₹20,000 TCS (tax collection at source) that was deducted on the stocks that he bought in February, it led to a discrepancy. “I got an intimation from the I-T department that said the gross receipt/income against which tax has been deducted at source has to be entered in the relevant schedule. My CA (chartered accountant) did not find any such irregularity except the foreign stocks bought after 31 December 2022 that I did not disclose.
The CA has revised the ITR and disclosed those stocks too," he said. Mayank Mohanka, founder of TaxAaram India and a partner at SM Mohanka & Associates, said this discrepancy could have risen as reporting is being done as per calendar year whereas TCS is reflected in Form 26AS as per the financial year. “Though you’re required to report foreign stocks bought from January onwards in the next assessment year, you will have to claim refund for transactions done till 31 March this year itself otherwise the credit will get lapsed," he said.
Currently, investing in foreign stocks attracts 5% TCS. The TCS rate will be hiked to 20% on transactions done after 1 October (subject to exemption limit of ₹7 lakh). However, Mohanka added that this shouldn’t have happened as TCS on foreign remittance has to be claimed in the same year and is not related to income from foreign assets.
Prakash Hegde, chartered accountant, Acer Tax & Corporate Services LLP, concurred and added “TCS is not linked with income. When you have to claim a refund on the 1% TCS deducted on a car bought for personal use, you’re not required to declare the expenditure in the ITR," he said. “This could play out with TDS that is deducted by the employer on ESOPs (employee stock options) received from the foreign parent company when they
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