Mumbai. Wednesday, 27 May 2026
The Income Tax Department officially opened the portal for ITR-2 filing for Assessment Year (AY) 2026-27 on May 27, 2026. If you are a salaried employee, pensioner, or investor with an income structure that goes beyond basic wages, it is time to gather your documents.
Because ITR-2 deals with complex assets, filing it requires a bit more care than a standard ITR-1. Let’s look at who must file this form, what has changed, and how to stay clear of tax notices.
Who is Required to File ITR-2?
ITR-2 is designed for individuals and Hindu Undivided Families (HUFs) who do not earn income from a business or profession, but possess layered personal finances. You fit into this category if your financial year included:
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Income Exceeding ₹50 Lakh: Anyone earning above this threshold cannot use ITR-1.
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Capital Gains or Losses: Profits or losses from selling stocks, mutual funds, real estate, cryptocurrency, or gold.
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Foreign Assets: If you hold overseas bank accounts, global stock options (like RSUs), or foreign property.
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Corporate Positions: You serve as a Director in a company or hold unlisted equity shares.
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Special Resident Status: You are a Non-Resident Indian (NRI) or Resident But Not Ordinarily Resident (RNOR).
Important Facts to Keep in Mind
The financial rules shift dynamically. Keep these two vital distinctions in mind before checking your tax forms:
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The ₹12 Lakh Myth: While an income of ₹12 Lakh under the new tax regime benefits from enhanced rebates under Section 87A (resulting in zero tax liability), filing your return remains absolutely mandatory. A zero-tax status does not exempt you from the filing process.
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Exemption Threshold Traps: While individuals earning under ₹2.5 Lakh are generally exempt from filing, you must file if you meet specific economic criteria. These include paying an electricity bill over ₹1 Lakh in the year, spending over ₹2 Lakh on foreign travel, or having aggregate bank deposits exceeding ₹1 Crore.
Five Critical Mistakes to Sidestep in ITR-2
Errors in ITR-2 frequently trigger automatic system notices. Watch out for these common compliance traps:
1. Inaccurate Capital Gains Reporting
With recent alignments to Capital Gains tax structures, ensure you are using the updated statutory rates: 20% for Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG) under Section 111A and 12.5% for Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) under Section 112A. Double-check your brokerage statements against the values populated in Schedule 112A.
2. Skipping Schedule FA (Foreign Assets)
If you are a resident Indian holding global assets, you must declare them in Schedule FA. This includes foreign equity, crypto accounts held on overseas exchanges, or multinational employee stock options. Leaving this blank can attract severe penalties under the Black Money Act, regardless of whether you owe tax on them.
3. Misreporting Residential Status
Your global tax exposure hinges entirely on your residential status (Resident, NRI, or RNOR). Ensure your days spent physically inside India are calculated exactly according to Section 6 of the Income Tax Act to avoid choosing the wrong form.
4. Overlooking Form 67 for Foreign Credits
If you earned income abroad that faced tax withholding at the source, you can claim a Foreign Tax Credit (FTC) to prevent paying tax twice. However, this credit will be rejected if you do not submit Form 67 online before filing your ITR-2.
5. Missing the Loss Carry-Forward Deadline
The ultimate deadline to submit your return for AY 2026-27 is July 31, 2026. If you had stock market or property losses this year, you can carry them forward to offset future gains—but only if you file by July 31. Missing the date locks you out of this benefit entirely.
Roadmap: How to Complete Your ITR-2 Filing
The tax department provides three ways to file: directly through the online portal interface, via the downloadable Excel utility, or using third-party aggregator software.
The Sequence of a Clean Return
1.Collate Information Documents:Step 1.
Important Filing Metrics At a Glance
| Parameter | Details & Key Dates |
| Filing Utilities Live | May 27, 2026 |
| Official Deadline | July 31, 2026 |
| Revised Return Extended Limit | March 31, 2027 |
| Standard Tax Rates Applied | STCG: 20% | LTCG: 12.5% |
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