Under the Explanation to Section 139(9) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, a return is considered defective if it fails to meet specific procedural or substantive requirements. Below are the key conditions that render a return defective:
1. Mandatory Requirements for a Valid Return
A return shall be regarded as defective unless all the following conditions are fulfilled:
(A) Documentation & Disclosures
- Annexures & Statements:
- The return must include all schedules, annexures, and columnsrelated to:
- Computation of income under each head (salary, house property, business, capital gains, etc.).
- Gross total income and total taxable income.
- Missing schedules(e.g., Schedule VDA for crypto income) make the return defective.
- The return must include all schedules, annexures, and columnsrelated to:
- Tax Computation Statement:
- Must be accompanied by a statement showing tax payablebased on the declared income.
- Audit Reports (if applicable):
- Section 44AB Audit Cases: Submit Form 3CA/3CB + 3CD(tax audit report).
- Charitable Trusts/Institutions: Attach Form 10B/10BB(audit report for exemptions under Sections 11/12).
(B) Proof of Tax Payments
- TDS/TCS Certificates: Proof of TDS (Form 16/16A)and TCS
- Advance Tax/Self-Assessment Tax: Challan details (BSR code, date, amount).
- Exception: If TDS certificate is unavailable, the return is not defectiveif:
- The deductor failed to issue it (Section 203), and
- The taxpayer submits it within 2 years(Section 155(14)).
(C) Financial Statements & Books of Accounts
- For Maintained Books:
- Submit profit & loss account, balance sheet, trading account, and personal accounts(for proprietors/partners).
- For Non-Maintained Books:
- Provide a statementshowing:
- Turnover/gross receipts, expenses, net profit.
- Sundry debtors/creditors, stock-in-trade, cash/bank balances.
- Provide a statementshowing:
(D) Personal & PAN Details
- Name Mismatch: Discrepancy between the name in the return and PAN card.
- Incomplete Bank Details: Missing account information for refund processing.
2. Common Reasons for Defective Returns
- Filing in Wrong ITR Form:
- Example: Using ITR-4(presumptive income) when turnover exceeds ₹2 crore.
- Unreported Income:
- Omitting income (e.g., interest, capital gains, crypto transactions under Schedule VDA).
- Mathematical Errors:
- Negative values in income fields or incorrect tax calculations.
- Non-Payment of Tax:
- Filing returns without paying self-assessment tax.
3. Consequences of Defective Returns
- Notice under Section 139(9):
- Taxpayer gets 15 days(extendable on request) to rectify defects.
- Invalid Return:
- If unrectified, the return is treated as non-filed, leading to:
- Loss of deductions/exemptions.
- Penalties under Section 271F(up to ₹10,000).
- If unrectified, the return is treated as non-filed, leading to:
- Best Judgment Assessment:
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- AO may estimate income if defects persist.
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4. How to Rectify?
- Log into the Income Tax e-filing portal.
- Navigate to “e-Proceedings” → “Defective Return Notice”.
- Upload corrected documents (XML/JSON file) and e-verifyvia Aadhaar OTP/DSC