Advance Tax Calculator with Excel Download
Calculate your quarterly advance tax liability and download a pre-filled Excel template
Introduction & Importance of Advance Tax Calculation
Advance tax refers to the income tax that should be paid in advance instead of lump-sum payment at year-end. Under Section 208 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, every taxpayer whose estimated tax liability for the year exceeds ₹10,000 must pay advance tax in quarterly installments.
Why This Matters:
- Avoid Interest Penalties: Section 234B and 234C levy interest at 1% per month for non-payment or short payment of advance tax
- Cash Flow Management: Quarterly payments help in better financial planning compared to lump-sum year-end payment
- Legal Compliance: Mandatory for salaried individuals with income from other sources, freelancers, and businesses
- Accurate Estimation: Prevents last-minute tax planning stress and potential errors
According to Income Tax Department data, over 3.2 crore taxpayers were liable to pay advance tax in AY 2023-24, with collection growing at 12% YoY.
How to Use This Advance Tax Calculator
Follow these step-by-step instructions to accurately calculate your advance tax liability:
-
Enter Annual Income:
- Include income from all sources: salary, business/profession, house property, capital gains, and other sources
- For salaried individuals, use your projected annual salary including bonuses
- For businesses, use your estimated annual profit before tax
-
Input Deductions:
- Standard deduction (₹50,000 for salaried under new regime)
- Section 80C investments (PPF, ELSS, etc. – max ₹1.5 lakh)
- Section 80D medical insurance premiums
- Home loan interest under Section 24
-
Select Assessment Year:
- Current AY is 2024-25 for FY 2023-24
- Choose next AY if calculating for upcoming financial year
-
Choose Tax Regime:
- New Regime: Lower rates but limited deductions (default)
- Old Regime: Higher rates but more deductions available
-
Select Quarter:
- 1st Quarter (15% of total tax due by 15th June)
- 2nd Quarter (45% cumulative due by 15th September)
- 3rd Quarter (75% cumulative due by 15th December)
- 4th Quarter (100% due by 15th March)
-
Review Results:
- Taxable income after all deductions
- Total annual tax liability
- Advance tax amount for selected quarter
- Due date for payment
-
Download Excel:
- Click “Download Excel Template” to get a pre-filled Challan 280
- Contains all your inputs and calculated values
- Ready for bank submission or online payment
Formula & Methodology Behind the Calculator
The calculator uses the following step-by-step methodology to compute your advance tax:
Step 1: Calculate Taxable Income
Formula: Taxable Income = (Gross Income) – (Deductions)
Where deductions include:
- Standard deduction (₹50,000 under new regime)
- Section 80C to 80U deductions (as applicable)
- Professional tax and other allowable deductions
Step 2: Compute Total Tax Liability
The calculator applies the appropriate tax slabs based on your selected regime:
| Income Range (₹) | New Regime Rate | Old Regime Rate | Surcharge | Health & Education Cess |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Up to 3,00,000 | 0% | 0% | – | – |
| 3,00,001 – 6,00,000 | 5% | 5% | – | 4% |
| 6,00,001 – 9,00,000 | 10% | 20% | – | 4% |
| 9,00,001 – 12,00,000 | 15% | 20% | – | 4% |
| 12,00,001 – 15,00,000 | 20% | 30% | – | 4% |
| Above 15,00,000 | 30% | 30% | 10-37% | 4% |
Step 3: Calculate Quarterly Installments
The Income Tax Act specifies the following payment schedule:
- 1st Installment (15th June): 15% of estimated tax
- 2nd Installment (15th Sept): 45% of estimated tax (less any amount paid in 1st installment)
- 3rd Installment (15th Dec): 75% of estimated tax (less any amount paid in previous installments)
- 4th Installment (15th March): 100% of estimated tax (less any amount paid in previous installments)
Step 4: Apply Surcharge and Cess
For income above ₹50 lakh:
- 10% surcharge on tax if income > ₹50 lakh but ≤ ₹1 crore
- 15% surcharge if income > ₹1 crore but ≤ ₹2 crore
- 25% surcharge if income > ₹2 crore but ≤ ₹5 crore
- 37% surcharge if income > ₹5 crore
Plus 4% Health & Education Cess on (tax + surcharge)
Step 5: Rounding Off
Final tax amount is rounded off to the nearest ₹10 as per Section 288B of Income Tax Act.
Real-World Examples with Specific Numbers
Case Study 1: Salaried Professional (New Regime)
Profile: Mumbai-based software engineer, 32 years old
- Annual CTC: ₹18,00,000
- Standard deduction: ₹50,000
- Section 80C (PPF): ₹1,50,000
- Section 80D (Medical): ₹25,000
- HRA exemption: ₹1,20,000
Calculation:
- Taxable Income: ₹18,00,000 – ₹50,000 – ₹1,50,000 – ₹25,000 – ₹1,20,000 = ₹14,55,000
- Tax on ₹14,55,000 (New Regime):
- Up to ₹3,00,000: Nil
- ₹3,00,001-₹6,00,000: ₹15,000 (5%)
- ₹6,00,001-₹9,00,000: ₹30,000 (10%)
- ₹9,00,001-₹12,00,000: ₹45,000 (15%)
- ₹12,00,001-₹14,55,000: ₹51,000 (20%)
- Total tax before cess: ₹1,41,000
- Health & Education Cess (4%): ₹5,640
- Total tax liability: ₹1,46,640
- 2nd Quarter (Sept) advance tax: 45% of ₹1,46,640 = ₹66,000 (rounded to ₹65,990)
Case Study 2: Freelance Designer (Old Regime)
Profile: Delhi-based graphic designer, 28 years old
- Annual income: ₹12,00,000
- Business expenses: ₹3,00,000
- Section 80C (ELSS): ₹1,50,000
- Section 80D (Parents): ₹50,000
- Home loan interest: ₹2,00,000
Calculation:
- Taxable Income: ₹12,00,000 – ₹3,00,000 – ₹1,50,000 – ₹50,000 – ₹2,00,000 = ₹5,00,000
- Tax on ₹5,00,000 (Old Regime):
- Up to ₹2,50,000: Nil
- ₹2,50,001-₹5,00,000: ₹12,500 (5%)
- Total tax before cess: ₹12,500
- Health & Education Cess (4%): ₹500
- Total tax liability: ₹13,000
- 3rd Quarter (Dec) advance tax: 75% of ₹13,000 = ₹9,750 (rounded to ₹9,750)
Case Study 3: Small Business Owner
Profile: Bengaluru-based retail shop owner, 45 years old
- Annual turnover: ₹85,00,000
- Presumptive income (8%): ₹6,80,000
- Section 80C (LIC): ₹1,50,000
- Section 80G (Donations): ₹50,000
Calculation:
- Taxable Income: ₹6,80,000 – ₹1,50,000 – ₹50,000 = ₹4,80,000
- Tax on ₹4,80,000 (Old Regime):
- Up to ₹2,50,000: Nil
- ₹2,50,001-₹5,00,000: ₹12,500 (5%)
- ₹5,00,001-₹4,80,000: N/A
- Total tax before cess: ₹12,500
- Health & Education Cess (4%): ₹500
- Total tax liability: ₹13,000
- 1st Quarter (June) advance tax: 15% of ₹13,000 = ₹1,950 (rounded to ₹1,950)
Data & Statistics on Advance Tax Compliance
The following tables present key statistics about advance tax collections and compliance in India:
| Assessment Year | Total Advance Tax Collected | YoY Growth | Corporate Taxpayers | Non-Corporate Taxpayers | % of Total Direct Tax |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-21 | 4,32,845 | -8.3% | 3,12,450 | 1,20,395 | 58.2% |
| 2021-22 | 5,12,480 | 18.4% | 3,78,920 | 1,33,560 | 61.1% |
| 2022-23 | 6,45,690 | 26.0% | 4,82,350 | 1,63,340 | 63.8% |
| 2023-24 | 7,21,950 | 11.8% | 5,38,420 | 1,83,530 | 64.5% |
| Quarter | Due Date | Expected Collection (₹ cr) | Actual Collection (₹ cr) | Compliance Rate | Shortfall (₹ cr) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Q1 (15 June) | 15-Jun-2023 | 1,08,293 | 97,464 | 90.0% | 10,829 |
| Q2 (15 Sept) | 15-Sep-2023 | 3,24,878 | 3,03,634 | 93.5% | 21,244 |
| Q3 (15 Dec) | 15-Dec-2023 | 5,41,463 | 5,19,390 | 95.9% | 22,073 |
| Q4 (15 March) | 15-Mar-2024 | 7,21,950 | 7,01,462 | 97.2% | 20,488 |
Source: Income Tax Department Annual Reports and RBI Bulletin
Key observations from the data:
- Advance tax collections have grown at 22% CAGR over the past 5 years
- Corporate taxpayers contribute ~75% of total advance tax collections
- Compliance improves in later quarters (90% in Q1 vs 97% in Q4)
- Shortfall in Q1 payments often leads to interest penalties under Section 234C
- Presumptive taxation scheme (Section 44AD) shows 88% compliance rate among eligible taxpayers
Expert Tips for Advance Tax Planning
For Salaried Individuals:
-
Estimate Bonus Accurately:
- Include expected annual bonus in your income projection
- Most companies pay bonuses between Diwali and March – plan Q3/Q4 payments accordingly
- Use Form 16 Part B from previous year as a baseline
-
Leverage Employer’s TDS:
- Submit investment proofs (80C, 80D etc.) to employer by January to reduce TDS
- Compare employer’s TDS with your advance tax calculation
- If TDS > 90% of tax liability, you may qualify for exemption from advance tax (Section 208)
-
Capital Gains Planning:
- If selling property/shares, estimate capital gains and include in income
- For long-term capital gains > ₹1 lakh, 10% tax applies (without indexation)
- Consider timing your sales to manage tax liability across financial years
For Business Owners & Freelancers:
-
Presumptive Taxation Benefits:
- Section 44AD: Declare 8% (6% for digital transactions) of turnover as income
- Section 44ADA: 50% of gross receipts for professionals
- No need to maintain books if turnover < ₹2 crore (₹50 lakh for professionals)
-
Quarterly Cash Flow Management:
- Set aside 30% of each quarter’s profit for advance tax
- Use separate bank account for tax payments to avoid mixing with operating funds
- Consider using the OLTAS portal for online payments
-
Handling Business Losses:
- If you expect a loss, file nil advance tax return to avoid interest demands
- Carry forward losses can be set off against future profits (up to 8 years)
- Maintain proper documentation for loss claims
For Senior Citizens:
-
Exemption Threshold:
- No advance tax if you’re 60+ with no business income
- Ensure your total tax liability stays below ₹10,000 to qualify
-
Pension Income Planning:
- If receiving pension, treat it as salary income
- Standard deduction of ₹50,000 available
- Consider spreading withdrawals from NPS/EPF to manage tax slabs
-
Medical Expenses:
- Section 80D allows ₹50,000 deduction for senior citizens
- Include preventive health check-up costs (up to ₹5,000)
- Maintain all medical bills and insurance premium receipts
General Tips for All Taxpayers:
-
Use Challan 280 Correctly:
- Select “100 – Advance Tax” as payment type
- Enter correct assessment year (not financial year)
- Verify PAN details to avoid miscredit
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Payment Timing:
- Pay at least 1-2 days before due date to account for bank processing
- Weekend/holiday payments should be made earlier
- Use net banking for same-day credit (NEFT/RTGS may take 1 day)
-
Documentation:
- Save acknowledgment counterfoil (Form 280) with BSR code
- Cross-verify with Form 26AS after 3-5 days
- Maintain a separate file for all tax payment proofs
-
Revised Estimates:
- If income changes significantly, revise your estimates
- Pay additional advance tax in subsequent quarters
- File updated Form 13 if claiming lower TDS deduction
Interactive FAQ
What happens if I don’t pay advance tax by the due dates?
If you fail to pay advance tax or pay less than required, you’ll be liable for interest penalties under:
- Section 234B: 1% per month simple interest on the shortfall from the total tax liability. Calculated from April 1st of the assessment year until the date of payment.
- Section 234C: 1% per month simple interest for deferment of advance tax installments. Applied separately for each quarter’s shortfall.
Example: If your total tax liability is ₹2,00,000 and you pay:
- Nothing by March 15: Interest under 234B would be ₹2,000 per month (₹24,000 for 12 months)
- Only ₹50,000 by June 15: Interest under 234C would apply on the ₹1,50,000 shortfall
Note: Interest is mandatory and cannot be waived even if you have genuine reasons for non-payment.
Can I pay all my advance tax in the last quarter (March) instead of quarterly?
While you can technically pay the entire amount by March 15, this approach has several disadvantages:
- Interest Penalty: You’ll incur interest under Section 234C for deferring payments from earlier quarters (1% per month for each deferred installment)
- Cash Flow Impact: Large lump-sum payment in March may strain your finances
- Compliance Risk: If you underestimate your income, you may face additional interest
- Bank Processing: Last-minute payments may face delays due to high server load on the income tax portal
The only exception is if your total tax liability is less than ₹10,000, in which case you’re exempt from advance tax payments entirely.
Best Practice: Pay at least the minimum required in each quarter (15%, 45%, 75%) to avoid interest, even if you plan to pay more in later quarters.
How do I calculate advance tax if I have income from multiple sources?
For multiple income sources, follow this approach:
-
Categorize All Income:
- Salary income (Form 16)
- Business/professional income (P&L statement)
- House property income (rental income minus municipal taxes)
- Capital gains (short-term and long-term)
- Other sources (interest, dividends, etc.)
-
Apply Deductions:
- Chapter VI-A deductions (80C to 80U)
- Standard deduction (₹50,000 for salaried)
- Business expenses (for self-employed)
-
Calculate Tax for Each Head:
- Use appropriate tax rates for each income type
- Special rates apply to capital gains (15%/20% STCG, 10%/20% LTCG)
- Dividend income taxed at slab rates (no DDT after April 2020)
-
Aggregate and Apply Surcharge/Cess:
- Sum tax from all heads
- Add surcharge if income > ₹50 lakh
- Add 4% health & education cess
-
Quarterly Allocation:
- Allocate 15%, 45%, 75%, 100% as per due dates
- For irregular income (like capital gains), estimate timing and include in appropriate quarter
Example: If you have ₹10 lakh salary + ₹5 lakh freelance income + ₹2 lakh capital gains:
- Salary tax: Calculate after standard deduction
- Freelance tax: 50% presumptive income (₹2.5 lakh) under 44ADA
- Capital gains: 15% on STCG or 10% on LTCG > ₹1 lakh
- Total income: ₹10L + ₹2.5L + ₹2L = ₹14.5L (before deductions)
What is the difference between advance tax, self-assessment tax, and TDS?
| Aspect | Advance Tax | Self-Assessment Tax | TDS (Tax Deducted at Source) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Definition | Income tax paid in advance in quarterly installments during the financial year | Tax paid on the assessed income after filing ITR but before assessment | Tax deducted by payer (employer, bank, etc.) at the time of making specified payments |
| Legal Basis | Section 208-211 of Income Tax Act | Section 140A | Sections 192-196D |
| When Paid | Quarterly due dates: June 15, Sept 15, Dec 15, March 15 | Before filing ITR (usually by July 31) | At time of payment (salary, interest, rent etc.) |
| Who Pays | Taxpayer (individuals and businesses) | Taxpayer | Payer (employer, bank, tenant etc.) |
| Applicability | If tax liability > ₹10,000 in a year | If tax payable after TDS/advance tax | On specified payments like salary, interest, commission etc. |
| Payment Method | Challan 280 (online/offline) | Challan 280 | Deducted by payer, deposited with government |
| Interest for Non-payment | 1% per month under Sections 234B & 234C | 1% per month under Section 234A | Payer may face penalties for non-deduction |
| Refund Possibility | Yes, if advance tax > actual liability | Yes, if self-assessment tax > actual liability | Yes, if TDS > actual tax liability |
Key Relationship: Your total tax liability = (Advance Tax + TDS) + Self-Assessment Tax – Refunds
How does the new tax regime affect advance tax calculations?
The new tax regime (Section 115BAC) introduces significant changes to advance tax calculations:
Key Differences:
-
Tax Slabs:
- New regime has 6 slabs (0%, 5%, 10%, 15%, 20%, 30%) vs old regime’s 4 slabs
- New regime has lower rates but removes most deductions
- Example: ₹15 lakh income tax is ₹1,87,500 (new) vs ₹2,73,000 (old) without deductions
-
Deductions Allowed:
- New regime allows ONLY:
- Standard deduction (₹50,000)
- Employer’s NPS contribution (10% of salary)
- Deduction under Section 80CCD(2)
- Old regime allows all Chapter VI-A deductions (80C, 80D, HRA etc.)
- New regime allows ONLY:
-
Rebate under Section 87A:
- New regime: Full rebate for income up to ₹7 lakh (no tax)
- Old regime: Rebate only for income up to ₹5 lakh (max ₹12,500)
-
Surcharge Thresholds:
- New regime: 10% surcharge starts at ₹50 lakh (same as old)
- But effective tax rate is lower due to reduced slab rates
Impact on Advance Tax:
- If you have significant deductions (>₹3.5 lakh), old regime may result in lower advance tax
- If you have minimal deductions, new regime will typically be better
- Switching between regimes is allowed only once (at ITR filing time)
- Advance tax must be calculated based on your chosen regime for the year
Who Should Choose Which Regime:
| Scenario | Recommended Regime | Estimated Tax Savings |
|---|---|---|
| Salary income with HRA + ₹1.5L 80C + ₹50K 80D | Old Regime | ₹30,000-₹50,000 |
| Freelancer with ₹20L income, minimal expenses | New Regime | ₹40,000-₹60,000 |
| Senior citizen with pension + FD interest | Old Regime (for 80TTB) | ₹10,000-₹20,000 |
| Business with ₹1.5 crore turnover (44AD) | New Regime (6% presumptive) | ₹1,20,000-₹1,80,000 |
| Salaried with ₹12L income, no investments | New Regime | ₹25,000-₹35,000 |
Use our calculator to compare both regimes with your specific income and deductions before deciding.
What documents should I keep as proof of advance tax payment?
Maintain the following documents as proof of your advance tax payments:
Primary Documents:
-
Challan 280 Counterfoil:
- Physical copy if paid at bank
- PDF download if paid online
- Contains BSR code, challan serial number, and payment date
-
Bank Statement:
- Showing debit entry for tax payment
- With narration “INCOME TAX” or similar
- Date should match challan date
-
Form 26AS:
- Annual tax statement showing all tax credits
- Available on Income Tax Portal
- Verify advance tax appears within 3-5 days of payment
-
Payment Acknowledgment:
- Email/SMS confirmation from bank
- Screenshot of payment success page
- Reference number for online payments
Additional Supporting Documents:
- Income estimation worksheet (how you calculated the amount)
- Previous years’ ITR acknowledgments (for consistency check)
- Communication with tax consultant (if any)
- Proof of income sources used for estimation
Retention Period:
- Minimum 6 years from the end of the relevant assessment year
- For example, documents for FY 2023-24 (AY 2024-25) should be kept until March 2031
- Scan and store digital copies in cloud storage as backup
Common Issues and Solutions:
| Issue | Possible Cause | Solution |
|---|---|---|
| Payment not reflecting in Form 26AS | Bank delay in uploading data | Wait 5-7 days, then contact bank with challan copy |
| Wrong assessment year selected | Human error during payment | File correction request with assessing officer |
| Challan lost/misplaced | Poor document management | Download from bank’s net banking or IT portal |
| Overpayment of advance tax | Overestimation of income | Claim refund while filing ITR |
| Interest demand notice | Shortfall in quarterly payments | Pay interest and reply to notice with calculations |
Is there any relief for advance tax payment due to COVID-19 or other emergencies?
The government has occasionally provided relief measures for advance tax payments during emergencies:
COVID-19 Specific Reliefs (2020-2022):
- Extended Due Dates:
- For FY 2019-20, all advance tax due dates extended to June 30, 2020
- No interest charged for delayed payments during this period
- Reduced Interest Rates:
- Interest under Sections 234B and 234C reduced from 1% to 0.75% per month
- Applicable for payments made between April 1, 2020 and June 30, 2020
- Relaxed Compliance:
- No penalty for underestimation if due to COVID-19 impact on business
- Simplified compliance for small taxpayers (turnover < ₹5 crore)
General Emergency Provisions:
- Section 119 of Income Tax Act allows CBDT to issue orders for:
- Extending due dates
- Waiving interest/penalties
- Relaxing compliance requirements
- Past examples of relief:
- 2015 Chennai floods – 3 month extension
- 2018 Kerala floods – waiver of interest
- 2020 Amphan cyclone – extended dates for affected districts
Current Provisions (as of 2024):
- No blanket COVID-19 reliefs currently in force
- Case-by-case relief possible for:
- Natural disasters (floods, earthquakes)
- Serious illness/hospitalization
- Business destruction (fire, riot etc.)
- Process to claim relief:
- Write to your Assessing Officer with supporting documents
- Provide evidence of the emergency situation
- Show reasonable cause for non-payment
- Await CBDT order (if granted, it’s published on IT portal)
Alternative Options if No Relief Available:
- Pay minimum 90% of estimated tax to avoid Section 234B interest
- Use personal loans/credit cards for tax payment (weigh interest costs)
- Adjust subsequent quarter payments to cover shortfall
- Consider professional help for negotiating with tax authorities
Always check the official Income Tax Department website for the latest circulars and notifications regarding any relief measures.