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Books of Accounts Under Section 44AA of Income Tax Act

By Mohammed S Chokhawala

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Updated on: Jul 5th, 2024

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7 min read

The Income Tax Act has specified the books of accounts that are required to be maintained for the purpose of Income Tax. These have been prescribed under section 44AA and Rule 6F.

Who is Required To Maintain Books of Account?

Books of accounts/accounting records have to be maintained if the income from business or profession exceeds Rs. 1,20,000 or turnover/gross receipts exceeds Rs. 10,00,000 in any of the 3 preceding years for an existing profession. This also applies to a newly set up business/profession whose income from business/profession is expected to exceed Rs. 1,20,000 in a year or gross receipts are expected to exceed Rs. 10,00,000.

Further, in case business/profession is being carried out by the individual or HUF the limits are increased as under: 

a. For Income - Limit is Rs. 2,50,000

b. For Turnover/Gross Receipt - Limit is Rs. 25,00,000.

Further, in case of specified professionals books of accounts are to be maintaitned only if income exceeds Rs. 1,50,000 in all of the 3 preceding years.

The specified professionals are:

  • Legal
  • Medical
  • Engineering
  • Architectural
  • Accountancy
  • Technical consultancy
  • Interior decoration
  • Authorized representative — 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.
  • Film artist — This includes a producer, editor, actor, director, music director, art director, dance director, cameraman, singer, lyricist, story writer, screenplay or dialogue writer and costume designers.
  • Company secretary
  • If you are a freelancer pursuing any of these listed professions and your gross receipts are more than Rs. 1,50,000, these rules shall apply to you.

For the businesses and professions (other than specified professionals) such books and accounts are to be kept which enables the tax officer to compute the taxable income.

Whereas in case of specified professionals, the accounting records to be kept have been prescribed in Rule 6F. 

Specified Books of Account as per Rule 6F

  • Cash book: A record of day-to-day cash receipts and payments which shows cash balance at the end of the day or at best at the end of each month and not later.
  • A journal according to mercantile system of accounting. A journal is a log of all day to day transactions. It is a record, in accounting terms, where total credits equal total debits, when we follow the double entry system of accounting ie each debit has a corresponding credit and vice versa.
  • A ledger where all entries flow from the journal, has details of all accounts, this can be used to prepare the financial statements.
  • Photocopied of bills or receipts issued by you which are more than Rs 25
  • Original bills of expenditure incurred by you which are more than Rs 50

Following are the additional requirements in case of a person carrying on medical profession — physicians, surgeons, dentists, pathologists, radiologists, etc.

  • Daily cash register with details of patients, services rendered, fees received and date of receipt
  • Details of stock of drugs, medicines, and other consumables used

These books should be maintained at the Head Office or at each of the offices.

Taxpayer

Profit/Loss

Applicable taxing section

Whether books as per section 44AA applicable

Business Income > Rs 1,20,000

Profit

Normal provisions

Yes

Business turnover > Rs 25 Lakh

Profit/Loss

Normal provisions

Yes

Business turnover </= Rs 25 Lakh

Profit/Loss

Presumptive taxation – Section 44AD

No

Business turnovers </= Rs 25 Lakh (Individual)

Profit/Loss

Normal Provisions

No

Business Turnover </= 2 Crores

Profit

Presumptive taxation – Section 44AD

No

BusinessTurnover </= 2 Crore

Loss

Presumptive taxation – Section 44AD

No

BusinessTurnover </= 2 Crore

Profit/Loss

Normal provisions

Yes

ProfessionGross receipts </= 50 Lakh

Profit/Loss

Presumptive taxation – Section 44ADA

No

ProfessionGross receipts > 25 Lakh

Profit/Loss

Normal provisions

Yes

For How Long should these Books be Maintained?

Each year’s books must be kept for a period of 6 years from the end of that year.


Failure to maintain books of accounts: If you fail to maintain books of accounts as prescribed, you may be charged a penalty of Rs 25,000 or in some cases where you may have international transactions and you have failed to maintain information and documents for such transactions – 2% of the value of each international transaction.It would be diligent to maintain your books of accounts and keep track of all your expense and income in a methodical way.

When is Bookkeeping Not Required?

  • Where the income does not exceed Rs 1,20,000 and total sales, turnover or gross receipts are not more than 10,00,000 in all preceding 3 years — no books of account are required to be maintained. In the case of a newly set up profession or business the same rule applies when income is expected to be less than Rs 1,20,000 and sales/turnover/gross receipts are expected to be less than Rs 10,00,000.
  • Where the income is more than Rs 1,20,000 or total sales, turnover or gross receipts are more than 10,00,000 in any of the preceding 3 years, such profession or businesses must maintain books of accounts and other documents which may enable the Assessing Officer to calculate their taxable income as per the Income Tax Act. No specific records are prescribed. In case of a newly set up profession or business, the same rule applies when income is expected to be more than Rs 1,20,000 or sales/turnover/gross receipts are expected to be more than Rs 10,00,000.
  • Businesses covered under section 44AE are not required to maintain any books of accounts. However, taxpayers who claim that their income from business is lower than the presumed income calculated under section 44AE must maintain books of accounts as specified in section 44AA and have them audited under section 44AB. 
  • A taxpayer may shifts from presumptive taxation under section 44AD/44ADA to normal taxation to claim that their income from business or profession is lower than the presumed income calculated under section 44AD/44ADA. In such a case, where the income exceeds the basic exemption limit of Rs 2,50,000, books of accounts as required under section 44AA have to be maintained and audited as per section 44AB.

Audit Requirements

Audit of accounts is compulsory by a Chartered Accountant for the following persons as per Section 44AB.

Tax Payer

Compulsory Audit required when

A person carrying on Business

If total sales, turnover or gross receipts are more than Rs. 1 crore (Limit has been increased to Rs. 10 crores for taxpayers whose cash receipts/cash payments does not exceed 5% of the total receipts/total payments

A person carrying on Profession

If gross receipts are more than Rs. 50 lakh

A person covered under presumptive income scheme section 44AD

If person want to declare income of the business as lower than the presumptive income calculated as per Section 44AD and the person’s total income is more than the maximum income which is exempt from tax.

A person covered under presumptive income scheme section 44AE

If person wants to declare income of the business lower than the presumptive income calculated as per Section 44AE.

A person covered under presumptive income scheme section 44ADA

If income of the profession is lower than the presumptive income calculated as per section 44ADA and the person’s total income is more then the maximum income which is exempt from tax.

Due Date for Getting Records Audited and Submission of Audit Report

Taxpayer

Audit Form

Statement Form

Due date for for submission of report

Due date for submission of income tax return

A person carrying on business or profession who is compulsorily required to get audited under any other statute/law.

Form 3CA

Form 3CD

September 30 of the assessment year

October 31 of the assessment year

A person other than those listed above who are required to get audited under Income tax law

Form 3CB

Form 3CD

September 30 of the assessment year

October 31 of the assessment year

The deadline for audit and submission of ITR is October 31 and November 30 respectively in case of international or specified domestic transactions.

Penalty When Accounting Records Are Not Maintained as per Section 44AA

If the taxpayer fails to maintain accounting records as per the requirements of Section 44AA, a penalty may be levied under section 271A. The maximum penalty that can be charged is Rs. 25,000. However, if the taxpayer can prove there is a reasonable cause for failure to maintain accounting records – such penalty may not be levied.

If the taxpayer fails to get the accounting records audited or furnish audit report as per the requirements of Section 44AB, a penalty may be levied under section 271B. The minimum penalty that can be charged is 0.5% of the total sales, turnover or gross receipts. The maximum penalty is Rs 1,50,000. However, if the taxpayer has a reasonable cause for failure to get an audit done – such penalty may not be levied.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Is it compulsory for a taxpayer to maintain books of accounts?

If you cross the limits as provided in Section 44AA for the business/profession, then you are required to maintain the books of accounts.

I am a salaried person, will I be required to maintain any books of accounts?

No, the requirement of maintaining books of accounts does not apply to a salaried person.

Is there any relaxation from maintaining books of accounts if I opt for new regime?

No, there is no relaxation to maintain books of accounts if you opt for new regime.

Will I be required to maintain books of accounts if I opt for presumptive taxation?

No, in case you opt for presumptive taxation, you will not be required to maintain books of accounts.

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About the Author

I'm a chartered accountant, well-versed in the ins and outs of income tax, GST, and keeping the books balanced. Numbers are my thing, I can sift through financial statements and tax codes with the best of them. But there's another side to me – a side that thrives on words, not figures. Read more

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