Underreporting of Income
Underreporting of Income refers to a situation where a taxpayer reports less income than actually earned, resulting in lower tax liability. It may occur due to errors, omissions, or intentional misreporting.
It attracts penalties under the Income Tax Act.
1. What Constitutes Underreporting
Underreporting can arise when:
- Income is not fully disclosed in the ITR
- Incorrect deductions or exemptions are claimed
- Certain income sources are omitted
- Income is understated compared to actual figures
2. Detection by Authorities
The Income Tax Department identifies underreporting through:
- AIS (Annual Information Statement)
- Form 26AS
- Data analytics and system matching
- Scrutiny and assessments
3. Penalty for Underreporting
Penalty is levied under Section 270A:
- 50% of tax payable on underreported income
- Can increase to 200% in case of misreporting
4. Underreporting vs Misreporting
- Underreporting: May arise due to errors or omissions
- Misreporting: Deliberate falsification or concealment
Misreporting attracts higher penalties.
5. Situations Leading to Underreporting
- Mismatch between ITR and AIS/Form 26AS
- Failure to report interest or other income
- Incorrect calculation of capital gains
- Not updating income details
6. Common Mistakes
- Ignoring small income sources
- Not reconciling tax data
- Relying only on Form 16
- Misunderstanding tax provisions
Practical Insight
Most underreporting is not intentional.
It happens because:
- data is scattered
- people miss details
- systems don’t match
But the system doesn’t differentiate easily.
So even small gaps can:
👉 trigger penalties
How N D Savla & Associates Can Help
At N D Savla & Associates, we help you:
- Reconcile income with AIS and Form 26AS
- Ensure complete and accurate reporting
- Avoid penalties under Section 270A
- Handle notices and assessments