A member of the leadership team with over 17 years spent working at the intersection of Investment Analysis, Personal Finance, and Technology. Hands-on experience across multiple functions including Index Construction, Index Maintenance, Asset Allocation, Portfolio Construction, Managing a team of Digital Relationship Managers, etc
Fact checked byA member of the leadership team with over 17 years spent working at the intersection of Investment Analysis, Personal Finance, and Technology. Hands-on experience across multiple functions including Index Construction, Index Maintenance, Asset Allocation, Portfolio Construction, Managing a team of Digital Relationship Managers, etc
For most of the people carrying on a business or profession, maintenance of books of accounts has always been a trick question. There are many misconceptions about the maintenance of accounts under section 44AA of Income Tax Act,1961. An assessee need not maintain the books in every case. Section 44AA of Income Tax Act, 1961 provides for criteria that must be seen in order to decide whether or not to maintain books of accounts.
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As per the provisions of section 44AA of Income Tax Act, every person carrying on the below profession must compulsorily maintain books of accounts:
** A person who represents another person for a fee before a tribunal or any authority constituted under any law. It does not include an employee of the person so represented or a person who is carrying on the profession of accountancy.
You must maintain the books of accounts if the gross receipts are more than Rs. 1,50,000 in the three preceding years for a person carrying on profession. The same is also applicable to a newly established profession whose gross receipts are expected to be greater than Rs. 1,50,000.
In case the gross receipts of the above-listed professions are not more than Rs. 1,50,000 in any of the three preceding years then the professional need not maintain the books of accounts under section 44AA.
The assessee must maintain these books of accounts at the Head Office or at each of the offices.
For how long the books need to be maintained under section 44AA Of the Income Tax Act, 1961?
As per the relevant provisions, you must maintain the books of accounts for a period of 6 years from the end of the year.
In case of a failure to maintain the books of accounts, the assessing officer may levy a penalty under section 271A up to Rs. 25,000. In the case of an international transaction, failure to maintain information and documents for transactions would lead to a penalty of 2% of the value of international transactions.
Let us understand the applicability of section 44AA with the help of a few examples.
Suppose Amit is a person carrying on profession as a film producer. His gross receipts from the profession are as below:
Financial year 2017-18 – Rs. 2,00,000
Financial year 2018-19 – Rs. 1,50,000
Financial year 2019-20 – Rs. 1,18,000
In the present case, Amit is a person who is carrying on profession as a film producer which is a notified profession as per section 44AA. Since his gross receipts in all three years do not exceed Rs. 1,50,000 the requirements of section 44AA are not applicable to Amit.
A person who is engaged in any profession as prescribed under section 44AA(1) cannot adopt the presumptive taxation scheme of section 44AD. The assessee can opt for the taxation scheme as per section 44ADA. Moreover, you must declare 50% of gross receipts as your presumptive income. Section 44ADA is applicable only for resident assessee whose total gross receipts of profession do not exceed fifty lakh rupees.
The assessee needs to maintain the proofs of earning for every source of income for the purpose of calculating the income by the assessing officer. Even if the specified documents are not kept, there should be reasonable records that will help the officer to calculate the income.
A chartered accountant needs to conduct an account audit for taxpayers who belong to the following categories:
Taxpayer Category | Which Audit is Necessary? |
Individuals under Section 44AE’s presumptive income scheme | If the presumptive income exceeds the business income as per Section 44AE |
Individuals involved in business | Gross receipts, turnover or sales exceed INR 2 crore |
Individuals under Section 44AD’s presumptive income scheme | If the business income falls below the presumptive income threshold outlined in Section 44AD, and the individual’s total income surpasses the minimum tax exemption limit. |
Individuals involved in a profession | Gross receipts exceed INR 50 lakh |
Taxpayer Category | Statement Form | Audit Form | Submission Due Date (Assessment Year) | Audit Due Date (AY) |
Individuals involved in a profession or business requiring a compulsory audit | Form 3CD | Form 3CA | 30 September | 30 September |
Any other individual not belonging to the above category | Form 3CD | Form 3CB | 30 September | 30 September |
Professionals must retain their accounting records for at least six years after the assessment year ends. This is crucial because tax assessments can be reopened under Section 147 of the Income Tax Act, and the AO may request these documents. Additionally, professionals should maintain separate accounting records for different work locations.
Following are the exceptions to Section 44AA of the Income Tax Act:
Posted on 24 Oct, 2023
Last updated November 6, 2023
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Anjana Dhand is a Chartered Accountant who brings over 5 years of experience and a stronghold on finance and income tax. She is a writer by day and reader by night. You can find her churning content at express speed. She is on a mission to stamp out unawareness and uncomplicate boring personal finance blogs to sparkle. Anjana believes in the power of education in making a smart financial decision.
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