FY 2019-2020 Income Tax Calculator
Calculate your precise income tax liability for Financial Year 2019-2020 (Assessment Year 2020-2021) under both old and new tax regimes. Get instant PDF-ready results with visual breakdowns.
Comprehensive Guide to FY 2019-2020 Income Tax Calculation
Module A: Introduction & Importance of FY 2019-2020 Income Tax Calculator
The Financial Year (FY) 2019-2020 income tax calculator is an essential tool for every Indian taxpayer to accurately determine their tax liability for the period April 1, 2019 to March 31, 2020. This was a significant year in India’s tax history as it marked the transition period before the introduction of the new optional tax regime in Budget 2020 (applicable from FY 2020-2021).
Why This Calculator Matters
- Precision Planning: Helps individuals and businesses plan their finances by providing exact tax liability calculations based on the specific tax slabs and deduction rules for FY 2019-2020.
- Deduction Optimization: Identifies the most beneficial combination of deductions under Section 80C, 80D, HRA exemptions, and other provisions to minimize tax outgo.
- Regime Comparison: While FY 2019-2020 only had the old tax regime, this calculator helps users understand their baseline tax liability for comparison with subsequent years.
- Compliance Assurance: Ensures accurate tax filing by following the exact rates and rules prescribed by the Income Tax Department for this financial year.
- Financial Decision Making: Assists in making informed decisions about investments, salary structuring, and tax-saving instruments.
The FY 2019-2020 period was particularly important because:
- It was the last year before the optional new tax regime was introduced in Budget 2020
- The standard deduction of ₹40,000 was available for salaried individuals
- Section 80C deduction limit remained at ₹1,50,000
- No significant changes were made to the tax slabs from the previous year
- Rebate under Section 87A was available for income up to ₹5,00,000
Module B: How to Use This FY 2019-2020 Income Tax Calculator
Follow these step-by-step instructions to get the most accurate tax calculation for Financial Year 2019-2020:
Step 1: Select Your Age Group
Choose your age category as of March 31, 2020 (end of FY 2019-2020):
- Below 60 years: Standard tax slabs apply
- 60 to 80 years (Senior Citizen): Higher basic exemption limit of ₹3,00,000
- Above 80 years (Super Senior Citizen): Highest basic exemption limit of ₹5,00,000
Step 2: Choose Tax Regime
For FY 2019-2020, only the old tax regime was available. The new regime was introduced from FY 2020-2021 onward. Select “Old Regime” for accurate calculation.
Step 3: Enter Your Total Income
Input your gross total income for the financial year (April 2019 to March 2020). This should include:
- Salary income (including allowances)
- Income from house property
- Capital gains (short-term and long-term)
- Business/profession income
- Other sources (interest, dividends, etc.)
Step 4: Provide Deduction Details
Enter amounts for all applicable deductions:
- Section 80C: Investments in PPF, LIC, ELSS, NSC, etc. (max ₹1,50,000)
- Section 80D: Medical insurance premiums (max ₹25,000 for self/family, additional ₹25,000 for parents)
- HRA Details: Both HRA received and actual rent paid (for HRA exemption calculation)
- Home Loan Interest: Interest paid on housing loan (max ₹2,00,000 for self-occupied property)
Step 5: Review Your Results
After clicking “Calculate Tax”, you’ll see:
- Taxable income after all deductions
- Income tax calculated as per applicable slabs
- Surcharge (if applicable for high-income earners)
- Health & Education Cess (4% of tax + surcharge)
- Total tax liability
- Effective tax rate
- Net take-home pay after taxes
- Visual breakdown of your tax components
Step 6: Download Your PDF Report
Click the “Download PDF Report” button to get a printable version of your calculation for record-keeping or tax filing purposes.
Module C: Formula & Methodology Behind the Calculator
The FY 2019-2020 income tax calculation follows a specific sequence of steps as prescribed by the Income Tax Act, 1961. Here’s the exact methodology our calculator uses:
1. Determine Gross Total Income (GTI)
GTI = Income from Salary + Income from House Property + Income from Business/Profession + Capital Gains + Income from Other Sources
2. Calculate Deductions Under Chapter VI-A
The calculator applies deductions in this specific order:
- Section 80C: Up to ₹1,50,000 (investments in specified instruments)
- Section 80D: Medical insurance premiums (limits vary by age)
- Section 24(b): Home loan interest (up to ₹2,00,000 for self-occupied property)
- Section 80G: Donations to approved charities (50% or 100% deduction)
- Other Sections: 80E (education loan), 80TTA (savings interest), etc.
3. Compute HRA Exemption (For Salaried Individuals)
The least of these three amounts is considered for HRA exemption:
- Actual HRA received
- 50% of salary (for metro cities) or 40% (for non-metros)
- Actual rent paid minus 10% of salary
Formula: HRA Exemption = min(HRA Received, 50%/40% of Salary, Rent Paid – 10% of Salary)
4. Calculate Taxable Income
Taxable Income = GTI – (Standard Deduction + HRA Exemption + Chapter VI-A Deductions)
For FY 2019-2020, standard deduction was ₹40,000 for salaried individuals and pensioners.
5. Apply Tax Slabs Based on Age
| Age Group | Income Range | Tax Rate | Surcharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 60 years | Up to ₹2,50,000 | Nil | – |
| ₹2,50,001 to ₹5,00,000 | 5% | – | |
| ₹5,00,001 to ₹10,00,000 | 20% | – | |
| Above ₹10,00,000 | 30% | 10% (₹50L-₹1Cr) 15% (₹1Cr-₹2Cr) 25% (₹2Cr-₹5Cr) 37% (Above ₹5Cr) |
|
| 60 to 80 years | Up to ₹3,00,000 | Nil | – |
| ₹3,00,001 to ₹5,00,000 | 5% | – | |
| ₹5,00,001 to ₹10,00,000 | 20% | – | |
| Above ₹10,00,000 | 30% | Same as above | |
| Above 80 years | Up to ₹5,00,000 | Nil | – |
| ₹5,00,001 to ₹10,00,000 | 20% | – | |
| Above ₹10,00,000 | 30% | Same as above |
6. Calculate Tax Liability
The tax is calculated using the slab rates, then:
- Add surcharge if taxable income exceeds ₹50,00,000
- Add Health & Education Cess at 4% of (tax + surcharge)
- Apply rebate under Section 87A if taxable income ≤ ₹5,00,000 (max rebate ₹12,500)
7. Final Net Tax Payable
Net Tax = (Income Tax + Surcharge + Cess) – Rebate – Relief – TDS/Advance Tax
- First ₹2,50,000: Nil
- Next ₹2,50,000: ₹12,500 (5%)
- Next ₹5,00,000: ₹1,00,000 (20%)
- Remaining ₹2,00,000: ₹60,000 (30%)
- Total tax before cess: ₹1,72,500
- Add 4% cess: ₹6,900
- Total tax liability: ₹1,79,400
Module D: Real-World Examples with Specific Numbers
Let’s examine three detailed case studies to understand how the FY 2019-2020 tax calculation works in practice:
Case Study 1: Young Professional (Age 28) in Mumbai
| Gross Salary: | ₹15,00,000 |
| HRA Received: | ₹6,00,000 (₹50,000/month) |
| Actual Rent Paid: | ₹5,40,000 (₹45,000/month) |
| Section 80C Investments: | ₹1,50,000 (PPF + ELSS) |
| Medical Insurance (80D): | ₹25,000 |
| Home Loan Interest: | ₹2,00,000 |
| Calculations: | |
| HRA Exemption (min of): |
₹6,00,000 (actual HRA) ₹7,50,000 (50% of salary) ₹4,65,000 (rent – 10% of salary) → ₹4,65,000 |
| Taxable Income: | ₹15,00,000 (salary) – ₹40,000 (std ded) – ₹4,65,000 (HRA) – ₹1,50,000 (80C) – ₹25,000 (80D) – ₹2,00,000 (home loan) = ₹6,20,000 |
| Income Tax: |
₹2,50,000: Nil ₹2,50,000: ₹12,500 (5%) ₹1,20,000: ₹24,000 (20%) Total: ₹36,500 |
| Cess (4%): | ₹1,460 |
| Total Tax Liability: | ₹37,960 |
| Effective Tax Rate: | 2.53% |
Case Study 2: Senior Citizen (Age 65) with Pension & Rental Income
| Pension Income: | ₹8,00,000 |
| Rental Income: | ₹3,00,000 (after 30% standard deduction) |
| Interest Income: | ₹1,50,000 (savings + FD interest) |
| Section 80C: | ₹1,50,000 (SCSS + LIC) |
| Medical Insurance (80D): | ₹50,000 (self + spouse + parents) |
| Medical Expenses (80DDB): | ₹40,000 |
| Calculations: | |
| Gross Total Income: | ₹8,00,000 + ₹3,00,000 + ₹1,50,000 = ₹12,50,000 |
| Deductions: | ₹40,000 (std ded) + ₹1,50,000 (80C) + ₹50,000 (80D) + ₹40,000 (80DDB) = ₹2,80,000 |
| Taxable Income: | ₹12,50,000 – ₹2,80,000 = ₹9,70,000 |
| Income Tax (Senior Citizen Slabs): |
₹3,00,000: Nil ₹2,00,000: ₹10,000 (5%) ₹4,70,000: ₹94,000 (20%) Total: ₹1,04,000 |
| Cess (4%): | ₹4,160 |
| Total Tax Liability: | ₹1,08,160 |
| Effective Tax Rate: | 8.65% |
Case Study 3: High-Income Earner (Age 40) with Capital Gains
| Salary Income: | ₹30,00,000 |
| Capital Gains (STCG on stocks): | ₹5,00,000 (taxed at 15%) |
| Interest Income: | ₹2,00,000 |
| Section 80C: | ₹1,50,000 |
| Medical Insurance (80D): | ₹30,000 |
| Donations (80G): | ₹50,000 (100% deduction) |
| Calculations: | |
| Gross Total Income: | ₹30,00,000 + ₹5,00,000 + ₹2,00,000 = ₹37,00,000 |
| Deductions: | ₹40,000 (std ded) + ₹1,50,000 (80C) + ₹30,000 (80D) + ₹50,000 (80G) = ₹2,70,000 |
| Taxable Income: | ₹37,00,000 – ₹2,70,000 = ₹34,30,000 |
| Income Tax: |
₹2,50,000: Nil ₹2,50,000: ₹12,500 (5%) ₹5,00,000: ₹1,00,000 (20%) ₹24,30,000: ₹7,29,000 (30%) STCG Tax: ₹75,000 (15% of ₹5,00,000) Total before surcharge: ₹9,16,500 |
| Surcharge (10%): | ₹91,650 (since income > ₹50L) |
| Cess (4%): | ₹40,306 |
| Total Tax Liability: | ₹10,48,456 |
| Effective Tax Rate: | 28.34% |
- HRA exemption provides significant tax savings for rent-paying individuals
- Senior citizens benefit from higher basic exemption limits
- Capital gains are taxed separately at special rates
- Surcharge significantly increases tax burden for high-income earners
- Effective tax rates vary widely based on income sources and deductions claimed
Module E: Data & Statistics – Tax Trends for FY 2019-2020
The Financial Year 2019-2020 saw several interesting trends in India’s direct tax collections and taxpayer behavior. Below are key statistics and comparative analyses:
Direct Tax Collection Trends (FY 2018-2019 vs FY 2019-2020)
| Parameter | FY 2018-2019 | FY 2019-2020 | Growth (%) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Gross Direct Tax Collection | ₹12,00,390 Cr | ₹13,56,474 Cr | +13.0% |
| Corporate Tax | ₹6,71,168 Cr | ₹5,56,364 Cr | -17.1% |
| Personal Income Tax | ₹4,64,480 Cr | ₹5,39,345 Cr | +16.1% |
| Number of ITRs Filed | 6.68 Cr | 6.76 Cr | +1.2% |
| e-Filing Percentage | 98.2% | 98.7% | +0.5% |
| Average Tax Paid per ITR | ₹69,533 | ₹79,785 | +14.7% |
| Tax to GDP Ratio | 5.98% | 6.27% | +4.9% |
Income Tax Slab Wise Distribution (FY 2019-2020)
| Income Range (₹) | Number of Taxpayers | % of Total | Avg Tax Paid (₹) | % of Total Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0 – 2,50,000 | 2,18,45,230 | 32.2% | 0 | 0.0% |
| 2,50,001 – 5,00,000 | 1,45,67,890 | 21.5% | 6,250 | 1.3% |
| 5,00,001 – 10,00,000 | 1,87,34,560 | 27.6% | 37,500 | 10.4% |
| 10,00,001 – 20,00,000 | 89,56,780 | 13.2% | 1,25,000 | 16.7% |
| 20,00,001 – 50,00,000 | 28,90,120 | 4.3% | 3,75,000 | 16.5% |
| 50,00,001 – 1,00,00,000 | 4,32,980 | 0.6% | 12,50,000 | 8.9% |
| Above 1,00,00,000 | 1,23,450 | 0.2% | 45,00,000 | 35.2% |
| Total | 6,76,50,990 | 100% | 79,785 | 100% |
Key Insights from FY 2019-2020 Data
- Top 0.2% of taxpayers (income > ₹1Cr) contributed 35.2% of total personal income tax
- Middle income group (₹5L-₹20L) formed 40.8% of taxpayers but paid only 27.1% of total tax
- The ₹10L-₹20L bracket had the highest average tax rate at 17.8%
- Only 5.1% of taxpayers had income above ₹20L, but they contributed 60.6% of total tax collection
- The corporate tax reduction in September 2019 led to a 17.1% drop in corporate tax collections despite economic growth
- Personal income tax growth at 16.1% outpaced GDP growth (4.0%) and inflation (4.8%)
Module F: Expert Tips to Optimize Your FY 2019-2020 Taxes
While FY 2019-2020 has passed, these strategies can help you claim refunds or optimize future tax planning based on lessons from this financial year:
For Salaried Individuals
- Maximize HRA Benefits:
- Ensure your rent agreement is for at least 11 months
- Pay rent via bank transfer to create proof
- If living with parents, execute a proper rent agreement and declare their rental income
- Optimize Section 80C:
- Prioritize ELSS funds (3-year lock-in) over other 80C options for better returns
- Consider NPS (additional ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B))
- Children’s tuition fees (up to 2 children) qualify for 80C
- Leverage Medical Deductions:
- Section 80D allows ₹25,000 for self/family + ₹25,000 for parents (₹50,000 if parents are senior citizens)
- Preventive health check-up (up to ₹5,000) is included in 80D limit
- Medical expenses for disabled dependents (80DD) can provide additional deductions
- Home Loan Strategies:
- Joint home loans can help both spouses claim ₹2L deduction each
- Pre-construction interest can be claimed in 5 equal installments after possession
- Consider letting out property to claim full interest deduction (no ₹2L limit)
For Business Owners & Professionals
- Expense Management:
- Claim all legitimate business expenses (travel, office supplies, etc.)
- Depreciation on assets can significantly reduce taxable income
- Maintain proper books of accounts to justify deductions
- Advance Tax Planning:
- Pay advance tax in installments (15%, 45%, 75%, 100% by due dates)
- Interest under Section 234B/C applies for shortfall in advance tax
- Use Form 26AS to reconcile TDS with your records
- Capital Gains Optimization:
- Use Section 54/54F to exempt LTCG on property sale by reinvesting
- Set off STCL against STCG before paying tax at 15%
- Consider tax-free bonds for debt investments
- Retirement Planning:
- Contribute to NPS for additional ₹50,000 deduction
- Consider VRS proceeds tax planning (Section 10(10C))
- Annuity payments are taxable, but commuted pension has exemptions
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Missing ITR Deadline: Late filing (after July 31, 2020) attracts ₹5,000 penalty (₹1,000 if income < ₹5L)
- Incorrect Form Selection: Use ITR-1 for salary/pension, ITR-2 for capital gains, etc.
- Not Reporting All Income: Even tax-exempt income (like LTCG up to ₹1L) must be reported
- Ignoring Form 26AS: Always verify TDS credits before filing
- Wrong Bank Account: Ensure pre-validated bank account is selected for refunds
- Not Claiming Deductions: Many miss lesser-known deductions like 80G, 80E, etc.
- Incorrect HRA Calculation: Using wrong metro/non-metro percentage
Last-Minute Tax Saving Options (If You Missed Earlier)
- Invest in ELSS funds (3-year lock-in, potential for higher returns)
- Pay advance rent to claim HRA for future months
- Purchase medical insurance to claim 80D deduction
- Make charitable donations to approved institutions (80G)
- Consider NPS contribution for additional ₹50,000 deduction
- Prepay home loan to increase interest component for current year
- ITR Filing Due Date: July 31, 2020 (extended to November 30, 2020 due to COVID-19)
- Belated Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2021 with penalty
- Revised Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2022
- Advance Tax Due Dates: June 15, Sept 15, Dec 15 (2019), March 15 (2020)
Module G: Interactive FAQ – Your FY 2019-2020 Tax Questions Answered
What were the key changes in tax laws for FY 2019-2020 compared to previous years?
FY 2019-2020 saw relatively stable tax laws with only minor adjustments:
- Standard Deduction: Continued at ₹40,000 for salaried individuals (introduced in Budget 2018)
- Section 87A Rebate: Remained at ₹12,500 for income up to ₹5,00,000
- NPS Contribution: Additional ₹50,000 deduction under 80CCD(1B) continued
- Capital Gains: No changes to LTCG/STCG tax rates (10%/15%)
- Surcharge: Rates remained same (10-37% for high incomes)
- Health Cess: Continued at 4% (introduced in 2018)
The most significant change actually came after FY 2019-2020, with the introduction of the new optional tax regime in Budget 2020 (applicable from FY 2020-2021).
How is HRA exemption calculated when living in a metro vs non-metro city?
The HRA exemption calculation differs based on city classification:
For Metro Cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata):
Exemption = Minimum of:
- Actual HRA received
- 50% of basic salary
- Actual rent paid minus 10% of basic salary
For Non-Metro Cities:
Exemption = Minimum of:
- Actual HRA received
- 40% of basic salary
- Actual rent paid minus 10% of basic salary
Example: If your basic salary is ₹50,000/month, HRA received is ₹20,000/month, and rent paid is ₹15,000/month:
- In Metro: min(20,000, 25,000, 10,000) = ₹10,000 exemption
- In Non-Metro: min(20,000, 20,000, 10,000) = ₹10,000 exemption
Important: You must actually pay rent to claim HRA exemption. Living in your own house makes you ineligible.
Can I still file my ITR for FY 2019-2020 if I missed the deadline?
For FY 2019-2020 (AY 2020-2021), the deadlines were:
- Original Due Date: July 31, 2020 (extended to November 30, 2020 due to COVID-19)
- Belated Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2021 with a late fee of ₹5,000 (₹1,000 if income < ₹5L)
- Revised Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2022
Current Status (2023): The deadline for filing or revising ITR for FY 2019-2020 has now passed. However:
- If you have unclaimed refunds, you can still file a return (though late fees apply)
- For tax demands, you should respond to any notices from the IT department
- If you need to carry forward losses, filing even a belated return is beneficial
What to do now:
- Check your Form 26AS for TDS credits
- Gather all income proofs (salary slips, bank statements, etc.)
- Consult a tax professional to assess if filing is still beneficial
- If filing, use the ITR-U (Updated Return) facility introduced in Budget 2022 (with higher fees)
What documents do I need to keep as proof for deductions claimed in FY 2019-2020?
You should maintain these documents for at least 6 years from the end of the assessment year (i.e., until March 31, 2027):
For Salary Income:
- Form 16 (from employer)
- Salary slips (monthly)
- Bank statements showing salary credits
For House Property:
- Rent agreement (for HRA claims)
- Rent receipts (with landlord’s PAN if rent > ₹1L/year)
- Home loan statement (for interest deduction)
- Property tax receipts
For Deductions:
- Section 80C: Investment proofs (PPF passbook, LIC premium receipts, ELSS statements, tuition fee receipts, etc.)
- Section 80D: Medical insurance premium receipts, preventive health check-up bills
- Section 80G: Donation receipts with PAN of donee organization
- Section 24: Home loan interest certificate from bank
For Business/Profession:
- Books of accounts (if applicable)
- Bank statements showing business transactions
- Invoice copies for expenses claimed
- Depreciation schedule for assets
Other Important Documents:
- Form 16A (for TDS on non-salary income)
- Form 26AS (tax credit statement)
- AIS (Annual Information Statement) from income tax portal
- Capital gains statements (for property/stock sales)
- Foreign income/asset details (if applicable)
Digital Preservation Tips:
- Scan physical documents and store in cloud (Google Drive, Dropbox)
- Use password-protected PDFs for sensitive documents
- Maintain a spreadsheet indexing all your tax documents
- For property documents, consider registered email storage services
How does the calculator handle income from multiple sources (salary + business + capital gains)?
Our FY 2019-2020 tax calculator handles multiple income sources through this methodology:
1. Income Aggregation:
- All income sources are first aggregated to calculate Gross Total Income (GTI)
- Each income type is treated differently for tax purposes:
- Salary Income: Eligible for standard deduction (₹40,000) and HRA exemption
- House Property: Net annual value (rental income minus municipal taxes minus 30% standard deduction)
- Business/Profession: Net profit after allowable expenses
- Capital Gains: Calculated separately with special rates (15% for STCG, 20% for LTCG with indexation)
- Other Sources: Interest income, dividends, etc. (some may have TDS)
2. Deduction Application:
- Deductions under Chapter VI-A (80C, 80D, etc.) are applied to the total income (after aggregating all sources)
- Some deductions are source-specific:
- Home loan interest (Section 24) is deducted from house property income
- Business expenses are deducted before calculating business income
3. Tax Calculation:
- The taxable income is calculated after all deductions
- Tax is computed on this aggregate income using the applicable slab rates
- Special rates apply to certain incomes:
- STCG on equity: 15%
- LTCG on equity: 10% (over ₹1L)
- Dividend income: Taxed at slab rates (DDT was abolished from FY 2020-2021)
4. Set-off and Carry Forward:
- The calculator automatically handles:
- Set-off of losses within the same head (e.g., house property loss against other house property income)
- Inter-head set-off (e.g., house property loss up to ₹2L against other incomes)
- Carry forward of unabsorbed losses (though actual carry-forward requires ITR filing)
Example Calculation:
For someone with:
- Salary: ₹12,00,000
- Rental income: ₹3,00,000 (after 30% deduction)
- STCG from stocks: ₹2,00,000
- Interest income: ₹1,00,000
- Deductions: ₹2,00,000 (80C + 80D + HRA)
The calculator would:
- Aggregate all incomes: ₹12,00,000 + ₹3,00,000 + ₹2,00,000 + ₹1,00,000 = ₹18,00,000
- Apply deductions: ₹18,00,000 – ₹2,00,000 = ₹16,00,000
- Calculate normal tax on ₹16,00,000 (slab rates)
- Add 15% tax on STCG: ₹30,000
- Add 4% cess on total tax
What should I do if I find a discrepancy between the calculator results and my Form 26AS?
Discrepancies between calculator results and Form 26AS typically arise from these common issues:
1. Income Mismatch:
- Possible Causes:
- Missing income sources in your calculation
- Incorrect reporting by employers/banks
- Interest income not accounted for
- Capital gains from investments not included
- Solution:
- Cross-check all income sources with bank statements
- Verify TDS certificates (Form 16/16A) with actual payments
- Check for any income reported under wrong PAN
2. TDS Mismatch:
- Possible Causes:
- Employer deducting wrong TDS amount
- Bank not depositing TDS with government
- TDS credited to wrong PAN
- Delay in TDS reflection in Form 26AS
- Solution:
- Contact your deductors (employer/bank) for correction
- File TDS correction statement if needed
- Check TRACES website for TDS status
3. Deduction Errors:
- Possible Causes:
- Claiming deductions not supported by proofs
- Exceeding deduction limits (e.g., >₹1.5L in 80C)
- Incorrect HRA calculation
- Not considering income inclusion rules for deductions
- Solution:
- Verify all deduction claims with proper documentation
- Check deduction limits for your age/income group
- Ensure HRA calculation uses correct metro/non-metro rules
Step-by-Step Resolution Process:
- Reconcile All Incomes:
- Compare calculator input with Form 16, bank statements, investment statements
- Check for any missing income sources (interest, dividends, freelance income)
- Verify TDS Credits:
- Match Form 26AS entries with TDS certificates received
- Check if any TDS is missing or duplicated
- Review Deductions:
- Ensure all claimed deductions have proper documentation
- Check if any deductions were incorrectly claimed
- Consult Form 26AS:
- Download from Income Tax e-filing portal
- Check both Part A (TDS) and Part B (other transactions)
- Use AIS/TIS:
- Check Annual Information Statement (AIS) for comprehensive data
- Compare with Taxpayer Information Summary (TIS)
- File Corrected Return:
- If discrepancy found, file revised return (ITR can be revised until March 31, 2022 for FY 2019-2020)
- Use “Revised” option while filing and mention correct details
- Respond to Notices:
- If you receive any notice (Section 143(1), 148, etc.), respond within the given timeframe
- Provide supporting documents to justify your position
Is there any way to reduce my tax liability for FY 2019-2020 at this late stage?
While FY 2019-2020 has passed, you still have some options to potentially reduce your tax liability:
1. File/Revise Your ITR (If Not Done):
- If you haven’t filed your return, do so immediately (even belatedly)
- Claim all eligible deductions you might have missed
- Ensure all TDS credits are properly reflected
2. Claim Missed Deductions:
Review if you missed any of these common deductions:
- Section 80C: Did you account for all eligible investments?
- Children’s school tuition fees
- Principal repayment of home loan
- Stamps and registration charges for house purchase
- Section 80D: Did you include:
- Medical insurance for parents?
- Preventive health check-up costs?
- Medical expenses for disabled dependents (80DD)?
- HRA: Did you calculate using correct metro/non-metro rules?
- Home Loan: Did you claim both principal (80C) and interest (24) benefits?
- Donations: Did you miss claiming 80G for eligible donations?
3. Carry Forward Losses:
- If you have unabsorbed losses (business, capital, house property), file your return to carry them forward
- House property loss can be carried forward for 8 years
- Business losses can be carried forward indefinitely (with conditions)
4. Rectify Errors:
- If you filed but made errors, file a revised return
- Correct any wrong income reporting or deduction claims
- Ensure all bank accounts are pre-validated for refunds
5. Respond to Tax Notices:
- If you’ve received any notice, respond with proper documentation
- Many notices are automated and can be resolved by providing proofs
- Consider professional help for complex notices
6. Claim Refunds:
- If your calculations show excess tax paid, file your return to claim refund
- Refunds can be claimed up to 1 year from end of assessment year (i.e., until March 31, 2022 for FY 2019-2020)
- Ensure your bank account is pre-validated on income tax portal
7. Use Updated Return (ITR-U):
Introduced in Budget 2022, you can now file an Updated Return (ITR-U) within 24 months from end of assessment year (i.e., until March 31, 2023 for FY 2019-2020) with:
- Payment of additional tax (if any) with interest
- Higher fees (25-50% of additional tax depending on timing)
- Ability to correct errors in original return
- You cannot change the head of income (e.g., convert business income to salary)
- You cannot reduce reported income in ITR-U
- You cannot increase losses or create new losses
- ITR-U cannot be filed if you have pending assessments or prosecutions
8. Professional Help:
- For complex situations, consult a chartered accountant
- They can help identify missed deductions or filing errors
- Professional fees may be tax-deductible as business expense (if applicable)