A tax refund is a refund on taxes when the tax liability or the amount of tax to be paid is less than the amount of taxes paid by the individual. However, you can also claim a tax refund in case the taxes were deducted because you did not declare your tax savings investments details to your employer or the bank deducted tax at source on Term Deposits where the interest income on a particular financial year exceeds Rs. 10,000.00 but you don’t have any other taxable income. For salaried individuals, it is possible that that the company deducted excess tax because you did not declare any of your tax savings investments to the employer. In such a case, a tax refund may be helpful. Towards the end of the financial year, most of us are dogged with the thoughts about filing investment declaration, filing tax returns and basically save as much money as possible from being deducted as tax. Once the formalities are completed, we think little about any tax refunds. Tax refunds are something that a few of us might get and a few of us might not. To be prepared it is prudent to know some basic information about tax refunds.
There is an incentive for taxpayers who file their income-tax returns electronically — they will get their refunds normaly within 1-2 months time. To speed up refunds and encourage electronic filing of tax returns, the Central Board of Direct Taxes has promised expeditious refunds. The wait for refunds in the case of physical tax returns may ranges between 5-10 months. CBDT want tax-payers to file electronically as that helps in faster processing of refunds. The verification of the paper tax returns filed is a tedious process that also delays tax refunds. This has become a bigger issue with the rising refunds. E-filing ensures that tax payers' information on income, taxes and refunds are uploaded in the tax system instantly and tax computations are processed on a real-time basis. Income-tax authorities send data to State Bank of India/other banks which in turn issues refund orders directly to tax-payers under the refund banker scheme. As notified by the Income Tax authorities, the small salaried tax-payers having annual income of Rs 5 lakh who will not be required to file tax returns if they do not have refund claims. Such tax-payers will not be required to file return unless they have tax refund.
If you do not want to wait for a long time to get your tax refund, you need to make sure that you do tax planning as early as possible. You need to assess your tax liability and if need be, take additional help from a tax expert. You also need to invest or save money according to the assessment of your tax liability. Finally, if you are a salaried individual, you need to declare your tax savings investments and other incomes details to your employer so that they can deduct the correct amount of tax from your salary.
To see whether you are eligible for a tax refund, you need to file your tax returns or check the Form-16 that you receive from your employer if you are a salaried individual.
The tax return will show the amount of refund (if any). In case if the tax return already shows that you are getting a tax refund you need not apply for it. The tax return cheque/refund order directly comes to the address mentioned on the Return of Income document filed with the Income Tax department. Tax refund can also be credited directly to your bank account which needs to be mentioned on the tax return. In a situation where you think that you forgot or did not have the proper documents to show the investments made, a Revised Return of Income needs to be submitted. The Income tax department has recently started an initiative where you can check your tax return status online.
Individual tax payers can track their income tax refund online using the following link https://tin.tin.nsdl.com/oltas/refundstatuslogin.html
Tax refund needs to be claimed with one year of the last day of assessment year.
If you do not receive your tax refund within a reasonable time (may vary from case to case) which normally is within a maximum of one year from the date of filing the tax return, you can either visit the tax department's office for the follow up of the refund or you can write a letter (along with the copy of acknowledgement of the tax return) to the concerned Income Tax Assessing Officer. If it is still not redressed then you may write a letter to the jurisdictional Chief Commissioner of the Income Tax with a copy to the Grievance Cell and the concerned Income Tax Officer. This letter may be accompanied by the copies of previous letter/s written to the Income Tax Assessing Officer and a copy of the tax return filed. In case you have tax refund, it is recommended filing your tax returns electronically (E-filing) to avoid the delay in getting the refund orders
Sunday, November 13, 2011
How to get Income Tax Refund
Posted by Dinesh at 9:52 PM 1 comments
Wednesday, November 9, 2011
Rupee posts biggest single-day loss in 1-1/2 month
The rupee posted its biggest single-day loss in a month and half on Wednesday, hurt by broad dollar gains against major currencies, while weak local shares bogged down by a Moody's downgrade of the banking system also added to the downward bias.
Traders said demand for dollars by a large corporate and for defence-related payments also weakened the unit.
The partially convertible rupee closed at 50.1750/1850 per dollar after hitting 50.1825, a level last seen on Oct. 21, and 1.4 percent weaker than its previous close of 49.4750/4850.
This is the rupee biggest one-day fall since a 2.5 percent decline on Sept. 21, which was its biggest fall in nearly three years.
"The equity markets turned negative and euro came off pushing the rupee lower," said N.S. Venkatesh, treasurer at state-owned IDBI Bank.
He expects the unit to trade in a range of 49.50 to 50.50 over the next couple of weeks.
The unit moved in the wide range of 49.3950- 50.1825 per dollar in the day, with traders cautious ahead of a market holiday on Thursday.
The main 30-share BSE index ended down 1.18 percent at 17,362.10 points -- its lowest close in two weeks.
Financials led the decline after ratings agency Moody's lowered its outlook on the country's banking system, citing slowing growth and concerns about asset quality.
The euro was at $1.3643, compared with $1.3770 when the rupee closed on Tuesday, while the index of the dollar against six major currencies was at 77.460 points versus 76.948 points.
The euro fell against the safe-haven U.S. dollar and Japanese yen on Wednesday as the euro zone's escalating debt crisis saw investors such as macro funds step up sales of the single currency after Italy's 10-year bond yield hit 7 percent.
"There was steady import-related dollar buying today by corporates, oil companies and defence firms," a dealer with a private bank said.
Oil is India's biggest import and refiners are the largest buyers of dollars in the local currency market.
Dealers said the rupee was likely to continue to weaken in the near term with the broad trend towards safe-haven assets including the dollar because of euro zone and trade deficit issues.
"A breach of the 50.20 level would push the rupee down to 50.50 with the next target then being 52.00," said Ashtosh Raina, head of foreign exchange trading at HDFC Bank.
Trade deficit in October is seen at $19.6 billion, the highest in four years, the country's trade secretary said on Tuesday, citing provisional data. At this rate, the trade deficit for the year could breach $150 billion, Rahul Khullar said.
The one-month onshore forward premium was at 25.25 points from 24.75 points on Tuesday, the three-month was at 65.25 points from 65 and the one-year was at 167.75 points from 178.75.
One-month offshore non-deliverable forward contracts were quoted at 50.17, at par with the onshore spot rate.
In the currency futures market, the most traded near-month dollar-rupee contracts on the National Stock Exchange were at 50.35, on the United Stock Exchange they were at 50.3225, while on the MCX-SX they were at 50.3125. The total volume was at $3.64 billion.
Posted by Dinesh at 6:58 PM 0 comments