Financial Year (FY) and corresponding Assessment Year (AY)
Here’s a table of India’s Financial Year (FY) and corresponding Assessment Year (AY) for the last 5 years:
Financial Year (FY) | Assessment Year (AY) |
---|---|
1 April 2020 – 31 March 2021 | AY 2021-22 |
1 April 2021 – 31 March 2022 | AY 2022-23 |
1 April 2022 – 31 March 2023 | AY 2023-24 |
1 April 2023 – 31 March 2024 | AY 2024-25 |
1 April 2024 – 31 March 2025 | AY 2025-26 |
Old Regime vs New Regime
✅ Old Regime (default till FY 2019-20)
- You pay tax at higher slab rates.
- But you can claim all deductions and exemptions like:
- 80C, 80D, 80E, 80EEB, 80EEA
- HRA, LTA, Standard Deduction
- Home loan interest (Sec 24(b)) etc.
✅ New Regime (Section 115BAC)
- You pay tax at lower slab rates.
- But most exemptions and deductions are not allowed.
- Disallowed deductions include:
- 80C (PF, LIC, ELSS, Tuition fees, Principal repayment) ❌
- 80D (Health Insurance) ❌
- 80E (Education loan) ❌
- 80EE, 80EEA, 80EEB ❌
- HRA, LTA, Housing loan principal, etc.
👉 Only a few deductions are allowed in the new regime, such as:
- EPF/NPS employer contribution exemptions ✅
- Employer’s contribution to NPS (80CCD(2)) ✅
- Standard deduction on salary (₹50,000) ✅ [reintroduced in Budget 2023]
Do you wish to exercise the option u/s 115BAC(6) of Opting out of new tax regime ?(Deafult is “No”)
That line comes from the Income Tax Return (ITR) filing forms/portals in India.
Let me explain it clearly:
🔹 Background
- Section 115BAC of the Income Tax Act (introduced in Finance Act 2020) provides the new tax regime.
- In the new regime, tax rates are lower but most exemptions and deductions (like HRA, 80C, 80D, home loan interest, etc.) are not allowed.
- The old regime keeps higher tax rates but allows all deductions and exemptions.
🔹 Meaning of the Question
When the form asks:
“Do you wish to exercise the option u/s 115BAC(6) of opting out of new tax regime? (Default is ‘No’)”
- If you select “No” → You are continuing in the new tax regime (default).
- If you select “Yes” → You are opting out of the new regime and going back to the old regime.
🔹 Important Points
- For Salaried Individuals:
- You can choose between old and new regime every year while filing ITR.
- So, flexibility exists.
- For Business/Profession Income:
- Once you opt out of the new regime, you cannot switch back freely.
- You may be allowed to switch only once in a lifetime (with restrictions).
- Default Setting:
- The system assumes “No” (i.e., you are in the new regime) unless you actively choose “Yes” to opt out.
Are you eligible to claim exemption in respect of expenditure incurred on cost of travel on tour or transfer or helper etc
This also comes from the Income Tax Return (ITR) form — it is asking if you are eligible to claim certain tax-free allowances under Section 10(14)(i) read with Rule 2BB(1)(a)–(c).
🔹 What Section 10(14)(i) Covers
Section 10(14)(i) allows exemption for special allowances granted to meet expenses wholly, necessarily, and exclusively incurred in the performance of official duties.
These are not personal perks, but reimbursements/allowances for doing your job.
🔹 Examples Covered by Rule 2BB(1)(a)–(c)
As per Rule 2BB, the following are exempt (to the extent actually spent):
- Travel Allowance – Cost of travel on tour or transfer.
- Covers fares (rail/air/bus) and related transport expenses when you are on official tour or transferred to another location.
- Daily Allowance – To meet ordinary daily charges when absent from normal place of duty.
- Meals, lodging, incidental expenses during official travel.
- Helper Allowance – To meet expenses on a helper engaged in the performance of official duties.
- For example, drivers, attendants, office helpers.
(There are other allowances listed under Rule 2BB, but the form is specifically referring to 2BB(1)(a)–(c)).
🔹 When You Can Claim
- You must be a salaried employee receiving such allowances from your employer.
- You can only claim to the extent actually spent (no automatic exemption).
- Typically applies to employees in government, public sector, banks, or roles involving transfers/tours.
🔹 In ITR Context
The question:
“Are you eligible to claim exemption in respect of expenditure incurred on cost of travel on tour or transfer or helper etc.?”
- If Yes → You (or your employer) provided details of such allowances in Form 16 (Part B, Allowances), and you actually spent the money for official duty.
- If No → You are not claiming these exemptions (most private salaried employees don’t get these).
👉 In short: This option is only relevant if your salary package includes Travel / Daily / Helper Allowances for official duty.
Are you eligible to claim exemption in respect of transport allowance to commute between the place of his residence and the place of his duty to
this is another specific exemption option that comes up while filing ITR.
🔹 Section 10(14)(ii) + Rule 2BB(2)(11)
This provision is about Transport Allowance given to employees to commute between home and office.
But here’s the key:
- General employees: This exemption is no longer available after 1 April 2018 (FY 2018-19 onwards) because the standard deduction of ₹50,000 replaced it.
- Exception – Persons with disabilities: Exemption still applies only for employees who are blind, deaf & dumb, or orthopedically handicapped with disability of lower extremities.
🔹 Current Exemption (as per Rule 2BB(2)(11))
- A fixed amount of ₹3,200 per month (₹38,400 per year) is exempt for such disabled employees.
- For everyone else, transport allowance for commute is fully taxable (but covered under the standard deduction benefit).
🔹 In ITR Form Context
When it asks:
“Are you eligible to claim exemption in respect of transport allowance to commute between the place of his residence and the place of his duty [Sec 10(14)(ii) r.w. Rule 2BB(2)(11)]?”
- Select Yes → only if you are an employee with the specified disability and your employer provides a transport allowance.
- Select No → for all other employees (salaried/private/govt) — because you already get the standard deduction instead.
✅ Summary:
Unless you are a person with disability as defined, you should mark No. For most employees, commuting allowance is taxable, and you instead get the ₹50,000 standard deduction.
Are you eligible to claim any other exemption from salary income?
This line comes directly from the ITR form — it is a catch-all question asking if you are entitled to any other salary exemptions apart from the ones specifically mentioned earlier (travel on tour/transfer, helper allowance, transport allowance, etc.).
🔹 What “Any Other Exemption from Salary” Means
Under Section 10(14) read with Rule 2BB, there are several allowances that may be exempt (fully or partially) if they are for official duties or special circumstances.
Some common ones include:
- Children Education Allowance – up to ₹100 per month per child (max 2 children).
- Hostel Expenditure Allowance – up to ₹300 per month per child (max 2 children).
- Tribal area / Scheduled area allowance – up to ₹200 per month.
- Underground allowance – for employees working underground in mines (up to ₹800/month).
- Island duty allowance – for armed forces personnel posted in Andaman & Nicobar / Lakshadweep (up to ₹3,250/month).
- Field area / High altitude / Border area allowance – for armed forces personnel in difficult postings (limits vary ₹1,600 – ₹7,000/month).
- Allowance for working in transport system (drivers, pilots, crew, etc.) – exempt up to 70% of such allowance or ₹10,000/month, whichever is less.
- Academic/research allowance – for teachers/researchers (exempt to the extent actually spent).
- Uniform allowance – to the extent actually spent on duty uniforms.
🔹 How to Answer in ITR
- Select “Yes” → if your Form 16 shows any of these allowances under the “Exempt Allowances” section.
- Select “No” → if you only have standard salary components (Basic, HRA, LTA, etc.) and no such allowances.
✅ In short:
This option is a general checkbox for all other less-common exemptions (mainly for government employees, defense personnel, researchers, teachers, transport workers, etc.). For most private sector salaried employees, the answer will be “No”.
Are you eligible to claim deduction u/s 80CCD(2) Contribution to pension scheme of Central Government by employer?
🔹 Section 80CCD(2) – Employer’s Contribution to NPS
- This section applies when your employer contributes to your NPS (National Pension System) account (Tier-I).
- It is different from your own contribution (which falls under Sec 80CCD(1) / 80CCD(1B)).
- The deduction is over and above the ₹1.5 lakh 80C limit.
🔹 Deduction Limit
The maximum deduction allowed under 80CCD(2) is:
- 14% of salary (Basic + DA) for Central/State Government employees.
- 10% of salary (Basic + DA) for other employees (private sector).
👉 No monetary upper cap like 80C — it’s a % of salary.
🔹 In ITR Form Context
When it asks:
“Are you eligible to claim deduction u/s 80CCD(2) – Contribution to pension scheme of Central Government by employer?”
- Select Yes → If your employer (Govt/Private) is contributing to your NPS account and it appears in your Form 16 (Part B, Deductions).
- Select No → If you don’t have employer NPS contributions (most private sector employees unless explicitly opted).
🔹 Example
- Your basic salary + DA = ₹10,00,000/year.
- Employer contributes 10% = ₹1,00,000 to NPS.
- This ₹1,00,000 is fully deductible under Sec 80CCD(2) in addition to your other deductions (80C, 80D, etc.).
✅ Summary:
This deduction is for employer’s NPS contribution (not your own).
If you don’t see an “Employer NPS Contribution” entry in your salary slip or Form 16 → you should answer No.
Are you eligible to claim deduction in respect of interest on deposits?
This question is about Section 80TTB, which is a special deduction for senior citizens 👴👵.
🔹 Section 80TTB – What It Covers
- Introduced in Finance Act 2018.
- Available only to resident senior citizens (aged 60 years or above).
- Deduction is allowed on interest income from:
- Savings bank deposits
- Fixed deposits (FDs)
- Recurring deposits (RDs)
- Any other deposit with banks, co-operative banks, or post offices
🔹 Deduction Limit
- Maximum deduction: ₹50,000 (per financial year).
- Applies on total interest income from eligible deposits.
- TDS (if deducted by the bank) is adjusted accordingly.
🔹 In ITR Context
When it asks:
“Are you eligible to claim deduction in respect of interest on deposits? [Sec 80TTB]”
- Select Yes → If you are a resident senior citizen and have interest income from deposits.
- Select No → If you are below 60 years → you can instead claim deduction under Section 80TTA (up to ₹10,000, savings account interest only).
🔹 Example
- Mr. Sharma (age 65) earns ₹40,000 interest from FDs and ₹15,000 from a savings account.
- Total = ₹55,000.
- Under 80TTB, he can claim deduction up to ₹50,000 → taxable interest = ₹5,000.
✅ Summary:
- 80TTB = for Senior Citizens only, up to ₹50,000 on bank/post office deposit interest.
- Others (<60 years) → use 80TTA (₹10,000, only savings account interest).
Residential Status in India
Perfect 👍 — this is the core classification of Residential Status in India for Income Tax purposes. Let’s go through each option in simple but clear detail with rules and tax implications.
🔹 1. Resident (R)
You are treated as Resident in India if either one of these conditions is satisfied in a Financial Year (FY):
- Stayed in India for 182 days or more during the FY, OR
- Stayed in India for 60 days or more in that FY AND 365 days or more in the 4 preceding FYs.
👉 For certain Indian citizens/PIOs going abroad for employment, or coming on visits, the 60-day condition is relaxed to 182 days.
✅ Tax impact for Residents:
- Your global income is taxable in India (whether earned in India or abroad).
- You must declare foreign assets, bank accounts, etc. in your ITR.
🔹 2. Non-Resident (NR)
You are Non-Resident if you do not satisfy any of the Resident conditions above.
👉 Usually applies if you stayed in India less than 182 days, and also don’t meet the 60+365 rule.
✅ Tax impact for NRs:
- You are taxable only on income earned, accrued, or received in India (salary for services in India, rent from Indian property, bank FD interest, etc.).
- Foreign income is not taxable in India.
🔹 3. Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR)
This is a special middle category for people who recently left India or returned, i.e., “Resident but with limited tax liability.”
You qualify as RNOR if you are a Resident as per basic rules, but:
- You were Non-Resident in 9 out of 10 preceding FYs, OR
- You stayed in India for ≤ 729 days in the last 7 preceding FYs.
✅ Tax impact for RNORs:
- Taxed only on income earned/accrued in India, and income from business/profession controlled from India.
- Foreign income (salary abroad, foreign bank interest, etc.) is NOT taxable in India.
- Very similar to NR, but status is technically “Resident”.
🔹 Quick Comparison Table
Status | Stay conditions | Taxable in India |
---|---|---|
Resident | ≥182 days OR (≥60 days + 365 days in last 4 yrs) | Global income (India + Abroad) |
Non-Resident (NR) | Does not satisfy Resident conditions | Only Indian income |
Resident but Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR) | Resident by basic rule, but NR in 9/10 yrs OR ≤729 days in last 7 yrs | Only Indian income + income from business controlled in India |
Section 80EEB – Deduction for Electric Vehicle Loan Interest
Perfect 👍 — let’s summarise Schedule 80EEB (for electric vehicle loan interest deduction) in a clear, complete way:
Section 80EEB – Deduction for Electric Vehicle Loan Interest
1. Eligibility
- Only individual taxpayers (not HUFs, companies, firms, etc.).
- You must have taken a loan for purchase of an electric vehicle.
- Vehicle must be new, fully electric (battery-powered or hydrogen fuel cell).
2. Loan Conditions
- Loan should be sanctioned between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2023.
- Loan must be taken from a banking company, NBFC, or financial institution (not from relatives or friends).
3. Deduction Limit
- Maximum deduction = ₹1,50,000 (per financial year).
- Applies only to interest portion of EMI, not principal.
- Allowed until the loan is fully repaid.
4. Other Important Points
- Deduction is over and above 80C, 80D, 24(b), etc.
- Vehicle can be for personal or business use:
- Personal use → you claim deduction directly in ITR under 80EEB.
- Business use → you can also claim depreciation + interest as business expense (but cannot double-claim under 80EEB).
- Only one vehicle allowed for deduction (the one purchased with the loan).
5. How to Claim in ITR
- Go to Schedule 80EEB.
- Enter total interest paid on EV loan during FY.
- Max claim = ₹1,50,000.
- Keep the interest certificate from the bank/NBFC as proof.
6. Example
- Loan for EV sanctioned: June 2022.
- EMI interest paid in FY 2024-25 = ₹1,20,000.
- Claim full ₹1,20,000 in AY 2025-26 under 80EEB.
If interest was ₹1,80,000 → you can only claim ₹1,50,000 (cap).
✅ Summary in One Line:
80EEB = Deduction up to ₹1.5 lakh/year on loan interest for purchase of an electric vehicle (loan sanctioned Apr 2019–Mar 2023, individual taxpayer only).
Section 80EEA – Deduction in respect of interest on loan taken for certain house property
1. Eligibility
- Only individual taxpayers (not HUFs, firms, companies).
- You must be a first-time home buyer (no other residential house owned on the date of loan sanction).
2. Loan Conditions
- Loan must be sanctioned between 1 April 2019 and 31 March 2022.
- Loan should be taken from a banking company, housing finance company, or financial institution.
3. Property Conditions
- Stamp duty value of the house property must be ≤ ₹45 lakh.
- The property should be a residential house (not commercial).
- The property must be for self-occupation or rental — both are allowed.
4. Deduction Limit
- Maximum deduction: ₹1,50,000 per financial year.
- Deduction is only for interest on loan (not principal).
- This is over and above Section 24(b) (₹2,00,000 interest limit for self-occupied house).
- But if you claim 80EEA, you cannot claim 80EE for the same property.
👉 So potentially, you can claim:
- Up to ₹2,00,000 (under 24(b)) + ₹1,50,000 (under 80EEA) = ₹3,50,000 interest deduction in a year (if eligible).
5. When You Can Claim
- Deduction starts only after you get possession / completion certificate.
- Any pre-construction interest can be claimed in 5 instalments under 24(b), but not under 80EEA.
6. How to Claim in ITR
- In Schedule 80EEA, enter the amount of interest paid (from lender’s interest certificate).
- Max allowed: ₹1,50,000.
- Also ensure you have already exhausted Section 24(b) limit before adding 80EEA.
7. Example
- Loan sanctioned: Dec 2021.
- Stamp duty value: ₹42 lakh.
- Interest paid in FY 2024-25: ₹2,80,000.
- Deduction you can claim:
- ₹2,00,000 under Sec 24(b)
- ₹80,000 under Sec 80EEA
- Total = ₹2,80,000.
If interest paid = ₹4,50,000 → max claim = ₹2,00,000 + ₹1,50,000 = ₹3,50,000.
✅ Summary in One Line
80EEA = Extra deduction (up to ₹1.5 lakh) on home loan interest for first-time buyers of affordable houses (≤ ₹45 lakh), loan sanctioned Apr 2019–Mar 2022, in addition to Sec 24(b).
👉 Since both your houses are still under construction, you cannot claim 80EEA in AY 2025-26 yet. You’ll claim it from the year of possession (if your loans fall in the eligible sanction period & property value condition is met).
Section 80EE – Deduction for Home Loan Interest
1. Purpose
- It was introduced as an additional deduction for first-time home buyers.
- Maximum deduction = ₹50,000 per year.
- This is over and above Section 24(b) (which already gives up to ₹2,00,000 deduction on home loan interest).
2. Eligibility Conditions
You can claim 80EE only if all these were true:
- Loan sanctioned between 1 April 2016 – 31 March 2017.
- Loan amount ≤ ₹35 lakh.
- Property value ≤ ₹50 lakh (stamp duty value).
- You did not own any other house property on the date of loan sanction.
- Loan must be taken from a banking company / housing finance company.
3. Deduction Details
- Max: ₹50,000 per year (interest portion only).
- Available after exhausting Section 24(b) limit of ₹2,00,000.
- Claim continues until the loan is fully repaid.
👉 So total interest deduction possible:
- ₹2,00,000 under 24(b) + ₹50,000 under 80EE = ₹2,50,000 per year.
4. Not Applicable for Recent Loans
- This section was a one-time limited window.
- Only for loans sanctioned in FY 2016-17.
- If your loan was sanctioned in 2024, you are not eligible for 80EE.
5. How to Claim in ITR (if eligible)
- Go to Schedule 80EE.
- Enter the interest paid during the year (supported by bank loan certificate).
- System caps it at ₹50,000.
- Must ensure conditions are met (loan sanction year, property value, etc.).
✅ Summary in One Line
80EE = Extra ₹50,000 deduction on home loan interest for first-time buyers, but only for loans sanctioned Apr 2016–Mar 2017.
👉 Since your loan is from 2024, you cannot use 80EE (only 24(b) applies).
Section 80E – Deduction for Education Loan Interest
Perfect 👍 — now let’s cover Schedule 80E (for education loan interest).
1. Purpose
- Encourages higher education by giving tax relief on education loan interest.
- Deduction is available for individual taxpayers only (not HUF/Company).
2. Eligible Loan Conditions
- Loan must be taken from a banking company, financial institution, or approved charitable institution (not from relatives/friends).
- Loan must be for higher education of:
- Yourself, or
- Your spouse, or
- Your children, or
- A student for whom you are a legal guardian.
3. Higher Education Definition
- Any course pursued after passing Senior Secondary Examination (Class 12).
- Includes both India and abroad studies.
- Covers all fields of study (engineering, medicine, management, arts, etc.).
4. Deduction Limit
- Interest portion only of EMI is deductible.
- No cap on the amount — full interest paid is deductible.
- Maximum period = 8 consecutive years, starting from the year you begin repaying.
- Deduction ends earlier if the loan is fully repaid before 8 years.
👉 Principal repayment is not deductible under 80E.
5. How to Claim in ITR
- In Schedule 80E, enter total interest paid during the FY (get certificate from bank/NBFC).
- Deduction automatically adjusts in total taxable income.
- Keep proof (interest certificate) for verification.
6. Example
- You took an education loan in 2022 for MBA abroad.
- Interest paid in FY 2024-25 = ₹1,20,000.
- In AY 2025-26 ITR, you claim ₹1,20,000 under 80E.
- No upper ceiling — entire ₹1.2 lakh allowed.
✅ Summary in One Line
80E = Deduction for full interest paid on education loan (for self, spouse, children, ward) for max 8 years, no monetary cap, principal not covered.
Section 80C – Deduction for Investments & Payments
1. Eligibility
- Only for individuals and HUFs.
- Maximum deduction = ₹1,50,000 per year (combined for all 80C items).
2. Eligible Investments & Payments
Here’s what qualifies under 80C:
💰 Insurance & Pension
- Life Insurance Premium (self, spouse, children).
- Deferred Annuity contracts.
- Pension Plans (like LIC Jeevan Suraksha).
🏦 Savings & Deposit Schemes
- Employee’s contribution to Provident Fund (EPF).
- Public Provident Fund (PPF).
- 5-Year Fixed Deposit with bank/post office.
- National Savings Certificate (NSC).
- Sukanya Samriddhi Yojana deposits.
- Senior Citizens Savings Scheme deposits.
🏠 Housing-related
- Principal repayment of Home Loan (only after possession).
- Stamp duty & registration charges paid for house purchase.
📚 Education-related
- Tuition fees paid for up to 2 children (only for full-time courses in India).
📈 Market-linked options
- Equity-Linked Savings Scheme (ELSS mutual funds).
- ULIPs (Unit Linked Insurance Plans).
3. Conditions / Restrictions
- Lock-in periods apply (e.g., ELSS = 3 yrs, PPF = 15 yrs, 5-year FD = 5 yrs).
- Life insurance premium must be ≤ 10% of sum assured (for policies issued after Apr 2012) to be fully eligible.
- Home loan principal → only for residential property, not commercial.
4. How It Appears in ITR
In Schedule 80C, you will see fields like:
- Life Insurance Premium
- Contribution to PF/PPF
- NSC
- Tuition Fees
- ULIP/ELSS
- Repayment of Housing Loan Principal
- Others
You enter actual eligible amounts, and the system caps the total at ₹1,50,000.
5. Example
Suppose in FY 2024-25 you paid:
- PPF contribution = ₹50,000
- LIC premium = ₹30,000
- ELSS = ₹60,000
- Home loan principal = ₹40,000
👉 Total = ₹1,80,000, but deduction allowed = ₹1,50,000 only.
✅ Summary in One Line
80C = Up to ₹1.5 lakh deduction for investments/payments like LIC, PPF, ELSS, tuition fees, housing loan principal, NSC, Sukanya Samriddhi, etc.
What is Schedule VI-A (Mandatory)?
🔹 What is Schedule VI-A (Mandatory)?
- In the Income Tax Return (ITR) forms, there is a section called Schedule VI-A.
- It is where you report all deductions under Chapter VI-A of the Income Tax Act.
- Chapter VI-A covers Sections 80C to 80U.
- These deductions reduce your Gross Total Income (GTI) to arrive at Total Taxable Income.
🔹 Common Sections under Chapter VI-A
Here are the most used ones (all entered in Schedule VI-A):
🏦 Savings & Investments
- 80C → LIC, PPF, ELSS, tuition fees, home loan principal, NSC, Sukanya Samriddhi (max ₹1.5 lakh).
- 80CCC → Pension funds contribution (within 80C limit).
- 80CCD(1) → NPS employee/self contribution (within ₹1.5L combined).
- 80CCD(1B) → Extra ₹50,000 for NPS.
- 80CCD(2) → Employer’s contribution to NPS (up to 10% / 14% of salary).
🏥 Medical / Health
- 80D → Medical insurance premium (₹25k – ₹1L depending on age).
- 80DD → Maintenance of handicapped dependent.
- 80DDB → Treatment of specified diseases.
🎓 Education
- 80E → Interest on education loan (max 8 years, no limit).
🏠 Housing
- 80EE / 80EEA → Additional home loan interest deductions (time-bound schemes).
🌱 Donations / Others
- 80G → Donations to approved funds/charities.
- 80GGA → Donations for scientific research/rural development.
- 80GGC → Donations to political parties.
👨🦽 Special Categories
- 80U → Deduction for persons with disability.
🔹 How It Works in ITR
- In the Schedule VI-A, the ITR form will have sub-sections (80C, 80D, 80E, etc.).
- You enter actual eligible amounts.
- The system calculates the total deduction and applies the statutory caps (like ₹1.5L under 80C).
- This reduces your taxable income.
🔹 Example
Gross Total Income (GTI) = ₹10,00,000
- 80C (PF + LIC + ELSS) = ₹1,50,000
- 80D (Health Insurance) = ₹25,000
- 80E (Education loan interest) = ₹60,000
👉 Total deduction under VI-A = ₹2,35,000
Taxable Income = ₹10,00,000 – ₹2,35,000 = ₹7,65,000
✅ Summary
Schedule VI-A (Mandatory) = place in ITR where you declare all deductions under Chapter VI-A (80C to 80U).
It’s “mandatory” because the portal needs you to confirm whether you’re claiming any deductions or not.
Section 80D – Medical Insurance & Health-related Deduction
Great 👍 — let’s cover Schedule 80D clearly, since it’s one of the most used deductions in ITR.
1. Who Can Claim?
- Only individuals and HUFs.
- Deduction available for:
- Self
- Spouse
- Dependent children
- Parents (separate limit)
2. Eligible Payments
- Health insurance premium (paid by cheque, card, UPI, net banking → not cash).
- Preventive health check-up expenses (allowed within limit, up to ₹5,000).
- Contribution to Central Govt Health Scheme (CGHS).
- Medical expenses of senior citizens (if no insurance policy).
3. Deduction Limits (FY 2024-25 / AY 2025-26)
Who Covered | Maximum Deduction |
---|---|
Self + Spouse + Dependent Children (all < 60 years) | ₹25,000 |
Parents (< 60 years) | ₹25,000 |
Parents (≥ 60 years) | ₹50,000 |
Self/Family if any member ≥ 60 years | ₹50,000 |
Preventive Health Check-up (included in above) | Up to ₹5,000 |
👉 So max deduction possible = ₹1,00,000 (if you + spouse are senior citizens + parents are senior citizens).
4. Special Notes
- Cash payments not allowed (except preventive check-up up to ₹5,000).
- HUF can also claim for premium paid on any member.
- If parents are non-dependent, you can still claim if you paid their insurance premium.
- Section 80D is separate from 80C (doesn’t eat into 1.5L 80C cap).
5. Example
- You (age 40) + spouse + kids: health insurance premium = ₹18,000.
- Parents (ages 68, 65): health insurance premium = ₹42,000.
- Preventive check-up = ₹4,000.
👉 Deduction =
- Self/family = ₹22,000 (18,000 + 4,000, capped at ₹25,000).
- Parents = ₹42,000 (capped at ₹50,000).
- Total = ₹64,000 under 80D.
6. How It Appears in ITR
In Schedule 80D, fields are given for:
- Self/Spouse/Children (<60 / ≥60)
- Parents (<60 / ≥60)
- Preventive health check-up
- Medical expenditure for senior citizens (if uninsured)
You fill in actual figures, and the system applies the caps.
✅ Summary in One Line
80D = Deduction up to ₹25k (self/family) + ₹25k/50k (parents) for health insurance & medical expenses, max ₹1,00,000 per year.
Perfect 👍 — let’s create a structured tutorial that explains when and why each ITR Schedule is used, with simple examples. This will help you or your team while filing returns.
When to Use Each ITR Schedule
1. Schedule Salary
When to use:
- If you earned salary from an employer (Indian or foreign, if Resident).
- Auto-fills from Form 16 if linked.
Example: You work at TCS, receive ₹12 lakh salary → report here.
2. Schedule HP (House Property)
When to use:
- If you own self-occupied, let-out, or deemed let-out property.
- Needed for rental income, home loan interest deductions (Sec 24).
Example: You rent out your flat and earn ₹20,000/month rent.
3. Schedule CG (Capital Gains)
When to use:
- Whenever you sell capital assets: property, land, shares, mutual funds, gold, etc.
- Includes both short-term and long-term capital gains/losses.
Example: You bought shares at ₹2 lakh, sold for ₹3 lakh → gain ₹1 lakh, report here.
4. Schedule 112A
When to use:
- For LTCG (Long-Term Capital Gains) on:
- Listed equity shares
- Equity-oriented mutual funds
- Units of business trusts
- Only when STT (Securities Transaction Tax) is paid.
- Taxed @ 10% above ₹1 lakh gain.
Example: You sold Infosys shares after 2 years for ₹3 lakh profit → fill in 112A.
5. Schedule 115AD (Non-Residents)
When to use:
- If you are a Non-Resident (NRI/FPI) and earn capital gains from sale of listed shares, units, etc.
- Tax treatment different from residents.
Example: A US-based FPI sells Indian listed shares.
6. Schedule VDA (Virtual Digital Assets)
When to use:
- If you trade/transfer crypto, NFTs, or digital tokens.
- Every transaction must be listed.
- Gains taxed @ 30% (no set-off of losses allowed).
Example: You bought Bitcoin for ₹1 lakh, sold for ₹1.5 lakh → ₹50k taxable @30%.
7. Schedule OS (Other Sources)
When to use:
- For incomes not falling under Salary, HP, CG.
- Includes:
- Interest (FD, savings, bonds)
- Dividends
- Gifts received
- Lottery, game shows, racehorses, etc.
Example: You earned ₹25,000 FD interest and ₹10,000 dividend.
8. Schedule SPI (Specified Persons’ Income)
When to use:
- If you need to club income of spouse, minor child, etc. under your return (Sec 64).
Example: You invest in FD in your child’s name, interest ₹5,000 → must be shown in SPI and clubbed in your income.
9. Schedule SI (Special Income Rates)
When to use:
- Mandatory schedule showing income taxed at special rates.
- Examples:
- STCG on shares (15%)
- LTCG u/s 112A (10%)
- Lottery, horse racing (30%)
Example: You sold equity shares (short-term, STT paid) → gain ₹40,000, taxed @15%.
10. Schedule EI (Exempt Income)
When to use:
- For income that is exempt from tax but must be reported.
- Examples:
- Agricultural income
- PPF interest
- Dividend from shares (up to FY 2019-20)
- LTCG u/s 10(38) (till FY 2017-18)
Example: You earned ₹15,000 PPF interest.
11. Schedule PTI (Pass Through Income)
When to use:
- If you invested in:
- Business trust (REIT/InvIT)
- Investment fund (AIF – Alternative Investment Fund)
- Such income “passes through” to investors and is taxed in their hands.
Example: You invested in an REIT, received ₹1 lakh distributed income.
12. Schedule FSI (Foreign Source Income)
When to use:
- If you are a Resident and earned foreign income.
- Must declare income country-wise.
Example: You worked in Japan for part of the year, earned ¥ salary → disclose here.
13. Schedule TR (Tax Relief)
When to use:
- If you are a Resident and paid tax abroad on the same income.
- Claim relief under DTAA (Double Tax Avoidance Agreement).
Example: You earned salary in Japan, tax deducted there, also taxable in India → claim TR relief.
✅ Quick Recap Table
Schedule | When to Use |
---|---|
Salary | Income from employment |
HP | House property income / home loan interest |
CG | Sale of capital assets (property, shares, gold) |
112A | LTCG on listed equity shares/MFs (STT paid) |
115AD | NRIs / FPIs gains from listed shares/units |
VDA | Crypto / NFT gains |
OS | Interest, dividend, gifts, lottery, misc. |
SPI | Clubbing spouse/minor child income |
SI | Income taxed at special rates (STCG 15%, LTCG 10%, lottery 30%) |
EI | Exempt income (PPF interest, agriculture) |
PTI | Pass-through income from REITs/AIFs |
FSI | Foreign income (Residents only) |
TR | Tax relief for foreign taxes paid |
✅ This way, you know exactly which schedule to fill depending on the source of your income.