If you claimed a Section 80GGC deduction for a donation to a political party and an Income Tax Department SMS or email is now asking you to “verify” it, treat it seriously: the department has been reversing fabricated and inflated 80GGC claims at scale, and a wrong claim can attract a penalty of up to 200 percent of the tax you dodged. Section 80GGC is a real and generous benefit - a 100 percent deduction for genuine, non-cash donations to a registered party - but it is also one of the most abused deductions in the country, which is why it is now under close scrutiny.
Quick answer: Section 80GGC lets a non-company taxpayer deduct 100 percent of a donation given to a political party registered under Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951, or to an electoral trust - but only if the money moves through a bank channel (cheque, demand draft, UPI, card, net-banking), and only if you are taxed under the OLD regime. Cash donations get nothing.
Section 80GGC is a Chapter VI-A deduction. From FY2025-26 the new tax regime under Section 115BAC is the default, and under the new regime almost every Chapter VI-A deduction is switched off - including 80GGC. So you can claim this deduction only if you have opted for the OLD tax regime for that year. If your return is filed under the new regime, an 80GGC entry will not reduce your tax and will simply flag your return for questions. This single point is where a lot of “notices” begin.
The text of Section 80GGC of the Income-tax Act, 1961 is short and strict. It allows a deduction for “any amount of contribution” made by an assessee to:
The deduction is 100 percent of the amount contributed - the whole donation is reduced from your gross total income, with no upper cap fixed in rupees (though it cannot exceed your taxable income, so it cannot create a refund out of thin air).
80GGC is for everyone except an Indian company and a local authority, and except an artificial juridical person funded wholly or partly by the government. In practice that means individuals, HUFs, firms, LLPs, and AOPs/BOIs use 80GGC. Companies use Section 80GGB instead - the rule is otherwise identical (100 percent, non-cash only), just a different section number for the corporate donor.
This is the part most people get wrong. A contribution paid in cash gets zero deduction, no matter how small the amount. To qualify, the donation must move through a traceable channel - cheque, demand draft, net-banking, UPI, debit or credit card. “In kind” donations (goods, services, free space) also do not count. If your receipt says “cash”, the claim is dead on arrival.
The donee must be a party actually registered with the Election Commission under Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951 (or a recognised electoral trust). A large slice of the bogus claims the department found were donations to bodies that were not registered parties at all - NGOs, private associations, and in some cases entities that did not exist. A donation to such a body earns no deduction even if you have a “receipt”.
Ramesh, salaried, Pune, FY2024-25. Ramesh files under the old regime. In January 2025 he donates Rs 30,000 to a political party registered under Section 29A, paying by UPI from his salary account. He collects a receipt showing his name, the amount, the date, and the party's registration number.
Result: he claims the full Rs 30,000 under 80GGC. At a 30 percent slab plus 4 percent cess, that saves him about Rs 9,360 in tax. The claim is clean because (a) he is in the old regime, (b) the money went by UPI not cash, and © the party is a registered 29A party with a matching bank trail.
Had Ramesh paid the same Rs 30,000 in cash, his deduction would have been Rs 0 - and claiming it anyway is exactly the kind of entry the department is now reversing.
Over the last few assessment years the department concluded that a large number of 80GGC claims were either inflated or simply fabricated - sometimes as part of refund-maximising rackets where a “donation” was routed out and quietly returned to the taxpayer in cash, minus a cut. Acting on data analytics, it began sending SMS and email alerts to taxpayers who had claimed 80GGC, asking them to verify the claim and furnish proof. A sample message reads: “It is observed that you have claimed deduction under section 80GGC … It is requested that the claim may be verified.”
The drive has had real bite: by official accounts tens of thousands of taxpayers (reported at around 40,000) have voluntarily withdrawn false claims, reversing in the order of Rs 1,000 crore of fictitious deductions. If you cannot back up an 80GGC claim with a genuine receipt and a matching bank debit to a registered party, you should assume it will not survive scrutiny.
Want to understand how citizens use the Right to Information Act to get records and verify how public money and registrations actually work? Our tools and guides can help. Try the AI RTI Drafter to frame a clean information request, the Timeline Tracker to keep deadlines straight, the PIO Reply Checker to test an authority's reply, and the First Appeal Builder if a department stonewalls you. For the bigger picture, read The RTI Playbook and the RTI Act, 2005.
| Point | Position under Section 80GGC |
|---|---|
| Who can claim | Anyone except an Indian company and a local authority |
| Company donor? | Uses Section 80GGB instead (same rules) |
| Deduction amount | 100 percent of the contribution |
| Cash donation | NOT eligible - zero deduction |
| Allowed modes | Cheque, DD, UPI, card, net-banking |
| Donee | Party registered under Section 29A RP Act 1951, or electoral trust |
| Tax regime | OLD regime only - not under new regime u/s 115BAC |
| Wrong claim risk | Up to 200 percent penalty u/s 270A |
No. 80GGC is a Chapter VI-A deduction, and under the new regime (Section 115BAC), which is the default from FY2025-26, it cannot be claimed. You must be in the old regime for that year to get the benefit.
No. A cash contribution earns zero deduction under 80GGC, regardless of the amount. The donation must move through a bank channel - cheque, demand draft, UPI, card or net-banking - and “in kind” donations do not qualify either.
You can deduct 100 percent of the amount you donated to a registered party or electoral trust. There is no fixed rupee cap, but the deduction cannot exceed your taxable income, so it can reduce your tax to nil but not generate a refund beyond the tax you paid.
They are the same benefit for different donors. Section 80GGB is for Indian companies; Section 80GGC is for everyone else (individuals, HUFs, firms, LLPs, AOPs). Both give a 100 percent deduction and both bar cash donations.
Not yet. The verification SMS or email is a prompt to check your claim. If it is genuine, keep your receipt and bank proof ready. If it was wrong, fix it by filing an updated return (ITR-U) and paying the dues - that avoids a heavier outcome later.
You can file an updated return (ITR-U) under Section 139(8A). The Finance Act 2025 extended this window to 48 months from the end of the relevant assessment year, but the additional tax payable rises the longer you delay, so it is cheaper to act early.
Keep the party's donation receipt showing your name, the amount, the date and the party's registration number; the bank statement showing the non-cash payment; and evidence that the party is registered under Section 29A of the Representation of the People Act, 1951.