Disallowance
A disallowance refers to an expense or deduction claimed by a taxpayer that is not permitted under tax laws while computing taxable income. As a result, such expenses are added back to income, increasing the overall tax liability.
Disallowances are governed by various provisions under the Income Tax Act, 1961.
How It Works
- A taxpayer claims certain expenses while computing income
- The tax authorities review whether those expenses are allowable
- If found non-compliant or not eligible, the expense is disallowed
- The disallowed amount is added back to taxable income
Common Examples of Disallowance
- Personal expenses claimed as business expenses
- Payments made without proper documentation or proof
- Cash payments exceeding prescribed limits (Section 40A(3))
- Non-deduction or late deduction of TDS (Section 40(a)(ia))
- Expenses not incurred wholly and exclusively for business purposes
Why It Matters
- Directly increases taxable income and tax liability
- Common trigger during scrutiny and assessments
- Requires proper documentation and compliance
- Impacts financial reporting and profit calculations
Important Note
Even genuine business expenses can be disallowed if compliance requirements (like TDS deduction or payment modes) are not followed. Proper record-keeping is critical.