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The basics · AY 2026-27

What Is an Income Tax Return (ITR)?

An income tax return is the form you file each year to tell the government what you earned, what tax you've paid, and whether anything is still due — or owed back to you. Here's everything that means, in plain language.

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An Income Tax Return (ITR) is a form filed with the Income Tax Department that declares your income, deductions and taxes paid for a financial year, and works out whether you owe more tax or are due a refund. Most people file it once a year, online, on the e-filing portal.

The one concept to get right

Financial year vs assessment year

You earn in one year and file the next. The year you earn is the financial year; the year you report and it's assessed is the assessment year.

Financial Year (FY)
2025-26

1 April 2025 to 31 March 2026 — the year you actually earn the income.

Assessment Year (AY)
2026-27

The next year — when you file the return for that income and it's assessed.

So the return you file in 2026 for what you earned in FY 2025-26 is your AY 2026-27 return.

What's changing next

The new ‘Tax Year’ concept

From the Income-tax Act, 2025, the confusing pair of “previous year” and “assessment year” is replaced by a single term — the Tax Year. You earn and file for the same year, with no second label to match.

Now · until FY 2025-26
FY 2025-26AY 2026-27

Two labels: you earn in the financial year and file in the next assessment year.

From FY 2026-27
Tax Year 2026-27

One label: you earn and file for the same Tax Year — a 12-month April-to-March period.

Does this change your filing now? No. Income earned up to 31 March 2026 is still filed for AY 2026-27 under the Income-tax Act, 1961 — the FY-and-AY system above still applies this season. The Tax Year takes over from 1 April 2026, the first being Tax Year 2026-27.

Why it matters

Why file an income tax return?

It may be the law

If your income is above the basic exemption — or you cross certain triggers — filing is mandatory.

Claim your refund

Paid more via TDS or advance tax than you owe? You only get it back by filing a return.

Carry forward losses

Business, trading or capital losses can be carried forward to save tax later — only if you file on time.

Proof of income

Banks and embassies ask for ITRs for loans, credit cards and visas. It's your financial track record.

Avoid penalty & notices

Late or missed filing brings a fee, interest, and a higher chance of a notice.

Big transactions on record

Filing keeps you clean when high-value spends and investments show up in your AIS.

Some of these apply even if your income is below the limit — see who should file an ITR and what happens if you file late.

Under the hood

What's inside an ITR?

Every return, however simple or complex, walks through the same five things.

1

Your income

From salary, business, house property, capital gains, and other sources — added up for the year.

2

Deductions & exemptions

Amounts the law lets you subtract — like 80C, 80D or the new-regime standard deduction.

3

Tax computation

Your tax on the net income, under the new or old regime, after any rebate.

4

Taxes already paid

TDS, advance tax and self-assessment tax — matched against your AIS and Form 26AS.

5

Payable or refund

The final line: a little more tax to pay, or a refund of what you overpaid.

Does it apply to you?

Who files, and on which form

Filing is mandatory once your income crosses the basic exemption, and for companies, firms and LLPs always — plus several other triggers. The form depends on your income type.

Plain-English glossary

Key terms, decoded

PAN

Your Permanent Account Number — the ID every return is filed under.

FY / AY

The year you earn (financial year) and the year you file (assessment year).

TDS

Tax Deducted at Source — tax your employer or bank already cut and deposited.

AIS / 26AS

Statements showing income and tax already reported to the department in your name.

Section 87A

The rebate that makes income up to ₹12 lakh tax-free under the new regime.

E-verification

The final step that confirms your return — without it, it's not treated as filed.

Common questions

Income tax return — FAQs

What is an income tax return (ITR)?

An ITR is a form filed with the Income Tax Department that reports your income, deductions and taxes paid for a financial year, and computes whether you owe more tax or are due a refund.

What is the full form of ITR?

ITR stands for Income Tax Return.

What is the difference between financial year and assessment year?

The financial year (FY) is when you earn the income — for example FY 2025-26. The assessment year (AY) is the next year, when you file the return and it is assessed — AY 2026-27.

Is filing an income tax return mandatory?

It is mandatory once your income crosses the basic exemption limit, and always for companies, firms and LLPs — plus several other triggers such as large deposits or foreign assets, even below the limit.

What happens if I don't file my ITR?

You can face a late-filing fee and interest, lose the ability to carry forward losses, delay any refund, and raise your chances of a notice from the department.

Do I need an ITR even if there's no tax to pay?

Often yes — to claim a refund, to carry forward a loss, or because a trigger makes filing mandatory. An ITR is also useful proof of income for loans and visas.

New to all this? Let a CA file it for you

Understanding the ITR is one thing; filing it correctly is another. Send your documents on WhatsApp and a Chartered Accountant picks the right form, the best regime, and files it on time — refund and all.

File my ITR with a CA

This explainer on income tax returns is for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26) and is for general information only — not tax, legal or financial advice. Rules, limits and forms are governed by the Income-tax Act, 1961 and may change. Verify the current position, or consult a Chartered Accountant, before filing.