A tax audit under Section 44AB of the Income-tax Act, 1961 is a check of your books of account by a Chartered Accountant. You need one if your business turnover crosses Rs 1 crore in the year, or Rs 10 crore when almost all your money moves through the bank, or if your professional gross receipts cross Rs 50 lakh. The CA files the report in Form 3CA or 3CB along with Form 3CD, normally by 30 September of the assessment year.
Use this table to see, at a glance, whether the audit rule touches you. Figures are for a single financial year.
| Taxpayer type | Limit | Tax audit required? |
|---|---|---|
| Business (normal cash use) | Turnover over Rs 1 crore | Yes |
| Business (cash receipts and cash payments each 5% or less of the total) | Turnover over Rs 10 crore | Yes |
| Business (cash receipts and cash payments each 5% or less) | Turnover Rs 10 crore or below | No |
| Profession (doctor, lawyer, CA, architect and similar) | Gross receipts over Rs 50 lakh | Yes |
| Presumptive business under Section 44AD, profit shown below the deemed rate and total income above the basic exemption limit | Any turnover | Yes |
| Presumptive profession under Section 44ADA, profit shown below 50% and total income above the basic exemption limit | Any receipts | Yes |
Work through these questions in order. The first “yes” is your answer.
If none of the above fits you, you generally do not need a tax audit for that year. When in doubt, ask a practising Chartered Accountant, because only a CA holding a valid certificate of practice can sign the report.
The Chartered Accountant reports the audit in one of two forms, always paired with Form 3CD, which is the detailed statement of particulars about your accounts.
| Your situation | Audit report form | Statement of particulars |
|---|---|---|
| Accounts already audited under another law, such as the Companies Act | Form 3CA | Form 3CD |
| Accounts audited only for income-tax purposes | Form 3CB | Form 3CD |
Due date. The law sets a “specified date” for the report, which is one month before the due date for filing your income-tax return under Section 139(1). For audit cases this normally works out to 30 September of the assessment year for the report, with the return itself due by 31 October. These are the standard dates, but the CBDT sometimes extends them, so always confirm the current year's dates before you file. For how the return deadlines fit together, see our guide on belated and revised income-tax returns.
If you were required to get a tax audit but did not, or you filed the report late, Section 271B allows a penalty. The amount is the lower of these two:
The word used in the law is “may”, so the Assessing Officer has discretion and does not have to impose it in every case. Section 273B gives you a defence: if you can show a genuine reasonable cause for the failure, such as a serious illness, a natural calamity, theft or seizure of records, or the auditor's sudden exit, the penalty need not be levied. Keep evidence of any such reason.
A missed audit often travels with other trouble, like a notice asking why your return looks off. If you receive one, read our income-tax notice guide first. If a penalty is wrongly imposed, you can challenge it in appeal, as explained in our note on filing an appeal before the CIT Appeals. And if you simply missed filing on time, you may still be able to fix it through an updated return under Section 139(8A).
No. A tax audit under Section 44AB is only about income-tax compliance and is reported in Form 3CA or 3CB with Form 3CD. A company's statutory audit under the Companies Act and any audit under GST law are separate exercises with their own rules and forms.
Only a Chartered Accountant who holds a valid certificate of practice can conduct and sign a tax audit report. A tax preparer, advocate or accountant without CA membership cannot sign the report for Section 44AB purposes.
Yes, in one common situation. If you had opted for the presumptive scheme under Section 44AD or 44ADA and then declare a profit lower than the deemed rate, and your total income is above the basic exemption limit, a tax audit becomes compulsory even though your turnover is small.
Late filing counts as a failure under Section 44AB and can attract the Section 271B penalty of 0.5% of turnover, capped at Rs 1,50,000. But if you have a genuine reasonable cause under Section 273B, you can ask the officer to drop the penalty. File as early as you can to avoid the argument altogether.
Not always. The presumptive schemes under Sections 44AD and 44ADA let you skip detailed books when you declare income at the set rate. The moment you declare less than that rate, while your total income is above the exemption limit, the audit requirement comes back.
For a plain-language walk-through of how citizens use the law to hold offices accountable, read The RTI Playbook.