ITR

Income Tax Return or ITR forms for AY 2021-22 issued. Details here

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There is no change in the manner of filing of ITR forms as compared to last year, the tax body mentioned

‘Keeping in view the ongoing COVID-19 crisis and to facilitate the taxpayers, no significant change have been made to the ITR forms in comparison to the last year’s ITR forms,’ CBDT said

The Central Board of Direct Taxation (CBDT) has notified new income tax return forms — ITR-1 to ITR-7 — for the assessment year 2021-22, the ministry of finance said in a release on 1 April. “Keeping in view the ongoing COVID-19 crisis and to facilitate the taxpayers, no significant change have been made to the ITR forms in comparison to the last year’s ITR forms,” the CBDT said. Only the bare minimum changes necessitated due to amendments in the Income-tax Act, 1961 have been made, CBDT further added.

The taxpayers will now have dedicated space in each of the ITR forms — Sahaj (ITR-1), Form ITR-2, Form ITR-3, Form ITR-4 (Sugam), Form ITR-5, Form ITR-6, Form ITR-7 and Form ITR-V to describe their investments, CBDT said.

ITR Form 1 (Sahaj) and ITR Form 4 (Sugam) are simpler Forms that cater to a large number of small and medium taxpayers. Sahaj can be filed by an individual having income upto ₹50 lakh and who receives income from salary, one house property/other sources (interest etc.)

“Similarly, Sugam can be filed by individuals, Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs) and firms (other than Limited Liability Partnerships (LLPs)) having total income upto Rs. 50 lakh and income from business and profession computed under the presumptive taxation provisions, the statement mentioned. Both the ITR forms are however not meant for individuals who are either director in a company or has invested in unlisted equity shares.

Individuals and HUFs not having income from business or profession (and not eligible for filing Sahaj) can file ITR-2. Those having income from business or profession can file ITR Form 3, it further stated.

“Persons other than individual, HUF and companies i.e. partnership firm, Limited Liability Partnerships (LLP) etc. can file ITR Form 5. Companies can file ITR Form 6. Trusts, political parties, charitable institutions etc. claiming exempt income under the Act can file ITR-7,” the statement noted.

The notified ITR forms are available on egazette.nic.in. There is no change in the manner of filing of ITR forms as compared to last year, the tax body mentioned.

Commenting on the new ITR forms, Archit Gupta, founder and chief executive officer, Cleartax said, “This year’s ITR forms do not have any major changes, as it should be, there should be as little change as possible so taxpayers find it easy to comply and are able to report information consistently.”

“Besides the choice between the regimes, taxpayers need to report quarterly dividend income earned in FY 2020-21 in order to comply with advance tax provisions similar to how advance tax is calculated and paid on capital gains, he explained.

“Tax filing exercise this year will be very important for every single taxpayer as this is the first time that taxpayers will have the option to choose a more beneficial tax regime,” he further added.

Meanwhile,the Income Tax Department has issued refunds worth over ₹2.62 lakh crore to more than 2.38 crore taxpayers in 2020-21. This include ₹87,749 crore personal income tax refunds to 2.34 crore taxpayers and ₹1.74 lakh crore worth corporate tax refunds in 3.46 lakh cases. The refunds issued in 2020-21 marks an increase of almost 43.2%, the I-T department said in a statement.

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