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ITR-4 Filing – Sugam Form for Presumptive Taxation Under Section 44AD, 44ADA & 44AE – N D Savla & Associates
Income Tax

ITR-4 Filing – Sugam Form
for Presumptive Taxation Under Section 44AD, 44ADA & 44AE

ITR-4 filing is the income tax return process for small businesses and professionals using the presumptive taxation scheme. The Sugam form eliminates the need for detailed books of account. However, choosing ITR-4 incorrectly leads to a defective return notice under Section 139(9).

What Is the ITR-4 Sugam Form?

The ITR-4 Sugam form is the income tax return for individuals, HUFs, and firms opting for the presumptive taxation scheme India. It eliminates the need for detailed books of account and formal audits. The Sugam form filing also covers salary, one house property, and other source income alongside the presumptive business income — all in a single return.

N D Savla & Associates provides complete ITR-4 filing services for traders, professionals, and transport operators. We assess your ITR-4 eligibility, choose the correct presumptive scheme, and complete the Sugam form filing on time. Our service connects with our Income Tax E-Filing services and Business Tax Filing advisory — keeping your full tax compliance in one place.

The key benefit: Under the presumptive taxation scheme India, small taxpayers declare income at a fixed percentage of turnover — avoiding full books of account and tax audit. However, opting out of the presumptive taxation scheme India for one year bars re-entry for five years. Our Tax Health Check reviews whether the scheme suits your income profile before each ITR-4 filing.
No Books
Required

No need to maintain formal ledgers, P&L, or balance sheet under presumptive taxation.

No Audit
Required

Section 44AB tax audit does not apply while you remain within the presumptive scheme limits.

Fixed %
of Turnover

Declare income at the prescribed percentage — 8%, 6%, or 50% — without transaction-level computation.

ITR-4 Eligibility – Three Presumptive Schemes

ITR-4 eligibility covers individuals, HUFs, and firms (excluding LLPs) who opt for the presumptive taxation scheme India. Total income from all sources must not exceed ₹50 lakh. Below are the three categories that qualify for Sugam form filing.

Section 44AD

Small Business Owners & Traders

Turnover up to ₹3 Crore
8% / 6%
of gross turnover declared as income

Covers resident individuals, HUFs, and partnership firms with any eligible business. Income is presumed at 8% of gross turnover — or 6% where all receipts and payments are digital. Not available to commission agents, professionals, or businesses covered by Section 44AE.

Example: A trader with ₹2 crore fully digital turnover declares ₹12 lakh (6%) as net income — without maintaining any books or getting a tax audit.
Section 44ADA

Specified Professionals

Receipts up to ₹75 Lakh
50%
of gross receipts declared as income

Covers doctors, lawyers, chartered accountants, architects, engineers, and other notified professionals under Section 44AA. Income is presumed at 50% of gross receipts. Minimum 50% must be declared — declaring below this is treated as opting out. Our Income Tax E-Filing advisory verifies profession classification before confirming ITR-4 eligibility.

Example: A doctor with ₹40 lakh gross receipts declares ₹20 lakh (50%) as taxable income — with no books or audit required below ₹75 lakh.
Section 44AE

Goods Transport Operators

Up to 10 goods vehicles
₹1,000/tonne
per vehicle per month (heavy vehicles)

Covers individuals, HUFs, and firms owning up to 10 goods vehicles at any time during the year. Income is presumed at ₹1,000 per tonne of vehicle capacity per month for heavy vehicles. Light vehicles attract a fixed presumptive amount per vehicle per month. Transport operators avoid maintaining trip logs and profit calculations entirely.

Example: A transporter with two 20-tonne trucks declares ₹4.8 lakh annually (₹1,000 × 20 tonnes × 2 vehicles × 12 months) as presumptive income.

Who Can — and Cannot — Use the ITR-4 Sugam Form?

ITR-4 eligibility disappears the moment any disqualifying income or event occurs during the year. Our Income Tax E-Filing service prevents defective return notices by reviewing the full income profile before confirming the correct form.

✓ Can Use ITR-4 (Sugam)

  • Resident individual, HUF, or firm (not LLP)
  • Total income from all sources ≤ ₹50 lakh
  • Business turnover up to ₹3 crore — Section 44AD
  • Professional receipts up to ₹75 lakh — Section 44ADA (notified professionals only)
  • Goods transport operator owning ≤ 10 vehicles — Section 44AE
  • Salary income alongside presumptive business income
  • One house property income alongside business income
  • Interest and dividend income alongside business income

✗ Cannot Use ITR-4 — Use ITR-2 or ITR-3

  • Any capital gain (even ₹100 from mutual funds or shares)
  • More than one house property
  • Foreign income, foreign assets, or foreign bank account signatory
  • Company director (in any company — listed or unlisted)
  • Holder of unlisted equity shares at any point during the year
  • Lottery winnings or casual income at special rates
  • Non-specified professions not covered by Section 44ADA
  • Businesses specifically excluded from Section 44AD (commission agents, etc.)
!

Many small business owners who also trade in stocks or hold unlisted shares lose their ITR-4 eligibility without realising it. A single equity fund transaction in the year forces a switch to ITR-2 or ITR-3. We review the full income profile — including AIS data — before confirming the correct form for every Sugam form filing.

Opting Out of the Presumptive Taxation Scheme — What Happens?

Once a taxpayer opts out of the presumptive taxation scheme India, specific restrictions apply for the next five years. This is the most overlooked risk in ITR-4 filing — and the consequences are long-term and costly.

The Five-Year Opt-Out Consequences — Section 44AD

Cannot re-enter the scheme for 5 years. After opting out of Section 44AD ITR-4, the taxpayer must maintain full books of account and file ITR-3 for five consecutive years — regardless of whether they would have qualified for the Sugam form filing.

Section 44AB audit may become mandatory. If business turnover exceeds ₹1 crore during the five-year restriction period, a Section 44AB tax audit also becomes mandatory — significantly increasing compliance costs.

!

Declaring below the minimum percentage also counts as opting out. If a taxpayer declares income below 8% (or 6%) of turnover in Section 44AD ITR-4, the Act treats this as an automatic opt-out — triggering the five-year restriction. The declared income figure in the Sugam form filing requires careful calculation every year.

We calculate whether actual income filing genuinely saves tax before recommending any exit from the presumptive taxation scheme India. Our Tax Health Check models both scenarios — presumptive vs actual — before each Sugam form filing to confirm the correct path.

ITR-4 Due Date and Late Filing Penalties

The ITR-4 due date is the most critical compliance deadline for small businesses and professionals on the presumptive scheme. We begin ITR-4 preparation in June — giving enough time to review receipts, confirm the scheme, and submit before the deadline.

ITR-4 Due Date
31 July 2025

For Assessment Year 2025-26, covering income earned in FY 2024-25. All traders, professionals, and transport operators on the presumptive taxation scheme India must file by this date.

Belated Return Window
31 Dec 2025

A belated Sugam form filing is possible until 31 December 2025 — but with late fees and interest. Refund processing is also slower for belated returns.

Late Fee — Section 234F
₹5,000

₹5,000 if total income exceeds ₹5 lakh. ₹1,000 if income is below ₹5 lakh. Plus interest at 1% per month under Section 234A on outstanding tax. Our Income Tax Notice advisory handles all post-filing consequences.

Scheme Risk
5-Year Lock

Failing to declare income at the minimum prescribed percentage — even inadvertently through a late or incorrect return — can trigger the five-year opt-out restriction from the presumptive taxation scheme India.

Advance Tax for Presumptive Taxpayers — Single Instalment

Unlike other business taxpayers who pay in four instalments, presumptive scheme taxpayers pay 100% of advance tax in a single instalment.

15 March
100% of liability

Single Advance Tax Instalment — By 15 March

Taxpayers on the presumptive taxation scheme India must pay their entire advance tax liability by 15 March. Missing this single instalment attracts interest under Section 234B and Section 234C. We compute the advance tax and remind clients before the 15 March deadline as part of every ITR-4 filing engagement.

Documents Required for ITR-4 Filing

ITR-4 filing is an annexure-free process — no documents are attached to the return. However, reviewing these records ensures accuracy in the Sugam form filing and prevents post-filing Section 143(1) notices from AIS mismatches.

Income and Turnover Records

  • Gross sales or turnover figures — from GST returns (GSTR-1) or bank statements. The presumptive income calculation starts from this figure
  • Bank statements for all business accounts — to confirm total receipts and the digital versus cash split (critical for 6% vs 8% rate under Section 44AD)
  • Form 26AS and AIS — to verify TDS deducted under Section 194C (contracts) or Section 194J (professionals). We reconcile AIS with declared income before Sugam form filing
  • Form 16A from clients — TDS certificates confirming tax already deducted from professional fees or business receipts

Deduction and Tax Payment Records

  • Investment proofs for Section 80C deductions — LIC, PPF, ELSS, tuition fees (applicable under the old tax regime)
  • Health insurance premium receipts — for Section 80D deduction under the old tax regime
  • Advance tax payment challans — for the 15 March instalment paid during the year
  • PAN and Aadhaar — for identity verification during e-filing
  • Bank account details pre-validated on the income tax portal — for refund credit where TDS exceeds the final tax liability

Our ITR-4 Filing Services at N D Savla & Associates

We provide end-to-end ITR-4 filing support for traders, professionals, and transport operators. Our service covers the complete Sugam form filing process — not just portal submission.

01

Presumptive Income Calculation and Scheme Selection

We calculate presumptive income under the correct section — Section 44AD, Section 44ADA, or Section 44AE. We compare the presumptive income with actual net profit to confirm whether the scheme genuinely benefits the client this year. We also apply the digital receipt adjustment where applicable — reducing the declared income from 8% to 6% under Section 44AD where all receipts are digital. Our Business Tax Filing service manages this analysis for every ITR-4 filing engagement.
02

GST-ITR Turnover Reconciliation

We reconcile the business income declared in the Sugam form filing with the GST return turnover figures. Mismatches between ITR-4 and GSTR-1 trigger automated notices from the Income Tax Department. We also reconcile TDS in Form 26AS with declared income — so no unreported receipt creates a post-filing discrepancy. Our Income Tax E-Filing service integrates ITR-4 filing with GST reconciliation for every client as a mandatory pre-submission check.
03

Old vs New Tax Regime for ITR-4 Filers

Small business owners and professionals on the presumptive taxation scheme India can choose between tax regimes each year. Unlike ITR-3 business filers who face a five-year regime lock-out, ITR-4 filers can switch regimes annually — because the five-year restriction applies to the presumptive scheme exit, not the regime choice. Therefore, we compare both regimes and select the one that minimises tax before each Sugam form filing. Our Business Tax Filing service does this computation for every ITR-4 client.
04

Advance Tax Planning and Opt-Out Risk Assessment

We compute the 15 March advance tax requirement for every ITR-4 filing client and send reminders well before the deadline. For clients approaching the scheme turnover limits — or considering whether to file actual income — our Tax Health Check models the five-year opt-out consequences before any decision is made. Where clients have received Income Tax Notices related to prior ITR-4 filings — AIS mismatches or turnover discrepancies — we handle the response alongside the current year's Sugam form filing.

File Your ITR-4 Return on Time. Expert CA Support for Every Presumptive Scheme.

Section 44AD, 44ADA, and 44AE income calculation, Sugam form filing, GST reconciliation, regime comparison, and advance tax planning — complete ITR-4 support for businesses and professionals across India.

+91 98190 00511  |  +91 91670 58000  |  +91 98190 00445  |  nainitsavla@savlagroup.in

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F.A.Q.

ITR-4 filing is the income tax return process for individuals, HUFs, and firms using the presumptive taxation scheme India. ITR-4 eligibility applies under Section 44AD for small businesses, Section 44ADA for professionals, and Section 44AE for goods transport operators. However, company directors, capital gains earners, and foreign asset holders cannot use the Sugam form filing route. Our Income Tax E-Filing advisory confirms your ITR-4 eligibility before filing.

The ITR-4 due date for Assessment Year 2025-26 is 31 July 2025. Missing this date results in a late fee of ₹5,000 under Section 234F (₹1,000 if income is below ₹5 lakh). Furthermore, interest at 1% per month under Section 234A applies on outstanding tax from the ITR-4 due date onwards.

Section 44AD ITR-4 covers resident individuals, HUFs, and firms with business turnover up to ₹3 crore. Income is presumed at 8% of gross turnover — or 6% for fully digital receipts and payments. Therefore, a trader with ₹2 crore digital turnover declares ₹12 lakh as taxable business income in the Sugam form filing — without maintaining detailed books. Our Business Tax Filing service handles Section 44AD calculation for all ITR-4 filing clients.

Section 44ADA professionals ITR-4 applies to doctors, lawyers, chartered accountants, architects, engineers, and other specified professionals. Gross receipts must not exceed ₹75 lakh. Additionally, income is presumed at 50% of total receipts — making the Sugam form filing highly tax-efficient for professionals with receipts well below the ₹75 lakh threshold.

Once you opt out of the presumptive taxation scheme India under Section 44AD, you cannot re-enter for five years. Therefore, you must maintain full books and file ITR-3 for five consecutive years. Moreover, if turnover exceeds ₹1 crore during this period, a Section 44AB tax audit also becomes mandatory. We model this cost before advising any scheme exit.

No. Section 44ADA professionals ITR-4 requires declaring at least 50% of gross receipts as income. Declaring below 50% counts as opting out of the presumptive taxation scheme India. Consequently, the professional must maintain books of account for that year and switch to ITR-3. Our Tax Health Check reviews whether Section 44ADA remains beneficial each year before Sugam form filing.

Yes. ITR-4 filing under the old tax regime allows deductions under Section 80C, 80D, 80G, and other chapter VI-A sections. However, the new tax regime does not permit these deductions. Therefore, the regime choice in Sugam form filing directly determines whether Section 80C and 80D deductions reduce the final tax. We compute both options for every ITR-4 filing client before submission.