Advance Tax Calculator (FY 2024-25)
Calculate your quarterly advance tax liability accurately to avoid interest penalties under Section 234B and 234C of the Income Tax Act.
Important Due Dates (FY 2024-25)
- 15th June 2024: 15% of advance tax
- 15th September 2024: 45% of advance tax
- 15th December 2024: 75% of advance tax
- 15th March 2025: 100% of advance tax
Missed payments attract 1% interest per month under Section 234C.
Complete Guide: How to Calculate Advance Tax Online in India (2024)
Module A: Introduction & Importance of Advance Tax
Advance tax, governed under Section 208-211 of the Income Tax Act, 1961, is the income tax payable in advance instead of a lump sum at year-end. The Income Tax Department mandates this for taxpayers whose estimated tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 in a financial year.
Why It Matters:
- Avoid Interest Penalties: Non-payment attracts 1% monthly interest under Section 234B (for total liability) and Section 234C (for installment delays).
- Cash Flow Management: Spreads tax burden across 4 quarters (June, September, December, March).
- Legal Compliance: Mandatory for freelancers, business owners, and salaried individuals with non-salary income (e.g., rental, capital gains).
- Refund Acceleration: Ensures faster processing of IT returns if taxes are pre-paid.
Who Must Pay Advance Tax?
- Salaried individuals with non-salary income > ₹50,000 (e.g., rent, interest, freelancing).
- Business owners and professionals (doctors, lawyers, consultants).
- NRIs with Indian-sourced income (rent, capital gains).
- Companies (regardless of income level).
Exception: Senior citizens (age ≥ 60) with no business income are exempt.
Module B: How to Use This Advance Tax Calculator
Follow these steps to accurately calculate your quarterly advance tax liability:
-
Enter Estimated Annual Income:
- Include all sources: salary, business profit, rental income, capital gains, interest (FD/savings), and other income.
- For salaried individuals: Use your gross salary + Form 16 Part B details.
- For businesses: Use projected P&L for FY 2024-25.
-
Add Deductions (Chapter VI-A):
Section Deduction Type Max Limit (₹) 80C PPF, LIC, ELSS, Tuition Fees 1,50,000 80D Health Insurance 25,000 (self) + 50,000 (parents) 80G Donations No limit (50%-100% of donation) 24(b) Home Loan Interest 2,00,000 HRA House Rent Allowance Actual HRA received -
Select Tax Regime:
New Regime (Default): Lower rates but no deductions (except 80CCD(2) and 80JJAA).
Old Regime: Higher rates but full deductions allowed.
Pro Tip: Use our comparison tool to choose the optimal regime.
-
Enter TDS Deducted:
- Check Form 26AS (download from IT Portal).
- Include TDS from salary (Form 16), bank interest (Form 16A), rent (Form 16C), etc.
-
Review Results:
The calculator provides:
- Quarter-wise breakup (15%/45%/75%/100%).
- Surcharge (10%-37% for income > ₹50 lakh).
- Health & Education Cess (4%).
- Net payable after TDS adjustment.
Module C: Formula & Methodology
The calculator uses the following Income Tax Department-approved methodology:
Step 1: Calculate Taxable Income
Taxable Income = (Gross Income) – (Deductions under Chapter VI-A)
Gross Income includes:
- Salary (after standard deduction of ₹50,000).
- House Property Income (net of 30% standard deduction).
- Business/Profession Income (after expenses).
- Capital Gains (STCG/LTCG with indexation benefits).
- Other Sources (interest, dividends, lottery).
Step 2: Apply Tax Slabs (FY 2024-25)
| Income Range (₹) | New Regime Rate | Old Regime Rate | Surcharge Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|
| 0 – 3,00,000 | 0% | 0% | – |
| 3,00,001 – 6,00,000 | 5% | 5% | – |
| 6,00,001 – 9,00,000 | 10% | 20% | – |
| 9,00,001 – 12,00,000 | 15% | 20% | – |
| 12,00,001 – 15,00,000 | 20% | 30% | – |
| > 15,00,000 | 30% | 30% | 10% (₹50L-₹1Cr), 15% (₹1Cr-₹2Cr), 25% (₹2Cr-₹5Cr), 37% (>₹5Cr) |
Step 3: Calculate Surcharge & Cess
Surcharge: Applied on tax amount (not taxable income) as per above thresholds.
Health & Education Cess: 4% of (Tax + Surcharge).
Total Tax = (Income Tax) + (Surcharge) + (Cess)
Step 4: Adjust for TDS/TCS
Net Advance Tax = Total Tax – TDS/TCS Credit
If the result is positive, you must pay advance tax in installments. If negative, you’re eligible for a refund.
Step 5: Quarter-Wise Allocation
| Due Date | % of Total Tax | Cumulative % | Penalty for Default |
|---|---|---|---|
| 15th June | 15% | 15% | 1% per month (Section 234C) |
| 15th September | 30% | 45% | 1% for 3 months |
| 15th December | 30% | 75% | 1% for 3 months |
| 15th March | 25% | 100% | 1% for 1 month + 1% under 234B |
Module D: Real-World Examples
Profile: Mumbai-based software engineer (₹10 lakh salary) + ₹2 lakh rental income.
Deductions: ₹1.5 lakh (80C), ₹50,000 (HRA), ₹25,000 (80D).
TDS: ₹1.2 lakh (salary TDS).
Calculation:
- Taxable Income: ₹10,00,000 (salary) + ₹2,00,000 (rent) – ₹30,000 (30% rent deduction) – ₹2,25,000 (80C+80D+HRA) = ₹9,45,000.
- Tax (New Regime): ₹45,000 (up to ₹6L) + ₹46,500 (next ₹3.45L at 15%) = ₹91,500.
- Cess (4%): ₹3,660.
- Net Tax: ₹95,160 – ₹1,20,000 (TDS) = Refund of ₹24,840.
Key Takeaway: No advance tax needed due to excess TDS. File ITR to claim refund.
Profile: Delhi-based graphic designer with ₹25 lakh annual income.
Deductions: ₹1.5 lakh (80C), ₹50,000 (home office expenses).
TDS: ₹50,000 (from clients).
Calculation:
- Taxable Income: ₹25,00,000 – ₹2,00,000 = ₹23,00,000.
- Tax (Old Regime): ₹1,12,500 (up to ₹10L) + ₹4,63,500 (next ₹13L at 30%) = ₹5,76,000.
- Surcharge (10%): ₹57,600.
- Cess (4%): ₹25,344.
- Total Tax: ₹6,59,944 – ₹50,000 (TDS) = ₹6,09,944 advance tax payable.
- Quarterly Breakup:
- 15 Jun: ₹91,492 (15%)
- 15 Sep: ₹2,74,474 (45%)
- 15 Dec: ₹4,57,458 (75%)
- 15 Mar: ₹6,09,944 (100%)
Key Takeaway: Must pay ₹91,492 by 15th June to avoid 1% penalty.
Profile: US-based NRI with ₹1.2 crore LTCG from property sale in Bangalore.
Deductions: ₹50,000 (80C). Indexed cost: ₹40 lakh.
TDS: ₹12 lakh (10% on property sale).
Calculation:
- LTCG: ₹1,20,00,000 (sale) – ₹40,00,000 (indexed cost) = ₹80,00,000.
- Tax (20% + cess): ₹16,00,000 + ₹6,40,000 (cess) = ₹22,40,000.
- Net Tax: ₹22,40,000 – ₹12,00,000 (TDS) = ₹10,40,000 advance tax.
- Quarterly Breakup:
- 15 Jun: ₹1,56,000
- 15 Sep: ₹4,68,000
- 15 Dec: ₹7,80,000
- 15 Mar: ₹10,40,000
Key Takeaway: NRIs must use Form 280 and select “Non-Resident” in the IT portal.
Module E: Data & Statistics
Advance tax collections are a critical revenue source for the government. Below are key trends from recent years:
1. Advance Tax Collection Trends (FY 2020-2024)
| Financial Year | Total Advance Tax (₹ Crore) | YoY Growth | Corporate Share | Non-Corporate Share |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2020-21 | 4,58,000 | -8.3% | 62% | 38% |
| 2021-22 | 5,25,000 | +14.6% | 60% | 40% |
| 2022-23 | 6,12,000 | +16.6% | 58% | 42% |
| 2023-24 (Provisional) | 7,05,000 | +15.2% | 56% | 44% |
Source: Income Tax Department Annual Reports
2. Penalty Comparison: Advance Tax vs. Self-Assessment Tax
| Scenario | Advance Tax (Section 234C) | Self-Assessment Tax (Section 234B) | Total Penalty (1 Year) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Tax Liability: ₹5,00,000 Paid: ₹0 by 15 Mar |
₹15,000 (3% for 3 quarters + 1% for 1 quarter) | ₹50,000 (10% of ₹5L) | ₹65,000 |
| Tax Liability: ₹20,00,000 Paid: ₹5,00,000 by 15 Dec |
₹45,000 (3% for 2 quarters on shortfall) | ₹15,000 (1% for 3 months on remaining) | ₹60,000 |
| Tax Liability: ₹1,00,000 Paid: ₹90,000 by 15 Mar |
₹3,000 (1% for 1 quarter on ₹10,000) | ₹1,000 (1% for 1 month on ₹10,000) | ₹4,000 |
Key Insight: Paying even 90% of advance tax on time reduces penalties by 90% compared to full default.
Module F: Expert Tips to Optimize Advance Tax
1. Accurate Income Projection
- Use trailing 6-month average for variable income (freelancers, businesses).
- For capital gains: Estimate based on pending transactions (e.g., property sales, stock exits).
- Overestimate by 10% to avoid shortfall penalties.
2. Leverage TDS Strategically
- Submit Form 15G/15H to banks if income is below taxable limit to avoid excess TDS.
- For freelancers: Ask clients to deduct TDS at 10% (vs. 20% for non-PAN cases).
- Use Form 26Q to verify TDS credits quarterly.
3. Payment Process
- Pay via Challan 280 on TIN NSDL or the IT Portal.
- Select “(100) Advance Tax” as payment type.
- Use net banking or debit card (1% convenience fee).
- Save the BSR Code + Challan Number for ITR filing.
4. Common Mistakes to Avoid
- ❌ Ignoring State Codes: Select correct state in Challan 280 to avoid misallocation.
- ❌ Wrong Assessment Year: Always choose 2025-26 for FY 2024-25.
- ❌ Missing Surcharge: For income > ₹50 lakh, surcharge is mandatory.
- ❌ Not Adjusting for TCS: TCS on foreign remittances (5-20%) can be used as credit.
5. Tools & Resources
- Income Tax Calculator: Official IT Department Tool
- Form 26AS: Verify TDS/TCS credits here.
- Challan Status: Check payment status on TIN NSDL.
- Tax Laws: Income Tax Act, 1961 (India Code).
Module G: Interactive FAQ
You’ll incur a 1% interest penalty under Section 234C for 3 months (June-August) on the shortfall. For example:
- If your 15% installment was ₹30,000 and you pay it on 10th September, the penalty is ₹900 (1% × ₹30,000 × 3 months).
- The penalty is automatically calculated when you file your ITR.
Solution: Pay the missed installment ASAP and include the penalty in your next payment.
Yes! The Income Tax Department allows revisions if your income estimates change. Here’s how:
- Pay the additional tax in the next installment.
- No separate revision form is needed—the system aggregates all Challan 280 payments.
- Example: If you paid ₹50,000 in June but later estimate ₹75,000, pay the extra ₹25,000 by 15th September.
Note: Overpayment earns 0.5% interest under Section 244A (credited as refund).
Yes, if the gains are realized during the year. Key rules:
- STCG (Section 111A): 15% tax on equity gains > ₹1 lakh.
- LTCG (Section 112A): 10% tax on gains > ₹1 lakh (without indexation).
- Property/Gold: 20% with indexation.
Example: You sell shares in May 2024 with ₹3 lakh LTCG. You must pay 10% (₹30,000) as advance tax by 15th June.
Exception: If you reinvest in 54EC bonds or a new house (Section 54), the gain is exempt, but you must pay advance tax on the unexempted portion.
NRIs must pay advance tax on Indian-sourced income (rent, capital gains, interest). Process:
- Use Form 280 and select “Non-Resident” in the residential status.
- Tax rates are the same as residents, but DTAA (Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement) benefits may apply.
- For rental income, deduct 30% standard deduction + municipal taxes.
- Submit Form 10F to claim DTAA benefits (if applicable).
Example: An NRI earns ₹15 lakh rent from a Mumbai property. After 30% deduction, taxable income is ₹10.5 lakh. Advance tax would be ~₹1.3 lakh (including cess).
| Parameter | Advance Tax | Self-Assessment Tax |
|---|---|---|
| Timing | Quarterly (Jun/Sep/Dec/Mar) | Paid before filing ITR |
| Purpose | Avoid interest penalties | Clear remaining tax before ITR |
| Penalty for Delay | 1% per month (Section 234C) | 1% per month (Section 234B) |
| Applicability | If tax liability > ₹10,000 | If tax remains after TDS/advance tax |
| Challan Type | Challan 280 (Code 100) | Challan 280 (Code 300) |
Key Takeaway: Advance tax is mandatory for high-income earners, while self-assessment tax is a final adjustment.
No, the Income Tax Department does not accept credit cards for advance tax payments. Allowed methods:
- Net Banking: All major banks (SBI, HDFC, ICICI, etc.).
- Debit Card: Visa/Mastercard/Rupay (1% fee).
- Over the Counter: At authorized bank branches (Challan 280).
- NEFT/RTGS: Via your bank’s tax payment portal.
Workaround: Use a debit card or net banking from a savings account. Avoid third-party platforms (they may charge high fees).
You can claim a refund when filing your ITR. Steps:
- File ITR-1/ITR-2/ITR-3 (as applicable) before 31st July 2025.
- In the “Taxes Paid” section, enter your advance tax details (from Challan 280).
- The excess amount will be refunded to your pre-validated bank account (linked to PAN).
- Refunds typically process in 2-6 months (check status on the IT Portal).
Interest on Refund: You earn 0.5% per month (Section 244A) if the refund is delayed beyond 3 months.