Tax Evasion
Tax Evasion refers to the illegal practice of deliberately avoiding payment of taxes by misrepresenting or concealing income, inflating expenses, or falsifying records.
It is a punishable offence under the Income Tax Act and can lead to severe penalties and prosecution.
1. Common Forms of Tax Evasion
Tax evasion may occur through:
- Not reporting full income
- Showing fake expenses or deductions
- Using undisclosed cash transactions
- Maintaining unaccounted books (“black money”)
- Hiding assets or income in other names
2. Difference from Tax Planning
- Tax Planning: Legal and permitted
- Tax Avoidance: Using loopholes (grey area)
- Tax Evasion: Illegal and punishable
Understanding this distinction is critical.
3. Consequences of Tax Evasion
- Heavy penalties
- Interest on unpaid tax
- Prosecution and imprisonment
- Seizure of assets
- Increased scrutiny by authorities
4. Detection by Authorities
The Income Tax Department uses:
- AIS (Annual Information Statement)
- Form 26AS
- Data analytics and risk assessment
- Information from banks and financial institutions
to detect discrepancies and unreported income.
5. Legal Provisions
- Covered under various sections of the Income Tax Act
- May involve criminal proceedings in serious cases
- Penalties depend on severity and intent
6. Common Mistakes
- Assuming small amounts won’t be tracked
- Ignoring reporting requirements
- Misclassifying income
- Believing cash transactions are invisible
Practical Insight
Most tax evasion cases today aren’t “planned fraud.”
They start with:
- underreporting
- mismatches
- casual errors
But once detected, they are treated seriously.
Because:
👉 intent is judged from behaviour, not just amount
How N D Savla & Associates Can Help
At N D Savla & Associates, we help you:
- Maintain clean and compliant records
- Report income accurately
- Avoid risky or non-compliant practices
- Handle notices and scrutiny professionally