Minimum Alternative Tax (MAT)
Minimum Alternative Tax (MAT) is a tax provision that ensures companies pay a minimum amount of tax even if their taxable income is low due to various deductions and exemptions.
It is applicable mainly to companies that report high “book profits” but pay little or no income tax under normal provisions.
1. Purpose of MAT
MAT was introduced to:
- Prevent companies from avoiding tax through excessive deductions
- Ensure a minimum level of tax contribution
- Bring parity between reported profits and tax paid
2. Applicability of MAT
- Applicable to companies (domestic and foreign, subject to conditions)
- Not applicable to companies opting for certain concessional tax regimes (like Section 115BAA/115BAB, subject to conditions)
3. Rate of MAT
- MAT is charged at 15% of book profit
- Plus surcharge and cess, as applicable
4. What is Book Profit
Book profit is calculated based on:
- Net profit as per financial statements (Companies Act)
- Adjusted for specified additions and deductions under tax provisions
This forms the base for MAT calculation.
5. How MAT Works
If:
- Tax under normal provisions < MAT → MAT is payable
- Tax under normal provisions > MAT → Normal tax is payable
So MAT acts as a minimum tax floor.
6. MAT Credit
- Excess MAT paid can be carried forward as MAT credit
- Can be set off in future years when normal tax exceeds MAT
- Carry forward allowed up to 15 years
7. Common Mistakes
- Ignoring MAT applicability during tax planning
- Incorrect computation of book profit
- Not tracking MAT credit
- Assuming MAT applies in all cases
Practical Insight
Here’s what most companies miss:
They focus only on reducing taxable income.
But if book profits are high,
MAT kicks in anyway.
So real planning is:
- balancing deductions
- tracking MAT credit
- choosing the right tax regime
How N D Savla & Associates Can Help
At N D Savla & Associates, we help you:
- Evaluate MAT applicability
- Compute book profits accurately
- Track and utilise MAT credit
- Plan optimal tax strategy across regimes