When submitting house rent allowance receipts, claiming that you pay rent to a close relative like parents, siblings or spouse, ensure you have supporting documents to substantiate it, experts tell Tinesh Bhasin.
Illustration: Uttam Ghosh/Rediff.com
A recent Income Tax Appellate Tribunal, ITAT, Mumbai, judgment has opened a can of worms.
A taxpayer claimed Rs 2.52 lakh HRA stating that she gives rent to her mother.
When supporting documents such as rent agreement and bank statement were sought, she could not give any and lost the case.
"An individual needs to satisfy just two conditions when claiming HRA. One, he is actually occupying the property. Two, the landlord actually receives the rent," says Suresh Surana, founder, RSM Astute Consulting Group.
So, ensure that you have a notarised leave-and-license agreement.
It also makes sense to inform the society.
And there should be a record for transfer of funds and therefore, use a banking channel to pay money to the property owner.
If you pay in cash, ATM withdrawals should reflect that.
In the case mentioned above, the income tax department even checked details such as who pays the electricity and water bills.
"The assessing officer would not usually ask for such information. But in this case, the assessee wasn't able to establish her claim and therefore further details were sought. Apart from the agreement and money trail, if the recipient files tax returns and declares the rent received, it would further strengthen your case," says Naveen Wadhwa of Taxmann.com
If you pay rent to your parents, whose income is not taxable, it would still be a good idea that they file returns and declare the rental income. They also get 30 per cent deduction towards maintenance of the property.
Exaggerating the rent can cause problems.
Surana says the rent should reflect the ongoing rates in the area.
With the tax department introducing the Form 12BB last financial year, employers could also be made responsible for wrong submissions.
While the ITAT Mumbai case was selected in a random scrutiny, the same can happen to you.
Every year, the tax department pick up around three per cent of the returns for scrutiny based on certain triggers such as income above a particular threshold, a major transaction shown in the returns and so on.
The assessment is made under section 143(3) of the Income Tax Act, where the assessee is asked to substantiate the income, expenses, deductions, losses, exemptions, etc, claimed in the return by producing relevant evidence.
When paying rent to a relative...