No person may receive Rs 2,00,000 or more in cash from one person in a single day, for a single transaction, or for transactions tied to one event. Break it and the penalty under section 271DA equals the entire cash you received. The penalty falls on the receiver, not the payer.
If you are short on time, jump to the everyday traps section below. Selling a car, taking wedding gift cash, or accepting a loan repayment in notes can each cross this line without you knowing.
Section 269ST of the Income Tax Act, 1961 was inserted by the Finance Act 2017 and applies from 1 April 2017. Its goal is simple: push large payments onto bank channels and choke black money. The rule does not tax the money. It bans the cash mode of receiving large sums.
This catches ordinary people, not just businesses. A jeweller, a hospital, a property seller, or a relative collecting wedding gifts can all trip the limit. The penalty is heavy, so it pays to know the three ways you can breach it.
Section 269ST says no person shall receive Rs 2,00,000 or more, otherwise than by an account payee cheque, an account payee bank draft, or electronic transfer through a bank account, in three situations:
The threshold is Rs 2,00,000 or more. So Rs 1,99,999 in cash is allowed, but Rs 2,00,000 is not. The limit looks at the receiver's side of each person separately.
A plain example. Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak sells an old car for Rs 3 lakh. The buyer hands over Rs 1 lakh on Monday and Rs 2 lakh on Wednesday. It is one transaction (one car). The total Rs 3 lakh in cash breaches section 269ST, and Dr. Pathak, the receiver, faces the penalty.
This is the part most people get wrong. The penalty under section 271DA is levied on the person who receives the cash, not the person who pays it.
Section 271DA states that a person who receives a sum in breach of section 269ST shall pay, by way of penalty, a sum equal to the amount of such receipt. Receive Rs 5 lakh in cash wrongly, and the penalty is Rs 5 lakh. You can effectively lose the whole sum.
The penalty is imposed by the Joint Commissioner. There is one relief: no penalty applies if the receiver proves there were good and sufficient reasons for the breach. That defence is decided case by case and is not guaranteed.
Note: the payer is not penalised under section 271DA. But payers face separate limits elsewhere. Section 40A(3) disallows business expenses paid in cash above Rs 10,000, and section 269SS restricts cash loans and deposits. So both sides have cash rules, just under different sections.
Most breaches are accidental. Watch these common traps.
A practical case. Kashvi Pathak runs a small boutique. A customer orders bridal wear worth Rs 2.4 lakh and pays cash in three visits. Because it is one transaction, accepting the full amount in cash breaches section 269ST, and Kashvi is the one penalised.
Section 269ST does not apply to receipts by:
To stay safe, follow these habits.
When you receive money, also check whether it is taxable. Cash gifts and high-value receipts can attract scrutiny. See our guide on tax on gifts from relatives under section 56 and pick the right return using which ITR form to file for 2026-27. If a penalty notice does arrive, read how to reply to a faceless penalty notice before responding. For your wider rights and process, The RTI Playbook is a useful companion.
It applies to the receiver. The ban is on receiving Rs 2 lakh or more in cash. The penalty under section 271DA is paid by the person who received the cash, not the person who paid. Payers face separate cash limits under sections like 40A(3) and 269SS, but not the 271DA penalty.
The penalty under section 271DA equals the full amount of cash received in breach. If you wrongly take Rs 4 lakh in cash, the penalty can be Rs 4 lakh. The Joint Commissioner imposes it. No penalty applies if you prove there were good and sufficient reasons for the breach.
No. Section 269ST adds up cash for a single transaction and for transactions tied to one event, regardless of how many days or receipts you spread it over. Splitting does not avoid the limit. Only the per-person, per-day aggregate is one of three independent tests, and all three must stay under Rs 2 lakh.
Yes, when they relate to one event. If a single person gives Rs 2 lakh or more in cash for one wedding, the receiver can breach the “one event or occasion” limb. The safest route is to ask large givers to transfer money to a bank account or pay by cheque rather than cash.
Yes. Section 269ST only bans cash. Receiving Rs 2 lakh or more by account payee cheque, bank draft, NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, or UPI is fully allowed. Always record the payment mode and bank reference so your books show the receipt came through a banking channel.