Taxpayers preparing to file their Income Tax Returns (ITR) for Assessment Year 2026-27 should pay close attention to several important changes introduced in the latest return forms. The Income Tax Department has revised multiple sections across ITR-1, ITR-2, ITR-3, and ITR-4, increasing disclosure requirements and tightening data verification processes.
Experts believe these updates are aimed at strengthening the department's technology-driven compliance framework. Tax returns will now be cross-verified more extensively with data available in the Annual Information Statement (AIS), Tax Deducted at Source (TDS) records, banking information, and brokerage reports. Even minor inconsistencies could attract scrutiny or trigger a tax notice.
Here is a detailed look at the key changes taxpayers should understand before submitting their returns.
The ITR-1 (Sahaj) form, commonly used by salaried individuals and pensioners, has undergone several notable changes.
Taxpayers can now use ITR-1 even if they earn income from two residential properties. Earlier, individuals with more than one house property generally had to shift to ITR-2.
Individuals earning long-term capital gains (LTCG) of up to ₹1.25 lakh from listed equity shares or equity-oriented mutual funds under Section 112A can now report this income through ITR-1 itself, reducing the need for a more complex return form.
The revised form now asks taxpayers to provide secondary contact details, including an alternate address, mobile number, and email ID. This is intended to improve communication and verification.
Taxpayers receiving pension income from abroad may find compliance easier, as detailed reporting requirements related to foreign pension accounts have been simplified in certain cases.
The ITR-2 form now requires more comprehensive reporting of investment-related transactions.
A dedicated section has been added for reporting losses arising from share buybacks. Tax treatment related to buyback transactions has also evolved, making accurate disclosure increasingly important.
Taxpayers must now provide transaction-level details for assets sold during the year. Information such as acquisition date, transfer date, purchase cost, sale consideration, and asset category must be disclosed separately.
Resident taxpayers holding foreign bank accounts, overseas investments, or foreign-source income must continue to provide detailed disclosures under the foreign asset reporting requirements.
Individuals involved in stock market trading and business activities using ITR-3 will also notice significant modifications.
Taxpayers must now report income or losses separately for:
Futures and Options (F&O) trading
Intraday equity trading
Commodity trading
Currency trading
This segregation is intended to improve transparency and allow better monitoring of trading activities.
Certain reporting requirements related to tax audits have been streamlined, offering some relief to taxpayers falling under audit provisions.
The ITR-4 (Sugam) form, generally used by small businesses and professionals opting for presumptive taxation schemes, includes one major new requirement.
Taxpayers filing ITR-4 must now disclose the total balance available across their bank accounts as of March 31, 2026. This marks a significant increase in financial transparency requirements.
Individuals opting for presumptive taxation under Sections 44AD, 44ADA, or 44AE can now also report income from two house properties and eligible LTCG of up to ₹1.25 lakh within the same form.
The Income Tax Department has strengthened verification mechanisms for deductions claimed on political donations.
A new reporting field requires taxpayers to provide the Permanent Account Number (PAN) of the political party receiving the contribution. The move comes after several cases where taxpayers reportedly claimed deductions for donations made to entities whose registrations had been cancelled.
Taxpayers should also be aware of revised compliance timelines.
The standard deadline for filing income tax returns remains July 31, 2026.
Non-audit businesses, trusts, and certain categories of traders, including eligible F&O participants, may benefit from an extended filing deadline of August 31, 2026.
Taxpayers who discover errors after filing can submit revised returns within the prescribed correction window. Applicable late filing fees may range from ₹1,000 to ₹5,000 depending on the circumstances.
The latest ITR changes clearly indicate a shift toward deeper data integration and automated verification. Since information reported in tax returns will be matched against AIS records, TDS statements, bank details, and investment reports, taxpayers should carefully review all financial data before filing.
Accurate reporting, timely filing, and proper documentation will be crucial to avoiding notices, penalties, or unnecessary delays in processing refunds during the 2026 tax filing season.