INCOME TAX DEPT BANK SFT SEBI Shares GSTN Turnover CRYPTO §509 FIU-IND STR/CTR CRS/FATCA 100+ Countries GCA GUPTA CHANDAN & ASSOCIATES Professional Firm · New Delhi · Pan India What…
India’s Financial Surveillance Is More Comprehensive Than Most People Realise: Your bank reports your ₹10 lakh cash deposits. Your property registrar reports your property purchase. Your broker reports every rupee of capital gains. Your credit card company reports when you spend ₹10 lakh or more annually. Your mutual fund reports your SIP and lump-sum investments. Crypto exchanges now report all VDA transactions under Section 509, ITA 2025. 100+ countries auto-share your foreign account balances under CRS/FATCA. The Income Tax Department’s Annual Information Statement (AIS) aggregates all of this – and the department uses AI-powered analytics on this data to identify mismatches with your ITR, select cases for scrutiny, and send notices. Understanding this surveillance architecture is essential for every taxpayer – not to evade tax, but to ensure your ITR is accurate, complete, and defensible.
The Intelligence Pipeline:
Over 10 crore data points flow into the Income Tax Department’s systems every year from 50+ categories of reporting entities. The data is processed, PAN-linked, aggregated, and displayed in the taxpayer’s AIS (Annual Information Statement) on incometax.gov.in. The Insight portal uses AI-powered analytics to flag mismatches between AIS data and ITR-reported income – automatically generating e-verification requests and selecting cases for scrutiny. This is not future technology – it has been operational since 2021.
2. SFT (Statement of Financial Transactions) – All Categories & Thresholds
Section §285BA, ITA 1961 / §508 ITA 2025 – Specified Entities MUST File SFT (Form 165 (61A)) by 31 May each year:
Unlike TDS (which is deducted from your income), SFT is pure third-party reporting about your transactions. You don’t know when it happens, you don’t get a certificate – it just shows up in your AIS. The IT Department uses SFT as its primary cross-check against your ITR.
SFT Category
Transaction Type
Threshold
Reported By
Appears in AIS?
1
Cash deposits in savings account
≥ ₹10 lakh in aggregate per year (all branches combined)
Banks, co-op banks, post office savings
Yes
2
Cash deposits in current/overdraft account
≥ ₹50 lakh in aggregate per year
Banks
Yes
3
Cash withdrawals from current account
≥ ₹50 lakh in aggregate per year
Banks
Yes
4
Cash payment for credit card bills
≥ ₹1 lakh in cash per year
Banks (credit card issuer)
Yes
5
Total credit card spend (all modes)
≥ ₹10 lakh in aggregate per year
Banks (credit card issuer)
Yes
6
Purchase of bank drafts/pay orders/banker’s cheque in cash
≥ ₹10 lakh in aggregate per year
Banks
Yes
7
Cash purchase of foreign currency (notes, travellers cheques)
≥ ₹10 lakh in aggregate per year
Authorised dealers (banks, Thomas Cook, forex shops)
Yes
8
Purchase of immovable property
≥ ₹30 lakh per transaction
Property registrar (Sub-Registrar office)
Yes
9
Sale of immovable property
≥ ₹30 lakh per transaction
Property registrar
Yes
10
Share application money received by private companies
≥ ₹10 lakh from any person per year
Company receiving the investment
Yes
11
Buy-back of shares by unlisted companies
≥ ₹10 lakh per person
Unlisted company doing buyback
Yes
12
Mutual fund units purchased
≥ ₹10 lakh in aggregate per year
Mutual fund AMC / RTA (CAMS, KFintech)
Yes
13
Purchase of bonds/debentures
≥ ₹10 lakh per year
Company/institution issuing bonds
Yes
14
Cash receipts for goods/services (businesses under audit)
≥ ₹2 lakh per person per transaction
Businesses liable to tax audit
Yes
15
Dividend income
NO THRESHOLD – every rupee reported
All dividend-paying companies
Yes – 100%
16
Capital gains on listed securities (shares, MF units)
NO THRESHOLD – every transaction reported
Stock exchanges, depositories (NSDL/CDSL)
Yes – 100%
17
Interest income (bank deposits, FDs, savings)
NO THRESHOLD – every rupee reported
Banks, post offices, NBFCs
Yes – 100%
18
Insurance premium paid
≥ ₹50,000 per year per policyholder
Life insurance / general insurance companies
Yes
19
Foreign remittance / LRS transactions
Any amount (no threshold – all reported from 2020)
Authorised Dealer (AD) banks for all LRS
Yes – all
20 (NEW)
Crypto/VDA transactions
NO THRESHOLD – all transactions
Crypto exchanges / VDA platforms (Section 509, ITA 2025)
Yes – 100%
21 (NEW)
Stamp paper purchases via SHCIL
All amounts
SHCIL (Stock Holding Corp of India)
Yes (new 2026)
22
Time deposit (FD) opening
≥ ₹10 lakh aggregate per year (across all branches)
Banks, co-op banks, Nidhi companies, NBFC
Yes
⚠️ Aggregation Rule – Critical to Understand:
All transactions of the same nature in the same person’s name across all branches of the same bank are aggregated. If you deposit ₹3 lakh cash each in 4 different branches of SBI in the same year – that’s ₹12 lakh aggregated, and it IS reported under SFT. You cannot avoid reporting by splitting across branches.
3. AIS (Annual Information Statement) – Your 46-Category Financial Profile
The Annual Information Statement (AIS) on incometax.gov.in (login → Services → Annual Information Statement) goes significantly beyond SFT to include 46 categories of financial data about you. The obligation to make AIS available to every assessee is enabled under §510, ITA 2025 (285BB ITA 1961). AIS is your complete financial profile as known to the IT Department.
AIS Major Data Categories (Beyond SFT)
Category
Data Shown
Source
TDS / TCS
Every TDS deduction from salary, rent, interest, professional fees, property, crypto etc.
All TDS deductors via quarterly returns
Salary income
Gross salary, tax paid, Form 130 (Form 16) data from employer
Employer TDS returns (Form 138 (Form 24Q))
Dividend income
All dividends received from listed/unlisted companies
Companies + SFT
Interest income
Bank FD interest, savings account interest, RD interest
Banks SFT + TDS records
Capital gains – Securities
Listed equity, MF redemptions, bonds, ETFs – purchase and sale details
Stock exchanges, NSDL/CDSL, AMC RTAs
Capital gains – MF
All mutual fund purchases and redemptions
AMCs, RTAs (CAMS, KFintech)
Rent received
Rent on which TDS was deducted (Form 141 (Form 26QC) by tenant)
TDS returns + SFT
Business/professional receipts
GST turnover from GSTN; income on which TDS deducted
GSTN data sharing + TDS
Property transactions
Purchase and sale of immovable property ≥₹30L
Property registrars SFT
Foreign remittances
All LRS remittances, forex purchases, foreign account transactions
AD Banks SFT + Form 15CA data
Advance tax / self-assessment tax
All taxes paid by you (Challan 280)
Challan records in TIN
Refund
IT refunds issued to you
IT Department own data
Demand pending
Outstanding tax demands against your PAN
IT Department own data
VDA / Crypto
All crypto transactions, 1% TDS deducted under §194S/§393(1) Sl.No.8(vi)
Crypto exchanges + TDS records + §509 reporting
Off-market share transfers
Transfers of shares outside stock exchange
NSDL / CDSL depository data
EPFO (PF) interest/withdrawal
PF withdrawals, taxable PF interest
EPFO data sharing
Foreign travel (visa spend)
Large forex/credit card transactions abroad
AD Bank SFT for forex; credit card SFT
Other information
Insurance policy maturity proceeds, housing loan interest (from lender), partner’s income from firm etc.
Various reporting entities
How to access your AIS: Login to incometax.gov.in → e-File → Income Tax Returns → View AIS. The AIS shows: (a) Reported value – what the reporting entity submitted; (b) Modified value – after your feedback. You can submit feedback if any information is incorrect (see Section 16).
4. TIS (Taxpayer Information Summary) – The Action Document
The Taxpayer Information Summary (TIS) is a simplified aggregated summary derived from AIS. It shows the net values by income category after processing all reporting entity data. TIS is used for:
Pre-filling your ITR – ITR forms auto-populate from TIS data
Mismatch detection – IT Department compares TIS with your filed ITR to identify discrepancies
Notice generation – AIS/TIS mismatch is the primary trigger for e-verification notices (§259/ §133C) and scrutiny selection
⚠️ The ITR-AIS mismatch trap: If your ITR shows ₹5 lakh in capital gains but AIS shows ₹12 lakh (based on broker SFT) – the IT Department’s Insight portal flags this discrepancy automatically. This triggers: (a) e-verification notice asking you to explain the difference; or (b) Defective return notice if the mismatch is considered a significant under-reporting; or (c) Scrutiny selection under CASS (Computer Assisted Scrutiny Selection). Always cross-check your AIS before filing ITR – not after.
Cross-checks with ITR income. If you deposit ₹15L cash but declare only ₹5L income → scrutiny. Cash income must be explained.
Cash deposits – current account
₹50 lakh aggregate per year per bank
Business cash transactions. IT checks: (a) is business registered in ITR? (b) Is turnover declared? (c) GST filed for this turnover?
Cash withdrawals – current account
₹50 lakh aggregate per year
Large cash withdrawals are monitored. If withdrawn but no corresponding cash expense in books → scrutiny for unexplained cash use.
TDS under §194N on large cash withdrawals
₹1 crore+ (non-filers: ₹20L+): TDS at 2-5%
Section 393 /194N TDS itself signals large cash withdrawal. Appears in AIS TDS section.
Bank drafts/pay orders in cash
₹10 lakh per year
Red flag for hawala or cash-to-instrument conversion. IT cross-checks destination of draft.
UPI/NEFT/RTGS transfers
No SFT threshold – NOT directly in SFT
However, large transfers appear in GST data (if business) or in TDS trail (if salary/professional fees). Not in SFT but can be accessed under §259/133(6) information gathering.
The ₹10 lakh cash deposit “myth”: Many people believe “if I deposit less than ₹10 lakh, IT won’t know.” This is partly true for SFT – savings account cash deposits below ₹10L in a single bank don’t trigger SFT. But: (a) if you use multiple banks and aggregate crosses ₹10L – the IT Department can still detect through CIBIL/RBI data linkage; (b) if you also have AIS mismatches on other income – the cash deposits become supporting evidence even if below SFT threshold; (c) large online transactions, GST turnover, TDS trails create context that makes any unexplained cash suspicious regardless of amount.
6. Credit Card Spends – What Gets Reported
Credit Card Reporting
Threshold
What IT Knows
Total credit card spends (all modes)
≥ ₹10 lakh per year → full amount reported
Bank reports aggregate credit card spend for the year to IT via SFT. IT cross-checks: if you spend ₹12L on credit card but declare only ₹5L income → lifestyle vs income mismatch → notice.
Cash payment for credit card bills
≥ ₹1 lakh in cash per year
Paying credit card bills in cash is a red flag – IT views this as potential conversion of unaccounted cash into legitimate-seeming credit card statements.
International credit card spends
Part of LRS SFT (foreign transactions); and in credit card total SFT
Foreign spend visible in both credit card SFT (total spend) and LRS SFT (foreign component). Forex spend on credit card is counted towards LRS $250K limit and reported to IT.
Reward points / cashback
Not tracked under SFT for tax purposes
Not currently reportable income (treated as discount/rebate) – but large cashback amounts from premium credit cards in some cases may be scrutinised
Real-world example: Shalini (salaried, ₹8L annual income declared) spends ₹14L on her HDFC credit card in FY 2025-26 (holidays abroad, luxury purchases, school fees). HDFC reports ₹14L credit card spend via SFT. Her AIS shows ₹14L credit card spend but only ₹8L income. The IT Department’s Insight system flags this as a lifestyle-income mismatch. E-verification notice asks her to explain: “Your credit card spends of ₹14L exceed your declared income of ₹8L.” She needs to demonstrate: spouse’s income, inherited wealth, loan proceeds, or other income not taxable in her hands.
7. Share Market & Securities – Capital Gains Surveillance
⚠️ Capital gains on listed securities: NO THRESHOLD – every transaction is reported: Your stock broker and the depository (NSDL/CDSL) report every buy and sell transaction in listed shares and equity mutual funds to the IT Department via SFT. There is no ₹10L or ₹30L threshold – even a ₹5,000 capital gain is reported. This data shows up in your AIS under “Capital Gains – Listed Securities” and is pre-filled in ITR-2/ITR-3.
Securities Transaction
SFT/Reporting Mechanism
What Gets Reported
Listed equity shares (NSE/BSE)
SFT by stock exchanges; demat account transaction report by NSDL/CDSL
Every buy/sell: date, quantity, price, gain/loss – monthly/half-yearly SFT
Equity mutual fund units
SFT by AMCs/RTAs (CAMS, KFintech)
All purchases and redemptions; NAV on purchase and redemption; gain/loss
Debt mutual funds
SFT by AMCs/RTAs
All transactions; post-Finance Act 2023 – taxed at slab rate
ETF (Exchange Traded Funds)
Stock exchange SFT
All buy/sell transactions
IPO applications (ASBA)
Bank SFT (ASBA blocks)
IPO application amounts visible; allotment and listing gains trackable
F&O turnover (premium traded, not just profit) reported; can be very large vs small income
AIS capital gains vs ITR capital gains – why they often don’t match: The AIS shows gross sale proceeds and cost of acquisition (based on SFT data). Your ITR may show a different gain if you have used indexation, Section 198 (112A old) ₹1.25L exemption, or have loss carry-forwards. This creates a frequent mismatch that doesn’t indicate wrong reporting – it’s a computation difference. Keep your capital gains calculation worksheet ready in case of any notice.
8. Mutual Fund Investments – SIP, Lump Sum, Redemptions
MF Transaction
Threshold
Who Reports
In AIS?
Lump sum MF purchase
≥ ₹10L aggregate in a year (across all funds)
AMC / RTA (CAMS, KFintech)
Yes – SFT
SIP (Systematic Investment Plan) installments
Each SIP may be small but aggregate matters; typically below ₹10L/year for most retail investors
AMC / RTA
Capital gains on each redemption: No threshold – all reported
MF redemptions / switches
No threshold – all redemptions reported (capital gains SFT)
AMC / RTA
Yes – all redemptions in AIS
ELSS investments
≥ ₹10L aggregate triggers SFT; also claimed as (§80C)/§123
AMC / RTA
Yes – cross-checked vs §123/ (§80C) claim
MF dividend payouts
No threshold
AMC (dividend payer)
Yes
9. Crypto & VDA – Section 509, ITA 2025 (New)
🆕 Section 509, ITA 2025 – Mandatory Crypto Transaction Reporting (from TY 2026-27):
Under the Income Tax Act, 2025, Section 509 specifically requires crypto exchanges and VDA (Virtual Digital Asset) platforms to furnish crypto-asset transaction statements to the Income Tax Department. This is separate from and in addition to the TDS obligations under §393(1) Sl.No.8(vi) ITA 2025 (= §194S). There is NO threshold – all VDA transactions, regardless of amount, must be reported. This significantly expands the IT Department’s visibility into cryptocurrency trading, NFT sales, and all digital asset transactions.
Crypto Transaction
Reporting Mechanism
What IT Knows
Crypto buy/sell on Indian exchanges (WazirX, CoinDCX etc.)
All trades: date, asset, quantity, INR value, TDS deducted. Appears in AIS under “VDA” and “TDS” sections.
P2P crypto transactions
§509 reporting by platforms; buyer must deduct TDS and file Form 141
P2P is being monitored – Form 141 filings identify buyer/seller. Undisclosed P2P trades are a high-risk area.
Crypto received as income (mining, staking, airdrops)
No specific TDS payer; but §509 exchange reporting captures transfers in/out
Large transfers into exchange from wallets are flagged for income classification (business income or speculative income)
NFT sales
§509 reporting if through VDA platform; 1% TDS by buyer
NFT proceeds visible in AIS; must be declared as capital gains (or business income if trader)
Foreign crypto exchange (Binance, Coinbase)
Not directly under §509 (foreign exchange); CRS may capture if assets held in foreign jurisdiction
Partial visibility; FATCA/CRS may capture if foreign crypto account has fiat gateway through foreign bank
⚠️ Crypto income must be declared regardless of whether it shows in AIS: Section 115BBH of ITA 1961 (194, ITA 2025) taxes VDA income at flat 30% (no deduction for expenses except cost of acquisition; no loss set-off). Even if a specific transaction doesn’t show in AIS (e.g., P2P, foreign exchange), the income is taxable. The IT Department is actively pursuing crypto non-filers – cross-referencing bank accounts linked to crypto exchanges, foreign exchange data, and Form 168 (Form 26AS) TDS data to identify crypto traders who haven’t declared income.
10. Real Estate – Property Purchase & Sale
Real Estate Transaction
SFT Threshold
Who Reports
What IT Tracks
Purchase of any immovable property
≥ ₹30 lakh per transaction
Sub-Registrar (property registration office)
Buyer’s PAN, Seller’s PAN, purchase price, stamp duty value, date
Sale of immovable property
≥ ₹30 lakh per transaction
Sub-Registrar
Seller’s PAN, sale price, buyer’s PAN – used to compute capital gain
TDS on property purchase (1% by buyer)
Aggregate ≥ ₹50 lakh
Buyer (Form 141/26QB)
Seller’s income: property sale proceeds appear in AIS from TDS records
TDS on rent (2% by tenant)
Monthly rent ≥ ₹50,000
Tenant (Form 141/26QC)
Landlord’s rental income appears in AIS
Property listed for rent on platforms
No direct SFT but platform income may be visible
Future: Platform reporting (emerging)
Rental income declared by tenants via TDS creates trail
Why “below registration value” property deals are now riskier: If you sell a property for ₹50 lakh but the circle rate (stamp duty value) is ₹80 lakh – the Sub-Registrar records ₹80 lakh in SFT. Your AIS shows a ₹80 lakh property sale. Your ITR declares ₹50 lakh as sale proceeds. This ₹30 lakh mismatch triggers a notice. Post-Finance Act 2023, the excess of sale consideration over stamp duty value (or vice versa for buyer) has been rationalised under §92 ITA 2025 (§56 ITA 1961) and §78/67 ITA 2025 (§50C/45 ITA 1961) – both buyer and seller have to account for the stamp duty value if it exceeds actual consideration by more than 10%.
11. Foreign Travel, LRS & Forex Transactions
Foreign Transaction
Reporting Mechanism
What IT/FIU Knows
LRS (Liberalised Remittance Scheme) – all overseas remittances
SFT by AD banks – ALL LRS reported (no minimum threshold since 2020)
Every USD/foreign currency sent abroad: amount, purpose (investment, education, travel, gift), recipient country. IT tracks if LRS is consistent with declared income.
Foreign education fee payment
SFT under LRS category
Large education remittances vs low income = scrutiny. “If sending ₹40L abroad for children’s fees but declaring ₹6L income…”
Overseas travel credit card spend
Part of credit card SFT (if total ≥₹10L); also LRS tracking
Foreign credit card spends added to LRS limit tracking; visible in AIS
Cash purchase of foreign currency at forex dealers
SFT: ≥ ₹10L cash purchase in year
Large cash forex purchases tracked. “Who is buying ₹15L in USD notes?”
Outward gift remittances
LRS SFT by AD bank
Large gifts to relatives abroad: taxable in recipient’s hands in some cases; IT checks if gifts from undisclosed income
TCS on LRS
20% TCS (from Oct 2023) on LRS remittances above ₹7L/year for most purposes; 0.5% for education loans
20% TCS shows in AIS; if not claimed in ITR → mismatch. Many taxpayers miss claiming their LRS TCS as credit in ITR.
LRS TCS – ₹100 crore collected annually, much unclaimed: From 1 October 2023, 20% TCS applies to most LRS remittances above ₹7L/year. If you remit ₹20L for foreign travel or investment, the bank deducts ₹2.6L as TCS (20% on ₹13L – the amount above ₹7L). This appears in your AIS as TCS collected. You must claim this as TCS credit in your ITR to get it adjusted against tax liability or refunded. Many taxpayers are unaware and leave this money with the government unnecessarily.
12. FATCA/CRS – Your Foreign Accounts Auto-Reported to India
Common Reporting Standard (CRS) – Annual Auto-Exchange Since 2017:
India joined the OECD CRS in 2016 and has been receiving automatic financial account information from 100+ countries since 2017. Every September, financial institutions in partner countries (banks, brokers, insurance companies) send account information on Indian tax residents to India’s IT Department. This information flows directly into AIS.
Country
What India Receives
Coverage
Switzerland
Account balances, interest, dividends, proceeds from asset sales at Swiss banks
From 2018 for Indian residents
Singapore
Bank accounts, investment accounts, insurance at Singapore FIs
From 2017
UAE (Dubai)
Bank accounts of Indian residents at UAE banks
UAE joined CRS; sharing from 2021 onwards
Mauritius, Cayman, BVI
Financial accounts at Mauritius banks/brokers; Cayman funds
From 2017-2019 depending on jurisdiction
UK, Germany, France, EU
All financial accounts of Indian residents
From 2017
USA
FATCA – US banks report accounts of Indian residents/entities; Form 166 (Form 61B)
From 2015 (FATCA IGA)
Australia, Canada
Bank/investment accounts of Indian residents
From 2017-2018
🆕 Finance Act 2026 update – Crypto Now Classified as a “Financial Asset” for CRS/FATCA:
CBDT amended Rules 114F, 114G, and 114H (the rules implementing FATCA/CRS in India) on 5 March 2026, formally classifying crypto-assets, Central Bank Digital Currencies (CBDCs), and e-money as “financial assets” for FATCA/CRS reporting purposes – effective from 1 January 2026. This closes a major gap: previously, crypto holdings on foreign exchanges (Binance, Coinbase, Kraken) sat outside the CRS net because crypto wasn’t formally a “financial account” under the rules. Going forward, foreign crypto exchanges in CRS-participating jurisdictions must report Indian residents’ crypto holdings, just as banks report cash and securities accounts. Separately, India is targeting domestic enforcement of the OECD’s Crypto-Asset Reporting Framework (CARF) from 1 April 2027, with the Multilateral Competent Authority Agreement (MCAA) for CARF expected to be signed in 2026 – meaning foreign crypto holdings will face the same automatic-exchange visibility as foreign bank accounts.
⚠️ Foreign accounts showing in AIS that you haven’t reported in ITR: If you have a foreign bank account – even if no income was earned – you must disclose it in Schedule FA (Foreign Assets) of your ITR every year. If AIS shows a foreign account (from CRS data) that is not in your Schedule FA → automatic mismatch → Black Money Act notice → potentially §49 prosecution (failure to disclose: 6 months to 7 years RI) or §51 (wilful concealment: 3 to 10 years RI). This is not a risk area where being “under the radar” helps anymore – CRS makes detection near-certain, and from 2026 this now extends to foreign crypto holdings too.
13. GST Data Sharing with Income Tax
A formal CBDT-CBIC data sharing protocol enables bidirectional exchange of taxpayer data:
GST Data
What IT Department Gets
How It’s Used
GST turnover (GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B)
Business turnover declared in GST returns; appears in AIS under “Business/Professional Receipts”
IT cross-checks: is GST turnover equal to ITR turnover? If GST shows ₹50L but ITR shows ₹30L → under-reporting notice
ITC claimed (GSTR-3B)
Large ITC claims visible; cross-referenced with GSTR-2B matching
If large ITC claimed but business income appears low → investigation
Non-filer identification
GSTN sends list of GST-registered businesses to IT Department
If GST-registered business files GST returns but doesn’t file ITR → non-filer notice
High-value GST transactions
Invoice-level data (above certain thresholds) shared
Used for identifying under-reporting of income in specific transactions
GST-ITR turnover consistency is essential: Your GST turnover (GSTR-1 aggregate) and your ITR business income turnover should be reconcilable. Differences arise legitimately from: GST-exempt supplies in ITR but not in GSTR-1, RCM income, composition scheme differences, export turnover treatment. Always prepare a GST-ITR reconciliation statement and keep it ready for any inquiry. GCA provides GST-ITR reconciliation as part of annual compliance.
The Financial Intelligence Unit – India (FIU-IND) receives reports from banks, NBFCs, CAs, real estate agents, and other reporting entities under PMLA. FIU-IND’s intelligence is shared with Income Tax, ED, CBI, Customs, and SEBI for enforcement action.
Report Type
Trigger
Filed By
Shared With IT?
CTR (Cash Transaction Report)
Cash transaction ≥ ₹10 lakh in a single day; or series of connected transactions
All banks/FIs automatically
Yes – IT receives CTR intelligence; used to cross-check cash deposits vs income
STR (Suspicious Transaction Report)
Any transaction that appears suspicious – no minimum amount
Banks, CAs, real estate agents, jewellers (within 7 working days of forming suspicion)
Yes – STR is high-priority intelligence; triggers serious IT scrutiny or ED investigation
CCR (Cross Border Wire Transfer Report)
International transfer ≥ ₹5 lakh or USD equivalent
Banks for all international transfers
Yes – used to cross-check with LRS declarations; detects undisclosed foreign transfers
NTR (Non-Profit Organisation Transaction Report)
NGO receipts/payments above threshold
Banks handling NGO accounts
FCRA + IT compliance cross-check
15. How the IT Department Uses This Data
Data Use
How It Works
Consequence for Taxpayer
Pre-filled ITR
AIS/TIS data auto-populates ITR 1/2/3/4 on the e-filing portal
Benefit: easier filing. Risk: if you accept pre-fill without verifying and AIS has errors → wrong ITR
Mismatch notices (e-verification)
Insight portal compares AIS with filed ITR; flags differences ≥ set thresholds automatically
E-verification notice under §259 (§133C); must respond within 15-30 days explaining mismatch
Non-filer identification
Persons with SFT-reportable transactions but no ITR are flagged as “non-filers”
Compliance notices asking “why haven’t you filed ITR despite having ₹30L property transaction?”
CASS (Computer Assisted Scrutiny Selection)
AI selects cases for scrutiny based on AIS-ITR mismatch patterns, risk profiling
§270, ITA 2025 (§143(2), ITA 1961) scrutiny notice; must appear before AO
High-value transaction monitoring
Dashboard monitoring for large transactions; lifestyle vs income analysis
Demand notices if unexplained expenditure/investment found
Search/survey triggers
Repeated suspicious patterns, large unexplained wealth, intelligence from FIU-IND → §247-248, ITA 2025 (§132/§133A, ITA 1961)
Raid / survey
16. What to Do If Your AIS Has Errors
Step 1: Check AIS before ITR filing (not after)
Go to incometax.gov.in → AIS → download PDF/JSON. Cross-check every item against your records. Capital gains, dividends, interest, property transactions – all should match your own records.
Step 2: Submit feedback if incorrect
In AIS portal, click on the incorrect item → “Submit Feedback” → select reason (Information is duplicate, Information relates to another person, Information is not fully correct, etc.) → submit. The reporting entity will receive your feedback and either confirm or correct.
File ITR based on your actual correct figures – even if AIS shows a different (wrong) value. In your ITR, you can note the discrepancy. Providing the correct value and maintaining documentation (broker statement, bank statement) is your protection.
Step 4: Respond to any AIS mismatch notice promptly
If you receive an e-verification or §143(1) notice about AIS-ITR mismatch – respond within the given timeline (typically 15-30 days) with explanation and supporting documents. Ignoring notices escalates to scrutiny.
17. Practical Case Studies
Case 1: The Unrecognised Cash Deposit
Ramesh (retired, small pension of ₹2L/year) deposits ₹15L cash in his savings account during FY 2025-26. He had sold some old gold jewellery and deposited the proceeds.
SFT reporting: His bank reports ₹15L cash deposit in savings account via SFT. Appears in his AIS under “Cash Deposit – Savings Account: ₹15L.”
ITR position: Ramesh files ITR-1 declaring ₹2L pension income. No mention of ₹15L cash.
Ramesh’s response: He explains it’s proceeds from sale of gold jewellery (ancestral) – exempt under Schedule II, ITA 2025 (§10, ITA 1961) if genuine and documented. Documents required: original jewellery purchase bills (if available), valuation certificate, family history of jewellery ownership.
Lesson: Large cash deposits must be reconciled with ITR income OR explained with documentation. Non-explanation → income addition → 60% tax under §195 ITA 2025 (§115BBE ITA 1961) (unexplained cash credit).
Case 2: Crypto Trader – Double Reporting
Priya actively trades crypto on CoinDCX. TY 2026-27: ₹8L profit from crypto trading. Also receives 1% TDS deducted on trades totalling ₹80K.
AIS data: (a) VDA section: exchange reports all trades via §509 ITA 2025; (b) TDS section: ₹80K TDS shown; (c) Total VDA transactions visible.
ITR filing requirement: Priya must declare ₹8L as VDA income in ITR-2/ITR-3 under “Income from VDA.” Tax at flat 30% = ₹2.4L. Claim ₹80K TDS credit.
If not declared: AIS shows ₹8L VDA income (§509 + TDS trail). ITR shows ₹0. Mismatch = ₹8L → scrutiny notice → tax ₹2.4L + penalty 50-200% + interest. Total exposure: ₹7L+ on ₹8L of income.
Lesson: Crypto income is now comprehensively tracked. Declaring it is the only safe option – and at 30% flat tax, there are no deductions to optimise anyway (only cost of acquisition deductible).
Case 3: Foreign Account Discovered Via CRS
Mr. Sharma (Delhi resident, salaried ₹18L/year) has a Singapore DBS Bank account with SGD 50,000 (≈₹30L) – opened during work stint in Singapore. Not declared in Schedule FA of his ITR for 3 years.
CRS reporting: DBS Singapore reports Mr. Sharma’s account (balance, interest) to Singapore tax authority → Singapore exchanges with India via CRS → IT Dept receives data → appears in his AIS as “Foreign Financial Asset – Singapore.”
IT notice: AIS shows SGD 50K Singapore account; Schedule FA in his ITRs for 3 years shows: no foreign assets. Black Money Act §43 notice: ₹10L penalty per year for non-disclosure. Also: §49 BMA for failure to disclose in ITR (6 months to 7 years RI).
Mitigation: Mr. Sharma immediately files revised ITRs (where time allows) disclosing Schedule FA; pays ₹30L × 30% BMA tax + ₹30L × 300% penalty (90% of value). Engages lawyer for any prosecution risk. Voluntary disclosure before assessment order reduces prosecution risk significantly.
Lesson: Foreign accounts are fully visible. Disclosure in Schedule FA every year is non-negotiable. Cost of non-disclosure = 90% penalty + potential 7-year RI vs proper annual disclosure costing nil.
18. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. My AIS shows ₹5L interest income but I didn’t earn that much. What should I do?
First, verify the detail in AIS — go to incometax.gov.in → AIS → click on “Interest Income” → see which bank/institution reported it and for which account. Common reasons for discrepancy: (a) Interest on your account that was reinvested automatically (auto-sweep FDs); (b) Interest on a joint account where the other holder’s income is also showing here; (c) Incorrect PAN linking by the bank; (d) Interest on a minor child’s account linked to your PAN as guardian. Steps: (1) Submit AIS feedback marking the incorrect amount as “Information not fully correct” with explanation; (2) File your ITR with the correct (actual) interest income based on your bank passbook; (3) Keep bank statements as documentation. The bank will review your feedback – if they confirm the correction, AIS updates. If they maintain the original figure, your documented explanation protects you if questioned.
Q2. I spent ₹12L on my credit card last year. My income is only ₹10L. Will I get a notice?
Your credit card issuer has reported the ₹12L spend via SFT. Your AIS will show ₹12L credit card expenditure. If your ITR shows ₹10L income, this is a lifestyle-income mismatch – the IT Dept’s analytics may flag it. You likely WON’T get an immediate notice for a small difference, but you should be prepared to explain: (a) credit card includes spouse’s expenses on a joint card, (b) some spending was from savings/inheritance not current income, (c) EMI payments on old loans using savings, (d) cash gifts received from family. The department generally focuses on large differences or repeat patterns. However, maintaining an explanation ready is prudent. For significant mismatches (e.g., ₹5L declared income, ₹25L credit card spend), a notice is very likely.
Q3. Does the IT Department know about every UPI transaction I make?
Not every UPI transaction – but it knows about many of them indirectly. Direct UPI transaction SFT: UPI is not directly reportable under current SFT categories at transaction level. However: (a) If your bank account shows large aggregate UPI receipts, it’s reflected in the bank’s picture of your account; (b) If you are a merchant receiving business payments via UPI – your bank reports business income-related cash flows; (c) Your GST returns (GSTR-1) must declare turnover matching with UPI business receipts; (d) Large UPI transfers between accounts can be requested by IT Department under §252 ITA 2025 (§133(6) ITA 1961) (information gathering powers) in specific cases. The practical answer: regular personal UPI transactions (buying groceries, splitting bills) are not monitored. But UPI as a business income channel without corresponding ITR/GST filing is detectable through GSTN-IT data integration and bank account analysis in scrutiny cases.
Q4. I invested ₹8L in mutual funds via SIP. Will this show in SFT and what action could result?
Monthly SIP of ₹8L in a year: if your aggregate MF investment in any fund/AMC exceeds ₹10L in the year – the AMC/RTA reports it via SFT. If your total investments with, say, CAMS (the RTA servicing most large fund houses) aggregate to ₹10L+ in a year, SFT is filed. However, the investment itself is not income – it’s capital deployment. SFT on MF investments is used by IT Department to: (a) verify that the source of funds for investment is disclosed income (if you invest ₹20L but declared ₹5L income – source inquiry possible); (b) track capital gains when you eventually redeem (no threshold – all redemptions reported). So MF investment SFT doesn’t itself create a tax liability – but it confirms that you have investable surplus that should be consistent with your declared income. Keep annual income consistent with your investment capacity.
GCA provides comprehensive AIS-ITR review and reconciliation before filing – cross-checking your AIS for accuracy, identifying mismatches before they become notices, filing AIS feedback for errors, preparing Schedule FA for foreign assets, advising on LRS TCS credit claims, responding to e-verification and mismatch notices, and providing full ITR filing with audit trail documentation. Pan-India, 100% digital.
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only. Based on §508, ITA 2025 (= §285BA, ITA 1961), Rule 114E IT Rules 1962, §509 ITA 2025 (crypto-asset reporting), §510 ITA 2025 (AIS), §454 ITA 2025 (penalty for §508 SFT non-furnishing, = §271FA ITA 1961, ₹500/day base escalating after notice), PMLA 2002 (FIU-IND reporting), FATCA India-US IGA (2015), OECD Common Reporting Standard (CRS – India signatory from 2016), CBDT-CBIC data sharing MoU, CBDT amendment to Rules 114F/114G/114H (5 March 2026, crypto/CBDC/e-money as financial assets for CRS/FATCA effective 1 January 2026), as available up to June 2026. AIS categories from incometax.gov.in AIS guidelines and CBDT notification. SFT categories and thresholds from Rule 114E (original + amendments through 2026). CRS: 100+ partner jurisdictions as per incometax.gov.in. LRS TCS at 20% per Finance Act 2023 (effective 1 October 2023). Black Money Act penalties per §43/§49/§51 BMA 2015.
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