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Updated: March 2026 FY 2025-26 | AY 2026-27

ITR Filing for Freelancers & Self-Employed – FY 2025-26 Complete Guide

File ITR-4 under Section 44ADA or ITR-3 for FY 2025-26. Understand presumptive taxation, advance tax, GST obligations, deductions you can claim, and avoid costly mistakes that trigger income tax notices.

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Section 1

Who Qualifies as a Freelancer / Professional Under Income Tax?

The Income Tax Act does not use the word “freelancer” – it uses “specified profession” under Section 44ADA. Here is who qualifies and who does not.

Covered Under Sec 44ADA

  • Doctors, dentists, physiotherapists
  • Lawyers, advocates, legal consultants
  • Chartered Accountants, Cost Accountants, Company Secretaries
  • Architects, engineers, technical consultants
  • Interior designers, fashion designers
  • IT professionals, software developers, UX designers (freelance)
  • Management / financial consultants
  • Content writers, graphic designers, digital marketers

NOT Covered – Use Sec 44AD Instead

  • Traders, shopkeepers, e-commerce sellers (use Sec 44AD)
  • Commission agents (use Sec 44AD)
  • Transport operators with 10 or fewer vehicles (use Sec 44AE)
  • Actors, film artists, sportspersons (not notified under 44ADA)
  • Receipts exceeding ₹75 lakh – must use ITR-3 with books
💡 Note: YouTube creators, influencers, and podcasters earning from platforms are classified as professionals and can use Sec 44ADA if income is from services, not goods.
Section 2

ITR-4 vs ITR-3 – Which Form Should a Freelancer Use?

Filing the wrong ITR form causes a defective return notice under Section 139(9). This comparison helps you decide.

ITR-4 SUGAM – Most Common for Freelancers

Use ITR-4 if all of these apply:

  • You are a resident individual (not NRI or RNOR)
  • Gross professional receipts are up to ₹75 lakh
  • At least 95% of receipts are through digital / banking channels
  • You declare 50% of gross receipts as income (no books needed)
  • No capital gains, foreign assets, or foreign income
  • Not a director in any company
ITR-3 With Books / High Income

Use ITR-3 if any of these apply:

  • Gross receipts exceed ₹75 lakh
  • You want to declare income lower than 50% (actual expenses)
  • You have capital gains from shares, MF, or property
  • You have foreign income or foreign assets
  • You are an NRI or RNOR
  • You opted out of 44ADA in a previous year (once out, cannot re-enter for 5 years)
5-Year Lock-In Rule Under Sec 44ADA

If you declare income below 50% of receipts in any year (i.e., opt out of 44ADA), you are required to maintain books of accounts and get a tax audit done under Sec 44AB for the next 5 consecutive years. Choose carefully – once you opt out, re-entry is not possible for 5 years.

Section 3

Section 44ADA Presumptive Taxation – Complete Guide for FY 2025-26

Section 44ADA allows eligible professionals to declare 50% of gross receipts as income without maintaining detailed books of accounts – saving significant compliance effort.

Step 1 – Gross Receipts

Total all professional income received from all clients during April 2025 to March 2026 – including TDS deducted by clients

Step 2 – Declare 50%

Declare 50% of gross receipts as your taxable professional income. No need to prove actual expenses – the other 50% is treated as expenses automatically

Step 3 – Add Other Income

Add other income like salary (if any), interest, dividends. Then subtract 80C / 80D deductions (Old Regime only) to arrive at total taxable income

Sec 44ADA Calculation Example – FY 2025-26

Profile: Freelance IT Developer (New Regime)

Gross Professional Receipts₹12,00,000
Deemed Income (50% of receipts)₹6,00,000
Basic Exemption (New Regime)₹4,00,000
Taxable Income₹2,00,000
Tax Payable (5% slab)₹10,000

TDS Already Deducted by Clients

TDS @ 10% on ₹12,00,000₹1,20,000
Total Tax Payable₹10,000
TDS Credit Available₹1,20,000
Tax Refund Due₹1,10,000

* Most freelancers with TDS deducted by clients get a large refund. File ITR on time to receive it.

Key Benefit – No Books of Accounts Required

Under Sec 44ADA, you are not required to maintain a profit & loss account or balance sheet. All you need is a record of your gross receipts (bank statements, invoices, Form 26AS). This makes ITR filing extremely simple for freelancers with receipts up to ₹75 lakh.

Section 4

Deductions Freelancers Can Claim on Their ITR

Under 44ADA, actual expenses are not deductible (50% is already deemed as expenses). However, deductions under Chapter VI-A still apply in the Old Regime.

Under 44ADA – 80C to 80U deductions available only in Old Regime | FY 2025-26
Section Deduction For Max Limit New Regime?
80CPPF, ELSS, LIC, NSC, 5-year FD, home loan principal, tuition fees₹1,50,000❌ No
80CCD(1B)Additional NPS contribution (self) over and above 80C₹50,000❌ No
80DHealth insurance for self, spouse, children and parents₹25,000 + ₹50,000 (senior parents)❌ No
Sec 24(b)Home loan interest on property₹2,00,000 (self-occupied)❌ No
80EInterest on education loan for self or childrenNo limit (8 years)❌ No
80GDonations to approved charitable organisations and PM funds50% or 100% of donation❌ No
80TTAInterest on savings bank account₹10,000❌ No
Under ITR-3 (Actual Books Method) – Additional Deductions Available

If you file ITR-3 with actual books of accounts, you can additionally deduct: office rent, internet and phone bills, software subscriptions, laptop/equipment depreciation, professional development courses, home office expenses (proportionate), and any other legitimate business expense. Maintain proper invoices and receipts for all claims.

Section 5

Advance Tax for Freelancers – Due Dates & Calculation

Freelancers whose net tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 must pay advance tax. Missing advance tax instalment dates attracts 1% interest per month under Sections 234B and 234C.

Advance Tax Schedule – FY 2025-26

Instalment Due Date % of Tax
1st (Regular taxpayers)15 Jun 202515%
2nd (Regular taxpayers)15 Sep 202545%
3rd (Regular taxpayers)15 Dec 202575%
44ADA Freelancers – FULL15 Mar 2026100%

* Freelancers under Sec 44ADA need to pay 100% of advance tax in just ONE instalment by 15 March – a major benefit over regular taxpayers who pay in 4 instalments.

How to Calculate Your Advance Tax

1
Estimate your gross receipts

Add up all invoices raised / income received during the year – including amounts where TDS was deducted

2
Calculate taxable income

50% of gross receipts under 44ADA, minus Old Regime deductions (80C etc.) if applicable

3
Compute net tax liability

Apply slab rates on taxable income, deduct TDS already deducted. If balance > ₹10,000 – pay advance tax

4
Pay via Challan 280 by 15 March 2026

Pay online at incometax.gov.in – select Advance Tax, AY 2026-27, and enter PAN

Section 6

Documents Required for Freelancer ITR Filing

Collect all these before you start. Missing documents cause AIS mismatches and notices from the Income Tax Department.

Income & Receipts

  • All invoices raised to clients during FY 2025-26
  • Bank statements for all accounts (full year)
  • Form 16A from each client who deducted TDS
  • PayPal / Payoneer / Wise statements (foreign clients)
  • Platform payout statements (Upwork, Fiverr, Toptal)

From Income Tax Portal

  • Form 26AS – verify all TDS from all clients
  • Annual Information Statement (AIS) – verify all income
  • Advance tax challan receipts (if paid)
  • Pre-validated bank account (for refund credit)

Investment & Deduction Proofs

  • LIC / PPF / ELSS / NSC statements (80C)
  • Health insurance premium receipts (80D)
  • NPS contribution proof (80CCD(1B))
  • Home loan interest certificate if applicable (Sec 24b)

Identity & GST

  • PAN Card (linked with Aadhaar)
  • Aadhaar Number (for OTP e-verification)
  • GST registration certificate (if registered)
  • GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed copies (reconcile with income)

Foreign Income (If Any)

  • Bank statement showing foreign remittances received
  • FIRC (Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate) if available
  • Invoices raised to overseas clients
  • Note: Foreign income is taxable in India – use ITR-3, not ITR-4

Investments & Capital Gains

  • Capital gains statement from broker / CAMS (if MF or shares sold)
  • Crypto transaction history (30% flat tax – Schedule VDA)
  • Note: If you have capital gains, you cannot file ITR-4 – use ITR-3
Section 7

How to File ITR-4 Online – Step-by-Step for Freelancers

Complete these steps on the official incometax.gov.in portal. New due date for freelancers is 31 August 2026.

1

Login & Download AIS

Login at incometax.gov.in. Download Form 26AS and AIS. Verify all TDS entries from clients match your records.

2

Calculate Gross Receipts

Total all professional income from bank statements and invoices. Include TDS-deducted amounts as receipts.

3

Select ITR-4

Under e-File > Income Tax Returns > File ITR. Choose ITR-4. Select Sec 44ADA under “Nature of Business”.

4

Enter 44ADA Details

Enter gross receipts, declare 50% as income. Add deductions under 80C/80D (Old Regime) if applicable.

5

Pay Tax Due

If tax payable after TDS credit, pay Self-Assessment Tax via Challan 280. Then enter challan details in ITR.

6

Submit & e-Verify

Submit return and e-verify within 30 days via Aadhaar OTP, Net Banking, or DSC. Unverified ITR is invalid.

Income Code for Professionals: In the ITR-4 form under “Business / Profession Details”, select the correct income code. For IT professionals and software freelancers use Code 16019. For doctors use Code 16001. For CA/CS/Lawyer use Code 16003/16005/16007. Wrong code can cause mismatch in processing.

Section 8

GST Obligations for Freelancers & Professionals

GST and income tax are separate compliances. Registering for GST does not affect your income tax liability under 44ADA – both are computed independently.

When is GST Registration Mandatory?

  • Annual turnover exceeds ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh in special states)
  • Providing services to clients outside India (exports) regardless of turnover – if you want GST refund
  • Registered under GST by choice (voluntary registration)

Foreign Clients – Export of Services

  • Services to foreign clients qualify as “Export of Services” – GST rated at 0%
  • No GST charged to foreign clients on invoices
  • Can claim refund of GST paid on business expenses (input credit)
  • Must file LUT (Letter of Undertaking) every year to export without paying GST

GST Returns to File Monthly

  • GSTR-1 – outward supply details (by 11th of next month)
  • GSTR-3B – monthly tax payment summary (by 20th)
  • GSTR-9 – annual return (by December 31 each year)
  • Small taxpayers under QRMP scheme file quarterly
GST Turnover vs Income Tax Receipts – Important Difference

GST is computed on the invoice amount billed to clients (before TDS). Income tax under 44ADA is computed on gross receipts actually received including TDS-deducted portions. If you issued invoices for ₹15 lakh but received only ₹13.5L in hand (₹1.5L TDS deducted), your 44ADA gross receipts are still ₹15 lakh (not ₹13.5L). Always check Form 26AS to verify total receipts including TDS.

Section 9

Common Mistakes Freelancers Make While Filing ITR

These are the most frequent errors that lead to income tax notices, demands, and refund delays for freelancers.

Not Including TDS-Deducted Amount in Receipts

If a client paid you ₹90,000 and deducted ₹10,000 TDS, your gross receipt is ₹1,00,000 – not ₹90,000. Many freelancers report only the net amount received in hand, causing a mismatch with Form 26AS and triggering a 143(1)(a) notice.

Filing ITR-4 With Capital Gains

If you sold mutual funds, shares, or property during FY 2025-26, you cannot file ITR-4. Capital gains must be reported in ITR-2 or ITR-3. Filing ITR-4 with capital gains will result in a defective return notice under Section 139(9).

Missing Advance Tax Payment

If your total tax liability exceeds ₹10,000 and you did not pay advance tax by 15 March 2026, you will attract interest at 1% per month under Sections 234B and 234C. This interest is calculated even if you pay the full tax before filing ITR.

Ignoring Foreign Income

All income earned from foreign clients is fully taxable in India as a resident Indian, even if received in a foreign currency. Foreign income also appears in AIS via banking channels. Additionally, having a foreign bank account or assets makes ITR-4 inapplicable – use ITR-3 with Schedule FA.

Declaring Income Below 50% Without Books

If you declare income below 50% of receipts under Sec 44ADA without maintaining proper books and getting a tax audit done under Sec 44AB, the return will be treated as defective. To declare lower income, you must maintain full accounts and file ITR-3 with a tax audit report.

Not Reconciling GST with Income Tax

If you are GST registered, the turnover declared in GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B should reconcile with your income tax receipts. A large variance between GST-declared turnover and income tax receipts is a common trigger for income tax scrutiny notices under Section 143(2).

Section 10

FAQs – ITR Filing for Freelancers & Self-Employed

These answers appear in Google’s rich results via FAQ schema markup.

Which ITR form should a freelancer file for FY 2025-26?
Freelancers and self-employed professionals with gross receipts up to ₹75 lakh can file ITR-4 (Sugam) under Section 44ADA. They declare 50% of receipts as income without maintaining books. If receipts exceed ₹75 lakh, they have capital gains, foreign income, or wish to claim actual expenses lower than 50%, they must file ITR-3 with full books of accounts.
What is the ITR filing due date for freelancers for AY 2026-27?
For freelancers and self-employed professionals not covered under tax audit (non-audit), the due date is 31 August 2026 – a new separate deadline introduced in Budget 2026, distinct from the salaried deadline of 31 July. For those covered under tax audit (receipts over ₹75 lakh opting out of 44ADA), the due date is 31 October 2026.
What is Section 44ADA and who can use it?
Section 44ADA is a presumptive taxation scheme for specified professionals. Under this scheme, you declare 50% of gross receipts as income without maintaining books of accounts or proving actual expenses. Eligible professionals include doctors, lawyers, architects, engineers, CA/CS, IT professionals, consultants, and designers. Gross receipts must not exceed ₹75 lakh (Budget 2024 enhanced this from ₹50 lakh) and at least 95% of receipts must be via digital/banking channels.
Do freelancers need to pay advance tax?
Yes. Freelancers with a tax liability exceeding ₹10,000 must pay advance tax. Under the presumptive scheme (Sec 44ADA), the entire advance tax can be paid in one single instalment by 15 March of the financial year (i.e., 15 March 2026 for FY 2025-26). Regular taxpayers pay in 4 instalments, but this is the major benefit for 44ADA taxpayers. Non-payment attracts interest at 1% per month under Sections 234B and 234C.
Is GST registration mandatory for freelancers?
GST registration is mandatory for freelancers if annual turnover exceeds ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh in special category states). For freelancers providing services to foreign clients (export of services), GST registration may be needed even below this limit if they want to claim refund of input tax credit. GST and income tax are separate – paying GST does not reduce your income tax, and vice versa. If you are not registered for GST, ensure you do not charge GST on invoices.
Can I claim laptop and internet expenses as deductions?
Under Section 44ADA (ITR-4), you cannot claim individual business expenses separately. The 50% deemed expense already covers all your costs including laptop, internet, software, and office expenses. However, if you file ITR-3 with actual books of accounts, you can deduct all legitimate business expenses – laptop depreciation, internet bills, software subscriptions, professional courses, and home office expenses (proportionate). The trade-off is that you need to maintain proper books and get a tax audit if income is below 50% of receipts.

File Your Freelancer ITR for FY 2025-26

CA-assisted ITR-4 / ITR-3 filing from ₹699. Share your receipts summary and we handle the rest – accurately, before 31 August 2026.

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indiantaxplanning.in  ·  CA-verified content  ·  Last updated March 2026

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