FY 2018-2019 Tax Calculator
Module A: Introduction & Importance of FY 2018-2019 Tax Calculation
The Financial Year 2018-2019 (April 1, 2018 to March 31, 2019) marked a significant period in India’s tax landscape with several important changes in tax laws and slab rates. Understanding your tax liability for this period is crucial for several reasons:
- Compliance Requirement: Accurate tax calculation ensures you meet your legal obligations under the Income Tax Act, 1961, avoiding penalties or legal issues.
- Financial Planning: Knowing your exact tax liability helps in better budgeting and investment planning for future financial years.
- Refund Claims: Many taxpayers overpay taxes through TDS. Proper calculation helps identify refund opportunities.
- Investment Optimization: The 2018-2019 tax regime offered specific deductions that could significantly reduce taxable income when properly utilized.
- Historical Record: Maintaining accurate tax records is essential for loan applications, visa processing, and other financial transactions.
The Union Budget 2018 introduced several key changes that affected tax calculations for FY 2018-2019:
- Reintroduction of standard deduction of ₹40,000 for salaried employees
- Increase in cess from 3% to 4% (though the 3% rate was maintained for FY 2018-2019)
- Changes in long-term capital gains tax on equity investments
- New rules for taxing income from cryptocurrencies (though not yet formally regulated)
For professionals and business owners, FY 2018-2019 also saw changes in presumptive taxation schemes and GST compliance requirements that indirectly affected income tax calculations. The Income Tax Department’s official portal provides authoritative information on these changes.
Module B: How to Use This FY 2018-2019 Tax Calculator
Our interactive tax calculator is designed to provide accurate tax computations for FY 2018-2019. Follow these step-by-step instructions:
-
Enter Your Annual Income:
- Input your total annual income from all sources (salary, business, capital gains, etc.)
- Include all taxable components before any deductions
- For salaried individuals, this should match your Form 16 Part B
-
Select Your Age Group:
- Below 60 years: Standard tax slabs apply
- 60-80 years: Higher basic exemption limit (₹3,00,000)
- Above 80 years: Highest exemption limit (₹5,00,000)
-
Enter Deductions:
- Standard deduction: Automatically set to ₹40,000 (new for FY 2018-2019)
- Section 80C: Includes EPF, PPF, LIC, ELSS, etc. (max ₹1,50,000)
- Section 80D: Medical insurance premiums (₹25,000 for self, additional for parents)
- HRA: Enter both HRA received and actual rent paid for accurate exemption calculation
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Review Results:
- Taxable income after all deductions
- Income tax calculated as per FY 2018-2019 slabs
- Education cess at 3% of income tax
- Total tax liability and effective tax rate
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Visual Analysis:
- Interactive chart showing tax breakdown
- Comparison of your tax components
- Visual representation of your tax efficiency
Pro Tip: For most accurate results, have your Form 16, investment proofs, and rent receipts (if applicable) ready before using the calculator. The tool automatically applies all relevant tax rules for FY 2018-2019, including the standard deduction introduced in Budget 2018.
Module C: Formula & Methodology Behind the Calculator
Our tax calculator uses the exact methodology prescribed by the Income Tax Department for FY 2018-2019. Here’s the detailed calculation process:
Step 1: Calculate Gross Total Income
Sum of all income sources:
- Income from Salary
- Income from House Property
- Income from Business/Profession
- Income from Capital Gains
- Income from Other Sources
Step 2: Apply Standard Deduction
For FY 2018-2019, a standard deduction of ₹40,000 was introduced for salaried individuals and pensioners, replacing the previous transport allowance (₹19,200) and medical reimbursement (₹15,000).
Step 3: Calculate Deductions Under Chapter VI-A
The calculator considers:
| Section | Deduction Type | Maximum Limit (₹) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 80C | Investments (PPF, EPF, LIC, etc.) | 1,50,000 | Includes tuition fees, principal repayment of home loan |
| 80D | Medical Insurance | 25,000 (self) 50,000 (senior citizen parents) |
Additional ₹5,000 for preventive health checkup |
| 80G | Donations | Varies (50%-100%) | Subject to qualifying institutions |
| 80E | Education Loan Interest | No limit | For higher education, max 8 years |
| 80TTA | Savings Account Interest | 10,000 | For individuals below 60 years |
Step 4: Calculate House Rent Allowance (HRA) Exemption
The HRA exemption is calculated as the minimum of:
- Actual HRA received
- 50% of salary (metro) or 40% (non-metro)
- Actual rent paid minus 10% of salary
Step 5: Determine Taxable Income
Formula: Taxable Income = (Gross Total Income - Standard Deduction - Chapter VI-A Deductions - HRA Exemption)
Step 6: Apply Tax Slabs for FY 2018-2019
| Age Group | Income Range (₹) | Tax Rate | Surcharge |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 60 years | Up to 2,50,000 | 0% | – |
| 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% (Above ₹1Cr) |
|
| 60-80 years | Up to 3,00,000 | 0% | – |
| 3,00,001 to 5,00,000 | 5% | – | |
| 5,00,001 to 10,00,000 | 20% | – | |
| Above 10,00,000 | 30% | 10% (₹50L-₹1Cr) 15% (Above ₹1Cr) |
Step 7: Add Education Cess
For FY 2018-2019, education cess remained at 3% of the total income tax (including surcharge if applicable). Note that this was increased to 4% in the following financial year.
Step 8: Calculate Rebate under Section 87A
Taxpayers with net income up to ₹3,50,000 could claim a rebate of up to ₹2,500 (100% of tax or ₹2,500, whichever is lower).
The calculator performs all these computations instantly and displays both the numerical results and a visual breakdown. For official tax rules, refer to the Income Tax India website.
Module D: Real-World Examples with Specific Numbers
Case Study 1: Young Professional (Age 28) in Mumbai
- Annual Income: ₹8,50,000
- Standard Deduction: ₹40,000
- 80C Investments: ₹1,50,000 (PPF + LIC + ELSS)
- 80D: ₹25,000 (Medical insurance)
- HRA: ₹2,40,000 (₹20,000/month)
- Rent Paid: ₹3,00,000 (₹25,000/month)
Calculation Breakdown:
- Gross Income: ₹8,50,000
- Less Standard Deduction: ₹40,000 → ₹8,10,000
- Less 80C: ₹1,50,000 → ₹6,60,000
- Less 80D: ₹25,000 → ₹6,35,000
- HRA Exemption: min(2,40,000; 50% of 8,50,000=4,25,000; 3,00,000-85,000=2,15,000) → ₹2,15,000
- Taxable Income: ₹6,35,000 – ₹2,15,000 = ₹4,20,000
- Tax Calculation:
- First ₹2,50,000: Nil
- Next ₹1,70,000 (4,20,000-2,50,000) at 5%: ₹8,500
- Education Cess (3%): ₹255
- Total Tax: ₹8,755
- Effective Tax Rate: 1.03%
Key Insight: The HRA exemption significantly reduces taxable income for Mumbai residents. The standard deduction provides additional savings compared to previous years.
Case Study 2: Senior Citizen (Age 65) with Pension and Investments
- Annual Income: ₹6,20,000 (Pension: ₹4,80,000 + Interest: ₹1,40,000)
- Standard Deduction: ₹40,000
- 80C Investments: ₹1,00,000 (SCSS + Senior Citizen Savings)
- 80D: ₹50,000 (Medical insurance for self and spouse)
- 80TTB: ₹50,000 (Interest income deduction)
Calculation Breakdown:
- Gross Income: ₹6,20,000
- Less Standard Deduction: ₹40,000 → ₹5,80,000
- Less 80C: ₹1,00,000 → ₹4,80,000
- Less 80D: ₹50,000 → ₹4,30,000
- Less 80TTB: ₹50,000 → ₹3,80,000
- Taxable Income: ₹3,80,000
- Tax Calculation (60-80 age group):
- First ₹3,00,000: Nil
- Next ₹80,000 at 5%: ₹4,000
- Education Cess (3%): ₹120
- Total Tax: ₹4,120
- Effective Tax Rate: 0.66%
Key Insight: Senior citizens benefit from higher exemption limits and additional deductions like 80TTB, resulting in minimal tax liability even at relatively higher income levels.
Case Study 3: High-Income Earner (Age 42) with Multiple Income Sources
- Annual Income: ₹22,00,000 (Salary: ₹18,00,000 + Capital Gains: ₹4,00,000)
- Standard Deduction: ₹40,000
- 80C Investments: ₹1,50,000
- 80D: ₹75,000 (Self + Parents + Preventive checkup)
- HRA: ₹3,60,000 (₹30,000/month)
- Rent Paid: ₹4,20,000 (₹35,000/month in Delhi)
- Home Loan Interest: ₹2,00,000
Calculation Breakdown:
- Gross Income: ₹22,00,000
- Less Standard Deduction: ₹40,000 → ₹21,60,000
- Less 80C: ₹1,50,000 → ₹20,10,000
- Less 80D: ₹75,000 → ₹19,35,000
- HRA Exemption: min(3,60,000; 50% of 18,00,000=9,00,000; 4,20,000-1,80,000=2,40,000) → ₹2,40,000
- Less Home Loan Interest (24b): ₹2,00,000 → ₹16,95,000
- Taxable Income: ₹16,95,000
- Tax Calculation:
- First ₹2,50,000: Nil
- Next ₹2,50,000: ₹12,500 (5%)
- Next ₹5,00,000: ₹1,00,000 (20%)
- Remaining ₹6,95,000: ₹2,08,500 (30%)
- Subtotal: ₹3,21,000
- Surcharge (10%): ₹32,100
- Education Cess (3%): ₹10,593
- Total Tax: ₹3,63,693
- Effective Tax Rate: 16.53%
Key Insight: High-income earners benefit significantly from proper tax planning. The combination of HRA exemption, home loan benefits, and Section 80 deductions reduces the effective tax rate from the nominal 30% slab rate.
Module E: Data & Statistics for FY 2018-2019
Comparison of Tax Slabs: FY 2017-2018 vs FY 2018-2019
| Parameter | FY 2017-2018 | FY 2018-2019 | Change |
|---|---|---|---|
| Standard Deduction | Not available | ₹40,000 | New introduction |
| Transport Allowance | ₹19,200 | Discontinued | Replaced by standard deduction |
| Medical Reimbursement | ₹15,000 | Discontinued | Replaced by standard deduction |
| Basic Exemption (Below 60) | ₹2,50,000 | ₹2,50,000 | No change |
| Basic Exemption (60-80) | ₹3,00,000 | ₹3,00,000 | No change |
| Basic Exemption (Above 80) | ₹5,00,000 | ₹5,00,000 | No change |
| Education Cess | 3% | 3% | No change (increased to 4% in FY 2019-2020) |
| 80C Limit | ₹1,50,000 | ₹1,50,000 | No change |
| 80D Limit (Self) | ₹25,000 | ₹25,000 | No change |
| 80D Limit (Senior Citizen Parents) | ₹30,000 | ₹50,000 | Increased by ₹20,000 |
Tax Collection Statistics for FY 2018-2019
| Category | FY 2017-2018 | FY 2018-2019 | Growth (%) | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Total Direct Tax Collection | ₹10.02 lakh crore | ₹12.00 lakh crore | 19.8% | Source: CBDT Annual Report |
| Personal Income Tax | ₹3.87 lakh crore | ₹4.62 lakh crore | 19.4% | Includes securities transaction tax |
| Corporate Tax | ₹5.60 lakh crore | ₹6.73 lakh crore | 20.2% | Higher compliance post-demonetization |
| Number of Returns Filed | 6.86 crore | 7.41 crore | 8.0% | Includes e-filed and paper returns |
| Taxpayers (Below 60) | 5.12 crore | 5.58 crore | 9.0% | Largest taxpayer segment |
| Taxpayers (60-80) | 1.24 crore | 1.35 crore | 8.9% | Growing senior citizen base |
| Taxpayers (Above 80) | 0.28 crore | 0.31 crore | 10.7% | Fastest growing segment |
| Average Tax Paid (Salaried) | ₹52,300 | ₹58,700 | 12.2% | Despite standard deduction introduction |
Data sources: Central Board of Direct Taxes, PRS Legislative Research
The introduction of standard deduction in FY 2018-2019 was intended to simplify tax filing, though its net benefit was partially offset by the removal of transport allowance and medical reimbursement. Analysis shows that:
- Taxpayers with income below ₹5 lakh saw marginal benefits
- Middle-income earners (₹5-10 lakh) had mixed outcomes depending on their specific deductions
- High-income earners benefited from simplified documentation
- Senior citizens gained from increased 80D limits for parent’s medical insurance
Module F: Expert Tips for Optimizing FY 2018-2019 Taxes
10 Proven Strategies to Reduce Your Tax Liability
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Maximize Section 80C Investments
- Prioritize ELSS funds (3-year lock-in) for potentially higher returns
- Consider NPS (additional ₹50,000 under 80CCD(1B))
- Include children’s tuition fees in your 80C calculations
- Home loan principal repayment qualifies under 80C
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Leverage HRA Exemption Fully
- Ensure rent agreement is in place for amounts above ₹1 lakh/year
- If living with parents, pay them rent and document it
- Metro cities (Delhi, Mumbai, Chennai, Kolkata) get 50% exemption
- Non-metros get 40% exemption – consider this in job location decisions
-
Optimize Medical Insurance (Section 80D)
- Cover parents (especially if senior citizens) for higher deduction
- Include preventive health checkup (₹5,000 within the limit)
- Consider top-up plans for additional coverage without extra tax benefit
- Pay premiums annually to avoid missing the deduction
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Utilize Home Loan Benefits
- Interest up to ₹2 lakh is deductible (Section 24)
- Principal repayment qualifies under 80C
- First-time homebuyers get additional ₹50,000 under 80EE
- Joint loans can double the benefits for couples
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Plan Capital Gains Strategically
- Long-term capital gains on equity over ₹1 lakh taxed at 10%
- Use the ₹1 lakh exemption limit wisely
- Consider tax-loss harvesting to offset gains
- Invest in capital gains bonds (54EC) to defer taxes
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Explore Lesser-Known Deductions
- Section 80G: Donations to approved charities (50-100% deduction)
- Section 80E: Education loan interest (no upper limit)
- Section 80GG: Rent deduction if no HRA (up to ₹60,000)
- Section 80TTA: Savings account interest (₹10,000)
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Time Your Income and Expenses
- Defer income to next FY if you’ll be in a lower tax bracket
- Prepay expenses (insurance, investments) before March 31
- Consider bonus timing if it pushes you into a higher bracket
- Plan capital gains realization across financial years
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Consider Tax-Free Allowances
- Leave Travel Allowance (LTA) – claim every 4 years
- Food coupons (up to ₹50 per meal tax-free)
- Gift vouchers (up to ₹5,000 per year tax-free)
- Relocation allowances for job transfers
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Maintain Proper Documentation
- Keep rent receipts and rental agreement for HRA
- Maintain investment proofs for 80C claims
- Get proper certificates for 80G donations
- Document medical expenses for 80D claims
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Consult a Tax Professional
- For complex situations (multiple income sources, foreign income)
- If you’re in the highest tax bracket (30%)
- When dealing with capital gains or business income
- For tax planning across multiple financial years
Common Mistakes to Avoid
- Ignoring Form 26AS: Always verify TDS credits match your records
- Missing Deadlines: Late filing reduces your interest income deduction under 80TTA
- Incorrect HRA Claims: Rent should be actually paid – fictitious claims can trigger notices
- Not Reporting All Income: Even small interest income must be reported
- Overlooking State Taxes: Professional tax varies by state and is deductible
- Improper Documentation: Without proofs, deductions can be disallowed
- Not E-Filing: Physical returns have higher error rates and processing delays
Module G: Interactive FAQ about FY 2018-2019 Taxes
What was the standard deduction introduced in FY 2018-2019 and how did it work?
The standard deduction of ₹40,000 was introduced in Budget 2018 to simplify tax calculations for salaried individuals and pensioners. It replaced the previous transport allowance (₹19,200 per year) and medical reimbursement (₹15,000 per year).
Key features:
- Flat deduction of ₹40,000 regardless of actual expenses
- Available to all salaried taxpayers and pensioners
- No need to submit bills or proofs
- Reduced paperwork and simplified tax filing
Comparison with previous system:
| Component | Before FY 2018-2019 | FY 2018-2019 |
|---|---|---|
| Transport Allowance | ₹1,600/month (₹19,200/year) | Included in standard deduction |
| Medical Reimbursement | ₹15,000/year (with bills) | Included in standard deduction |
| Total Benefit | ₹34,200 (with proofs) | ₹40,000 (no proofs needed) |
For most taxpayers, this resulted in a net benefit of ₹5,800 (₹40,000 – ₹34,200) without the hassle of maintaining receipts. However, those with higher actual medical expenses might have been worse off.
How did the tax slabs differ for senior citizens in FY 2018-2019?
FY 2018-2019 maintained the existing higher basic exemption limits for senior citizens, which were significantly more beneficial than for younger taxpayers:
| Age Group | Basic Exemption Limit | Tax on Income up to ₹5 lakh | Example Tax Savings vs Below 60 |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below 60 years | ₹2,50,000 | 5% on ₹2,50,001-₹5,00,000 | Base case |
| 60-80 years | ₹3,00,000 | 5% on ₹3,00,001-₹5,00,000 | Saves ₹2,500 (5% of ₹50,000) |
| Above 80 years | ₹5,00,000 | Nil up to ₹5,00,000 | Saves ₹12,500 (5% of ₹2,50,000) |
Additional benefits for senior citizens in FY 2018-2019:
- Higher deduction limit for medical insurance (₹50,000 for senior citizen parents)
- No advance tax requirement if no business income
- Higher interest income exemption (₹50,000 under 80TTB)
- Reduced TDS rates on interest income
For example, a 70-year-old pensioner with ₹6 lakh annual income would pay:
- Taxable income: ₹6,00,000 – ₹3,00,000 (exemption) – ₹40,000 (standard) – ₹1,50,000 (80C) = ₹1,10,000
- Tax: 5% of ₹1,10,000 = ₹5,500
- Cess: 3% of ₹5,500 = ₹165
- Total tax: ₹5,665 (effective rate: 0.94%)
What were the key changes in Section 80D for medical insurance in FY 2018-2019?
FY 2018-2019 saw significant enhancements to Section 80D deductions for medical insurance, particularly benefiting senior citizens:
Revised Deduction Limits:
| Category | FY 2017-2018 | FY 2018-2019 | Increase |
|---|---|---|---|
| Self, spouse and children | ₹25,000 | ₹25,000 | No change |
| Senior citizen parents | ₹30,000 | ₹50,000 | ₹20,000 |
| Very senior citizens (above 80) | ₹30,000 | ₹50,000 | ₹20,000 |
| Preventive health checkup | Included in above limits | ₹5,000 (within overall limit) | New |
| Maximum possible deduction | ₹55,000 | ₹1,00,000 | ₹45,000 |
Important Notes:
- Payments must be made by any mode other than cash (for amounts over ₹10,000)
- Policy can be in name of self, spouse, children or parents
- Preventive health checkup limited to ₹5,000 (part of the overall limit)
- For senior citizens, the higher limit applies even if only one parent is a senior citizen
- Medical expenses for very senior citizens (above 80) without insurance qualify for ₹50,000 deduction
Example Calculation:
A 45-year-old taxpayer with:
- ₹20,000 insurance for self and spouse
- ₹40,000 insurance for senior citizen parents
- ₹5,000 preventive health checkup
Total deduction: ₹20,000 + ₹40,000 + ₹5,000 = ₹65,000 (but limited to ₹75,000 overall limit)
How was long-term capital gains tax treated differently in FY 2018-2019?
FY 2018-2019 marked a significant change in the taxation of long-term capital gains (LTCG) from equity investments, ending the previous tax-exempt status:
Key Changes:
- Tax Rate: 10% on LTCG exceeding ₹1 lakh
- Grandfathering: Gains up to January 31, 2018 were exempt
- Definition: LTCG period remained 12 months for listed equity
- STT Paid: Only transactions with STT qualified for the ₹1 lakh exemption
Calculation Method:
For shares acquired before February 1, 2018:
- Take higher of:
- Actual cost price
- Fair market value as on January 31, 2018
- Calculate gain from this adjusted cost
- Exempt first ₹1 lakh of gains
- Tax remaining at 10% + cess
Example:
1,000 shares bought at ₹100 in 2016 (total cost ₹1,00,000)
FMV on Jan 31, 2018: ₹150 per share (₹1,50,000 total)
Sold in March 2019 at ₹200 per share (₹2,00,000 total)
Calculation:
- Adjusted cost: ₹1,50,000 (higher of actual ₹1,00,000 and FMV ₹1,50,000)
- Gain: ₹2,00,000 – ₹1,50,000 = ₹50,000
- Taxable gain: Nil (below ₹1 lakh exemption)
Important Points:
- The ₹1 lakh exemption is per financial year, not per transaction
- STT-paid equity mutual funds also qualify for this treatment
- Non-equity assets (debt funds, property) continued with 20% LTCG tax with indexation
- Short-term capital gains (holding <12 months) remained taxed at 15%
This change significantly impacted high-net-worth individuals with large equity portfolios, though the grandfathering clause provided some relief for long-held investments.
What were the common reasons for receiving income tax notices for FY 2018-2019?
The Income Tax Department significantly increased its scrutiny during FY 2018-2019 using data analytics. Common triggers for notices included:
Top 10 Notice Triggers:
-
Mismatch in Form 26AS:
- TDS claimed not matching employer/bank records
- Interest income not reported
- Dividend income discrepancies
-
High Value Transactions:
- Cash deposits > ₹10 lakh in savings account
- Credit card payments > ₹10 lakh
- Property purchases > ₹30 lakh
-
Excessive Deductions:
- 80C claims without supporting documents
- HRA claims without rent receipts
- Medical insurance claims without premium proofs
-
Capital Gains Mismatches:
- Stock sales not matching broker statements
- Property sales without proper valuation
- Incorrect cost inflation index application
-
Foreign Income Issues:
- Undisclosed foreign assets
- Foreign income not reported
- Non-resident status misrepresentation
-
Business Income Discrepancies:
- GST turnover not matching income tax returns
- High cash transactions in business
- Low profit margins compared to industry standards
-
Late Filing:
- Returns filed after due date (July 31, 2019)
- Belated returns without proper explanation
-
Incorrect ITR Form:
- Using ITR-1 when having capital gains
- Business income reported in wrong form
-
Bank Account Mismatches:
- Multiple accounts not disclosed
- High cash deposits without explanation
-
Random Scrutiny:
- Computer-assisted selection
- High-income taxpayers more likely to be selected
How to Respond to Notices:
- Don’t ignore – respond within the stipulated time (usually 15-30 days)
- Gather all supporting documents before replying
- Consult a tax professional for complex notices
- Use the e-filing portal for responses when possible
- Maintain polite and professional communication
- If you agree with the notice, pay the demanded amount promptly to avoid interest
Preventive Measures:
- Reconcile Form 26AS with your records before filing
- Maintain proper documentation for all deductions
- Report all income sources, no matter how small
- File returns on time (even if no tax is due)
- Use the correct ITR form for your income sources
- Disclose foreign assets and income properly
Could I still file or revise my FY 2018-2019 return in 2023?
As of 2023, filing or revising your FY 2018-2019 (AY 2019-2020) income tax return has specific limitations under the Income Tax Act:
Current Status (2023):
- Original Return: The due date was July 31, 2019 (extended to August 31, 2019 for some taxpayers)
- Belated Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2020 (end of the assessment year)
- Revised Return: Could be filed until March 31, 2021 (one year from end of assessment year)
- Current Possibility: No normal provision to file or revise now
Possible Exceptions:
-
Condonation of Delay:
- Can apply to CBDT for condoning the delay
- Requires valid reasons (serious illness, natural calamities, etc.)
- Discretionary approval – not guaranteed
- May require professional assistance
-
Tax Demand Notice:
- If you received a notice for non-filing
- You can file a return in response to the notice
- May involve penalties and interest
-
Refund Claims:
- Time-barred – cannot claim refunds now
- Refunds for AY 2019-2020 had to be claimed by March 31, 2020
Consequences of Not Filing:
- Cannot carry forward losses (except house property losses)
- May face penalties if tax was due (₹5,000 under Section 271F)
- Interest at 1% per month on unpaid tax
- Difficulty in getting loans, visas, or government tenders
- Potential scrutiny in future years
What You Can Do Now:
- Check if you have any pending tax demands on the e-filing portal
- If you owe tax, consider paying it as “Tax on Self-Assessment” to reduce interest
- Maintain all records in case of future scrutiny
- Ensure you file all subsequent years’ returns on time
- Consult a tax professional to explore condonation options if you have valid reasons
Important Note: While you cannot normally file the return now, it’s crucial to ensure all taxes for FY 2018-2019 were paid (through TDS, advance tax, or self-assessment tax). The Income Tax Department can still assess and demand payment for up to 6 years (or longer in case of undisclosed foreign assets).