When you receive a
tax refund from the Income Tax Department, you may also receive
interest on that refund if it was delayed. However, this interest isn’t just a bonus — it comes with specific rules and tax implications you must understand.
1. What Is Refund Interest and When Is It Payable?Under Section
244A of the Income Tax Act, if the tax department delays issuing your refund, you are usually entitled to receive
simple interest at 0.5% per month (or
6% per year) on the tax amount refunded. The interest is calculated from either:·
1 April of the assessment year if you filed your return
on time,· Or the
date you filed your return, if you filed it
after the due date.This interest compensates you for the delay in returning your excess tax to you.
2. Interest Is Taxable as “Income from Other Sources”Although you receive interest along with your refund, this interest amount is
not tax‑free. It must be declared under the head
“Income from Other Sources” in your income tax return for the year in which you actually receive the interest.This means:· You include the interest amount in taxable income,· It is taxed at your applicable tax slab rate,· You cannot treat it as a deduction — but you must report it.
3. You Only Get Interest If Certain Conditions Are MetNot all refunds earn interest — the law sets
conditions for eligibility:✔
Refund Amount Must Be SignificantInterest is
not payable if the refund is less than
10% of your total tax liability for that year.This means that small refunds often won’t earn interest.✔
No Interest for Taxpayer‑Caused DelaysIf
you caused the delay (for example, by filing late, submitting incomplete information, or delaying e‑verification), the period attributable to you is
excluded from interest calculation.In simple terms, the government only pays interest for the delay it is responsible for.
4. Different Situations Affect How Interest Is CalculatedInterest isn’t always calculated the same way. It depends on
why the refund is due:·
Refund from TDS, TCS, or Advance Tax — interest counted from 1 april or filing date.·
Refund from Self‑Assessment Tax — interest counted from filing or tax payment date, whichever is later.Also, interest may be paid only from the
date the refund becomes due and not for periods where the taxpayer slowed down the process.
*5. Even If You Don’t Get Interest, There’s No Penalty for Not Reporting ItThere has been legal clarification that if you
fail to disclose interest received on a tax refund, you may not necessarily data-face a penalty. A tribunal ruled that since the interest element is not known
until the refund is received, non‑disclosure by a taxpayer before that shouldn’t be penalised.That said, accurately reporting any interest you
do receive is still important to stay compliant with tax laws.
Summary – What Every Taxpayer Should RememberRuleKey Point1. Refund interest is legally mandatedIncome Tax Act Section 244A provides interest if refund is delayed.
2. Interest is taxedInterest is reported under
Income from Other Sources.
3. Conditions must be metRefund must exceed 10% of tax liability, and taxpayer delays exclude interest.
4. Calculation variesDifferent rules exist for TDS, advance tax, and self‑assessment cases.
5. Reporting is essentialDisclose the interest received in your ITR to avoid issues.
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