Submit form 15g or 15h to avoid tax deducted at source
Ankit
(Finance Professional)
(30 Points)
31 January 2014
Delayed tax refunds can be frustrating. After all,
what can be worse than waiting for your own
money to come back to you? This is why financial
advisers suggest planning one's taxes well in
advance and avoid overpayment. The start of the
financial year is, perhaps, the best time to do so.
Submit the Forms 15G or 15H right away to avoid
the tax deducted at source (TDS) on your
investments, if your income is below the exemption
limit. From this year onwards, the Income Tax
Department has introduced some changes in the
two forms.
You now have to give additional information on
income from all sources and tax deduction availed
of during the financial year. According to the
TDS rules, if interest income exceeds Rs 10,000 in
a year, 10% tax will be deducted at source. If
the investor has not furnished his PAN details, the
TDS rate will be higher at 20%. However, if the
investor's total taxable income is below the basic
exemption limit, he can submit a declaration to
avoid TDS. Form 15G is to be used by individuals
below 60 years, HUFs and trusts, etc.
Senior citizens and those above 80 years must
use Form 15H. Till now, one only had to declare in
the form that one's income was below the taxable
limit and, therefore, the TDS should not be
deducted. Now, however, one must also mention the
expected taxable income in the financial year.
This includes income from all sources, such as
salary, interest, rent and capital gains. One can
avoid the tax-free income like interest from the
PF, the PPF and tax-free bonds.
Are you eligible? Before you rush to submit the Form
15G or 15H, make sure that you are eligible. An
individual or HUF must satisfy two conditions.
First, the estimated taxable income for the
financial year should be less than the basic
exemption limit. This is Rs 2 lakh for individuals
below 60 years and HUFs, Rs 2.5 lakh for senior
citizens, and Rs 5 lakh for very senior citizens
above 80 years.
The second condition, which is applicable only to
Form 15G, is that the total interest income from
all sources should not exceed the basic exemption
limit. Senior citizens have been exempted from this
condition because most retirees get the biggest
chunk of their income from interest.
These conditions are not new. The only
difference is that now the individual has to
specifically mention his expected income in the
form. In the table below, we look at the various
situations in which an individual is eligible to file
the declaration.
Interestingly, these forms also require the
individual to mention details of other incomes,
including dividends from shares and mutual funds.
Dividend income is tax-free but the Income Tax
Department still wants to know how much you
earned from them. "The new forms seem to have
been made with all the possible situations in mind.
As of now, the dividend is tax-free, but may be
taxable in the future,'' explains Sandeep Shanbhag,
director, Wonderland Consultants.
Err on the side of caution The TDS rules can be
cumbersome, but you just have to take them in your
stride. The Forms 15G and 15H have to be
submitted at every branch of the bank where you
have a deposit. Though the threshold limit of Rs
10,000 a year is per branch, some banks insist on
a form to be submitted even when the interest is
less than Rs 10,000 in that branch.
?A bank can track you using the unique customer
ID. If the combined interest in all branches is
above the Rs 10,000 limit, TDS will be deducted if
you have not filled the Form 15G or 15H. It is best
to provide the form than risk TDS. Once the tax
has been deducted, it can only be reclaimed by
filing your income tax return.
The worst affected are investors who are not
eligible to file Form 15G because their interest
income is above the threshold limit even though
their total taxable income is not liable to tax.
One option for such people is to allow the banks
to deduct the TDS. They can then reclaim the
amount by filing their tax returns. This is a
cumbersome process and, therefore, not worth
undertaking. The second option is to split the
fixed deposits across several banks and branches
so that the TDS exemption limit is not breached.
This is no less tedious because you will have to go
to multiple locations. Besides, it increases your
paperwork manifold. There may also be cases of a
small tax liability which makes an investor
ineligible for filing these forms. You can handle
this by letting one bank deduct the TDS so that
the amount takes care of your total tax liability.
However, note that the above strategies are only
meant to avoid TDS, not avoid tax or file your tax
return. You may be required to file your tax return
if your total income before the deductions is
above the basic tax exemption limit.
Besides, there is a stiff penalty for furnishing
incorrect information in the form just to avoid the
TDS.