Complete Income Tax Solutions for Every Taxpayer

From individual ITR filing to corporate tax returns, TDS compliance to income tax notices — Diwan Consultancy handles every income tax obligation for individuals, businesses, and organisations, accurately and on time.

Never Miss a Deadline

Maximum Tax Savings

Dedicated Professional Team

Fast Notice Handling

Service 01

Income Tax E-Filing (Individual / HUF)

Income Tax e-Filing is the mandatory online submission of the Income Tax Return (ITR) to the Income Tax Department through the official portal at incometax.gov.in. Every Individual/HUF whose Gross Total Income exceeds ₹4 Lakhs (basic exemption limit) will be liable for tax — but if Net Taxable Income is ₹12 Lakhs or below then, final tax payable will be NIL, because of Rebate u/s 87A of ₹60,000, which will be available to all taxpayers opting for the New Tax Regime must file an ITR annually for F.Y.2025-26. 

Due Date (Non-Audit) (ITR 1 & 2)

July 31st

Due Date (Non-Audit) (ITR 3 & 4)

Aug 31st

Belated Return

Till December 31 st (with penalty)

Late Fees

U/s.234F (Sec.428 as per New Act)

  • Choose correct ITR form: ITR-1 (salary), ITR-2 (capital gains), ITR-3/4 (business income)
  • Claim all eligible deductions: 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest, NPS, donations
  • Faster refund processing — e-filed returns with Aadhaar OTP verification processed in days
  • Mandatory for loan approvals, visa applications, and government tenders as income proof
  • Must file ITR even if income is below exemption limit if TDS/TCS exceeds ₹25,000
  • Old vs New Tax Regime comparison done by our professional team before filing to maximise your tax savings

Service 02

Business Tax Filing (Proprietorship)

 A sole proprietorship has no separate legal identity — the proprietor and business are taxed as one. Business income is declared in the proprietor’s personal ITR using ITR-3 (books maintained) or ITR-4 Sugam (presumptive taxation u/s 44AD (businesses) and 44ADA (Professionals) (Sec.158 as per new act), provided income ≤ ₹50 Lakhs). Tax audit u/s 44AB is mandatory if turnover exceeds ₹1 Crore (or ₹10 Crore if cash transactions are within 5% of total receipts/payments), with a due date of 31st October.

✦ Presumptive Taxation:
Under Section 44AD (Sec.158 as per new act), small businesses with turnover up to ₹2 Crore (or ₹3 Crore if 95%+ receipts are digital) can declare 8% of turnover (or 6% for digital receipts) as deemed profit — no books needed. Under Section 44ADA (Sec.158 as per new act), professionals (doctors, CAs, lawyers) can declare 50% of gross receipts as profit if receipts are ≤ ₹50 Lakh (or ≤ ₹75 Lakh if 95%+receipts are digital).

ITR Form

ITR-3 (books) or ITR-4 (presumptive)

Audit Due Date

September 30 st (Tax Audit Report)

  • ITR-4 (Sugam) available for businesses under presumptive taxation — simpler and faster to file
  • Claim all business related expenses like Rent, Electricity, Salaries, Depreciation etc.
  • Tax audit mandatory if turnover exceeds ₹1 crore (or ₹10 crore for 95%+ digital transactions)
  • Tax Audit Report in Form 3CD (Form 26 as per new act) must be filed by september 30, before the ITR due date.
  • Advance tax must be paid quarterly if estimated tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 per year.

Service 03

Partnership Firm / LLP ITR Filing

Both Partnership Firms and LLPs are indeed taxed as separate legal entities under the Income Tax Act, distinct from their partners. The firm/LLP pays tax on its income, and the partners’ share of profit from the firm/LLP is exempt from tax in their hands. Both Partnership Firms and LLPs are required to file ITR-5 to report their income and are taxed at a flat rate of 30% on taxable income, plus applicable surcharge & Health & Education Cess. Both must file an income tax return irrespective of profit or loss.

ITR Form

ITR-5

Tax Rate

30% flat

Non Audit Return Due Date

July 31

Audit Return Due Date

October 31 of assessment year

  •  Firm/LLP files ITR-5; partners declare remuneration and interest in personal ITR, while profit share is exempt from Tax.
  • Partners’ remuneration and interest on capital are deductible for the firm, subject to limits.
  • Mandatory if turnover exceeds ₹1 crore (business) or ₹50 lakh (profession), with enhanced ₹10 crore limit if cash transactions are ≤5%.
  • Alternate Minimum Tax (AMT) at 18.5% applicable if regular tax liability falls below AMT.
  • LLPs must additionally file Form 8 and Form 11 with MCA; this obligation does not apply to a Partnership Firm.
  • Loss returns must be filed within the due date carry forward and set off business losses.

Service 04

Company ITR Filing (Private Limited / OPC)

Private Limited, OPC, Public Limited companies must file ITR-6 annually, regardless of turnover or activity level. All companies under the Companies Act 2013 must undergo a statutory audit before ITR filing this applies irrespective of turnover. Since companies are subject to audit, the ITR-6 duedate is 31st October. Domestic companies need to pay Tax 25% (turnover ≤ ₹400 crore) or 22% under Section 115BAA (Sec.200 as per new act).

ITR Form

ITR-6

Return Due Date

October 31 st (audit mandatory)

Advance Tax

Quarterly — June, Sep, Dec, March

Tax Rate

25% or 22%

Due Date

Change to return due date

Advance Tax

Quarterly — June, Sep, Dec, March

  • Companies need to file ITR-6 electronically with financial data entered directly in the form
  • Tax Audit Report in Form 3CA/3CD (Form 26 as per new act) must be submitted by 30th September, and ITR-6 must be filed by 31st October every year.
  • Companies opting for Section 115BAA (Sec.200 as per new act) (22% tax) must forgo some exemptions and incentives permanently.
  • Domestic Manufacturing companies incorporated on or after 1st March, 2016 (turnover ≤₹400 crore) can opt for 25% tax rate under Section 115BA (Sec.199 as per new act).
  • Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) at 15% applies if regular tax liability is lower than 15% of book profit, but is fully exempt for companies opting for Section 115BAA(Sec-200 as per new act).
  • Advance Tax — 4 Instalments — Payable at 15%, 45%, 75%, and 100% cumulative by 15th June, 15th September, 15th December, and 15th
    March respectively.

Service 05

Trust / NGO Tax Filing (ITR-7)

Charitable trusts, religious institutions, NGOs, Section 8 companies, political parties, research associations, and educational institutions registered under the Income Tax Act file their annual returns using Form ITR-7. Entities registered under Section 12A/12AB (sec.332 as per new act) enjoy complete exemption from income tax if at least 85% of income is applied to charitable or religious purposes. The remaining 15% can be accumulated. However, they must file ITR-7 by October 31 every year and maintain detailed records of income, receipts, and expenditure

ITR Form

ITR-7

Due Date

October 31 annually

Exemption

Under Section 12A / 12AB

  •  Income applied toward charitable/religious purposes is exempt under Section 11 (Sec.318 as per new act), provided at least 85% of income is applied during the year.
  • File Form 10BB (Form 112 as per new act) if income ≤ ₹5 crore and no foreign contribution; file Form 10B (Form 112 as per new act) if income > ₹5 crore or foreign contribution is received — both due by 30th September.
  • All receipts including donations, grants, CSR funds, interest, and rental income must be fully disclosed in ITR-7.
  • Anonymous donations exceeding ₹1 lakh or 5% of total donations, whichever is higher, are taxed at 30% under Section 115BBC (Sec.207 as per new act) religious trusts are fully exempt from this provision.
  • Foreign contributions must be received and maintained in a separate FCRA-designated bank account and reported separately.
  • Late or non-filing of Form 10B/10BB (Form 112 as per new act) results in loss of Section 11 (Sec.318 as per new act) exemption for that year.

Service 06

15CA/15CB (Form 145/146 as per new act)

Form 15CA (Form 145 as per new act) is an online declaration filed by the remitter before making any payment to a non-resident, confirming TDS compliance under Section 195 (Sec-393 as per new act). The form has four parts — Part A for remittances up to ₹5 lakh; Part B when an Assessing Officer certificate is obtained; Part C when remittance exceeds ₹5 lakh and no AO certificate exists (requiring CA-certified Form 15CB Form 146 as per new act); and Part D when the payment is not chargeable to tax. Form 15CB ( Form 146 as per new act) is a CA certificate confirming applicable tax rates under the Income Tax Act or DTAA, and must be obtained before uploading Form 15CA (Form 146 as per new act). Both forms must be filed prior to the actual remittance, and the Authorised Dealer (AD) bank verifies them before processing the transfer. From 1st April 2026, under the new Income Tax Act, 2025, Form 15CA and 15CB stand replaced by Form 145 and Form 146 respectively, with enhanced disclosures including UDIN, non-resident’s TIN, and 65 remittance categories.

15CA

Declaration by remitter (online)

15CB

CA certificate (remittance >₹5 lakh, taxable)

Withdrawal

Form 15CA can be withdrawn within 7 days

Governed By

Section 195 + Rule 37BB

  • Part A: Remittance ≤₹5 lakh and chargeable to tax — only Form 15CA Part A required
  • Part C: Remittance >₹5 lakh and chargeable to tax — Form 15CB from CA + Form 15CA Part C
  • Part D: Remittance not chargeable to tax — only Form 15CA Part D required
  • Not required for 28 specified transactions under Rule 37BB (gifts, government payments, investments)
  • AD Bank cross-verifies 15CA and 15CB before processing the international wire transfer
  • Penalty for non-compliance: ₹1 lakh under Section 271-I of the Income Tax Act

Service 07

TAN Application & Registration

Tax Deduction and Collection Account Number (TAN) is a mandatory 10-digit alphanumeric number issued by the Income Tax Department to all individuals and entities responsible for deducting or collecting Tax at Source (TDS/TCS). Under Section 203A (Now Sec.397) of the Income Tax Act, every employer, business, or individual making specified payments (salaries, rent, contractor fees, interest, commission) must obtain a TAN and quote it on all TDS returns, challans, and certificates. Non-compliance attracts a penalty of ₹10,000. Notably, individuals paying under Section 194-IA (new Sec 392 as per new act) (property purchase) or Section 194-IB (Now Sec-393(3) as per new act) (rent by individuals/HUF) are exempt from obtaining TAN and use PAN instead.

Form

Form 49B (offline) or online at NSDL/UTIITSL

Validity

Lifetime (no renewal required)

Penalty Without TAN

₹10,000 under Section 272BB

  • Mandatory for any employer deducting TDS from salaries — must be quoted on Form 16 issued to employees
  • Required for businesses making payments to contractors, professionals, or landlords above threshold limits
  • TAN must be registered on TRACES (TDS Reconciliation Analysis and Correction Enabling System)
  • One entity can have only one TAN — using multiple TANs or incorrect TAN attracts penalties
  • TAN must be mentioned on all TDS/TCS returns, payment challans, and certificates
  • TAN registration on the e-filing portal is required to file TDS returns online using TRACES

Service 08

TDS Return Filing

 Every deductor holding a valid TAN is required to file quarterly TDS returns summarising all TDS deductions made during the quarter — the deductee’s PAN, nature of payment, amount paid, and TDS deducted and deposited. TDS returns must be filed quarterly: Q1 (April–June) by July 31, Q2 (July–September) by October 31, Q3 (October–December) by January 31, and Q4 (January March) by May 31. Accurate filing ensures that TDS credits reflect correctly in the deductee’s Form 26AS (now form 168 as per new act).

⚠️ Late filing penalty: ₹200 per day under Section 234E from the due date until filing (capped at the total TDS amount). Additionally, ₹10,000 to ₹1,00,000 penalty under Section 271H may apply if return is not filed within 1 year of due date. 1% interest per month for late deduction, 1.5% for late deposit.

Q1 (Apr–Jun)

Due by July 31

Q2 (Jul–Sep)

Due by October 31

Q3 (Oct–Dec)

Due by January 31

Q4 (Jan–Mar)

Due by May 31

  • Form 24Q: TDS on salary payments — most common, filed by all employers quarterly
  • Form 26Q: TDS on non-salary payments (contractor fees, rent, interest, professional fees)
  • Form 27Q: TDS on payments to non-residents — mandatory with Form 15CA/15CB documentation
  • Form 26QB/26QC/26QD: Special TDS returns for property purchases, rent, and contractor payments
  • File using RPU (Return Preparation Utility) and validate with FVU before uploading to TRACES
  • Issue TDS certificates — Form 16 (salary) and Form 16A (non-salary) — after filing each quarter

Service 09

Income Tax Notice compliance

An Income Tax notice is a formal communication from the Income Tax Department asking a taxpayer to clarify discrepancies, submit documents, or respond to scrutiny — common triggers include mismatches between ITR and Form 26AS/AIS (Now Form 168 as per new act), under-reporting of income, non-filing of returns, high-value transactions, or random scrutiny selection.Every notice carries a strict response deadline and must never be ignored, as failure to respond can lead to ex-parte assessment, tax demands with interest, heavy penalties up to 200% of tax, and even prosecution for wilful evasion. If a taxpayer disagrees with an assessment order, a first appeal lies before CIT(A)/NFAC within 30 days, followed by a second appeal before ITAT within 60 days — with further recourse to the High Court and Supreme Court on questions of law. 

⚠️Every notice has a specific deadline — typically 15 to 30 days. Missing the response window can result in the AO passing an ex-parte order confirming the demand in full, plus interest and penalty. Notices under Section 148 (reassessment) have particularly serious consequences if ignored.

Section 143(1)

Intimation — data mismatch / demand

Section 143(2)

Scrutiny notice — detailed examination

Section 148

Reassessment — escaped income

Response Deadline

Typically 15–30 days from notice date

  • Section 143(1) intimation: if demand raised, pay via portal or file rectification under Section 154
  • Section 143(2) scrutiny: respond through e-Proceedings portal with documents and reconciliation
  • Section 139(9) defective return: correct and resubmit ITR within 15 days of notice
  • Section 148: reassessment for escaped income — consult a CA/lawyer immediately before responding
  • Section 245: proposed refund adjustment — accept or reject via portal within 30 days
  • All notices and responses are managed online via the e-Proceedings section of the IT portal

Service 10

Updated ITR Return (ITR-U)

Form ITR-U (Updated Return) under Section 139(8A) (Now Sec.263(8A) as per new act) allows taxpayers to voluntarily correct errors, declare missed income, or file previously unfiled returns — without waiting for the Income Tax Department to initiate scrutiny or notice proceedings. Budget 2025 extended the filing window from 2 years to 4 years from the end of the relevant Assessment Year, but filing ITR-U comes at a cost — an additional tax of 25%, 50%, 60%, or 70% of tax and interest is payable depending on whether it is filed in the 1st, 2nd, 3rd, or 4th year respectively. ITR-U can only be used to increase tax liability — it cannot be filed to claim refunds, reduce existing liability, or when assessment/reassessment proceedings are pending or search/survey has been initiated against the taxpayer. Only one ITR-U is permitted per Assessment Year with no second revision allowed, making it essential to ensure accuracy before filing. The key benefit is that voluntary disclosure through ITR-U reduces exposure to scrutiny, heavy penalties up to 200% of tax, and prosecution — making early filing always more advisable than delay.

⚠️ ITR-U cannot be filed if: an assessment/reassessment is already initiated, if it would result in a refund or reduced liability, or if there’s an ongoing search/seizure operation. Only ONE ITR-U can be filed per assessment year — there is no revision.

Window

Up to 4 years from end of assessment year (Budget 2025)

Additional Tax (Year 1–2)

25% on tax + interest payable

Additional Tax (Year 3–4)

50% on tax + interest payable

Limitation

Cannot reduce liability or claim refund

  • Declare income missed in original return — from freelancing, investments, foreign assets, or FDs
  • Correct mistakes in originally filed ITR such as wrong deductions, wrong regime, or missed income
  • File for the first time if the original return was never filed — covers up to 4 assessment years back
  • Pay additional tax (25% or 50% surcharge on remaining tax + interest) along with ITR-U filing
  • Reduces risk of scrutiny notice and heavy penalties from the Income Tax Department
  • One-time opportunity per assessment year — accuracy is critical as no further revision is possible

Service 11

Pan Card Application & alteration

The Permanent Account Number (PAN) is a 10-digit alphanumeric identifier  issued by the Income Tax Department that serves as the primary financial identity for all individuals, firms, companies, trusts, and NGOs in India. PAN is mandatory for income tax filing, bank account opening, high-value financial transactions, GST registration, and all business registrations. Diwan Professional Team will assists with fresh PAN applications (Form 49A (now Form 93 as per new act) for Indian entities, Form 49AA (Now From 95 as per new act) for foreign nationals), corrections/alterations to existing PAN data, and PAN-Aadhaar linking.

✦ Note: From July 1, 2025, Aadhaar number is mandatory for all fresh PAN applications. Inoperative PAN (not linked to Aadhaar) results in higher TDS deduction at 20% instead of the normal rate, and return processing may be held up until PAN is reactivated.

New PAN Form

Form 49A (Indian) / 49AA (Foreign)

Correction Form

Request for Change/Correction in PAN

Processing Fee

₹91 (Indian address) / ₹862 (foreign address)

Delivery Time

Physical card in 15 days; e-PAN in 48 hrs

  • Apply for fresh PAN online via NSDL/Protean or UTIITSL portal or through Diwan Consultancy
  • Correct errors in name, date of birth, father’s name, address, or signature via Form 49A correction
  • Entities (companies, firms, trusts) require their own separate PAN — different documents required
  • Instant e-PAN available through the IT portal using Aadhaar-based OTP — delivered digitally in minutes
  • Link PAN with Aadhaar to keep PAN active — inoperative PAN causes 20% higher TDS deductions
  • Foreign nationals can apply for PAN using Form 49AA with passport and home country TIN as identity proof

Service 12

Income Tax Audit & Assurance Services

A Tax Audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (now Section 63 of the income Tax Act, 2025) is the examination of a taxpayer’s books of accounts by a practising Chartered Accountant. It ensures that income, deductions, and tax computations are correctly reported as per the provisions of the Income Tax Act. The audit report is filed in Form 3CA/3CB along with Form 3CD — now proposed to be replaced by Form 26 under the new Income Tax Rules, 2026

Who is Liable for Tax Audit

  1. Business (Normal) – Turnover exceeds ₹1 Crore in a financial year.
  2. Business (Digital) – Turnover exceeds ₹10 Crore where 95%+ receipts & payments are digital.
  3. Profession – Gross receipts of specified professionals (CA, Doctor, Lawyer, etc.) exceed ₹50 Lakh.
  4. Presumptive Business (Sec 44AD / Sec 58 of IT Act 2025) – Business with turnover up to ₹2 Crore (₹3 Crore if 95%+ digital) declares profit below 8%/6% with income above basic exemption limit.
  5. Presumptive Profession (Sec 44ADA / Sec 58 of IT Act 2025) – Professional with receipts up to ₹50 Lakh (₹75 Lakh if 95%+ digital) declares income below 50% of gross receipts with total income above basic exemption limit.

Assurance Services in Taxation

Assurance services go beyond compliance auditing and provide stakeholders with independent verification and confidence over financial and tax information. Key assurance services in a tax practice include:

  1. Statutory Audit – Mandatory audit of financial statements under the Companies Act.
  2. Internal Audit – Review of internal controls, risk management, and governance.
  3. Compliance Audit – Verification of adherence to tax laws, GST, TDS, and ROC regulations.
  4. Special Audit – Directed by the Assessing Officer for complex cases.
  5. Due Diligence Audit – For mergers, acquisitions, and business restructuring.
  6. Review of Financial Statements – Limited assurance engagement for interim reporting.

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