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Section 63 Tax Audit under Income Tax Act 2025

Complete Guide to Section 63 Tax Audit with Form 26, Rule 47 & Presumptive Taxation Explained

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Section 63 – Tax Audit | IT Act 2025 | eTaxSave by CA Devesh Thakur
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IT Act 2025 · Income Tax Series

Section 63 – Tax Audit
Under Income Tax Act 2025

Complete Structured Guide — Master Applicability, Presumptive Taxation (Sec 58), Deemed Income, 5-Year Lock-in Rule, Form 26 (Rule 47), Technology Control & Anti-Evasion Framework

Income Tax Act 2025 Section 63 | Section 58 Rule 47 | Form 26 CA Devesh Thakur
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Master Applicability Flow

Who is required to get a Tax Audit under Section 63? The threshold depends on whether you are in Business or Profession — with a higher ₹10 Crore limit available for digital-mode businesses.

🔀 Master Applicability Flow FLOWCHART 1

START
Is person carrying on Business or Profession?
💼 BUSINESS
Turnover > ₹1 Crore?
YES → Audit Applicable
Check Cash Condition:
Cash Receipts ≤ 5%
AND
Cash Payments ≤ 5%?
YES
✅ Limit = ₹10 Cr
NO
⚠️ Limit = ₹1 Cr
🏛️ PROFESSION
Gross Receipts > ₹50 Lakh?
✅ Audit Required u/s 63

Presumptive Taxation Flow (Section 58)

A person eligible for the presumptive scheme under Section 58 can avoid audit — but only if the income declared is at least equal to the deemed income. Below the deemed income threshold, audit becomes mandatory under Section 63.

🔀 Presumptive Taxation — Audit Trigger Flow FLOWCHART 2

Eligible for Presumptive Scheme (Sec 58)?
YES
Turnover / Receipts within eligible limits?
Business
≤ ₹2 Crore
(₹3 Cr if cash ≤ 5%)
Profession
≤ ₹50 Lakh
(₹75 L if cash ≤ 5%)
Income Declared ≥ Deemed Income?
YES
✅ No Audit Required
NO
⚠️ Audit Required u/s 63
📐

Point 3 — Deemed Income Structure (Important)

CategoryDeemed Income Rate / Amount
Business — Digital Receipts6% of turnover / gross receipts
Business — Cash Receipts8% of turnover / gross receipts
Profession50% of gross receipts
Goods Carriage₹7,500 per vehicle per month  OR  ₹1,000 per ton per month

Presumptive Non-Compliance — 5-Year Lock-in Rule

Exiting the presumptive scheme triggers a 5-year lock-in period. If income during lock-in exceeds the basic exemption limit, audit under Section 63 becomes mandatory.

🔀 Presumptive Non-Compliance — Lock-in Rule Flow FLOWCHART 4

Was income declared under Presumptive Taxation?
YES
Later declared NOT as per presumptive scheme?
YES
🔒 5-Year Lock-in Period Triggered
Income > Basic Exemption Limit?
⚠️ Audit Required u/s 63
📌

Point 5 — Important Presumptive Conditions

ConditionRule / Detail
Eligible AssesseeIndividual / HUF / Firm  Not LLP
Not AllowedCommission agents, brokers, and agency businesses are excluded from the presumptive scheme
No Further DeductionsNo additional deductions allowed once presumptive income is adopted
DepreciationDeemed to be already allowed — cannot be claimed separately
Non-Account Payee ChequeTreated as cash — counts towards cash receipt/payment percentage
⚠️

Point 6 — Exception: Goods Carriage Business

Section 62 & Section 63 are NOT applicable to Goods Carriage businesses. The turnover from goods carriage is excluded from the threshold calculation for audit applicability. This is a critical exception — remember it for exams and practice.

Specified Date Flow

The audit must be completed and Form 26 must be filed on or before the Specified Date — defined as 1 month before the ITR due date under Section 263.

🔀 Specified Date Calculation Flow FLOWCHART 7

📅 ITR Due Date (Section 263)
Minus 1 Month
🎯 Specified Date (Audit Due Date)
📅

The Rule

Specified Date = 1 month before the ITR due date under Section 263. Audit report must be filed by this date.

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Practical Example

If ITR due date = 31st October, then Audit Specified Date = 30th September

⚠️

Consequence of Delay

Missing the specified date may attract penalties. The audit and filing must both be completed before this deadline.

Form 26 — Structure & Audit Type

Rule 47 prescribes Form 26 as the tax audit report under Section 63. It has four parts — Part A & B apply to all; Part C or D depends on whether the accounts are audited under any other law.

📁

Form 26 — Four Parts at a Glance

PartApplicabilityPurpose
Part AAll CasesAssessee basic details — name, PAN, address, nature of business
Part BAll CasesStatement of particulars — detailed financial disclosure (11 areas)
Part CAccounts audited under other law (e.g. Companies Act)Reliance on statutory audit — CA certifies based on existing audit
Part DNo other audit applicableIndependent tax audit conducted directly by the CA

🔀 Form 26 — Structure Flow FLOWCHART 8

📋 Form 26
Part A
Assessee Details
All Cases
Part B
Statement of Particulars
All Cases
Part C
Audit Under Other Law
Rely on Statutory Audit
Part D
No Other Audit
Independent Tax Audit

🔀 Audit Type Selection — Part C vs Part D FLOWCHART 11

Accounts audited under any other law?
(Companies Act, Co-op Act, etc.)
YES
Part C
Rely on Statutory Audit
NO
Part D
Independent Tax Audit

Part B Core Structure, Schedule Trigger & Auditor Reporting

Part B has 11 coverage areas — every clause is answered Yes/No. A “Yes” answer triggers a detailed schedule. The auditor must also classify the basis of reporting for each item.

📋

Point 9 — Part B Core Structure (11 Areas)

#AreaCoverage & Details
1General InfoBasic business details — nature, name, registration, category
2Books & AccountingMethod of accounting, books maintained, accounting software used
3IncomeGross receipts, total turnover, income computation
4ExpensesDisallowances — personal expenses, capital items, excessive payments
5Prior PeriodAdjustments relating to earlier financial years
6DepreciationLosses, depreciation claims and deduction computation
7International TaxForeign transactions — transfer pricing, foreign remittances
8TDS / TCSTax Deducted / Collected at Source — reporting & compliance
9GSTIndirect tax — turnover reconciliation with GST returns
10QuantitativeStock details — opening, closing, purchase & sales quantities
11OtherKey disclosures — MAT credit, other mandatory items

🔀 Schedule Trigger Flow FLOWCHART 10

Clause Answer in Part B = YES?
YES
📎 Detailed Schedule Required
NO
No Schedule Needed
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Point 12 — Auditor Reporting Classification

TypeMeaning
Test-Check BasisSample-based — auditor verifies selected transactions, not every entry
Management RepresentationAuditor relies on statements/representations made by client management
Unable to VerifyInsufficient evidence — auditor cannot independently verify the item

Mandatory Impact Reporting (All Cases)

Regardless of the audit basis used, the auditor must mandatorily report the financial impact on:

  • Profit / Loss — effect on the net income figure
  • Book Profit — effect on Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) computation

Complete Process Flow & Document Requirements

From maintaining books of accounts to final acceptance by the assessee — every step in the tax audit process under Section 63, and the key documents required.

🔀 Complete Process Flow — Books to Filing FLOWCHART 13

📚 Books of Account
🏛️ Audit by CA (Chartered Accountant)
📋 Form 26 Preparation
🔑 UDIN Generation
🔐 Upload with DSC (Digital Signature Certificate)
✅ Assessee Acceptance
📁 Filed Successfully
1

Books of Account

Maintain complete and accurate books — base data for the entire audit

2

Audit by CA

Chartered Accountant conducts the tax audit and forms opinion

3

Form 26 Preparation

CA prepares the structured audit report in Form 26 as per Rule 47

4

UDIN Generation

Unique Document Identification Number generated for audit authenticity

5

Upload with DSC

CA uploads Form 26 on the income tax portal using Digital Signature Certificate

6

Assessee Acceptance

Assessee reviews, approves and formally accepts the uploaded report — filing complete

📂

Point 14 — Document Requirements

DocumentPurpose
Books of AccountBase data — complete financial records for the relevant FY
Financial StatementsP&L Account and Balance Sheet
Audit ReportIf applicable — statutory or earlier audit reports
GST / TDS RecordsCompliance proof — returns, challans, reconciliation
Inventory RecordsQuantitative data — opening/closing stock, movements

TDS/TCS Reporting, Technology Control & Anti-Evasion System

New requirements introduced under IT Act 2025 — designed to ensure data authenticity, prevent evasion, and enable automated risk-based scrutiny.

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Point 15 — TDS / TCS Reporting (New Requirement)

RequirementDetail
Total TransactionsMandatory — All TDS/TCS transactions must be fully reported
Unreported TransactionsMandatory — Transactions not previously reported must be specifically disclosed
Amount of Such TransactionsMandatory — Exact quantification of unreported amounts is required
🖥️

Point 16 — Technology Control System

AreaRequirementImpact
SoftwareMandatory disclosure of accounting software usedData authenticity verification
Cloud StorageDisclose IP address + country of cloud storageTraceability of financial data
Backup ServerBackup server must be India-basedData security & sovereignty
System ValidationSystem-based cross-matching with ITR, GST, TDS returnsEarly mismatch detection

Anti-Evasion Control System

Risk
💾 Data Tampering
✔ Control: Software tracking — prevents manipulation of records
Risk
🌐 Offshore Hiding
✔ Control: Server location reporting — prevents data concealment abroad
Risk
⏮ Timing Manipulation
✔ Control: Prior period reporting — stops shifting of income/expenses
Risk
🌍 Treaty Misuse
✔ Control: Remittance classification — prevents DTAA abuse
Risk
📊 Credit Misuse
✔ Control: MAT tracking — prevents excess MAT credit claims

ITR Matching & Final Structure

The complete end-to-end picture — how Form 26 feeds into the system for cross-matching, and the layered framework from law to outcome.

🔀 ITR Matching Flow FLOWCHART 18

Form 26 Filed
🖥️ System Cross-Check
Mismatch Detected?
YES
⚠️ Adjustment Triggered
NO
✅ Accepted

🔀 Final Structure — Section 63 to Outcome FLOWCHART 19

Section 63
⚙️ Rule 47
📋 Form 26
📊 Structured Reporting
🖥️ System Validation
🎯 Risk-Based Scrutiny
Layer 1 — Law
Section 63
Layer 2 — Rule
Rule 47
Layer 3 — Execution
Form 26
Layer 4 — Method
Structured Reporting
Layer 5 — Validation
System Validation
Layer 6 — Outcome
Risk-Based Scrutiny
💡

Key Takeaway — Students & Professionals

Section 63 of IT Act 2025 is a major evolution. It integrates Section 58 (Presumptive Taxation) with clear deemed income thresholds (6%/8%/50%), introduces a strict 5-year lock-in rule on opting out, carves out a specific exception for Goods Carriage businesses, and moves the entire audit framework to a structured, system-driven, automated process via Form 26 — enabling real-time cross-matching with ITR, TDS and GST returns for risk-based scrutiny.

© 2025–2026 eTaxSave by CA Devesh Thakur · All Rights Reserved  |  This blog is for educational purposes. Please consult a qualified CA for specific tax advice.

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