Tag: credit card payments tax india

  • How to Reply GST Notice u/s 73 : Complete Step-by-Step Guide (2026)

    How to Reply GST Notice u/s 73 : Complete Step-by-Step Guide (2026)

    By Dr. Haresh Adwani, PhD (Commerce), Law Graduate, Adwani and Company

    Received a GST notice under Section 73? Don’t panic. Section 73 of the CGST Act, 2017 deals with cases where tax has not been paid, short paid, or input tax credit (ITC) has been wrongly
    availed but without any intention of fraud or wilful misstatement. These are routine tax demand notices and can be resolved smoothly with the right response. This complete 2026 guide walks you through everything: what the notice means, when it is issued, the time limits, a step-by-step reply process, required documents, penalties for ignoring it, and answers to the most common questions taxpayers ask.


    What’s in This Guide

    • What is a Section 73 GST Notice?
    • When is it Issued? (With scenario table)
    • Time Limits to Reply — Key Deadlines
    • Step-by-Step Reply Process (7 Steps)
    • Documents Required
    • What is a Section 73 GST Notice?
    • Penalties if You Ignore the Notice
    • 7 FAQs Answered by CA Experts
    • Case Study: How Adwani & Co Saved a Client

    What is a GST Notice Under Section 73?

    Legal Definition: Section 73 of the CGST Act, 2017 empowers a proper officer to issue a show cause notice (SCN) to a registered taxpayer when tax has not been paid, has been short-paid, erroneously refunded, or when ITC has been wrongly availed or utilised without any element of fraud or intentional misstatement.

    In plain terms: the GST department has identified a mismatch or gap in your returns/tax payment, and they want you to explain or pay up without accusing you of fraud (that would be Section 74).


    When is a Section 73 Notice Issued?

    The GST officer may issue a Section 73 notice in any of these situations:

    ScenarioCommon Reason Risk Level
    GSTR-3B vs GSTR-2A/2B
    mismatch
    ITC claimed but not reflected in supplier’s
    data
    Medium
    GSTR-1 vs GSTR-3B mismatchOutput tax declared in GSTR-1 but not paidMedium
    Short payment of taxTax due > tax depositedMedium
    Excess ITC claimedITC beyond eligible limit claimedHigh
    Erroneous refundRefund granted but conditions not metHigh
    Non-payment by unregistered personTax liability exists but GST not paidHigh
    Annual return discrepancyGSTR-9/9C data doesn’t match returnsMedium

    Time Limits — What You Must Know

    Understanding time limits under Section 73 is critical. Missing a deadline converts a manageable notice into a serious penalty situation.

    ActionTime LimitConsequence if Missed
    Voluntary payment
    BEFORE SCN
    Anytime before SCN is issuedNo SCN issued; no penalty
    Payment after SCN but
    within 30 days
    Within 30 days of SCNNo penalty payable
    Reply / Show Cause responseAs stated in notice (usually 30 days)Ex-parte order passed against you
    Officer’s order issuance (DRC-07)Within 3 years from the due date of annual returnN/A — legal deadline for officer
    SCN issuance deadlineAt least 3 months before order
    deadline
    SCN can be challenged as
    time-barred
    SCN can be challenged as time-barred
    Appeal against order3 months from date of orderForfeiture of appeal right

    Important 2026 Update: The Finance Act 2024 extended the time limit for issuance of orders under Section 73 for FY 2018-19 to FY 2021-22. If you receive a notice for these years now, it is still valid. Always verify the notice date and consult a CA immediately.

    Received a notice and unsure of your deadline? (Consult Adwani & Co — Get Expert Review in 24 Hours)

    Also Read https://www.adwaniandco.com/blog/gst-show-cause-notices


    Step by Step: How to Reply to GST Notice u/s 73

    Step 1: Read the Notice Carefully (DRC-01)
    Identify the financial year, the tax period, the amount demanded (CGST/SGST/IGST/Cess separately), the reason for notice, and the response deadline. Check if it is a SCN (Show Cause Notice) or a pre-SCN intimation (DRC-01A).


    Step 2: Analyse the Discrepancy
    Download your GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-2A/2B, and GSTR-9 for the relevant period. Cross check the department’s claim against your own records. Identify whether the demand is correct, partially correct, or incorrect.

    Step 3: Decide Your Response Strategy
    Three options:
    (a) Accept the demand and pay — no penalty within 30 days of SCN
    (b) Partially agree — pay agreed portion and contest the rest
    (c) Fully contest — file a detailed reply with supporting documents

    Step 4 : Prepare Your Reply (GST Notice Reply Format)

    Draft a point-by-point reply addressing each allegation in the SCN. Refer to the specific paragraph numbers in the notice. Use DRC-06 form for filing the reply on the GST portal.
    Attach all supporting documents and a clear reconciliation statement.


    Step 5 : File the Reply on GST Portal
    Log in at gstin.gov.in → Services → User Services → View Notices and Orders → Click on the relevant notice → Submit reply using DRC-06. Attach documents (PDF, max 5MB each).
    Preserve the ARN (Acknowledgement Reference Number) after submission.


    Step 6 : Attend Personal Hearing (If Called)
    If the officer schedules a personal hearing, attend it (or send an authorised representative). Carry original documents and a point-wise argument sheet. Request adjournments in writing via the portal if needed.


    Step 7 : Track the Order & Take Next Steps
    After hearing, the officer issues DRC-07 (Demand Order). If the order is in your favour no further action needed. If you disagree with the order, file an appeal before the Appellate Authority (GST APL-01) within 3 months.


    Documents Required to Reply to Section 73 Notice

    • GSTR-1 for the relevant period
    • GSTR-3B for the relevant period
    • GSTR-2A / 2B reconciliation statement
    • GSTR-9 (Annual Return)
    • Purchase invoices (basis for ITC claimed)
    • Sales invoices for the disputed period
    • Bank statements
    • Previous hearing orders (if any)
    • Supplier correspondence (if disputing ITC)
    • E-way bills (if applicable)
    • Books of accounts / ledgers
    • CA-certified reconciliation statement

    Pro Tip: Always submit a reconciliation statement along with your reply even if the officer didn’t specifically ask for it. It demonstrates good faith and helps resolve the matter faster.

    Penalties if You Ignore the GST Notice u/s 73

    Do NOT ignore a Section 73 notice. Here is what happens:

    Situation Penalty / Consequence
    No reply filed within stipulated
    time
    Ex-parte order passed; demand confirmed automatically
    Demand confirmed via DRC-07Interest @ 18% p.a. on unpaid tax + 10% penalty
    Ignoring confirmed demandRecovery action: bank attachment, asset seizure
    Non-payment after orderCertificate issued to Tax Recovery Officer; property recovery
    Minimum penalty u/s 73Higher of ₹10,000 or 10% of tax dues

    Important: If you voluntarily pay the tax within 30 days of the Show Cause Notice you pay zero penalty. This is the most important window to act quickly.


    Real Case Study – Adwani & Co

    Textile Wholesaler Pune | GST Notice for ITC Mismatch (FY 2021-22)
    A Pune-based textile wholesaler received a Section 73 SCN for ₹18.4 lakhs alleging ITC claimed on invoices not reflecting in GSTR-2B. The client had missed the response deadline and
    an ex-parte order was already issued.

    Demand Raised ₹18.4 Lakhs
    Final Settled Amount ₹2.1 Lakhs
    Demand Waived 89%
    Our team filed a rectification application with full reconciliation proving 87% of the ITC was
    valid with supplier invoices and payment proof. Penalty was fully waived.
    Handled by Adwani & Co, 2023


    Frequently Asked Questions

    01.What is the GST notice reply format PDF / which form do I use?

    You file your reply using Form GST DRC-06 on the GST portal. It allows you to submit a
    written reply, upload supporting documents, and indicate whether you agree/disagree with the demand. There is no separate “PDF format” the reply is filed online through the portal. You
    can prepare a detailed written representation offline and upload it as a PDF attachment with DRC-06.

    02.How to reply to a GST notice — is it the same as an income tax notice?

    No. Income tax notices are handled under the Income Tax Act 1961 via the Income Tax portal
    (incometax.gov.in), while GST notices are handled under CGST Act 2017 via the GST portal (gst.gov.in). The forms, deadlines, and processes are completely different. This guide covers GST notices only.

    03.What is the time limit to reply to a GST notice u/s 73?

    The reply deadline is mentioned in the notice itself — typically 30 days from the date of the
    notice. If you need more time, you can request an extension in writing via the portal. If you
    received an intimation (DRC-01A) before the SCN, you have 30 days to pay or explain before the formal SCN is issued.

    04.Can I avoid paying the penalty under Section 73?

    Yes — if you pay the full tax demand within 30 days of receiving the Show Cause Notice
    (SCN), no penalty is levied under Section 73(8). If you pay voluntarily even before the SCN is
    issued (upon receiving DRC-01A), you pay zero penalty and no SCN is even issued.

    Q5. What if I disagree with the entire demand?

    You file a detailed reply via DRC-06 on the GST portal, contesting each point with evidence
    invoices, ledgers, reconciliation statements, etc. The officer will schedule a personal hearing. If the order still goes against you, you can appeal before the GST Appellate Authority (GST APRIL-01) within 3 months of the order.

    Q6. Is Section 73 notice serious? Will I face criminal action?

    Section 73 notices are civil/tax proceedings — not criminal. Criminal prosecution under GST
    applies only to Section 132 offences involving fraud, fake invoicing, or tax evasion above ₹5
    crore. A Section 73 notice (no fraud element) will not result in criminal action if you respond
    properly. However, ignoring it will lead to demand orders and recovery proceedings.

    Q7. Can I hire a CA or tax consultant to handle the GST notice reply?

    Absolutely and it is strongly recommended for demands above ₹1 lakh or complex ITC
    mismatch cases. A qualified CA can review the notice, identify errors in the department’s claim,
    prepare a legally sound reply, represent you in hearings, and negotiate settlements. Adwani & Co specialises in GST notice handling with a 90%+ success rate in demand reduction

    About the Author
    Dr. Haresh Adwani
    Ph.D. in Commerce | Law Graduate | Managing Partner, Adwani & Co LLP Dr. Haresh Adwani holds a Ph.D. in Commerce and is a qualified Law graduate with over two decades of hands-on experience in GST advisory, direct taxation, and statutory compliance for businesses across Pune and Maharashtra. As Managing Partner of Adwani & Co LLP a firm established in 1977 by Advocate N. T. Adwani Dr. Adwani has guided hundreds of
    SMEs, startups, and corporates through India’s evolving tax landscape. He is a recognised advisor on GST compliance, company formation, and Virtual CFO services, and regularly
    contributes to professional seminars and industry forums in Pune.


  • Credit Card Income Tax Notice: Essential Guide to Avoid Penalties

    Credit Card Income Tax Notice: Essential Guide to Avoid Penalties

    Credit Card Income Tax Notice
    Credit Card Income Tax Notice

    A Swipe Today, a Notice Tomorrow?

    Imagine this scenario. You have paid ₹12 lakh towards your credit card bills throughout the financial year. Your declared income? Just ₹6 lakh. You have never evaded tax intentionally. Your family uses your card. Friends occasionally swipe and repay. Business and personal expenses are all tangled up on a single plastic card.

    Sounds familiar, doesn’t it?

    Now here is the part most people miss. The Income Tax Department does not see each individual swipe. They do not know whether you bought groceries, booked a flight, or paid a hospital bill. What they see is one consolidated number: total credit card payments of ₹12,00,000. And when that number does not match your declared income, it raises a red flag that can lead to a credit card payments income tax notice.

    At Adwani and Company (https://www.adwaniandco.com/), we have seen this situation unfold more times than we can count. Professionals, salaried individuals, small business owners all caught off guard by a simple mismatch between their spending and their reported income. This blog will walk you through exactly how the Income Tax Department tracks your credit card payments, what Section 69C means for you, and how you can protect yourself from unnecessary scrutiny.

    As CA Dipesh Gurubakshani recently highlighted in a powerful insight: “It is not about how much you spend. It is about how well you can explain it.” This single line captures the reality that millions of credit card holders in India need to understand before it is too late.Understanding how a credit card income tax notice works is the first step toward protecting yourself from unnecessary scrutiny.

    Also Read:

    https://www.adwaniandco.com/blog/gst-appeal-pre-deposit-apl-01-fix-april-2026

    How the Income Tax Department Tracks Your Credit Card Payments

    The SFT Reporting Mechanism Under Rule 114E

    If you think your credit card payments are a private matter between you and your bank, think again. Under Rule 114E of the Income Tax Rules, financial institutions including banks and credit card companies are required to file a Statement of Financial Transactions (SFT) with the Income Tax Department.

    Here is the critical threshold: if your total credit card payments exceed ₹10 lakh in a single financial year, your bank is legally obligated to report this to the department. This information is then reflected in your Annual Information Statement (AIS), which the Income Tax Department uses to cross-verify your filed returns.

    According to the Income Tax Department of India (https://www.incometax.gov.in), the AIS is a comprehensive statement that contains details of all financial transactions carried out by a taxpayer during the year. It includes information about savings account interest, dividends, securities transactions, property purchases and yes, credit card payments.

    The takeaway? Every rupee you pay towards your credit card is being watched. Not in a sinister way, but through a data-driven compliance framework designed to identify discrepancies.

    What Exactly Gets Reported?

    Let us be specific. The SFT report for credit card payments includes:

    • Aggregate credit card bill payments made during the financial year.
    • Cash payments exceeding ₹1 lakh against credit card bills.
    • Any single transaction exceeding ₹10 lakh in credit card payments.

    This means even if no single transaction was large, if the cumulative payments cross the threshold, it gets flagged. And this is precisely where the mismatch between income and credit card payments income tax notice issues begin.

    Your Annual Information Statement Reveals Everything

    Since the introduction of the Annual Information Statement (AIS), taxpayers can now see exactly what the government sees. Your AIS, accessible through the Income Tax e-filing portal, displays:

    • Total credit card payments made during the year
    • High-value cash deposits
    • Mutual fund and stock transactions
    • Property purchases
    • Foreign remittances

    When your credit card payments and income tax return show a glaring mismatch, the system automatically flags your profile. This is not a manual process it is algorithm-driven, and it is getting smarter every year.

    Why a Credit Card Payments Income Tax Notice Gets Triggered

    The Simple Math the Tax Department Uses

    The logic is straightforward. If your declared income is ₹6 lakh but your credit card payments total ₹12 lakh, the department has a legitimate question: Where did the remaining ₹6 lakh come from?

    You might have perfectly valid explanations:

    • Your spouse or parents used your card and reimbursed you
    • A friend swiped for a purchase and transferred money back
    • Business expenses were routed through your personal card
    • You used savings from previous years

    But here is the problem valid explanations need valid documentation. Without proper records, you are left scrambling to prove the source of funds after receiving a credit card payments income tax notice.

    SituationTax ImpactAction
    Payments > ₹10 lakhReported in AIS (SFT)Track yearly usage
    Spending > IncomeNotice riskReconcile & justify source
    Third-party usageTreated as your expenseKeep bank proof
    No explanationTax under Sec 69C (~78%)Maintain documentation

    Here’s a real-world case of a credit card income tax notice

    Let us share a practical example that we frequently encounter at Adwani and Company.

    Mr. Sharma (name changed for privacy) is a mid-level IT professional in Pune.

    • Annual salary income declared: ₹8,50,000
    • Total credit card payments in FY: ₹14,20,000
    • Cash deposits in savings account: ₹2,50,000
    • Mutual fund investments: ₹1,80,000

    Now look at this from the tax department’s perspective:

    • Income: ₹8.5 lakh
    • Total outflows (credit card + investments + deposits): ₹18.5 lakh

    Where did the extra ₹10 lakh come from?

    Mr. Sharma’s wife, a homemaker, frequently used his credit card for household purchases, children’s tuition fees, and online shopping. His parents, who lived with him, occasionally used the card for medical expenses. His brother had repaid ₹3 lakh for a shared vacation.

    Mr. Sharma received a notice under Section 69C asking him to explain the source of funds for his credit card payments. Because he had maintained no records of reimbursements from family members and had no paper trail showing the flow of funds, what should have been a simple clarification turned into a stressful, months-long process.

    At Adwani and Company, our team helped Mr. Sharma compile bank statements, family member declarations, and a detailed reconciliation of every major transaction. The case was eventually resolved but it could have been entirely avoided with proper planning.

    Understanding Section 69C: Unexplained Expenditure and Your Credit Card

    What Is Section 69C?

    Section 69C of the Income Tax Act, 1961 deals with unexplained expenditure. If the Assessing Officer finds that a taxpayer has incurred expenditure that is not satisfactorily explained, and the source of such expenditure is not disclosed, the amount may be deemed as income and taxed accordingly.

    In the context of credit card payments, this means:

    • If your total credit card payments significantly exceed your declared income
    • And you cannot explain the source of those funds
    • the excess amount can be treated as your income and taxed at the applicable rate60% flat tax + 25% surcharge + 4% cess, resulting in an effective rate of 78% under Section 115BBE.

    Let us put this in perspective with numbers:

    If ₹5 lakh of your credit card spending is deemed unexplained under Section 69C, you could face a tax demand of approximately ₹3,90,000 (effective rate of 78%) on ₹5 lakh deemed as unexplained income — and this can go even higher if penalty under Section 271AAC is also levied) on money you may have already spent and possibly did not even owe tax on, had you documented it properly.

    How Section 69C Applies to Your Credit Card Payments Income Tax Notice

    The section does not require the department to prove that you earned undisclosed income. The burden of proof shifts to you, the taxpayer. You must demonstrate:

    1. Source of funds Where did the money come from?
    2. Nature of transactions What were the payments for?
    3. Reimbursement proof If someone else used your card, can you prove it?

    This is a significant legal burden, and it is one that catches many taxpayers unprepared. This is precisely why Dr. Haresh Adwani consistently reminds clients: “Section 69C does not punish spending. It punishes the inability to explain spending. Documentation is your shield.”

    For a deeper understanding of how tax provisions affect your finances, explore our tax advisory services at Adwani and Company (https://www.adwaniandco.com/).

    A credit card income tax notice under Section 69C can result in your unexplained spending being taxed at 60% plus surcharge.

    Common Scenarios That Lead to a Credit Card Payments Income Tax Notice

    1. Family Members Using Your Credit Card

    This is perhaps the most common scenario in Indian households. Your card, your liability but the spending is collective. The problem? Banks report the payment in your name, and the tax department associates it with your income.

    Solution: Maintain a simple monthly log of who spent what. Ask family members to transfer their share to your account via bank transfer (not cash) so there is a clear trail.

    2. Friends Swiping and Repaying Later

    We have all been there a group dinner, a vacation booking, a last-minute purchase. You swipe, they repay. But if the repayment is in cash or through informal channels, there is no documentary evidence.

    Solution: Always insist on bank transfers for repayments. A simple UPI transfer creates a timestamped, traceable record.

    3. Mixing Business and Personal Expenses

    Small business owners and freelancers are particularly vulnerable. When business expenses like client entertainment, travel, or supplies are charged to a personal credit card, the lines get blurred.

    Solution: Maintain separate credit cards for business and personal use. If that is not possible, keep a detailed spreadsheet categorizing each transaction. At Adwani and Company, we recommend this as a non-negotiable best practice for all our business clients.

    4. Reward-Chasing and Card Churning

    Many financially savvy individuals route all payments rent, insurance premiums, mutual fund SIPs through credit cards to maximize reward points. While there is nothing illegal about this, it inflates the total payment figure reported under SFT.

    Solution: Ensure your ITR accurately reflects all sources of income, including savings and investments, that justify the total outflow.

    5. EMI Conversions on High-Value Purchases

    High-value purchases converted to EMIs still reflect as lump-sum payments in SFT reporting. A ₹2 lakh laptop purchase on EMI appears as a ₹2 lakh credit card payment even though you are paying it in monthly installments.

    Solution: Keep purchase receipts and EMI conversion confirmation emails as supporting documentation.

    Each of these everyday situations can quietly build up the spending gap that eventually triggers a credit card income tax notice from the department.

    How to Protect Yourself from a Credit Card Payments Income Tax Notice

    Step 1: Track Your Annual Credit Card Payments

    This sounds obvious, but most people do not do it. At the start of every financial year, set up a simple tracker a spreadsheet, an app, or even a diary to log your monthly credit card payments. If you are approaching ₹10 lakh, be extra mindful about documentation.

    Step 2: Check Your Annual Information Statement (AIS)

    The AIS is available on the Income Tax e-Filing Portal (https://www.incometax.gov.in). Review it before filing your return. If the credit card payment figure does not match your records, investigate the discrepancy before the department does.

    Step 3: Maintain Documentation for Third-Party Usage

    If anyone else uses your credit card, create a paper trail. Bank transfers, written acknowledgements, or even email confirmations can serve as evidence.

    Step 4: Reconcile Income and Expenditure Before Filing

    Before filing your ITR, do a basic reconciliation. Does your total expenditure (including credit card payments, EMIs, rent, and cash withdrawals) align with your declared income plus savings? If there is a gap, identify and document the source.

    Step 5: Separate Business and Personal Cards

    If you are a freelancer, consultant, or business owner, this is non-negotiable. Use a dedicated card for business expenses and another for personal spending. This clean separation makes it infinitely easier to justify your credit card payments income tax filings.

    Step 6: Declare All Sources of Income

    If you have income from freelancing, capital gains, rental income, or any other source declare it. An undeclared ₹2 lakh freelancing income might be exactly the gap that turns your credit card spending into “unexplained expenditure.”

    Step 7: Consult a CA Before the Notice Arrives

    Proactive consultation is always less expensive than reactive damage control. At Adwani and Company (https://www.adwaniandco.com/), we conduct pre-filing reviews specifically designed to identify potential red flags in your financial profile including credit card spending patterns.The best way to avoid a credit card income tax notice is to maintain proper documentation of every third-party card usage.

    What to Do If You Have Already Received a Credit Card Payments Income Tax Notice

    If a notice under Section 142(1), 148, or any assessment-related provision has already arrived due to your credit card spending, here is your action plan:

    1. Do not panic, but do not ignore it. Every notice has a response deadline. Missing it escalates the situation.
    2. Gather all supporting documents bank statements, credit card statements, UPI transaction records, reimbursement proofs, and employer certificates.
    3. Prepare a detailed reconciliation showing the source of every major payment.
    4. Engage a qualified Chartered Accountant who has experience handling income tax scrutiny cases. The response needs to be precise, professional, and legally sound.

    Dr. Haresh Adwani and his team at Adwani and Company have successfully represented hundreds of clients in assessment proceedings. “A well-drafted response, backed by solid documentation, resolves most cases at the first stage itself,” he notes.

    The Bigger Picture: India’s Expanding Financial Surveillance

    The government’s ability to track financial transactions has grown exponentially in recent years. Between SFT reporting, AIS, the Faceless Assessment Scheme, Project Insight, and data analytics, the Income Tax Department now has a 360-degree view of your financial life.

    Credit card payments are just one piece of the puzzle. The department cross-references your:

    • Bank deposits and withdrawals
    • Property registrations
    • Mutual fund and equity transactions
    • Foreign remittances
    • GST filings (for businesses)

    Conclusion: Do Not Let Your Credit Card Become a Tax Liability

    Your credit card is a financial tool convenient, rewarding, and essential in today’s digital economy. But every payment you make creates a data point in the tax department’s vast surveillance network. The days of flying under the radar are long gone.

    A credit card payments income tax notice is not a criminal accusation it is a request for explanation. But an unprepared response can snowball into penalties, interest, and prolonged assessments.Remember, a credit card income tax notice is not a criminal charge but an unprepared response can lead to serious financial consequences.

    The solution is simple: track, document, and reconcile. And when in doubt, seek professional guidance.

    If you want expert guidance on credit card tax compliance, income tax notices, or financial planning, connect with Adwani and Company today (https://www.adwaniandco.com/). With decades of experience and a team led by seasoned professionals including CA Dipesh Gurubakshani and Dr. Haresh Adwani, we ensure your finances are always compliant, transparent, and optimized.

    Reach out to us today  because the best time to prepare is before the notice arrives.

    Now let us answer the most commonly searched questions about credit card income tax notice on Google.

    1. Can I receive a credit card payments income tax notice?

    Yes, absolutely. If your total credit card payments exceed ₹10 lakh in a financial year and are reported under SFT (Rule 114E), the Income Tax Department can issue a notice if there is a mismatch with your declared income.

    2. What is the SFT limit for credit card payments?

    Banks must report credit card payments exceeding ₹10 lakh in aggregate during a financial year. Additionally, cash payments exceeding ₹1 lakh against credit card bills are also reported.

    3. What happens under Section 69C if I cannot explain my credit card spending?

    Under Section 69C, unexplained expenditure can be treated as your income and taxed at 60% plus surcharge and cess under Section 115BBE. This can result in significant tax liability, interest, and penalties.

    4. Does using a credit card for someone else’s purchase create tax problems?

    It can, if you do not maintain proper documentation. Since the card is in your name, the payment is attributed to you. Always keep proof of reimbursement through bank transfers.

    5. How can I check if my credit card payments are reported in AIS?

    Log in to the Income Tax e-Filing Portal (https://www.incometax.gov.in), navigate to the AIS section, and review the SFT data. Your credit card payment details will be listed there.

    6. Is it necessary to declare credit card payments in my ITR?

    While you do not declare credit card payments directly in your ITR, your income declaration must be consistent with your overall spending. If total payments exceed your income, you should be prepared to explain the source.

    7. How can Adwani and Company help me with a credit card income tax notice?

    At Adwani and Company (https://www.adwaniandco.com/), we specialize in income tax compliance, notice responses, and tax planning. Our team can help you reconcile your credit card payments, prepare documentation, and respond effectively to any notice

    Author

    CA.Dipesh Gurubakshani. He is a Chartered Accountant with professional experience in audit, direct taxation, and accounting advisory services.