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Income Tax

Sections 234A / 234B / 234C — Interest on Tax Late-Payment + Deferment (FY 2025-26)

234A (1%/mo late filing), 234B (advance-tax shortfall, 90% rule), 234C (installment deferment): triggers, presumptive + cap-gains carve-outs.

Ravi Patel

Ravi Patel

Editor-in-charge

Last Updated

18 May 2026

Why these three sections exist

The Income-tax Act operates on a pay-as-you-earn model. Advance tax must be paid in installments through the FY (Sections 207 + 208 + 211), the ITR must be filed by the Section 139(1) due date, and any residual tax must be cleared as self-assessment tax before filing.

Three interest provisions enforce this timeline — all independent, all at the same 1% per month rate, but with different triggers:

  • Section 234A — interest for filing the return late
  • Section 234B — interest for not paying at least 90% of assessed tax as advance tax by 31 March
  • Section 234C — interest for not meeting the four installment due dates

A single non-compliant taxpayer can attract all three simultaneously on the same outstanding tax. They are mandatory, automatic, and not subject to Assessing Officer discretion (only CBDT can grant relaxation via Section 119(2)(a), in narrow circumstances).

Section 234A — interest on late filing

Trigger

ITR filed after the due date prescribed under Section 139(1). For most individual taxpayers (non-audit), this is 31 July of the AY. For audit cases, the due date is 31 October of the AY (Sec 139(1) Explanation 2).

Computation

  • Rate: 1% per month or part of a month
  • Period: from the day after the due date to the actual date of filing the return
  • Base: net tax payable at the time of filing = total tax liability − (advance tax + TDS + TCS + self-assessment tax already paid + relief under Sections 89 / 90 / 91)
  • Rounding: base is rounded down to the nearest ₹100 (Rule 119A)

Worked example

Salaried freelancer with mixed income — FY 2025-26, AY 2026-27. ITR due 31 July 2026. Filed 15 October 2026.

  • Total tax liability: ₹1,50,000
  • TDS + advance tax already paid: ₹1,00,000
  • Net tax payable at filing: ₹50,000
  • Months of delay: August (full) + September (full) + October partial → 3 months

234A interest = 3 × 1% × ₹50,000 = ₹1,500

When 234A does not apply

  • TDS + advance tax fully covers the liability before 31 July → net tax payable is zero → 234A is zero (irrespective of how late the return is filed)
  • Refund-due cases → 234A is zero
  • Returns within the Section 139(4) belated-return window are still late under 234A — there is no carve-out for the belated-return window

Section 234B — interest on advance tax default

The 90% trigger

Advance tax is mandatory under Section 208 if the estimated tax liability (after subtracting TDS / TCS) for the FY is ≥ ₹10,000. The taxpayer is required to deposit advance tax to cover at least 90% of the Assessed Tax by 31 March of the FY.

Assessed Tax = total tax liability on total income − (TDS + TCS + reliefs under Sections 89 / 90 / 91 + AMT credit under Section 115JD + tax credit under Section 115JAA / 115JB).

If advance tax paid by 31 March is below 90% of Assessed Tax, 234B is triggered.

Period of charge

  • Rate: 1% per month or part of a month
  • Period: from 1 April of the AY to the date the self-assessment tax is actually paid (or the date of Section 143(1) intimation, whichever is earlier)
  • Base: shortfall = Assessed Tax − advance tax paid

Worked example

Freelancer for FY 2025-26:

  • Total tax liability: ₹2,50,000
  • TDS deducted by clients: ₹50,000
  • Assessed Tax: ₹2,00,000
  • 90% threshold: ₹1,80,000
  • Advance tax paid by 31 March 2026: ₹1,00,000 (only 50% — below 90%, so 234B triggers)

Self-assessment tax ₹1,00,000 paid on 30 August 2026.

  • Period: 1 April 2026 → 30 August 2026 = 5 months
  • Shortfall: ₹2,00,000 − ₹1,00,000 = ₹1,00,000

234B interest = 5 × 1% × ₹1,00,000 = ₹5,000

Interaction with 234A

A late-filer who also defaulted on advance tax pays both. The same ₹1L shortfall in this example, if filed after 31 July 2026, would also attract 234A starting 1 August 2026 — on top of the 234B that’s running from 1 April 2026.

Section 234C — interest on installment deferment

While 234B evaluates the year-end position, 234C polices the four installment dates set by Section 211.

Installment schedule (standard taxpayers)

Due dateCumulative advance tax requiredBuffer (no 234C if at least)
15 June15%12%
15 September45%36%
15 December75%
15 March100%

If the cumulative payment by the due date is below the required percentage (and below the buffer where applicable), 234C is charged at 1% per month for 3 months on the shortfall — except for the 15 March installment, where the charge is 1 month on the shortfall.

Worked example — installment shortfall

Total advance tax for the year: ₹1,00,000. Schedule of actual payments:

  • 15 June: ₹10,000 paid (required 15% = ₹15,000; buffer 12% = ₹12,000 — below buffer, triggers 234C on shortfall = ₹15,000 − ₹10,000 = ₹5,000)
  • 15 September: nothing additional (cumulative required 45% = ₹45,000; cumulative paid = ₹10,000; shortfall = ₹35,000)
  • 15 December: ₹40,000 added (cumulative paid = ₹50,000; required 75% = ₹75,000; shortfall = ₹25,000)
  • 15 March: ₹50,000 added (cumulative paid = ₹1,00,000; required 100% = ₹1,00,000; no shortfall)

234C interest:

  • Q1: 3 × 1% × ₹5,000 = ₹150
  • Q2: 3 × 1% × ₹35,000 = ₹1,050
  • Q3: 3 × 1% × ₹25,000 = ₹750
  • Q4: 0

Total 234C = ₹1,950

Presumptive taxpayers (44AD / 44ADA)

Taxpayers declaring income under Section 44AD (small business) or Section 44ADA (specified profession) get a single-installment relief — 100% of advance tax by 15 March in one payment. The four-installment schedule does not apply. Short-pay on 15 March attracts 234C at 1% for 1 month on the shortfall.

Carve-out for capital gains, dividend, lottery, casual income

Income from sale of capital assets, dividend income, lottery / casual winnings, and (for first-year businesses) the first declared business income cannot be reliably estimated for earlier installments. The proviso to Section 234C states:

  • If such income arises after a given installment due date, no 234C is charged for under-payment at that installment date attributable to that income, provided the tax on the income is paid:
    • In the remaining installments falling due after the income arises, OR
    • By 31 March of the FY (if the income arises after 15 March, it must be cleared by 31 March)

The carve-out preserves the installment integrity for predictable salary / business income while neutralising 234C for genuinely unforeseen capital-gains shocks.

How the three interact in a typical late-payer

End-to-end worked example, FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27):

Profile:

  • Total tax liability: ₹3,00,000
  • TDS during the FY: ₹1,50,000
  • Assessed Tax: ₹1,50,000
  • Advance tax paid: ₹0
  • ITR due date: 31 July 2026
  • ITR filed + self-assessment tax paid: 30 September 2026

234C (installment deferment): advance tax due was ₹1,50,000; paid nil.

  • Q1 shortfall ₹22,500 (15% × ₹1,50,000): 3 × 1% × 22,500 = ₹675
  • Q2 shortfall ₹67,500 (45%): 3 × 1% × 67,500 = ₹2,025
  • Q3 shortfall ₹1,12,500 (75%): 3 × 1% × 1,12,500 = ₹3,375
  • Q4 shortfall ₹1,50,000 (100%): 1 × 1% × 1,50,000 = ₹1,500
  • 234C = ₹7,575

234B (advance tax default): advance tax paid ₹0 vs 90% threshold ₹1,35,000 → triggered.

  • Shortfall = ₹1,50,000
  • Period: 1 April 2026 → 30 September 2026 = 6 months
  • 234B = 6 × 1% × ₹1,50,000 = ₹9,000

234A (late filing): ITR due 31 July, filed 30 September.

  • Net tax payable at filing = ₹1,50,000 (no SAT paid before 31 July)
  • Period: August + September = 2 months
  • 234A = 2 × 1% × ₹1,50,000 = ₹3,000

Total interest: ₹7,575 + ₹9,000 + ₹3,000 = ₹19,575

The base tax was ₹1,50,000; the late + default + deferment interest is ~13% on top. This is why advance tax discipline and on-time filing matter even when refunds are not at stake.

Senior citizens — exempt from advance tax

Per Section 207(2): a resident senior citizen (60+ years at any time during the FY) who does not have any income chargeable under “Profits and Gains of Business or Profession” is exempt from the advance tax obligation. Consequently:

  • 234B does not apply (no advance-tax-liability default to be in default of)
  • 234C does not apply (no installment schedule applies)
  • 234A still applies if the return is filed late, computed on net tax payable

Senior citizens with pension + interest + capital gains income can clear the entire FY liability as self-assessment tax before filing without any default-interest exposure.

Waiver under Section 119(2)(a)

The three interest sections are mandatory and automatic — neither the Assessing Officer nor the CIT(A) has discretion to waive them on individual hardship. The only relaxation channel is Section 119(2)(a): the CBDT can issue a general circular relaxing the application in specific circumstances (e.g., a natural disaster affecting a region, e-filing portal outages, mass extension of due dates). Such relaxations are notified publicly and apply to the entire eligible class, not on individual appeal.

Computation in the ITR utility

The Income Tax Department’s ITR utility (online + offline) computes 234A / 234B / 234C automatically once the taxpayer enters:

  • Total income + tax liability (per the respective ITR form schedules)
  • TDS / TCS claims (Schedule TDS1 / TDS2 / TCS)
  • Advance tax + self-assessment tax challan details with dates (Schedule IT)
  • For capital gains, the Schedule CG + the quarterly bifurcation in Schedule BFLA / Schedule CYLA / Schedule AI (Advance Tax Information) — quarterly bifurcation is required to invoke the 234C carve-out

The utility-computed interest appears in Part B-TTI of the ITR. Verify the computation against the principles above — common utility errors include over-computing 234C when the cap-gains carve-out is not properly fed.

Common pitfalls

  1. Confusing 234A vs 234B. Paying full tax on 25 July avoids 234A (filed by 31 July) but leaves 234B running from 1 April to 25 July on the advance-tax-shortfall portion.
  2. Forgetting Rule 119A part-of-month. Delaying a payment from 31 August to 1 September doubles the interest span at that boundary.
  3. Missing the cap-gains carve-out in 234C. A sudden Feb-2026 stock-sale profit should not trigger 234C interest from Q1 onwards. The carve-out requires correct quarterly bifurcation in Schedule AI; missing it causes the utility to over-charge.
  4. Presumptive taxpayers paying quarterly. Section 44AD / 44ADA taxpayers paying advance tax in four installments rather than the single 15 March installment — legally harmless but a working-capital drain.
  5. Treating SAT paid before 31 July as eliminating 234B in full. SAT paid in (say) June 2026 stops 234B from running June onwards, but 234B for April + May still applies on the advance-tax-shortfall portion.
  6. Senior citizens paying advance tax unnecessarily. Resident senior citizens without business income are exempt under Section 207(2); paying advance tax does not earn interest from the department and tied-up working capital is the only cost.
  7. Ignoring Section 234B in reassessment. If a Section 147 reassessment raises the demand, 234B is recomputed from 1 April of the original AY — not from the reassessment date.

For the broader FY 2025-26 income-tax framework + the regime choice that feeds into these computations, see the Old vs New Tax Regime comparison and the Section 87A rebate spoke. For end-to-end advance tax + installment management + ITR filing, see the ITR Filing service.

Cost Comparison: The BatchWise Advantage

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Service / Cost Item DIY + In-House Team Traditional CA Firm BatchWise Standard
Premium Accounting Software ₹15,000 / year Included Included
Junior Accountant (Full-time) ₹3,00,000 / year N/A Included
Monthly P&L & Bank Rec Included above ₹30,000 / year Included
Annual Filings (GST, ROC, ITR) ₹20,000 / year ₹50,000 / year Included
Total Estimated Cost ₹3,35,000 / year ₹80,000+ / year ₹59,988 / year
Ravi Patel

Ravi Patel

Founder & CEO, BatchWise

Having navigated Indian compliance for years, Ravi created BatchWise to bridge the gap between "DIY AI slop" software and expensive traditional firms. He ensures SMEs and foreign subsidiaries have reliable, expert guidance without the friction.