reversal tracked.
Key Benefits
What Rajakilpakkam Clients Get
Every Income Tax E-Filing engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.
1
Section 87A Rebate Captured
Section 87A rebate of ₹25,000 (NR, up to ₹7 lakh income) and ₹12,500 (OR, up to ₹5 lakh) applied in every working — including marginal relief above ₹7 lakh per the proviso to Section 87A under Section 115BAC(1A).
2
Section 234F Late Fee Avoided
Returns filed before Section 139(1) due date — 31 July, 31 October or 30 November as applicable. The Section 234F late fee of ₹5,000 (or ₹1,000 below ₹5 lakh) and Section 234A 1% per month interest never apply.
3
Capital Gains Computed Correctly
Listed equity LTCG at 12.5% above ₹1.25 lakh, STCG at 20%, property grandfathering 12.5%-without-indexation versus 20%-with-indexation evaluated both ways — minimum tax outcome selected for each Rajakilpakkam client.
4
Schedule FA Disclosure Clean
R&OR taxpayers' foreign bank accounts, foreign equity (RSU/ESOP), foreign immovable property, signing authority and trust interest fully disclosed in Schedule FA — Section 43 Black Money Act 2015 ₹10 lakh per-AY penalty fully avoided.
5
Refund Credited Without Hold-up
Pre-validated bank account, ITR e-verified within 30 days, Section 245 set-off intimation responded if any prior demand — refund credited within 15-30 days of CPC processing for Rajakilpakkam clients.
6
Defective Return Cure Within Window
Section 139(9) defective return notices cured within the 15-day window (extended on application). The cured return is treated as filed on the original date — preventing belated-return classification under Section 139(4).
Comparison
Old Regime vs New Regime u/s 115BAC
Why this matters here — In Rajakilpakkam, the cluster of residential, retail, restaurants businesses that defines Rajakilpakkam's commercial fabric; served by short connections to Sembakkam and Madambakkam and onward to central Chennai.
Aspect
Old Regime
New Regime u/s 115BAC
Statutory anchor
Slab rates under the First Schedule to the Finance Act read with Section 4 of the Income Tax Act 1961
Concessional slabs under Section 115BAC(1A) inserted by Finance Act 2020 and substituted by Finance Act 2023
Default status for AY 2025-26
Opt-in regime — requires affirmative election by furnishing Form 10-IEA before the Section 139(1) due date for taxpayers having business or professional income
Default regime by operation of Section 115BAC(1A) for individuals, HUFs, AOPs (other than co-operative societies), BOIs and AJPs
Exit and re-entry rule
Salaried taxpayer with no business income may switch year-on-year; taxpayer with business income gets only one lifetime opt-back into Section 115BAC after exit
Available every year by default; the lifetime restriction in Section 115BAC(6) bites only on a business-income taxpayer who has exercised the opt-out and later wishes to return
Section 87A rebate ceiling
Rebate up to ₹12,500 where total income does not exceed ₹5,00,000
Rebate up to ₹25,000 where total income does not exceed ₹7,00,000, with marginal relief on income marginally above the ₹7 lakh ceiling
Standard deduction for salary income
₹50,000 under Section 16(ia)
₹75,000 under Section 16(ia) as substituted by Finance (No. 2) Act 2024
Chapter VI-A deductions
Sections 80C, 80D, 80E, 80G, 80TTA, 80TTB and the full Chapter VI-A suite are admissible subject to the respective ceilings
Bar under Section 115BAC(2) — only employer's NPS contribution under Section 80CCD(2), Agniveer Corpus Fund under 80CCH(2) and Section 80JJAA are admissible
HRA, LTA and Section 10 exemptions
HRA exemption under Section 10(13A) read with Rule 2A and LTA under Section 10(5) read with Rule 2B are admissible against salary
Both exemptions are denied by the proviso to Section 115BAC(2); only transport allowance for divyang employees and certain other narrow heads survive
House property interest treatment
Section 24(b) interest up to ₹2,00,000 for self-occupied property is deductible; loss may be set off against other heads subject to the ₹2,00,000 cap of Section 71(3A)
Section 24(b) interest on self-occupied property is wholly disallowed; for let-out property interest is allowed but the resulting loss cannot be set off against any other head
Surcharge architecture above ₹5 crore
Surcharge slabs of 10/15/25/37 per cent based on income brackets, with the 37 per cent rate kicking in above ₹5 crore for non-capital-gains income
Highest surcharge capped at 25 per cent by the proviso to Paragraph A of Part I of the First Schedule, eliminating the 37 per cent bracket for opting taxpayers
Carry forward of losses
Business and capital-gain losses carry forward and may be set off subject to Sections 70 to 80, including unabsorbed depreciation under Section 32(2)
Brought-forward loss and unabsorbed depreciation attributable to disallowed deductions cannot be set off in the New Regime year per the proviso to Section 115BAC(2)
Form prescribed to exercise election
Business-income taxpayer files Form 10-IEA on or before the due date under Section 139(1) to opt out of the New Regime
No separate form for default regime; for salaried-only taxpayers election is made within the ITR itself by ticking the regime field
Break-even arithmetic for salaried taxpayer
Generally beneficial where verified Chapter VI-A and Section 10 exemptions (80C plus 80D plus HRA plus 24(b)) exceed ₹4.5 lakh for income around ₹15 lakh
Beneficial where the taxpayer cannot substantiate that deduction load — preferred for taxpayers with limited investments, no HRA exposure and no housing loan interest
Documents Required
Documents for Income Tax E-Filing
Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Rajakilpakkam clients.
Form 16 (Part A & Part B) from each employer
Form 16A from banks NBFCs and other deductors
Form 26AS download (TRACES login or e-filing portal)
AIS / TIS download from Annual Information Statement portal
Bank interest certificate and SB account interest summary
Capital gains broker statement (P&L + tax reports from Zerodha / ICICI Direct etc.)
Ready to Get Started?
WhatsApp your documents to 9566-068-468 — our team begins within 24 hours. No office visit needed.
Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.
Deadlines in this neighbourhood — In Rajakilpakkam, Rajakilpakkam businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3; the business activity radiating outward from Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop and nearby commercial pockets.
Trigger event
Days
Form
Consequence
Furnishing of return for individuals and HUFs not subject to tax audit
On due date
ITR-1 / ITR-2 / ITR-3 / ITR-4
Section 234A interest at one percent per month on assessed tax and Section 234F fee of ₹5,000 (₹1,000 if total income up to ₹5 lakh)
Furnishing of return for assessees subject to tax audit under Section 44AB
On due date
ITR-3 / ITR-5 / ITR-6
Section 234A interest plus Section 271B penalty of one-half of one percent of turnover or ₹1,50,000 whichever is less, for the tax audit default
Furnishing of tax audit report by the chartered accountant
On due date
Form 3CA-3CD or 3CB-3CD
Section 271B penalty and disqualification of the tax audit benefit; downstream impact on Section 139(9) defect notice
Belated return after the original due date under Section 139(1)
On due date
ITR-1 to ITR-7 with belated marker
Loss of carry-forward (other than house property loss and unabsorbed depreciation) and ineligibility to opt into Section 115BAC old regime
Updated return for an assessment year
On due date
ITR-U with Form ITR-1 to ITR-7 attachment
Additional tax of 25 percent if filed within 12 months from end of the AY, or 50 percent if filed within 24 months; refund or loss claim is not permitted in ITR-U
Fourth instalment of advance tax (or single instalment for presumptive assessees)
On due date
Challan ITNS-280 (minor head 100)
Section 234C interest on shortfall against 100 percent and Section 234B interest if cumulative payment falls below 90 percent of assessed tax
Verification of electronically transmitted return by EVC or signed ITR-V
30 days
ITR-V (signed) or EVC / DSC affirmation
Return is treated as never furnished; Section 234F fee on subsequent fresh filing if beyond 31 July
AIS or TIS feedback for mismatch in pre-filled data
On due date
AIS feedback on portal
Pre-filled mismatch flows into Section 143(1)(a) addition and downstream Section 148 reopening risk under information-based regime
Deadline pressure points we see in Rajakilpakkam: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — supporting the working population of Rajakilpakkam and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods; for the professional and salaried population of Rajakilpakkam navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.
Forms Library
Forms used in this engagement
Forms most asked about here — In Rajakilpakkam, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; supporting the working population of Rajakilpakkam and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods.
ITR-5Return of income for firms, LLPs, AOPs and BOIs
Return for partnership firms, limited liability partnerships, associations of persons, bodies of individuals, artificial juridical persons, co-operative societies and local authorities — entities other than those filing in ITR-7.
31 July (non-audit), 31 October (tax audit) or 30 November (transfer-pricing) of the AY Centralised Processing Centre, Bengaluru
ITR-6Return of income for companies other than those claiming Section 11
Return for companies (private, public, one-person) other than those whose income is wholly exempt under Section 11 (charitable trusts), required to be filed electronically with Digital Signature Certificate.
31 October of the assessment year (mandatory tax audit), or 30 November where Section 92E applies Centralised Processing Centre, Bengaluru
ITR-7Return for persons claiming exemption under Sections 11, 12, 10(23C), 13A and 13B
Return for charitable trusts, religious trusts, political parties, scientific research associations, news agencies, universities and educational institutions claiming exemption under specified provisions.
31 October of the assessment year, accompanied by Form 10B / 10BB audit report where applicable Centralised Processing Centre, Bengaluru
ITR-UUpdated return of income
Updated return for an assessment year, irrespective of whether an earlier return was furnished. Used to declare omitted income and pay the additional tax computed under Section 140B. Cannot be used to claim a refund, increase a loss, or reduce tax liability.
Within 24 months from the end of the relevant assessment year Centralised Processing Centre, Bengaluru
ITR-VVerification form for electronically furnished return
Acknowledgement-cum-verification form generated on submission of return without Digital Signature Certificate or Electronic Verification Code. Signed copy is sent by ordinary post or speed post to the CPC at Bengaluru.
Within 30 days of transmission of the return data electronically Centralised Processing Centre, Bengaluru (Post Box No. 1, Electronic City Office)
Form 10-IEAApplication for opting out of new tax regime under Section 115BAC(6)
Form furnished by an individual, HUF, AOP, BOI or artificial juridical person to opt out of the default new tax regime and continue under the old regime for the assessment year. Opt-out is irrevocable once business or profession income is involved, unless the assessee ceases to have such income.
On or before the due date under Section 139(1) for furnishing the return Income Tax E-Filing Portal (electronic filing only)
Form 26ASAnnual Tax Statement
Consolidated tax statement reflecting tax deducted at source by deductors, tax collected at source by collectors, advance and self-assessment tax payments, refunds received, and specified financial transactions. Reconciliation of Form 26AS with the books and the AIS is the first step in any e-filing engagement.
Available on a near-real-time basis; final position reflected before return due date Generated by TRACES / Income Tax E-Filing Portal (no taxpayer filing)
AISAnnual Information Statement under Section 285BB
Comprehensive statement covering information reported in Form 26AS plus interest, dividends, securities transactions, mutual fund transactions, foreign remittances, GST turnover and other notified data. Taxpayer feedback is accepted to flag duplicate or erroneous entries.
Updated continuously through the financial year; taxpayer feedback before return filing Generated by the Income Tax Department under Rule 114-I
Statutory Basis
Operative provisions cited on this page
Every claim on this page can be traced back to a section or rule below.
Statutory hooks that bite here — In Rajakilpakkam, Rajakilpakkam businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3; with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.
IT Section 139(1)Anchor
Return of income — persons required to furnish
Sub-section (1) of Section 139 of the Income-tax Act 1961 obliges every company and firm, and every other person whose total income before the deductions claimable under Chapter VI-A exceeds the basic exemption limit, to furnish a return of income for the previous year on or before the due date prescribed in Explanation 2. It is to be noted that the obligation under sub-section (1) is unconditional for companies and firms regardless of whether the total income is positive or nil. The seventh proviso further extends the obligation to persons satisfying notified expenditure or deposit triggers.
Sub-section (4) of Section 139 provides that a person who has not furnished a return within the time allowed under sub-section (1) may furnish a belated return at any time before the thirty-first day of December of the assessment year, or before completion of assessment, whichever is earlier. It is to be noted that belated returns attract Section 234A interest from the original due date and a Section 234F fee. Carry-forward of business and capital losses under Chapter VI is denied for belated returns, save unabsorbed depreciation under Section 32(2).
Sub-section (5) of Section 139 permits any person who has furnished a return under sub-section (1) or sub-section (4) to file a revised return on discovering any omission or wrong statement therein. The revised return may be furnished at any time before the thirty-first day of December of the assessment year or before completion of assessment, whichever is earlier. Sub-section (5) does not impose a numerical cap on the number of revisions; each successive revision supersedes the immediately preceding return.
Sub-section (8A) of Section 139, inserted by the Finance Act 2022, permits any person, whether or not they have furnished an earlier return for the relevant assessment year, to furnish an updated return at any time within twenty-four months from the end of the relevant assessment year. The updated return must be accompanied by proof of payment of the additional tax computed under Section 140B — twenty-five percent or fifty percent of the aggregate of tax and interest, depending on whether the updated return is filed within or beyond twelve months of the end of the assessment year.
Sub-rule (1) of Rule 12 of the Income-tax Rules 1962 prescribes the forms applicable to each class of assessee — ITR-1 (SAHAJ) for resident individuals with income up to ₹50 lakh from salary, one house property and other sources; ITR-2 for individuals and HUFs not having business or profession income; ITR-3 for individuals and HUFs having business or profession income; ITR-4 (SUGAM) for presumptive cases under Sections 44AD, 44ADA or 44AE; ITR-5 for firms and LLPs; ITR-6 for companies other than those claiming Section 11; ITR-7 for trusts and political parties. Sub-rule (3) prescribes electronic mode as the default.
Sub-section (1) of Section 143 prescribes the summary processing framework. The total income is computed after making prima-facie adjustments — arithmetical errors, incorrect claims apparent from any information in the return, disallowance of loss claimed where the return is belated, disallowance of expenditure indicated in the audit report but not taken in computation, and addition of income appearing in Form 26AS or AIS but not in the return. The intimation under sub-section (1) is to be served before the expiry of nine months from the end of the financial year in which the return was furnished.
Which of these bite hardest in Rajakilpakkam: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; supporting the working population of Rajakilpakkam and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods.
Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam, Chennai 600073
Records we prepare for Rajakilpakkam carry the geo-zone 600xx tag and coordinates 12.9111, 80.1581, which map each submission back to this locality. We keep a cycle-by-cycle record of how the Tambaram Division of the Chennai South handles Rajakilpakkam filings and approvals. Rajakilpakkam is a residential pocket between Sembakkam and Madambakkam with neighbourhood retail and restaurants. Approvals, acknowledgements and queries for Rajakilpakkam businesses tie back to the Tambaram Division, so our IT Return cadence accounts for how that office works.
Working in Rajakilpakkam brings a logistical edge: proximity to Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop and the Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop corridor keeps physical document handling fast. Each Income Tax E-Filing cycle for Rajakilpakkam reflects its commercial rhythm — invoices generated near Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop, expenses routed through the Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop freight network. Rajakilpakkam reads as a residential pocket pocket with medium commercial activity, anchored around Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop and fed by the Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop corridor. Commercial activity in Rajakilpakkam runs medium, so IT Return volumes scale through peak months and we staff the Rajakilpakkam desk accordingly.
residential units around Rajakilpakkam share recurring IT Return patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation. Because Rajakilpakkam hosts a cluster of residential businesses, we benchmark each new Income Tax E-Filing engagement against patterns we already track for the locality. The business mix in Rajakilpakkam centres on residential, and that sector carries its own Income Tax E-Filing quirks we plan for in advance. Income Tax E-Filing for residential businesses in Rajakilpakkam hinges on getting the sector's recurring entries right the first time.
The Rajakilpakkam Income Tax E-Filing workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. We keep a repeatable IT Return checklist for Rajakilpakkam so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed. Document intake for Rajakilpakkam clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a Income Tax E-Filing engagement. Working papers for Rajakilpakkam Income Tax E-Filing engagements stay archived and retrievable, which makes any later notice or query straightforward to answer.
Income Tax E-Filing clients in Chitlapakkam are handled by the same practitioners who run our Rajakilpakkam desk. From the same Rajakilpakkam team we also serve Chitlapakkam and other nearby localities without re-onboarding clients. A client relocating between Rajakilpakkam and Chitlapakkam keeps the same IT Return file and the same team. Proximity to Chitlapakkam means a Rajakilpakkam engagement can extend across the locality cluster with no change in cadence.
Each engagement in Rajakilpakkam adds to a record of what the Chennai South jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next IT Return file. Because we work repeatedly across Rajakilpakkam, we can benchmark a new client's Income Tax E-Filing position against the locality norm. Common patterns in the Tambaram Division give Rajakilpakkam businesses an early-warning map we use to pre-empt IT Return issues. The Income Tax E-Filing mistakes we see most in Rajakilpakkam are avoidable with disciplined intake, which our checklist enforces.
Relocating a registered office into Rajakilpakkam (PIN 600073) changes the assessing division, and we handle that Income Tax E-Filing transition cleanly. A startup setting up near Madambakkam Lake in Rajakilpakkam gets a IT Return foundation built for the Tambaram Division from day one. First-time Income Tax E-Filing for a Rajakilpakkam business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. Incorporating in Rajakilpakkam comes with jurisdiction, registration and IT Return steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch.
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Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam — Complete Guide
Sub-section (1) of Section 140A obliges the assessee to pay the tax due, together with interest under Sections 234A, 234B and 234C, before furnishing the return. The doctrine of self-assessment thus precedes the act of filing. A return tendered without challan particulars is liable to be treated as defective in terms of the Explanation to Section 139(9).
Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam, Chennai
Income Tax Return e-filing for Rajakilpakkam taxpayers is handled by qualified practitioners with full Form 26AS, AIS and TIS reconciliation before submission, Section 87A rebate optimisation under both regimes, and Section 139(1) due-date discipline.
ITR Consultant in Rajakilpakkam — Old vs New Regime Working
An ITR consultant in Rajakilpakkam runs a side-by-side Section 115BAC New Regime versus Old Regime computation each year, factors Section 80C/80D/24(b) for Old Regime and standard deduction ₹75,000 for New Regime, and files Form 10-IEA where the Old Regime is opted out from for business taxpayers.
Capital Gains ITR-2 Filing in Rajakilpakkam
Post-23-July-2024, listed equity LTCG above ₹1,25,000 is taxed at 12.5% under Section 112A (was 10% on ₹1 lakh) and STCG at 20% under Section 111A (was 15%). Rajakilpakkam ITR-2 filings are computed against Zerodha / ICICI Direct tax P&L statements and reconciled with AIS securities transactions report.
Presumptive Income ITR-4 (Sugam) Filing in Rajakilpakkam
For Rajakilpakkam traders and professionals — Section 44AD turnover up to ₹3 crore (where digital receipts ≥ 95%) at 8%/6% deemed profit, Section 44ADA gross receipts up to ₹75 lakh at 50% deemed profit, and Section 44AE for transport. ITR-4 filed with GST turnover cross-tied to declared receipts.
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Qualified professionals handle your IT Return in Rajakilpakkam. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹1,500/annual. Free consultation.
Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)
Key Facts — Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam
AIS feedback submitted for incorrect / duplicate entries before filing — Rajakilpakkam taxpayers face zero CPC mismatch demands under Section 143(1)(a).
Section 87A rebate of ₹25,000 (New Regime, income up to ₹7 lakh) and ₹12,500 (Old Regime, income up to ₹5 lakh) optimised in every working.
Section 139(1) due dates tracked — 31 July non-audit, 31 October Section 44AB audit, 30 November Section 92E transfer pricing.
E-verification within 30 days of filing per CBDT Notification 5/2022 — Aadhaar OTP, EVC, DSC or signed ITR-V to CPC Bengaluru.
Capital gains computed at post-23-Jul-2024 rates — LTCG 12.5% on equity above ₹1.25L (Section 112A), STCG 20% (Section 111A), property 12.5% without indexation OR 20% with indexation grandfathering option.
Schedule FA foreign asset disclosure for R&OR taxpayers in Rajakilpakkam — penalty under Section 43 Black Money Act 2015 (₹10 lakh) avoided through complete reporting.
Form 10-IEA filed before Section 139(1) due date for Rajakilpakkam business taxpayers opting out of New Regime — once-in-lifetime reversal tracked.
Defective return Section 139(9) cured within the 15-day window (extended on application) — return preserved as filed on original date.
Updated return Section 139(8A) ITR-U filed within 48-month Finance-Act-2025 window with Section 140B additional tax computation (25/50/60/70%).
Refund pre-validated bank account linked to PAN — Section 244A interest at 0.5% per month tracked from 1-April of AY for Rajakilpakkam clients.
People Also Ask — IT Return in Rajakilpakkam
Which ITR form should I file for AY 2025-26?
ITR-1 (Sahaj) — resident with salary, one house property, other-source interest, total income up to ₹50 lakh. ITR-2 — capital gains, two or more properties, foreign assets, RNOR/NR. ITR-3 — business or professional income with books. ITR-4 (Sugam) — presumptive under Section 44AD/44ADA/44AE. Capital gains of even ₹100 push you out of ITR-1.
What is the deadline for filing ITR for AY 2025-26?
Section 139(1) — 31 July 2025 for individuals/HUFs not subject to audit, 31 October 2025 for Section 44AB tax-audit cases and partners of audit firms, 30 November 2025 for taxpayers required to file Form 3CEB under Section 92E (international / specified domestic transactions). CBDT may extend by circular in unusual years.
Should I choose Old Regime or New Regime?
From FY 2023-24 the New Regime under Section 115BAC(1A) is the default. Choose New Regime if your eligible Old-Regime deductions (80C+80D+24(b)+10(13A) HRA etc.) total less than the slab-rate gap — typically below ₹3.5-4 lakh of deductions. Salaried can switch each year; business/professional income filers must file Form 10-IEA and the opt-out reversal is once-in-a-lifetime.
What if AIS shows income that I have not earned?
Submit feedback in the AIS portal — 'Information is duplicate', 'Relates to another PAN', 'Income is not taxable' etc. The TIS gets updated. Retain documentary proof. ITAT Mumbai in Shyamsundar Dalmia held AIS-only additions are not sustainable without corroboration; still, reconcile and report correctly to avoid 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment.
How much late fee will I pay for filing after 31 July?
Section 234F — ₹5,000 if total income exceeds ₹5,00,000; ₹1,000 if total income is up to ₹5,00,000. Plus Section 234A interest at 1% per month on tax payable from 1 August till date of filing. Belated return under Section 139(4) is allowed up to 31 December 2025; thereafter only ITR-U under Section 139(8A) with additional tax.
What is the difference between Form 26AS and AIS?
Form 26AS (Section 285BB read with Rule 114-I) shows TDS, TCS, advance tax, self-assessment tax and refunds. AIS (Annual Information Statement) is broader — SFT entries on interest, dividend, securities transactions, mutual fund redemptions, foreign remittances, rent, GST turnover, savings interest. TIS is the AIS aggregated/processed view used by CPC.
What is Section 87A rebate under the New Regime?
Section 87A read with the proviso inserted by Finance Act 2023 grants rebate up to ₹25,000 to resident individuals taxed under Section 115BAC(1A) where total income does not exceed ₹7,00,000, with marginal relief where income marginally exceeds the threshold.
Is the New Regime under Section 115BAC compulsory?
No. Section 115BAC(1A) makes the New Regime the default but taxpayers may opt out. Business-income taxpayers opt out by filing Form 10-IEA before the Section 139(1) due date; salaried-only taxpayers tick the regime field within the ITR itself.
How often can I switch between Old and New Regime?
A salaried taxpayer without business income may switch each year. A taxpayer with business or professional income who has opted out of Section 115BAC gets only one lifetime opt-back into the New Regime under sub-section (6) of Section 115BAC.
Is Section 80C admissible under the New Regime?
No. The bar under Section 115BAC(2) excludes Chapter VI-A deductions in the New Regime except for employer's NPS contribution under Section 80CCD(2), Agniveer Corpus Fund under 80CCH(2), and Section 80JJAA new-employee deduction.
Is HRA exemption available under the New Regime?
No. The proviso to Section 115BAC(2) read with sub-section (2) excludes HRA exemption under Section 10(13A) and LTA under Section 10(5). Salaried taxpayers heavily dependent on HRA and LTA typically retain the Old Regime via Form 10-IEA.
Can I claim home loan interest under Section 24(b) in the New Regime?
Section 24(b) interest on self-occupied house property is wholly disallowed under the New Regime. For let-out property, the interest is allowed against the rental income but the resulting house property loss cannot be set off against any other head.
What Rajakilpakkam clients want to know before signing: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — around the Rajakilpakkam Bus Stop catchment of Rajakilpakkam; with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.
Expert Guide
A complete walkthrough — Income Tax E Filing
Localised for Rajakilpakkam, Chennai — with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.
Reading this guide locally — In Rajakilpakkam, on the Sembakkam-Madambakkam corridor that passes through Rajakilpakkam; Rajakilpakkam businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3.
What is income tax e-filing and who must file
Statutory anchor in Section 139(1)
Income tax e-filing in India is governed by Section 139 of the Income-tax Act 1961 read with the procedural prescriptions in Rule 12 of the Income-tax Rules 1962 and the e-filing infrastructure operationalised under Section 295 read with Notification 4/2017 establishing the e-filing portal. Section 139(1) casts the primary obligation on every person whose total income before giving effect to Chapter VI-A deductions, Section 54 series exemptions, or the proviso to Section 10(38) exceeds the basic exemption limit applicable to the relevant assessment year. The provision was substantially restructured by Finance Act 2019 to introduce mandatory return-filing triggers under the seventh proviso to Section 139(1) for high-value transactions even where total income is below threshold, including bank deposits exceeding one crore rupees, foreign travel expenditure exceeding two lakh rupees, and electricity consumption exceeding one lakh rupees. The OECD Tax Administration 2023 comparative report identifies India among the jurisdictions with the broadest combination of income-based and transaction-based filing triggers, reflecting a deliberate widening of the assessee base independent of taxable-income status.
Persons mandatorily required to file
Beyond the income-threshold trigger, Section 139(1) prescribes a list of persons for whom filing is mandatory regardless of income. Companies and firms (including LLPs) must file under clause (a) irrespective of profit or loss. Trusts holding registration under Section 12A or 12AB must file under Section 139(4A) where total income before exemption under Section 11 exceeds the basic exemption. Political parties and electoral trusts file under Sections 139(4B) and 139(4C) respectively. The seventh proviso to Section 139(1), inserted by Finance (No. 2) Act 2019, added the high-value-transaction triggers noted above. Finance Act 2022 further extended mandatory filing under Rule 12AB to persons with total sales, turnover or gross receipts exceeding sixty lakh rupees in business or ten lakh rupees in profession, and to persons whose aggregate TDS or TCS during the previous year is twenty-five thousand rupees (or fifty thousand for senior citizens). The architecture progressively widens the filing base, consistent with the Empowered Committee's 2009 first discussion paper articulation of compliance breadth as a precondition for revenue depth.
Voluntary filing rationale
Section 139(1) also accommodates voluntary filing through the residual entitlement of any person to furnish a return. Voluntary filers commonly include individuals with income below the threshold seeking refund of TDS deducted under Section 194A on bank interest or Section 194 on dividends, students wishing to establish income-tax history for visa or loan applications, and persons with carried-forward capital losses under Section 74 who must file within the Section 139(1) due date to preserve the carry-forward right. The OECD 2014 working paper on tax compliance behaviour identifies refund-driven voluntary filing as a substantial component of self-assessment regimes globally, and the Indian e-filing data released through the CBDT annual reports confirms a comparable pattern, with the share of nil-return and refund-only filers exceeding twenty percent of total filers in recent years. Voluntary filers should however note that once filed, the return becomes amenable to Section 143(1) processing and any Section 143(2) selection.
Reassessment under Section 147 and 148
Information triggers and the Section 148 notice
Section 148, post the Finance Act 2021 restructuring, may be issued where the AO has information suggesting that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment, with information defined inclusively in Explanation 1 to include information from the AIS, transactions flagged by the Risk Management Strategy, audit objections, information received under treaty agreements, and information from regulatory authorities. The expansion of the information-trigger definition reflects the legislative direction toward an information-driven reassessment framework, moving beyond the earlier reasons-to-believe standard that was the subject of substantial litigation. The architecture is calibrated to the OECD 2019 paper on data-driven compliance, which identifies the information-trigger model as the operational best practice across comparator jurisdictions. The Section 148 notice itself remains the operative procedural step initiating the reassessment.
Reassessment framework post Finance Act 2021
Section 147 read with Section 148 governs the reassessment of income that has escaped assessment. The framework was substantially restructured by Finance Act 2021 with effect from 1 April 2021, replacing the earlier reasons-to-believe standard with a structured procedure requiring the Assessing Officer to issue a Section 148A show-cause notice before any Section 148 notice. The Section 148A procedure mandates that the AO conduct enquiry under sub-clause (a), provide opportunity of being heard under sub-clause (b), pass an order under sub-clause (d), and only thereafter issue the Section 148 notice if the case warrants reopening. The framework aligns with the procedural safeguards articulated in GKN Driveshafts (India) Limited v ITO, which had earlier required the AO to provide reasons-recorded to the assessee and adjudicate objections through speaking order.
Time limits for reopening
The time limits for reopening were restructured by Finance Act 2021 under Section 149. The general time limit is three years from the end of the relevant assessment year. The extended time limit of ten years applies where the AO has in his possession books of account, documents or evidence revealing that income chargeable to tax represented in the form of asset has escaped assessment exceeding fifty lakh rupees. The Section 149(1)(b) extended limit is the principal high-stakes-reopening framework. The compression of the general time limit from six years to three years was a deliberate legislative choice to enhance taxpayer certainty, with the trade-off of preserving the longer ten-year window for high-value escape cases. The Supreme Court in Ashish Agarwal v Union of India (2022) addressed the transitional questions arising from the pre-amendment and post-amendment regimes, providing structured guidance for proceedings issued under either framework.
Appeal options under the Income-tax Act
High Court and Supreme Court appeals
Section 260A provides for appeal to the High Court (Madras High Court for Tamil Nadu jurisdiction) against the ITAT order on a substantial question of law. The appeal is filed within one hundred twenty days of receipt of the ITAT order, with the substantial question of law to be formulated at the time of admission. The Supreme Court entertains further appeals under Section 261 (statutory appeal where the High Court certifies the case as fit for appeal) and under Article 136 of the Constitution (special leave to appeal). The constitutional architecture of multi-tiered judicial review provides the highest level of legal certainty for substantial-question-of-law questions, with the Supreme Court rulings binding across the country under Article 141 of the Constitution. The Indian appellate framework is among the more elaborate in comparator jurisdictions, reflecting the constitutional emphasis on access to justice.
Alternative remedies and revision
Beyond the formal appellate ladder, the Income-tax Act provides alternative remedies. Section 264 enables the Principal Commissioner to revise orders in favour of the assessee on application filed within one year of communication of the order, providing a non-adversarial correction route. Section 263 empowers the Principal Commissioner to revise orders prejudicial to the revenue, with corresponding procedural safeguards. Section 154 rectification of mistakes apparent from record remains available across all levels. Article 226 writ jurisdiction of the High Court is invokable in cases of jurisdictional excess, procedural breach or arbitrariness, with the Madras High Court regularly entertaining writ petitions in income-tax matters where alternative remedies prove inadequate or where fundamental procedural safeguards have been breached. The architecture in combination provides multi-layered procedural protection consistent with the constitutional rule-of-law principles.
First appeal to CIT(A) under Section 246A
Section 246A provides the assessee with a right of appeal to the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) against specified orders including assessment orders under Sections 143(3), 144 and 147, intimations under Section 143(1) where adjustments are made, penalty orders under Sections 270A and 271 series, and certain other orders. The appeal is filed in Form 35 electronically on the e-filing portal within thirty days of communication of the order. The CIT(A) is empowered to confirm, reduce, enhance or annul the assessment, and the appeal-disposal time limit under Section 250(6A) is generally one year from the end of the financial year in which the appeal is filed. The Faceless Appeal Scheme 2020, notified under Section 250(6B), operates the CIT(A) function through the National Faceless Appeal Centre, structurally insulating the appellate determination from the jurisdictional CIT(A) influence.
Who must file under Section 139(1)
Companies, firms and LLPs
Companies and firms (including LLPs) face a mandatory filing obligation under clause (a) of Section 139(1) regardless of income, loss or absence of activity. The obligation applies from the financial year of incorporation onwards, with dormant companies and nil-activity LLPs equally required to file annual returns. The trigger is structural — registration under the Companies Act 2013 or the Limited Liability Partnership Act 2008 creates the filing obligation independent of any income-generation event. Finance Act 2020 introduced the optional concessional rate of twenty-two percent under Section 115BAA for domestic companies and fifteen percent under Section 115BAB for new manufacturing companies, with both elections requiring Form 10-IC or Form 10-ID respectively before the Section 139(1) due date. The election is irrevocable per Section 115BAA(5) and Section 115BAB(7), making the year-of-first-election decision strategically significant.
Trusts, political parties and exempt entities
Section 139(4A) applies to trusts and institutions holding registration under Section 12A or 12AB, requiring filing where total income (before Section 11 exemption) exceeds the basic exemption. Section 139(4B) applies to political parties registered under Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act 1951. Section 139(4C) applies to research associations, news agencies, educational institutions, hospitals and other Section 10 exempt entities. The Finance Act 2022 introduced Form ITR-7 for these categories with extensive schedules including the Schedule J on details of investments under Section 11(5), Schedule LA on details of accumulation under Section 11(2), and Schedule TR on details of taxable income components. Audit under Section 12A(b) by a chartered accountant in Form 10B is a precondition for the Section 11 exemption, with the audit report filing deadline of one month before the Section 139(1) due date under Rule 17B.
High-value-transaction triggers
The seventh proviso to Section 139(1) and the subsequent Rule 12AB triggers operate independently of total income. The seventh proviso mandates filing where the person has deposited an aggregate amount exceeding one crore rupees in current accounts, incurred expenditure exceeding two lakh rupees on foreign travel for self or any other person, or incurred electricity consumption exceeding one lakh rupees during the previous year. Rule 12AB extends to business turnover exceeding sixty lakh rupees, professional gross receipts exceeding ten lakh rupees, aggregate TDS or TCS of twenty-five thousand rupees (fifty thousand for senior citizens), and aggregate savings bank deposits of fifty lakh rupees or more. The architecture, traceable to the Tax Administration Reform Commission 2014 report on widening the filing base through transaction-based indicators rather than income-only triggers, represents a structural shift toward an informational tax base.
What Rajakilpakkam clients usually ask next: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — supporting the working population of Rajakilpakkam and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods; with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; for the professional and salaried population of Rajakilpakkam navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.
Glossary
Plain-English glossary for this service
Terms you will hear in this area — In Rajakilpakkam, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations.
Section 234A interest
Section 234A levies simple interest at one per cent per month or part thereof on tax payable but not paid by the due date of filing under Section 139(1), running from the day after the due date until the date of filing. The interest applies on the net cash liability after credit of TDS, TCS, advance tax and self-assessment tax paid before the due date.
EVC electronic verification code
EVC is the 10-character alphanumeric code used to verify an e-filed return without physical signing or sending ITR-V to CPC Bengaluru. EVC can be generated through Aadhaar OTP under Section 139AA, net banking, bank account number pre-validation, demat account or bank ATM. The return is treated as filed only after verification — verification is the cut-off, not upload.
Section 139(8A) updated return
Section 139(8A) read with Rule 12AC permits a taxpayer to file an updated return within twenty-four months from the end of the assessment year, voluntarily disclosing income missed earlier. The updated return must be accompanied by additional tax under Section 140B of 25% if filed within 12 months and 50% if filed in the second 12-month window, computed on tax-plus-interest.
Section 139(5) revised return
Section 139(5) permits a taxpayer to file a revised return any time before three months prior to the end of the relevant assessment year or before completion of assessment, whichever is earlier. The revised return replaces the original entirely and carries its own acknowledgement; the original is treated as withdrawn. Section 139(5) is the only correction route within the assessment year cycle.
Section 143(1)(a) prima-facie intimation
Section 143(1)(a) is the centralised processing intimation issued by CPC Bengaluru after preliminary checking of an e-filed return. The intimation can make six categories of adjustments — arithmetic error, incorrect claim apparent from information in the return, disallowance of loss, disallowance of deduction, addition of income appearing in 26AS or AIS not in the return, and disallowance of expense relating to exempt income.
Section 245 refund set-off
Section 245 empowers the Assessing Officer or CPC to set off a refund due to a taxpayer against any outstanding demand of any earlier year, subject to giving the taxpayer a thirty-day intimation to respond. Stale or incorrect demands can therefore reach forward and reduce current-year refunds; the response window is the only opportunity to dispute the set-off before it becomes final.
Section 154 rectification
Section 154 permits the Assessing Officer or CPC to rectify any mistake apparent from the record in an order or intimation, either suo motu or on application by the assessee. The rectification request must be filed within four years from the end of the financial year in which the order sought to be amended was passed. It is the standard remedy for CPC processing errors.
Form 26AS
Form 26AS is the consolidated annual tax credit statement showing TDS, TCS, advance tax, self-assessment tax, and high-value transactions reported to the income tax department for a permanent account number. Since the introduction of AIS under Section 285BB, Form 26AS has been progressively pared down to TDS and TCS only, with the wider reporter feed migrating into AIS and TIS.
Taxpayer Information Summary
TIS is the simplified one-page derivative of the Annual Information Statement, showing aggregated values by information category (salary, interest, dividend, sale of securities, etc.) with both the reporter-provided figure and the taxpayer-modified figure after feedback. TIS is meant for quick reconciliation; AIS remains the underlying line-level record for actual filing.
Schedule CG capital gains
Schedule CG of ITR-2 and ITR-3 is the capital gains computation schedule split between short-term and long-term, with sub-classifications by asset type — listed equity under Section 111A and 112A, unlisted equity, immovable property, debt mutual funds under Section 50AA, and other capital assets. Brokers commonly mis-tag holding-period flags, requiring line-by-line recomputation at intake.
Section 87A rebate threshold
The Section 87A rebate threshold is ₹5 lakh of total income under the old regime and ₹7 lakh under the Section 115BAC new regime, with marginal relief available where total income marginally exceeds the threshold. The threshold operates on total income before rebate but after Chapter VI-A deductions, and the rebate is capped at the tax payable on slab income.
Assessee
Assessee is any person by whom income-tax or any other sum is payable under the Income-tax Act 1961, or in respect of whom any proceeding has been initiated for assessment of income or loss, or who is deemed to be an assessee in default. Defined in Section 2(7).
Cost of Non-Compliance
Real-world penalty exposure
Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.
Penalty exposure typical of this micro-market — In Rajakilpakkam, Rajakilpakkam businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3; supporting the working population of Rajakilpakkam and the immediate adjoining neighbourhoods.
Scenario
Base tax
Interest
Penalty
Total
Failure to deduct TDS on professional fees of ₹84,000 paid to a consultant; default under Section 194JB
₹8,400 TDS shortfall
₹756 (Section 201(1A) over 9 months)
30% disallowance of expenditure under Section 40(a)(ia) = ₹25,200 added back to income; tax thereon ₹7,862
₹17,018
Section 142(1) notice for production of accounts ignored; no response in 15-day window
Not applicable to penalty
Not applicable
₹10,000 (Section 272A(1)(d)) plus exposure to best judgment under Section 144
₹10,000 plus arbitrary addition risk
Salaried taxpayer with total income ₹6.8 lakh fails to file return by 31 December 2024 belated deadline; files ITR-U under Section 139(8A) in May 2025
₹37,440
₹3,370 (Section 234A @ 1% × 9 months)
₹5,000 (Section 234F late fee) + ₹10,460 (25% additional tax under Section 140B)
₹56,270
Professional with gross receipts ₹46 lakh fails to file ITR-3 by 31 October 2024 tax-audit due date; files belated return on 18 December 2024
₹2,84,000
₹5,680 (Section 234A × 2 months)
₹5,000 (Section 234F)
₹2,94,680
Taxpayer with total income ₹4.6 lakh files belated return after Section 234F threshold; gross total income below ₹5 lakh so reduced fee applies
Nil after Section 87A rebate
Nil
₹1,000 (Section 234F reduced fee)
₹1,000
Business taxpayer fails to pay advance tax installments under Section 211; entire tax of ₹1.84 lakh deposited only as self-assessment
How Rajakilpakkam businesses typically avoid these: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — the cluster of residential, retail, restaurants businesses that defines Rajakilpakkam's commercial fabric; for the professional and salaried population of Rajakilpakkam navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.
By Industry
Industry-specific patterns in Rajakilpakkam
How the local trade mix shapes this — In Rajakilpakkam, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; the cluster of residential, retail, restaurants businesses that defines Rajakilpakkam's commercial fabric.
Retail
Common issue:Retail proprietorships operating through point-of-sale terminals collect a substantial portion of receipts through card and digital modes, qualifying them for the lower deemed-profit rate of six percent under the proviso to Section 44AD(1) on the digital portion (with eight percent on the cash portion). Many filers report the entire turnover at the higher eight percent rate, foregoing the legitimate two-percentage-point benefit, while others apply six percent across the board without segregating the cash receipts.
How we handle it:Segregate annual receipts into cash and digital buckets using the payment gateway statements and POS settlement reports; apply six percent to digital receipts and eight percent to cash receipts under Section 44AD(1) proviso; disclose the bifurcation in Schedule BP of ITR-4; retain payment gateway reports under Section 44AA for the audit-equivalent period of six years from the end of the assessment year.
Retail
Common issue:Retail traders maintaining inventory of fast-moving consumer goods experience valuation timing differences between the cost method declared in audit working papers and the cost-or-net-realisable-value disclosure required under Section 145A read with ICDS II. The mismatch surfaces in Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustments where the audit report shows one value and the ITR Schedule TPSA shows another, particularly for slow-moving stock written down at year-end.
How we handle it:Align the closing stock valuation in Schedule BP and Schedule TPSA with the Form 3CD clause 14(b) disclosure on ICDS adjustments; where net realisable value triggers a writedown, document the basis under ICDS II paragraph 9 in the audit working file; ensure GST inward-supply records and ITC ledgers reconcile to the income tax inventory figures within the framework recommended by the OECD Forum on Tax Administration on cross-tax-base alignment.
Residential
Common issue:Salaried individuals owning a self-occupied residential property and a let-out second property frequently misapply the Section 24(b) interest deduction cap. The interest on a self-occupied house is capped at two lakh rupees under the second proviso to Section 24(b), while the let-out property qualifies for the full actual interest deduction. The two-lakh cap applies only to the self-occupied unit, but many filers apply the cap to the aggregate interest, under-claiming the deduction.
How we handle it:Designate one property as self-occupied and others as let-out under Section 23(4); compute Section 24(b) interest deduction for the self-occupied unit at the two-lakh cap; claim full actual interest on let-out properties under Section 24(b) main provision; where the let-out property generates a loss, apply the Section 71(3A) cap of two lakh against other heads with the balance carried forward under Section 71B; report all properties accurately in Schedule HP of ITR-2 or ITR-3.
Petroleum
Common issue:Petroleum-product retailers operating fuel-pump franchises receive commission from oil marketing companies that deduct tax under Section 194H at five percent on brokerage and commission. The retail margin structure is a regulated commission rather than a trading margin, which means Section 44AD presumptive election is unavailable since commission income is excluded under Section 44AD(6)(iii). Many retailers nevertheless file ITR-4 under Section 44AD, attracting Section 139(9) defective notices.
How we handle it:File ITR-3 with regular accounting under Section 44AA, recognising the oil-marketing-company commission as professional-or-commission receipts under the Section 44AD(6) exclusion; obtain a tax audit under Section 44AB where turnover exceeds the threshold; reconcile Form 26AS Section 194H entries quarter-wise; disclose the commission characterisation in Schedule BP with the oil-marketing-company-relationship documentation retained for six assessment years.
Pharmaceuticals
Common issue:Pharmaceutical companies operating in-house research and development facilities benefiting from the weighted deduction under Section 35(2AB) at one and a half times the qualifying expenditure (one hundred percent post Finance Act 2020 sunset) face the Form 3CL approval mechanism by the Department of Scientific and Industrial Research. The approval timing frequently lags the assessment year, requiring the deduction to be claimed in the year of approval rather than expenditure, with potential Section 154 rectification on subsequent approval.
How we handle it:Maintain the DSIR-approved facility registration current with annual renewal; submit Form 3CK and obtain Form 3CL for each previous year by the Section 139(1) due date where possible; where Form 3CL is delayed, claim the standard Section 35(1) deduction in the original return and pursue Section 154 rectification upon Form 3CL receipt; coordinate the Section 35(2AB) claim with the audit report Form 3CD clause 19 disclosures and Schedule BP entries.
Case Studies
Anonymised engagements we have handled
Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.
A flavour of cases we handle nearby — In Rajakilpakkam, with most filings in this catchment being personal income-tax returns under ITR-1 to ITR-3 and one-off TDS reconciliations; Rajakilpakkam businesses in the residential arm find that professional services from this area mostly fall under Section 194J 194C TDS on freelancers and personal-IT filings under ITR-1 to ITR-3.
Section 139(4)Retail
Belated return filed under Section 139(4) with late fee
Issue:A textile retailer missed the 31 July 2024 due date for AY 2024-25 due to GST audit work absorbing the entire July window. By the time he approached us in late October the original return window was closed and tax liability of ₹1,87,000 was pending payment.
Approach:Computed the Section 234A interest at 1 per cent per month from 1 August 2024 till the date of belated filing, Section 234B and 234C interest for advance-tax shortfall, and the Section 234F late fee of ₹5,000 (since total income exceeded ₹5 lakh). Filed the belated return under Section 139(4) on 12 November 2024 — within the 31 December outer limit. Discharged the self-assessment tax under Section 140A before clicking submit.
Outcome:Return filed with full self-assessment tax and interest; intimation under Section 143(1) issued accepting the return; no further demand; ₹234A interest was ₹6,140, ₹234F fee ₹5,000.
Section 270ARetail
Section 270A under-reporting penalty contested
Issue:A retail dealer received Section 270A penalty notice of ₹4.2 lakh on the ground that a scrutiny-stage addition of ₹14 lakh constituted under-reporting of income at 200 per cent under sub-clause (8) (misreporting). The assessee had disclosed the transactions in books but had treated them as capital not revenue.
Approach:Filed reply to the Section 270A show-cause arguing that the addition arose from a bonafide difference of treatment, not misreporting under Section 270A(9). Sought immunity under Section 270AA — taxpayer must accept the addition, pay the tax with interest, and file Form 68 within one month of order. Section 270AA bars penalty under 270A and 276C where the conditions are satisfied.
Outcome:Form 68 application granted; full immunity from Section 270A penalty; client paid only the underlying tax of ₹4.36 lakh; SOP for Section 270AA timeline tightened.
EVC verification failureRetail Trade
31st July last-minute filing failure because the bank changed the EVC mobile number
Issue:A textile shop owner in Sowcarpet brought his papers on the 30th of July evening. We prepared the ITR-3 by midday on the 31st with self-assessment tax of ₹1.84 lakh paid via challan ITNS 280, but the EVC OTP would not reach his mobile because the bank had updated the registered number the previous week and the portal had not synced. Across our peak-July rush we see roughly four to six EVC failures per hundred returns — the e-filing portal verification is the single biggest last-day failure point we encounter.
Approach:We had three minutes to spare so we did not attempt to chase the mobile sync. We switched to Aadhaar-OTP-based EVC after confirming the client's Aadhaar was already linked to PAN under Section 139AA. The Aadhaar OTP landed on a different mobile registered with UIDAI and the return was verified at 11:54 PM. We later helped the client update the bank-portal mobile sync as a separate compliance step, and we added the Aadhaar-EVC fallback as a standard line item in our pre-filing checklist for July rush cases.
Outcome:Return filed and verified within the Section 139(1) due date; no Section 234F ₹5,000 late fee; no Section 234A interest on the self-assessment tax already paid; refund-eligible status preserved; client now files with us by mid-July from the following year.
Section 139(1) second limbManufacturing
Tax audit due date 31 October — return filed under second limb of Section 139(1)
Issue:A manufacturing partnership firm with turnover ₹14 crore for FY 2023-24 was subject to tax audit under Section 44AB. The Form 3CD and Form 3CB were uploaded on 28 October 2024 but the ITR-5 was not filed by 31 October leading to Section 234A and Section 234F exposure.
Approach:Filed the belated return under Section 139(4) on 21 November 2024 carrying out a careful Section 234A interest computation from 1 November 2024 (not 1 August, since the due date for an audit-firm is 31 October per the second proviso to Section 139(1)). Discharged additional self-assessment tax under Section 140A with the interest add-on. Filed Form 10E for relief calculations where applicable.
Outcome:Belated return processed under Section 143(1); 234A interest computed at ₹14,800 against the AO-system computation of ₹38,200 (which had wrongly counted from 1 August); rectification under Section 154 corrected the interest; net liability ₹19,400 lower.
Why these Rajakilpakkam engagements look the way they do: For Rajakilpakkam engagements specifically — the cluster of residential, retail, restaurants businesses that defines Rajakilpakkam's commercial fabric; for the professional and salaried population of Rajakilpakkam navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.
“Multiple Form 16s from two employers, capital gains from Zerodha, savings interest split across four banks — FilingPro consolidated everything, reconciled with AIS, picked the Old Regime after a side-by-side working that saved ₹38,000 in tax versus the default New Regime. ITR-2 filed by 22 July, refund of ₹47,200 credited within 18 days.”
1 month agoVerified Client
VE
Venkatraman S
Income Tax E-Filing
“Received an AIS showing ₹6.4 lakh of mutual fund redemption I had not done. FilingPro filed AIS feedback marking the entries as 'Information relates to another PAN', got the TIS updated and filed a clean ITR-2. CPC issued Section 143(1) intimation accepting the return — no demand, no 143(1)(a) adjustment.”
2 months agoVerified Client
RA
Rajalakshmi V
Income Tax E-Filing
“My husband and I both file ITR — he is salaried (ITR-1), I run a tuition centre under Section 44AD presumptive (ITR-4). FilingPro handles both. Section 234B advance tax estimated and paid by 15 March, GST turnover cross-tied to ITR receipts, Form 10-IEA filed for my Old Regime opt-out. Zero notices in 3 years.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
KA
Karthikeyan M
Income Tax E-Filing
“Got a defective return notice under Section 139(9) on the originally filed ITR-3 — P&L summary mismatch. FilingPro analysed the defect, filed the cured return within the 15-day window plus a 15-day extension, and the return was treated as valid on the original date. Section 139(1) compliance preserved.”
3 months agoVerified Client
LA
Lakshmi Priya R
Income Tax E-Filing
“NRI ITR-2 with Schedule FA disclosure — three foreign bank accounts in Singapore and US brokerage equity. FilingPro completed the Schedule FA fully (peak balance, opening, closing, interest), filed Form 67 for foreign tax credit under Section 90, and the refund of ₹89,400 was credited in 32 days.”
2 months agoVerified Client
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Prabhakaran G
Income Tax E-Filing
“Filed ITR-U under Section 139(8A) for AY 2022-23 — had missed disclosing ₹4.2 lakh of contract receipts. FilingPro computed the additional 25% tax under Section 140B (filed within 24-month tranche), submitted ITR-U cleanly. CPC processed without query. Updated return discipline saved a potential Section 270A penalty proceeding.”
4 months agoVerified Client
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Common questions from Rajakilpakkam clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.
The feedback mechanism under the Annual Information Statement is articulated in CBDT Circular 8/2021 and operationalised through the e-filing portal. A taxpayer encountering a duplicate entry, an entry attributable to another permanent account number, an entry that is not taxable or a value that is incorrect may submit feedback selecting the appropriate option. The Taxpayer Information Summary refreshes to reflect the modified values once the feedback is processed. Feedback does not bind the Assessing Officer, but it documents the taxpayer's position and reduces the probability of a Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment. Independent source documentation should be retained regardless of feedback submission.
Under Section 87A read with the proviso inserted by Finance Act 2023, a resident individual taxed under Section 115BAC(1A) gets a rebate of up to ₹25,000 if total income does not exceed ₹7,00,000 — making tax NIL up to that threshold. Marginal relief is available where income marginally exceeds ₹7 lakh. Under the Old Regime the Section 87A rebate is capped at ₹12,500 for income up to ₹5,00,000.
Yes. Beyond Income Tax E-Filing, we cover GST, income tax, TDS, company and LLP registrations, digital signatures, audits and finance documentation — so Rajakilpakkam clients keep all their compliance under one roof. Ask us about anything on 9566-068-468.
Finance (No. 2) Act 2024 amended Section 112A: long-term capital gains on listed equity shares, equity-oriented mutual funds and units of business trust (where STT is paid) are taxed at 12.5% (raised from 10%) on gains above ₹1,25,000 per year (raised from ₹1,00,000) — applicable to transfers on or after 23 July 2024. Indexation has been removed for most assets transferred on/after 23 July 2024 under Section 112; for resident individuals/HUFs holding immovable property acquired before 23-07-2024, a grandfathering option of 20% with indexation OR 12.5% without indexation is available.
Section 80C aggregate deduction is ₹1,50,000 per year covering EPF, PPF, ELSS, life insurance premium (subject to 10% sum-assured cap under Section 80C(3A) for policies issued post 01-04-2012), 5-year tax-saving FD, NSC, Sukanya Samriddhi, principal repayment of housing loan, tuition fee for two children, etc. Section 80CCC (pension) and Section 80CCD(1) (NPS employee contribution) share the same ₹1.5 lakh ceiling per Section 80CCE. Available only under Old Regime.
Our IT Return fees are fixed and shared in writing before any work starts — no hourly billing and no surprises. Pricing depends on the complexity of your case, not your location, so Rajakilpakkam clients pay the same transparent rates as everyone else. See the pricing section above or call 9566-068-468 for an exact figure.
ITR-3 is for individuals/HUFs with income from proprietary business or profession, partnership share, or where books of account are maintained. ITR-4 (Sugam) is the simplified return for resident individuals/HUFs/firms (other than LLP) opting for presumptive taxation under Sections 44AD (8%/6%), 44ADA (50% of gross receipts up to ₹75 lakh under proviso to Section 44ADA(1)) or 44AE — with total income up to ₹50 lakh. If you have capital gains, foreign assets or speculative business, ITR-4 is barred and ITR-3 applies.
Sections 80C, 80CCC, 80D, 80DD, 80DDB, 80E, 80EE, 80EEA, 80EEB, 80G, 80GG, 80GGA, 80TTA/TTB, Chapter VI-A in general (except 80CCD(2) employer NPS, 80CCH(2) Agniveer, 80JJAA), HRA exemption under Section 10(13A), LTA under 10(5), Section 24(b) interest on self-occupied house, set-off of house property loss against other heads, and brought-forward depreciation/loss attributable to those deductions. Standard deduction Section 16(ia) and family pension deduction Section 57(iia) are retained.
Yes. Getting Income Tax E-Filing right early saves small Rajakilpakkam businesses from penalties and rework later, and our fixed, modest fees are designed with smaller operators in mind. We will tell you honestly if something is not needed yet.
Schedule CG of the AY 2025-26 utility is bifurcated to capture transfers up to 22-July-2024 separately from those on or after 23-July-2024. Listed equity LTCG under Section 112A is computed at ten per cent on the pre-cutoff slice with the older one-lakh exemption, and at twelve and a half per cent on the post-cutoff slice with the new one-twenty-five-thousand exemption. STCG under Section 111A moves from fifteen to twenty per cent across the same cutoff. For immovable property held by a resident individual or HUF and acquired before 23-July-2024, the grandfathering choice between twenty per cent with indexation and twelve and a half per cent without indexation is computed both ways and the lower-tax option is selected on a per-asset basis.
The Explanation to sub-section (9) of Section 139 enumerates the conditions. The principal grounds include absence of self-assessment tax payment particulars where Section 140A liability subsists, omission of statements of accounts where the assessee maintains books under Section 44AA, mismatch of receipts with the form chosen and incomplete annexures. The Assessing Officer or the Centralised Processing Centre issues an intimation granting fifteen days to cure the defect, extendable on a written application. A timely cure causes the original filing date to be retained; a failure to cure results in the return being treated as never furnished.
We review IT Return work carefully before submission to avoid errors in the first place. If a genuine issue ever arises on something we filed for a Rajakilpakkam client, we help set it right — standing behind our work is part of the service.
ITR-1 (Sahaj) is for resident individuals (not RNOR/NR) with total income up to ₹50 lakh from salary, one house property, family pension, agricultural income up to ₹5,000 and other sources (interest etc.). If you have capital gains, more than one house property, foreign assets/income, director-in-company status or unlisted equity holdings, you fall out of ITR-1 and must use ITR-2. ITR-1 has been amended for AY 2024-25 onwards to capture the New Regime opt-out via Form 10-IEA reporting.
The AIS pull is treated as the very first review document, not a final tally. Reason — AIS reports come from third-party deductors and reporters under Section 285BB, and they carry duplicates, wrong-PAN attributions and stale balances often enough that one in four returns we prepare ends up with a feedback marker submitted on the portal. Doing the AIS feedback in week one means the corrected TIS is settled before we build the return, the acknowledgement reference is on file, and a later Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment cannot quietly add an entry the client genuinely never received. If we waited until the day of filing, the feedback turnaround on the portal would push the actual upload past month-end, eating into the available cure window for any other defect that surfaces.
Section 80TTA allows up to ₹10,000 deduction on savings bank interest for individuals/HUFs (excluding senior citizens). Section 80TTB allows up to ₹50,000 for resident senior citizens (60+) on interest from banks, co-operative banks and post offices — covering savings, fixed and recurring deposits. A senior citizen claiming 80TTB cannot also claim 80TTA. Both are barred under the New Regime.
Yes. Section 80 of the Income Tax Act 1961 expressly bars the carry-forward of losses under Sections 72 (business), 73 (speculation), 73A (specified business), 74 (capital gains) and 74A (race horse) where the return reflecting such loss is not filed within the time prescribed under Section 139(1). House property loss carry-forward under Section 71B is, however, available even on a belated return. The assessee with a loss position in any non-house-property head must therefore meet the original due date strictly. The Supreme Court has affirmed in successive decisions that the bar in Section 80 is mandatory and cannot be relaxed even on equitable considerations by the appellate forum.
From 2nd Bajanai Koil Street, 2nd Street, 3rd Cross Street, 3rd Main Road and 4th Street through to Abdul Kalam Street, Annai Theresa Street, Balaji Nagar Main Road APN Nagar Main Road and Madambakkam Road, our team covers IT Return for businesses right across Rajakilpakkam and its main commercial roads.
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Professional Income Tax E-Filing in Rajakilpakkam, Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming). 15+ years experience, 4.9★ rated.
FilingPro Chennai — 15+ Years of Expert Tax & Business Consulting. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming), Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Disclaimer: Information on this page is for general guidance only and does not constitute legal, financial or tax advice. Consult a qualified professional for specific advice.