The Income-tax Act, 1961 not only governs the levy and collection of income tax but also establishes a robust penalty framework to ensure taxpayer compliance. Penalties are imposed for various defaults, including delayed tax payments, non-filing of returns, failure to maintain records, non-compliance with notices, inaccurate reporting, tax deduction defaults, and cash transaction violations.
While certain penalties are mandatory, many provisions provide relief where taxpayers can demonstrate a reasonable cause for the default. With the introduction of faceless penalty proceedings, the government has further strengthened transparency and efficiency in tax administration.
Before filing the income tax return, taxpayers must pay any balance tax liability after considering TDS, advance tax, and other eligible credits.
Where self-assessment tax remains unpaid, the taxpayer may be treated as an assessee in default under Section 140A and may attract a penalty under Section 221.
Penalty: Up to the amount of tax in arrears.
Key Points
Where a tax demand is raised through a notice under Section 156, payment must generally be made within 30 days.
Failure to pay may result in:
Penalty: Up to the amount of tax outstanding.
Section 234F imposes a fee for filing returns after the prescribed due date.
Fee Structure
| Total Income | Late Filing Fee |
|---|---|
| Up to ₹5 lakh | ₹1,000 |
| Above ₹5 lakh | ₹5,000 |
Persons responsible for deducting or collecting tax must file quarterly statements within prescribed timelines.
Section 234E Fee
The fee must be paid before filing the delayed statement.
The Assessing Officer may issue notices seeking information, documents, or attendance.
Failure to comply with notices under:
can result in penalties.
Penalty
₹10,000 for each failure
This penalty is levied under Section 272A.
Section 270A introduced a structured regime to penalize concealment and inaccurate reporting.
A taxpayer is considered to have under-reported income when:
Penalty
50% of tax payable on under-reported income
Misreporting is treated more severely and includes:
Penalty
200% of tax payable on misreported income
Certain taxpayers are required to maintain prescribed books under Section 44AA.
Failure to do so attracts penalty under Section 271A.
Penalty
₹25,000
Taxpayers covered under Section 44AB must obtain and furnish a tax audit report within the prescribed due date.
Penalty under Section 271B
Lower of:
Businesses engaged in international transactions or specified domestic transactions must maintain extensive documentation.
Section 271AA imposes a penalty for:
Penalty
2% of the value of each transaction
Transfer pricing report under Section 92E must be furnished in Form 3CEB.
Penalty
₹1,00,000
Where undisclosed income is detected during search proceedings, penalties may apply under Section 271AAB.
Penalty Range
Depending on circumstances:
The rate depends on disclosure, cooperation, and payment of tax.
To curb fake invoicing and bogus transactions, Section 271AAD imposes stringent penalties.
False entries include:
Penalty
Equal to the aggregate amount of false or omitted entries
The penalty can also be imposed on persons facilitating such transactions.
Section 271C provides for penalties where tax required to be deducted is not deducted.
Penalty
Amount equal to tax not deducted
Section 271CA applies where tax collectible at source is not collected.
Penalty
Amount equal to tax not collected
Section 271H imposes penalties for:
Penalty
This is in addition to fees under Section 234E.
The government has imposed strict restrictions on large cash transactions.
Section 269SS prohibits acceptance of loans, deposits, or specified sums of ₹20,000 or more in cash.
Penalty under Section 271D
100% of the amount accepted
Section 269T prohibits repayment of specified loans or deposits above prescribed limits in cash.
Penalty under Section 271E
100% of the amount repaid
Section 269ST restricts cash receipts of ₹2 lakh or more in specified circumstances.
Penalty under Section 271DA
Equal to the amount received
Businesses with turnover exceeding prescribed limits must provide notified digital payment facilities.
Penalty under Section 271DB
₹5,000 per day of default
Specified persons must furnish Statements of Financial Transactions under Section 285BA.
Penalty under Section 271FA
Penalty under Section 271FAA
₹50,000
Professionals such as:
must exercise due diligence while issuing reports.
Penalty under Section 271J
₹10,000 per incorrect report or certificate
Failure to:
may attract penalties.
Penalty under Section 272BB
₹10,000
The Income-tax Act recognizes genuine hardships and provides relief mechanisms.
Section 273A
The Principal Commissioner or Commissioner may waive or reduce penalties in deserving cases.
No penalty shall be imposed under several specified sections if the taxpayer proves that there was a reasonable cause for the failure.
This provision provides significant relief where non-compliance occurred due to circumstances beyond the taxpayer’s control.
To improve transparency and reduce physical interaction, the government introduced the Faceless Penalty Scheme.
The system aims to:
The penalty provisions under the Income-tax Act, 1961 are designed not merely as punitive measures but as compliance tools that encourage timely filing, accurate reporting, proper record maintenance, and tax discipline. With increasing digitization, data analytics, and faceless assessments, taxpayers must ensure strict compliance with statutory requirements to avoid significant financial consequences.
Businesses, professionals, and individual taxpayers should periodically review their tax compliance processes and seek professional guidance wherever necessary. A proactive compliance approach is invariably less costly than defending penalty proceedings after a default occurs.
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