How to File ITR Online FY 2025-26: Complete Expert Guide — All Forms & Due Dates

how to file ITR online
How to File ITR Online FY 2025-26: Complete Expert Guide to Income Tax Return Filing

How to File ITR Online FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27): The Complete Expert Guide to Income Tax Return Filing

Filing your Income Tax Return is not just a legal obligation — it is your annual financial health check. Yet every year, millions of Indian taxpayers make avoidable mistakes: picking the wrong ITR form, missing pre-filled AIS data, filing under the wrong tax regime, or forgetting to e-verify in time.

For FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27), the stakes are higher than ever. The new Income Tax Act 2025 comes into force from April 1, 2026 — but your FY 2025-26 return is still governed entirely by the Income Tax Act 1961. CBDT has already notified ITR-1 and ITR-4 forms for AY 2026-27.

This guide walks you through everything — from choosing the right ITR form and gathering documents, to filing on the portal, claiming every deduction you are entitled to, and verifying your return — so you file correctly the first time, every time.

1. Who Must File ITR for FY 2025-26?

Understanding whether ITR filing is mandatory for you is the first and most important step. The obligation is determined by income level, transaction thresholds, residential status, and entity type — not just by tax liability.

Mandatory ITR Filing Conditions — Individuals

Filing is mandatory if any one of the following conditions is satisfied:

ConditionThreshold
Income exceeds basic exemption limit (New Regime)₹4,00,000
Income exceeds basic exemption limit (Old Regime — below 60 yrs)₹2,50,000
Income exceeds basic exemption limit (Old Regime — Senior Citizens 60-80)₹3,00,000
Income exceeds basic exemption limit (Old Regime — Super Senior 80+)₹5,00,000
Deposited in current account(s) in aggregate₹1 Crore or more
Electricity expenditure during the year₹1 Lakh or more
Foreign travel expenditure (self or anyone else)₹2 Lakh or more
TDS/TCS deducted/collected in aggregate₹25,000 or more (₹50,000 for senior citizens)
Business turnover (Section 44AB)₹60 Lakh or more
Professional gross receipts (Section 44AB)₹10 Lakh or more
Deposited in savings account(s) in aggregate₹50 Lakh or more
Owns foreign assets or has foreign bank account signing authorityAny amount
Resident with assets/investments outside IndiaAny amount

Additionally, ITR filing is mandatory for all companies and firms regardless of profit or loss, and for any entity required to file under Section 139(4A), 139(4B), or 139(4C).

✅ File Even When Not Mandatory — 5 Strong Reasons:
  • Claim TDS refund if excess tax was deducted from your salary, FD interest, or other payments.
  • Carry forward capital losses to set off against future gains — requires timely ITR filing.
  • ITR is accepted as income proof for home loans, personal loans, visa applications, and insurance.
  • Voluntary filers build a consistent financial track record useful for loan eligibility and government tenders.
  • Avoid future notices from the Income Tax Department for non-filing when transactions are high.

2. ITR Due Dates — AY 2026-27 KEY DATES

Missing the ITR due date is one of the most expensive mistakes a taxpayer can make — it triggers penalties, interest, and the loss of the right to carry forward certain losses. Mark these dates carefully.

Category of TaxpayerITR FormDue Date
Individuals and HUFs (Salaried, Non-Business) ITR-1, ITR-2 July 31, 2026
Non-Audit Businesses, Professionals, Freelancers ITR-3, ITR-4 August 31, 2026 (extended by Budget 2026)
Tax Audit Cases (Turnover > ₹1 Crore for business / ₹50 Lakh for profession) ITR-3, ITR-5, ITR-6 October 31, 2026
Transfer Pricing Cases ITR-3, ITR-5, ITR-6 November 30, 2026
Belated Return (Late filing) All forms December 31, 2026 (with penalty)
Updated Return — ITR-U (Section 139(8A)) ITR-U Up to 2 years from end of AY (March 31, 2029)

Late Filing Penalties — Section 234F

Filing TimelineTotal IncomeLate Fee (Section 234F)
After due date but before December 31, 2026Above ₹5 Lakh₹5,000
After due date but before December 31, 2026₹5 Lakh or below₹1,000
After December 31, 2026 (ITR-U only)Any25%–50% additional tax on tax + interest due
⚠️ Loss of Carry Forward Right: If you miss the original due date (July 31 / August 31 / October 31), you permanently lose the right to carry forward capital losses, business losses, and speculative losses to future years. Only House Property losses can be carried forward even in a belated return. File on time — this benefit, once lost, cannot be recovered.

3. Which ITR Form to File? — Complete Selection Guide for FY 2025-26

Selecting the wrong ITR form renders your return defective. The Income Tax Department will issue a notice requiring you to file a revised return in the correct form. Here is the definitive guide:

ITR-1 (Sahaj) — For Salaried Individuals

Who can file: Resident individual (not RNOR/NRI) with total income up to ₹50 lakh from: salary/pension, one house property, interest/dividends/other sources, and LTCG under Section 112A up to ₹1.25 lakh (new for AY 2026-27).

Cannot file ITR-1 if: Total income > ₹50 lakh, agricultural income > ₹5,000, foreign assets/income, company director, unlisted shares, TDS under Section 194N, or capital losses to carry forward.

ITR-2 — For Individuals with Capital Gains or Multiple Properties

Who should file: Individuals and HUFs with no business/profession income but having capital gains (shares, property, mutual funds), more than one house property, foreign assets, income from other countries, or total income exceeding ₹50 lakh.

Ideal for: Investors selling shares/MFs, NRIs with India income, professionals with passive investments.

ITR-3 — For Individuals with Business/Profession Income

Who should file: Individuals and HUFs carrying on a business or profession and not eligible for presumptive taxation (Section 44AD/44ADA). Includes partners in firms, stock traders with F&O income (treated as business), freelancers with income above presumptive limits.

ITR-4 (Sugam) — For Presumptive Taxation

Who should file: Individuals, HUFs, and Firms (excluding LLPs) with income from business under Section 44AD (turnover up to ₹2 crore / ₹3 crore in special cases) or from profession under Section 44ADA (receipts up to ₹75 lakh), or transport business under Section 44AE. Total income must not exceed ₹50 lakh. Can include salary, house property, and LTCG 112A up to ₹1.25 lakh.

ITR FormBest ForIncome LimitCapital Gains?
ITR-1Salaried, Pensioners₹50 LakhOnly Sec 112A ≤ ₹1.25L
ITR-2Investors, NRIs, Multiple PropertiesNo limitYes — all types
ITR-3Business, Profession, F&O TradersNo limitYes — all types
ITR-4Presumptive (44AD/44ADA/44AE)₹50 LakhOnly Sec 112A ≤ ₹1.25L
ITR-5Firms, LLPs, AOPsNo limitYes
ITR-6Companies (other than Section 11)No limitYes
ITR-7Trusts, Political Parties, NGOsNo limitYes
💡 F&O Traders — Important: If you traded in Futures & Options (F&O) during FY 2025-26, your F&O income is treated as non-speculative business income. You cannot file ITR-2. You must file ITR-3 and may need a tax audit if your F&O turnover exceeds ₹2 crore (with loss) or if you opt out of presumptive taxation under Section 44AD after previously using it.
Which ITR Form to File? — FY 2025-26 Decision Guide What is your Income Source? ITR-1 (Sahaj) Salary + One House Property Interest / Dividends Total Income ≤ ₹50 Lakh ITR-2 Capital Gains (All Types) Multiple House Properties Foreign Assets / NRI No Business Income ITR-3 Business / Profession Income F&O Traders (Business Income) Partners in Firms Actual Books Maintained ITR-4 (Sugam) Presumptive Business (44AD) Presumptive Profession (44ADA) Transport (44AE) Total Income ≤ ₹50 Lakh ⏰ ITR Due Dates — AY 2026-27 ITR-1, ITR-2 July 31, 2026 ITR-3, ITR-4 (Non-Audit) August 31, 2026 Tax Audit Cases October 31, 2026 Belated Return December 31, 2026 Late Filing Fee — Section 234F: ₹5,000 (income > ₹5L) | ₹1,000 (income ≤ ₹5L) ⚠️ Missing due date = Loss of carry forward right for Capital Losses & Business Losses cleartaxadvisors.in | ITR Form Selection Guide | Income Tax Act 1961 | FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)
Image 1 ALT: How to file ITR online FY 2025-26 — ITR form selection guide and due dates for AY 2026-27 | cleartaxadvisors.in

4. Documents You Need Before Filing ITR for FY 2025-26

Gathering the right documents before you open the e-filing portal saves enormous time and prevents errors. Here is the complete document checklist organised by category:

Basic Identity and Banking Documents

  • PAN Card — your user ID for the Income Tax portal
  • Aadhaar Card — mandatory for most taxpayers; linked mobile number needed for OTP-based e-verification
  • Bank Account Details — IFSC code and account number for refund credit (account must be pre-validated on the portal)

Income-Related Documents

  • Form 16 — issued by employer; contains salary details and TDS deducted. Part A shows TDS, Part B shows salary breakup and deductions claimed.
  • Form 16A / 16B / 16C — for TDS on non-salary income (interest, rent, professional fees)
  • Bank passbook or statements — for savings account interest, FD interest, and any other bank income
  • Interest certificates from banks, post offices, and NBFCs for FD and RD interest income
  • Rental income details — rent agreements, municipal tax receipts if you have house property income
  • Capital gains statements — from stockbroker (for shares), mutual fund houses or CAMS/KFintech (for MF units), and property sale documents
  • Dividend income statements — from registrars or company communications

Deduction and Exemption Documents (Old Tax Regime)

  • Section 80C: LIC premium receipts, PPF passbook, ELSS investment statements, home loan principal repayment certificate, NSC certificates, children’s tuition fee receipts
  • Section 80D: Health insurance premium receipts for self, spouse, children, and parents
  • HRA exemption: Rent receipts, rent agreement, landlord’s PAN (if rent > ₹1 lakh/year)
  • Home Loan Interest Certificate: From the lending institution showing principal and interest split
  • Section 80CCD(1B): NPS contribution statement with PRAN number
  • Section 80G: Donation receipts with PAN of donee organization
  • Section 80E: Education loan interest certificate from the lender
📌 AY 2025-26 Change — Documentation Now Required at Filing: For AY 2025-26, if you chose the old tax regime and claimed deductions, you needed to upload documentary proof while filing (new requirement). For AY 2026-27, keep all proofs ready — the Department continues to tighten documentation. Always cross-check with your CA to understand current year’s specific requirements. Reach out via our Tax Advisory team if needed.

5. Form 26AS, AIS, and TIS — Your Most Critical Pre-Filing Step

Before touching the ITR form, spend time reviewing three key documents available on the Income Tax portal. These documents hold the Government’s records of all financial transactions linked to your PAN — and if your ITR doesn’t match them, expect scrutiny notices.

Form 26AS — Tax Credit Statement

Form 26AS is the consolidated tax credit statement showing all taxes deposited against your PAN: TDS from salary, TDS from bank interest, TCS collected, Advance Tax paid, and Self-Assessment Tax. Download it from the e-filing portal under “e-File → Income Tax Returns → View Form 26AS.” Cross-check every TDS entry with your Form 16 and bank certificates. Any mismatch must be resolved before filing.

AIS — Annual Information Statement

AIS is a far more comprehensive document introduced in 2021. It aggregates all financial transactions reported against your PAN from multiple sources: employers, banks, mutual fund houses, stock exchanges, registrars (for property), foreign remittance agencies, and more. AIS includes salary income, interest income, dividend income, securities transactions, mutual fund purchases/redemptions, property transactions, and foreign remittances.

TIS — Taxpayer Information Summary

TIS is a summarised version of AIS that shows category-wise totals for easy review. It is especially useful for cross-referencing your own records at a high level before drilling into the detailed AIS.

⚠️ AIS Mismatch Protocol: If your AIS shows income that you believe is incorrect — for example, a transaction you did not undertake or an amount that seems wrong — do NOT simply ignore it. Use the “Feedback” feature on the AIS portal to submit your explanation (e.g., “Duplicate entry,” “Transaction belongs to different person”). Unresolved AIS mismatches are a leading trigger for income tax notices. The IT Department’s systems automatically flag discrepancies between filed ITR and AIS data.

6. How to File ITR Online — Step-by-Step Process (AY 2026-27)

Follow these eight steps to file your ITR accurately on the Income Tax e-filing portal at incometax.gov.in.

1
Log In to the Income Tax e-Filing Portal Visit incometax.gov.in. Click “Login” and enter your PAN as User ID with your registered password. If you are a first-time user, register using your PAN. Once logged in, go to “e-File” → “Income Tax Returns” → “File Income Tax Return.” Select Assessment Year: AY 2026-27 and mode as Online.
2
Select Your ITR Form and Filing Status Based on your income sources (see Section 3), select the appropriate ITR form. Select your status as Individual, HUF, Firm, or Company. Choose your reason for filing: income above basic exemption limit, mandatory filing criteria, or claiming a refund.
3
Choose Your Tax Regime For AY 2026-27, the New Tax Regime is the default. If you want the Old Tax Regime, explicitly select “Yes” to opt out of the new regime in the Personal Information section. This choice determines which deductions are available to you. Compare tax liability under both regimes using our Tax Regime Guide before deciding.
4
Validate Pre-Filled Personal Information Review and validate your pre-filled personal details — name, date of birth, PAN, Aadhaar, address, bank account details. Ensure your bank account is pre-validated (pre-validation done separately under Profile section). Contact details must match your registered mobile and email.
5
Report All Income Sources Enter income from all sources: salary (from Form 16), house property income, capital gains (from broker/MF statements), business/profession income, and other sources (FD interest, savings interest, dividends). Cross-check every figure with your Form 26AS and AIS. Add any income shown in AIS that is not pre-filled. Do not omit any income — the AIS matching algorithm will flag it.
6
Claim All Eligible Deductions (Old Regime Only) If you chose the old tax regime, enter all eligible deductions under Chapter VI-A: Section 80C (up to ₹1.5 lakh), Section 80D (health insurance), Section 80CCD(1B) (NPS — additional ₹50,000), Section 24(b) (home loan interest), HRA exemption, and any other applicable sections. Keep all supporting documents ready. Enter precise amounts — do not over-claim.
7
Review Tax Computation and Pay Any Balance Tax The portal will compute your total tax liability based on income declared and deductions claimed. Compare it against total TDS/TCS already deducted and Advance Tax paid. If there is any balance tax payable, pay it as Self-Assessment Tax (Challan 280) directly from the portal before submitting your return. Note the BSR Code and challan serial number for entry in the ITR.
8
Preview, Submit, and E-Verify Do a final review of the Return Summary — verify total income, deductions, tax liability, and refund/payable amount. Click “Submit.” Immediately proceed to e-verify the return within 30 days using Aadhaar OTP, Net Banking EVC, Bank ATM, or Demat Account EVC. Without e-verification, your ITR is invalid.
ITR Filing Process — Documents, AIS Check, and Key Steps 📁 Documents Checklist IDENTITY ✓ PAN + Aadhaar (linked) ✓ Bank Account (Pre-validated) INCOME ✓ Form 16 (from Employer) ✓ Form 16A / 16B (TDS Certificates) ✓ Bank Interest Certificates ✓ Capital Gains Statement (Broker) ✓ MF Capital Gains (CAMS/KFintech) ✓ Property Sale Documents DEDUCTIONS (Old Regime) ✓ LIC / PPF / ELSS / NSC (80C) ✓ Health Insurance Premium (80D) ✓ HRA Receipts + Rent Agreement ✓ Home Loan Interest Certificate ✓ NPS Statement with PRAN (80CCD) ✓ Donation Receipts (80G) ✓ Education Loan Interest (80E) Documents NOT uploaded — Keep for Records 🔍 AIS / 26AS Cross-Check Step 1: Download from Portal e-File → Income Tax Returns → View AIS Step 2: Check These Categories ✓ Salary income (matches Form 16?) ✓ Interest income (Bank FD / Savings) ✓ Dividends received ✓ Securities transactions (Shares / MF) ✓ Property purchases and sales ✓ Foreign remittances ✓ TDS deducted (matches 26AS?) Step 3: Resolve Mismatches → Submit Feedback on AIS portal → Explain discrepancy (if genuine error) → Include unreported income in ITR ⚠️ AIS vs ITR mismatch = Notice Risk IT Dept auto-flags income not declared ✅ E-Verification Methods Must e-verify within 30 days of filing! ⭐ Aadhaar OTP (Recommended) Linked mobile receives OTP Instant | No physical documents Net Banking EVC Log in via your bank’s Net Banking Bank generates EVC code Bank ATM EVC Swipe card at your bank’s ATM Select “Generate EVC” option Demat Account EVC Through NSDL/CDSL portal Physical ITR-V (Last Resort) Print, sign, speed post to CPC Bengaluru Slow — use only if online fails NOT verified in 30 days = ITR Invalid cleartaxadvisors.in | ITR Filing Guide | Income Tax Act 1961 | FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)
Image 2 ALT: How to file ITR online FY 2025-26 — documents checklist, AIS cross-check process, and e-verification methods | cleartaxadvisors.in

7. Old vs New Tax Regime — Choosing at ITR Filing Stage

One of the most consequential decisions in your ITR filing is the tax regime. For FY 2025-26, this choice has significant implications given the Budget 2025 changes that made the new regime far more attractive.

The new tax regime is the default for AY 2026-27. If you do nothing, your tax is computed under the new regime. To use the old regime, you must actively opt out during ITR filing.

Regime Choice — Key Rules for FY 2025-26

Taxpayer TypeCan Switch at ITR Filing?Special Rule
Salaried Individuals (No Business Income) Yes — every year Can change irrespective of declaration to employer
Pensioners Yes — every year Same as salaried
Business/Profession Income (ITR-3/4) Only once via Form 10-IEA File Form 10-IEA before ITR due date to switch to Old Regime. Can return to New Regime, but only once in lifetime.
NRI — Non-Resident Individual New Regime default applies No senior citizen basic exemption benefit in new regime

Before deciding at filing time, compute your exact tax under both regimes. For a comprehensive comparison with examples and a decision framework, refer to our detailed Old vs New Tax Regime Guide and our Income Tax Saving Tips. The Official Income Tax Regime Comparison Calculator is the most reliable tool for this.

8. Key Deductions and Exemptions to Claim in ITR FY 2025-26

If you have chosen the old tax regime, claiming every eligible deduction is essential to minimising your tax outgo. Here is a structured overview of the most important deductions available under the Income Tax Act 1961:

SectionDeduction TypeMaximum LimitNew Regime?
Section 80CPPF, ELSS, LIC, EPF, NSC, Home Loan Principal, Tuition Fees₹1,50,000No
Section 80CCD(1B)Additional NPS Contribution (beyond 80C)₹50,000No
Section 80CCD(2)Employer’s NPS Contribution14% of salary (Govt) / 10%Yes
Section 80DHealth Insurance Premium (Self + Parents)₹25,000–₹75,000No
Section 24(b)Home Loan Interest (Self-Occupied Property)₹2,00,000No (let-out only in New)
Section 10(13A) — HRAHouse Rent Allowance ExemptionActual (formula-based)No
Standard DeductionFlat deduction for salaried/pensioners₹50,000 (Old) / ₹75,000 (New)Yes — ₹75,000
Section 80TTASavings Account Interest (non-senior citizens)₹10,000No
Section 80TTBFD + Savings Interest (Senior Citizens only)₹50,000No
Section 80GDonations to approved funds/institutions50%–100% of donationNo
Section 80EEducation Loan InterestFull interest (8 years)No
Section 80EEBEV Loan Interest (Electric Vehicle)₹1,50,000No
ITR Deductions — Old Regime Maximum Tax Savings FY 2025-26 Maximum Deduction Amounts Available (Old Tax Regime): Section 80C (PPF/ELSS/LIC) ₹1,50,000 Section 80CCD(1B) — NPS Extra ₹50,000 Section 80D — Health Insurance ₹75,000 (with Parents) Section 24(b) — Home Loan Interest ₹2,00,000 HRA Exemption (Section 10(13A)) Actual (Varies) Standard Deduction (Old Regime) ₹50,000 Section 80E — Education Loan Full Interest Maximum Possible Deductions (Old Regime) Up to ₹5.25 Lakh+ New Regime Benefits ✅ Standard Deduction: ₹75,000 ✅ 87A Rebate: ₹60,000 ✅ ₹12L Zero Tax (₹12.75L Salaried) ✅ Employer NPS (80CCD(2)) ✅ Lower Tax Rates Across Slabs ✅ Less Documentation ❌ No 80C, HRA, 80D, Home Loan 24(b), LTA, 80E, 80G Calculate both — always Use official IT Calculator 📌 Section 87A Rebate — Does NOT apply to LTCG/STCG (Capital Gains) Even if income is below ₹12 lakh, capital gains tax must be paid separately | See Capital Gains Tax Guide cleartaxadvisors.in | ITR Deductions Guide | Income Tax Act 1961 | FY 2025-26
Image 3 ALT: How to file ITR online FY 2025-26 — maximum deductions available under old tax regime versus new tax regime benefits | cleartaxadvisors.in

9. Infographic — ITR Filing FY 2025-26: Complete Quick Reference

How to File ITR Online FY 2025-26 AY 2026-27 | Income Tax Act 1961 | cleartaxadvisors.in ① Who Must File ITR? • Income > ₹4L (New Regime) or ₹2.5L (Old Regime — below 60 yrs) • TDS / TCS deducted ≥ ₹25,000 (₹50,000 for Senior Citizens) • Current A/C deposit ≥ ₹1 Crore | FT Expense ≥ ₹2 Lakh • Foreign assets | Company/Firm — always mandatory ✅ Always file to: claim TDS refund, carry forward losses, get loan/visa proof • Business Receipts ≥ ₹60L | Professional Receipts ≥ ₹10L ② ⏰ ITR Due Dates — AY 2026-27 ITR-1, ITR-2 (Salaried, Non-Business): July 31, 2026 ITR-3, ITR-4 (Non-Audit Business) — Budget 2026 Extended: August 31, 2026 Tax Audit Cases: Oct 31 | TP Cases: Nov 30 | Belated: Dec 31 Late Fee: ₹5,000 (income > ₹5L) | ₹1,000 (income ≤ ₹5L) | Sec 234F ③ Which ITR Form to File? ITR-1: Salary + 1 House + Interest (Income ≤ ₹50L, Resident) ITR-2: Capital Gains + Foreign Assets + Multiple Properties ITR-3: Business / Profession / F&O Trading ITR-4: Presumptive Tax (44AD / 44ADA / 44AE — Income ≤ ₹50L) ⚠️ Wrong form = Defective Return + Notice from IT Dept F&O traders MUST file ITR-3 (not ITR-2) — F&O = Business Income CBDT has notified ITR-1 & 4 for AY 2026-27 | Check official portal ④ 8 Steps to File ITR Online 1️⃣ Gather docs: Form 16, 26AS, AIS, bank statements 2️⃣ Login to incometax.gov.in → e-File → ITR → AY 2026-27 3️⃣ Select correct ITR form based on income sources 4️⃣ Choose Tax Regime (New = Default; Old = Select explicitly) 5️⃣ Validate personal info, bank account (pre-validated) 6️⃣ Report all income: salary, capital gains, interest, rent 7️⃣ Claim deductions (Old Regime) → Pay balance tax (Challan 280) 8️⃣ Submit → E-Verify within 30 days! (Aadhaar OTP recommended) ⚠️ Not verified = ITR Invalid! 30-day window starts from date of filing ⑤ Check AIS Before Filing! AIS = All your financial transactions on record with IT Dept Includes: Salary, FD Interest, Dividends, Shares, MF, Property Mismatch with ITR = Auto Notice from Income Tax Department Submit Feedback on AIS if incorrect data found Available at: incometax.gov.in → Services → Annual Information Statement ⑥ 10 Mistakes to Avoid ❌ Wrong ITR form selected ❌ Not checking AIS before filing ❌ Not reporting FD interest / dividend income ❌ Filing under wrong tax regime ❌ Missing e-verification (30-day window) ❌ Not reconciling TDS from Form 26AS ❌ Skipping capital gains from MF / shares ⑦ ITR Filing Checklist — FY 2025-26 ☑ Collect Form 16, 26AS, AIS before filing ☑ Select correct ITR form for your income type ☑ Compare old vs new regime — pick lower tax ☑ Report ALL income — salary, interest, dividends, capital gains ☑ Claim every deduction you’re entitled to (Old Regime) ☑ Pre-validate bank account for refund credit ☑ Pay balance Self-Assessment Tax before submitting ☑ E-verify within 30 days (Aadhaar OTP preferred) ☑ File by July 31, 2026 — never miss the due date! cleartaxadvisors.in India’s Trusted CA & Tax Advisory Platform | FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)
Infographic ALT: How to file ITR online FY 2025-26 complete infographic — who must file, due dates, form selection, 8 steps, AIS check, and ITR filing checklist | cleartaxadvisors.in

10. E-Verification — The Final and Critical Step

Filing the ITR is only half the process. E-verification is mandatory to complete the filing. An unverified ITR is treated as if it was never filed — with all the consequences that entails.

You must e-verify your ITR within 30 days of the date of filing. Here are the available methods, ranked by ease:

  1. Aadhaar OTP (Most Recommended): Your Aadhaar-linked mobile number must be active. Select “e-Verify via Aadhaar OTP” on the portal, enter the OTP received — done in under 2 minutes.
  2. Net Banking EVC: Log in to the IT portal through your bank’s Net Banking. The bank generates an EVC (Electronic Verification Code) which is automatically used to verify your return.
  3. Bank ATM EVC: At your bank’s ATM, use the “Generate EVC for Income Tax Return” option using your debit card. The EVC is sent to your registered mobile.
  4. Demat Account EVC: Through your depository (NSDL or CDSL) linked account — generates EVC via the securities account.
  5. Pre-Validated Bank Account EVC: If your bank account is pre-validated on the IT portal, you can generate EVC through the portal itself using the registered mobile OTP.
  6. Physical ITR-V by Speed Post (Last Resort): Print the generated ITR-V (acknowledgement), sign it in blue ink, and send it by speed post to: CPC, Post Box No. 1, Electronic City Post Office, Bengaluru – 560100. This takes weeks and should only be used if all electronic methods fail.

11. 10 Common ITR Filing Mistakes — and How to Avoid Every One

In over two decades of tax practice, these are the mistakes we see most frequently — each of them entirely avoidable with the right preparation.

  1. Filing Under the Wrong ITR Form: F&O traders filing ITR-2 instead of ITR-3. Taxpayers with capital gains filing ITR-1. This results in a defective return notice (Section 139(9)) and requires re-filing. Always verify the correct form using the selection guide in Section 3.
  2. Not Cross-Checking AIS Before Filing: The most dangerous oversight. The IT Department matches your ITR with AIS automatically. Any income in AIS that is not in your ITR triggers a scrutiny notice. Always download and review AIS before filing.
  3. Forgetting to Report FD Interest, Savings Interest, and Dividends: Banks and companies report all interest and dividend payments to the IT Department. Not declaring them in “Income from Other Sources” is a clear mismatch with AIS data.
  4. Choosing the Wrong Tax Regime: Salaried taxpayers sometimes inadvertently file under the wrong regime (especially since new regime is now the default) and lose out on either the ₹12 lakh zero-tax benefit or the large deductions of the old regime. Always compute both before filing.
  5. Not E-Verifying within 30 Days: Filing without completing e-verification renders the ITR invalid. The 30-day clock starts from the filing date — not the due date. E-verify the same day if possible.
  6. Missing Capital Gains from Mutual Funds: LTCG and STCG from mutual fund redemptions during the year must be reported in Schedule CG of ITR-2 or ITR-3. Obtain your capital gains statement from CAMS or KFintech for all fund houses combined.
  7. Incorrect TDS Reconciliation: TDS figures in your Form 16 may sometimes differ from Form 26AS due to employer errors. Always file based on Form 26AS amounts and raise a correction request with your employer for any discrepancy.
  8. Not Claiming Eligible Deductions: Especially in the old regime, taxpayers regularly leave money on the table by forgetting deductions they are entitled to — Section 80TTA (savings interest), Section 80D (health insurance), or Section 80CCD(1B) (NPS). Review the full list before filing.
  9. Not Paying Advance Tax Timely: If your total tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 after TDS, you must pay Advance Tax in quarterly instalments. Non-payment attracts interest under Sections 234B and 234C. Check your liability by September quarter each year.
  10. Filing After the Due Date Without Knowing the Consequences: Many taxpayers file belated returns assuming there is no difference. The consequences are significant: no carry forward of capital/business losses, late fee under Section 234F, and interest under Section 234A. File on time — always.

12. Key Takeaways — ITR Filing FY 2025-26

  • FY 2025-26 returns are filed for AY 2026-27 under Income Tax Act 1961 — the new Act 2025 applies from FY 2026-27 onwards.
  • Due date: July 31, 2026 for salaried individuals; August 31, 2026 for non-audit businesses (Budget 2026 extension).
  • CBDT has already notified ITR-1 and ITR-4 forms for AY 2026-27 — check the official portal.
  • New Tax Regime is the default for AY 2026-27. To use old regime, actively select it during filing.
  • Always download and review AIS before filing — AIS vs ITR mismatch is the leading trigger for income tax notices.
  • F&O trading income = business income → must file ITR-3, not ITR-2.
  • E-verify within 30 days of filing — unverified ITR = invalid ITR.
  • Late filing attracts penalty under Section 234F and loses the right to carry forward capital and business losses.
  • Report ALL income sources — salary, interest, dividends, capital gains — exactly as reflected in your Form 26AS and AIS.

13. Frequently Asked Questions (FAQ)

Q1. What is the due date for filing ITR for FY 2025-26?
The due date for filing ITR for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27) is July 31, 2026 for most individuals (salaried, non-business). Budget 2026 extended the deadline for non-audit businesses (ITR-3 and ITR-4) to August 31, 2026. Tax audit cases have a due date of October 31, 2026. Belated returns can be filed up to December 31, 2026, with a late fee under Section 234F of ₹5,000 (income above ₹5 lakh) or ₹1,000 (income below ₹5 lakh).
Q2. Which ITR form should I file for FY 2025-26?
Use ITR-1 (Sahaj) if you are a salaried resident individual with income up to ₹50 lakh from salary, one house property, interest, and LTCG under Section 112A up to ₹1.25 lakh. Use ITR-2 if you have capital gains, foreign assets, or multiple house properties but no business income. Use ITR-3 if you have business or profession income (including F&O trading). Use ITR-4 if you opt for presumptive taxation under Sections 44AD, 44ADA, or 44AE with total income up to ₹50 lakh. Filing the wrong form makes your return defective.
Q3. Is ITR filing mandatory if my income is below ₹12 lakh and my tax is zero?
Even if your effective tax liability is zero (due to Section 87A rebate under the new tax regime), filing ITR is mandatory if your income exceeds the basic exemption limit (₹4 lakh under new regime, ₹2.5 lakh under old regime), or if any of the high-value transaction thresholds are triggered (TDS > ₹25,000, current account deposits > ₹1 crore, foreign travel > ₹2 lakh, etc.). Filing is also strongly recommended even when not mandatory, to claim any TDS refund, establish income proof for loans and visas, and carry forward losses.
Q4. Can I change my tax regime while filing ITR?
Yes, for salaried individuals without business income. You can switch between old and new regime at the time of ITR filing regardless of what you declared to your employer earlier in the year. For taxpayers with business/profession income (ITR-3/4), switching from the new regime to the old regime requires filing Form 10-IEA before the ITR due date. This switch is available only once in a lifetime for business income taxpayers.
Q5. What happens if I do not e-verify my ITR?
If you do not e-verify your ITR within 30 days of filing, the return is treated as not filed. You will need to file a fresh return (if within the due date) or a belated/updated return (with applicable penalties). The most convenient method is Aadhaar OTP — instant, free, and available 24/7. Always e-verify on the same day you file if possible.
Q6. How do I claim a TDS refund?
When the total TDS deducted (from salary, bank interest, etc.) plus Advance Tax paid exceeds your actual tax liability, you are entitled to a refund of the excess. The refund is automatically calculated by the system when you file your ITR and is credited to your pre-validated bank account after the Income Tax Department processes your return. Refunds are typically processed within 20–45 days. Track refund status using the IT portal’s “View Returns/Forms” section or via the NSDL portal at tin.nsdl.com.
Q7. What is the difference between ITR-V and ITR-U?
ITR-V is the Acknowledgement Receipt generated after you file your ITR online — it must be e-verified (or physically sent to CPC Bengaluru) to complete the filing process. ITR-U is the Updated Return under Section 139(8A) — it is a separate ITR that allows you to correct or report additional income omitted from an earlier filed return, within 2 years from the end of the relevant assessment year, with an additional tax payment of 25%–50% of the tax and interest due.
Q8. How does AIS affect my ITR filing?
AIS (Annual Information Statement) contains all financial transactions linked to your PAN, reported by third parties — banks, employers, mutual fund houses, brokers, registrars, and more. The Income Tax Department automatically matches your filed ITR against AIS data. If your ITR omits income shown in AIS, you risk receiving a deficiency notice or scrutiny assessment. Always download AIS before filing, reconcile all entries with your records, and include all income. If AIS contains incorrect data, submit feedback through the AIS portal — do not simply ignore it.

14. Conclusion — File Your ITR Correctly the First Time

Filing your income tax return for FY 2025-26 does not need to be complicated — but it does need to be done correctly, completely, and on time. The cost of errors is real: defective return notices, scrutiny assessments, lost carry-forward opportunities, and penalties that compound over time.

The three pillars of a successful ITR filing are: choosing the right form for your income profile, cross-checking AIS before filing so no income goes undeclared, and e-verifying within 30 days so your filing is legally complete. Master these, and the rest follows.

For more detailed guidance on tax planning, explore our Income Tax Saving Tips and our Old vs New Tax Regime Guide. For capital gains from shares and property, see our Capital Gains Tax India 2025 Guide. The official Income Tax India portal and SEBI are always your most reliable primary sources.

If your return involves complexity — capital gains across multiple assets, foreign income, F&O trading, or business income — work with a qualified CA. Our team at ClearTax Advisors handles ITR filing from simple salaried returns to complex multi-source filings. Get in touch for a consultation today.

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⚠️ Disclaimer: This article is for educational purposes only and does not constitute personalised tax advice. Income tax rules, forms, and deadlines are subject to change via government notifications and circulars. Always verify current forms and due dates on the official Income Tax India portal (incometax.gov.in) and consult a qualified Chartered Accountant for your specific tax situation. ClearTax Advisors accepts no liability for actions taken solely based on this article.

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