ITR-3: Everything Business Owners and Professionals Need to Know:

A complete guide to ITR-3 covering eligibility, tax audit requirements, FY 2025-26 updates, due dates, and common filing mistakes for taxpayers.
Everything You Need to Know About ITR-3

ITR-3: Everything Business Owners and Professionals Need to Know
Introduction:
ITR-3 is form specifically designed for individuals and HUFs who earn income from business and profession. It is one of the most comprehensive return forms under Income Tax Act, 1961 requiring taxpayers to disclose details of their business or profession income, assets and liabilities, deductions, taxes paid, and other source of income.
Eligibility and Applicability of ITR-3:
ITR-3 is applicable to the individual and HUFs who earn income from business and profession and who maintain regular books of accounts.
Professionals such as doctors, lawyers, CA, consultants, and freelancers generally file ITR-3, when they do not opt presumptive taxation scheme.
Partners of the partnership firm who earn remuneration, interest, bonus from the firm are also require to file ITR-3.
Who Should File ITR-3?
ITR-3 is applicable for Individuals and HUFs who have income from:
Key Mistakes to avoid
- Profits and gains from business or profession (including those carried on by a partner in a firm).
- Salary/Pension income
- House Property income
- Capital gains (short-term or long-term)
- Income from other sources
- Foreign income or foreign assets.
- ITR-3 is the correct form for F&O traders who report actual income/loss with books of account. If there is a loss, ITR-4 cannot be used.
- Companies, LLPs, Firms (they use ITR-5/6)
- Those eligible for ITR-1 (Sahaj) or ITR-2 should not use ITR-3.
- Individuals with presumptive income under Section 44AD, 44ADA, or 44AE should use ITR-4 (Sugam)
- Extended Due Date: The due date for filing ITR-3 in case of non-audit is extended from 31st July to 31st For audit cases due date remain same i.e. 31st October.
- Capital Gain Reporting Simplified: The bifurcation reporting of capital gain earns before or after 23 July has been removed because in F.Y 25-26 all are fall in the new regime. A new schedule of the capital gain allows reporting loss from shares buy-backs.
|
Category |
Due Date |
|
|
|
|
Non-Audit Cases (Business/Profession) |
31 Aug 2026 |
| Audit Cases (u/s 44AB) |
31 Oct 2026 |
|
Tax Audit Report (Form 3CA/3CB/3CD) |
30 Sep 2026 |
| Transfer Pricing Cases |
30 Nov 2026 |
|
Belated Return |
31 Dec 2026 |
| Revised Return |
31 Mar 2027 |
- Filing ITR-2 instead of ITR-3 when you have F&O or any business income
- Not maintaining books of account when required under Sec 44AA
- Wrong F&O turnover calculation (using contract value instead of absolute profit/loss)
- Not filing Form 10-IEA when opting out of new tax regime
- Missing Schedule GST or not reconciling with GSTR filings
- Not reporting intraday trading under speculative business
- Missing Schedule AL when income exceeds 1 crore
- Skipping advance tax compliance (applicable if tax liability > ₹10,000 after TDS/TCS)
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