Income Tax, India
Income Tax, India
Income Tax, India
The government of India imposes an income tax on taxable income of individuals, Hindu
Undivided Families (HUFs), companies, firms, co-operative societies and trusts
(identified as body of individuals and association of persons) and any other artificial
person. Levy of tax is separate on each of the persons. The levy is governed by the
Indian Income Tax Act, 1961. The Indian Income Tax Department is governed by the
Central Board for Direct Taxes (CBDT) and is part of the Department of Revenue under
the Ministry of Finance, Govt. of India. There were 33 million income taxpayers in 2008.
Contents
1 Overview
o 1.1 Charge to Income-tax
o 1.2 Residential Status
o 1.3 Heads of Income
2 Individual Heads of Income
o 2.1 Income from Salary
o 2.2 Income From House property
o 2.3 Income from Business or Profession
o 2.4 Income from Capital Gains
o 2.5 Income from Other Sources
3 Deduction
o 3.1 Section 80C Deductions
o 3.2 Section 80CCF: Investment in Infrastructure Bonds
o 3.3 Section 80D: Medical Insurance Premiums
o 3.4 Interest on Housing Loans Section
4 Use of Deductions
5 Tax Rates
o 5.1 Surcharge
o 5.2 Tax Rate for non-Individuals
o 5.3 Refund Status for Salaried tax payers
6 Corporate Income tax
o 6.1 Tax Penalties
7 See also
8 References
9 External links
Overview
Charge to Income-tax
Every Person whose total income exceeds the maximum amount which is not
chargeable to the income tax is an assesse, and shall be chargeable to the income tax
at the rate or rates prescribed under the finance act for the relevant assessment year,
shall be determined on basis of his residential status.
Income tax is a tax payable, at the rate enacted by the Union Budget (Finance Act) for
every Assessment Year, on the Total Income earned in the Previous Year by every
Person.
for men:
→ Up to 1,80,000 = NIL ,
Residential Status
All residents are taxable for all their income, including income outside India. [2] Non
residents are taxable only for the income received in India or Income accrued in India.
Not Ordinarily residents are taxable in relation to income received in India or income
accrued in India and income from business or profession controlled from India.
Heads of Income
The total income of a person is divided into five heads, viz., taxable [3]:
All income received as salary under Employer-Employee relationship is taxed under this
head. Employers must withhold tax compulsorily, if income exceeds minimum
exemption limit, as Tax Deducted at Source (TDS), and provide their employees with a
Form 16[4] which shows the tax deductions and net paid income. In addition, the Form
16 will contain any other deductions provided from salary such as:
Income from House property is computed by taking what is called Annual Value. The
annual value (in the case of a let out property) is the maximum of the following:
Rent received
Municipal Valuation
Fair Rent (as determined by the I-T department)
If a house is not let out and not self-occupied, annual value is assumed to have accrued
to the owner. Annual value in case of a self occupied house is to be taken as NIL.
(However if there is more than one self occupied house then the annual value of the
other house/s is taxable.) From this, deduct Municipal Tax paid and you get the Net
Annual Value. From this Net Annual Value, deduct :
o carry forward of losses
An example .. An architect works out of home and co-ordinates work for his clients. All
the following expenses would be deductible from his professional fees.
he uses a computer,
he travels to sites in his car,
he has a peon to help him collect payments
He has a maid who comes in daily
part of the society maintenance bills
entertainment expenses incurred..
books and magazines for his professional practice.
The income referred to in section 28, i.e, the incomes chargeable as "Income from
Business or Profession" shall be computed in accordance with the provisions contained
in sections 30 to 43D. However, there are few more sections under this Chapter, viz.,
Sections 44 to 44DA (except sections 44AA, 44AB & 44C), which contain the
computation completely within itself. Section 44C is a disallowance provision in the case
non-residents. Section 44AA deals with maintenance of books and section 44AB deals
with audit of accounts.
The computation of income under the head "Profits and Gains of Business or
Profession" depends on the particulars and information available. [5]
If regular books of accounts are not maintained, then the computation would be as
under: -
Income (including Deemed Incomes) chargeable as income under this head xxx Less:
Expenses deductible (net of disallowances) under this head xxx Profits and Gains of
Business or Profession xxx
However, if regular books of accounts have been maintained and Profit and Loss
Account has been prepared, then the computation would be as under: -
Transfer of capital assets results in capital gains. A Capital asset is defined under
section 2(14) of the I.T. Act, 1961 as property of any kind held by an assessee such as
real estate, equity shares, bonds, jewellery, paintings, art etc. but does not include
some items like any stock-in-trade for businesses and personal effects. Transfer has
been defined under section 2(47) to include sale, exchange, relinquishment of asset,
extinguishment of rights in an asset, etc. Certain transactions are not regarded as
'Transfer' under section 47.
For tax purposes, there are two types of capital assets: Long term and short term. Long
term asset are held by a person for three years except in case of shares or mutual
funds which becomes long term just after one year of holding. Sale of such long term
assets gives rise to long term capital gains. There are different scheme of taxation of
long term capital gains. These are:
1. As per Section 10(38) of Income Tax Act, 1961 long term capital gains on shares
or securities or mutual funds on which Securities Transaction Tax (STT) has
been deducted and paid, no tax is payable. STT has been applied on all stock
market transactions since October 2004 but does not apply to off-market
transactions and company buybacks; therefore, the higher capital gains taxes will
apply to such transactions where STT is not paid.
2. In case of other shares and securities, person has an option to either index costs
to inflation and pay 20% of indexed gains, or pay 10% of non indexed gains. The
indexation rates are released by the I-T department each year.
3. In case of all other long term capital gains, indexation benefit is available and tax
rate is 20%.
All capital gains that are not long term are short term capital gains, which are taxed as
such:
Under section 111A, for shares or mutual funds where STT is paid, tax rate is
10% From Asst Yr 2005-06 as per Finance Act 2004. For Asst Yr 2009-10 the tax
rate is 15%.
In all other cases, it is part of gross total income and normal tax rate is
applicable.
For companies abroad, the tax liability is 20% of such gains suitably indexed (since STT
is not paid).
This is a residual head, under this head income which does not meet criteria to go to
other heads is taxed. There are also some specific incomes which are to be taxed under
this head.
Deduction
Section 80C of the Income Tax Act [1] allows certain investments and expenditure to be
tax-exempt. The total limit under this section is Rs. 100,000 (Rupees One lac) which
can be any combination of the below:
The investment can be from any source and not necessarily from income chargeable to
tax.
From April, 1 2010, a maximum of Rs. 20,000is deductible under section 80CCF
provided that amount is invested in infrastructure bonds. This is in addition to the
100,000 deduction allowed under Section 80(C).
For self occupied properties, interest paid on a housing loan up to Rs 150,000 per year
is exempt from tax.(Excluding Rs.1,00,000/p.a. u/s 80c Saving) However, this is only
applicable for a residence constructed within three financial years after the loan is taken
and also the loan if taken after April 1, 1999.
If the house is not occupied due to employment, the house will be considered self
occupied.
For let out properties, the entire interest paid is deductible under section 24 of the
Income Tax act. However, the rent is to be shown as income from such properties. 30%
of rent received and municipal taxes paid are available for deduction of tax.
The losses from all properties shall be allowed to be adjusted against salary income at
the source itself. Therefore, refund claims of T.D.S. deducted in excess, on this count,
will no more be necessary.[6]
Use of Deductions
While the use of the above sections helps one to avoid paying money as tax if one falls
in the tax bracket, one should look at this more as an investment-return opportunity.
One should still file income tax, even if one is not paying any tax. Except ELSS (Equity
Linked Savings Scheme) and the NPS (National Pension Scheme), other schemes
under 80C typically offer a relatively risk-free investment and guaranteed returns.
Tax Rates
In India, Individual income tax is a progressive tax with three slabs. About 10 per cent of
the population meets the minimum threshold of taxable income [7][8]
From April 1, 2011 new tax slabs apply, which are as follows:
No income tax is applicable on all income up to Rs. 1,80,000 per year. (Rs.
1,90,000 for women, Rs. 2,50,000 for senior citizens of 60 till 80 yrs (excluding
80) and Rs. 5,00,000 for very senior citizens of 80 yrs and above and must be
resident of india)
From 1,80,001 to 5,00,000 : 10% of amount greater than Rs. 1,80,000 (Lower
limit changes appropriately for women and senior citizens)
From 5,00,001 to 8,00,000 : 20% of amount greater than Rs. 5,00,000 + 32,000 (
Rs. 31,000 for women and Rs. 26,000 for senior citizens)
Above 8,00,000 : 30% of amount greater than Rs. 8,00,000 + 92,000 ( Rs.
91,000 for women and Rs. 86,000 for senior citizens)
Surcharge
Surcharge has been abolished for Personal income tax in the financial year 2009-10.
A 7.5% surcharge (tax on tax) is applicable if the taxable income (taking into
consideration all the deductions) is above Rs. 10 lakh (Rs. 1 million). The limit of 10 lacs
was increased to Rs. 10 crore (Rs. 100 million) with effect from 1 June 2009
All taxes in India are subject to an education cess, which is 3% of the total tax payable.
With effect from assessment year 2009-10, Secondary and Higher Secondary
Education Cess of 1% is applicable on the subtotal of taxable income. Mainly education
cess is applicable on excise duty and service tax
From Income Tax Year 2010-11, education cess would be 3% and no surcharge would
be levied.
There are special rates prescribed for Firms, Corporates, Local Authorities & Co-
operative Societies.[9]
The Income Tax Department has put on its website the list of income tax refunds of all
salary tax payers which could not be sent to the concerned persons for want of correct
address. (link to check refund)
Salary taxpayers who have not received refunds for assessment years 2003-04 to
2006-07 can click on the link below and query using the PAN number and assessment
year whether any refund due to them has been returned undelivered. . [10]
For companies, income is taxed at a flat rate of 30% for Indian companies, with a 5%
surcharge applied on the tax paid by companies with gross turnover over Rs. 1 crore
(10 million). Foreign companies pay 40%.[11] An education cess of 3% (on both the tax
and the surcharge) are payable, yielding effective tax rates of 32.5% for domestic
companies and 41.2% for foreign companies. [12] From 2005-06, electronic filing of
company returns is mandatory.[13]
Tax Penalties
The major number of penalties initiated every year as a ritual by I T Authorities is under
section 271(1)(c) which is for either concealment of income or for furnishing inaccurate
particulars of income. What is inaccurate particulars of income is not defined under
Income Tax Act 1961 , however recently Supreme Court in case of CIT vs Reliance
Petroproducts states as under "If we accept the contention of the Revenue then in
case of every Return where the claim made is not accepted by Assessing Officer for
any reason, the assessee will invite penalty under Section 271(1)(c). That is clearly not
the intendment of the Legislature."
Read more: http://taxworry.com/landmark-judgment-by-supreme-court-on-penalty-us-
2711c-in-favour-of-taxpayers/#ixzz1F5mJSvsn "If the Assessing Officer or the
Commissioner (Appeals) or the Commissioner in the course of any proceedings under
this Act, is satisfied that any person-
(b) has failed to comply with a notice under sub-section (1) of section 142 or sub-section
(2) of section 143 or fails to comply with a direction issued under sub-section (2A) of
section 142, or
(c) has concealed the particulars of his income or furnished inaccurate particulars of
such income,
(ii) in the cases referred to in clause (b), in addition to any tax payable by him, a sum of
ten thousand rupees for each such failure;
(iii) in the cases referred to in clause (c), in addition to any tax payable by him, a sum
which shall not be less than, but which shall not exceed three times, the amount of tax
sought to be evaded by reason of the concealment of particulars of his income or the
furnishing of inaccurate particulars of such income.
[edit] References