In cases where the salary income is more than the basic exemption limit, but after deductions is not taxable, returns have to be filed, says Amarpal Chadha, mobility leader, people advisory services, EY. For example, if you have salary income of Rs 3.5 lakh (which is above the basic exemption limit) and have investments under Section 80C amounting to Rs 1.25 lakh, the taxable income would be Rs 2.25 lakh, which is below the exemption limit. In such case, you are required to file tax return as the total salary income before deductions is more than Rs 2.5 lakh.
Even if your income is lower than the basic exemption limit, but you own a house or foreign asset, then you must file returns. If you had taxable salary last year, but no income this year, you should still file something called a ‘Nil Return’. “NRIs who own property in India, but don’t earn any income in India should file returns as they will be deemed to earn rental income from the property,” says Sonagara.
Also, with bank accounts getting linked to Aadhaar, it is increasingly possible for the government to trace discrepancies between income and expenditure. That’s why more people are getting tax notices these days. “People get flagged in the income tax department’s Non-filers Monitoring System (NMS). Sometimes, some fixed deposits or recurring deposits get disclosed as part of the Annual Information Report (AIR). If you do get flagged, you will get notices and the I-T department will not care if you are below the basic exemption or not. So, it is better to file returns,” Sonagara adds.
Tax returns help in maintaining clear records and in obtaining tax clearance certificate for individuals travelling abroad on work. The tax return acknowledgement helps in opening bank accounts, getting bank credits and making investments.
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