Section 270A: The Complete Professional Commentary
Section at a Glance
| Parameter | Position Under IT Act 1961 |
|---|---|
| Applicable from | AY 2017-18 onwards |
| Replaces | Section 271(1)(c) — which continues for AYs up to 2016-17 |
| IT Act 2025 equivalent | Section 439 (penalty) + Section 440 (immunity) |
| Penalty — under-reporting | 50% of tax payable on under-reported income |
| Penalty — misreporting | 200% of tax payable on under-reported income |
| Immunity provision | Section 270AA — Form 68 within 1 month of assessment order |
| Immunity available for misreporting? | No — expressly excluded by Section 270AA(3) |
| AO must specify | Which limb of Section 270A(9) is invoked — mandatory |
| Key judicial trend | Penalty quashed where AO fails to specify exact misreporting clause |
| Limitation for penalty order | 6 months from end of FY in which CIT(A)/ITAT order is passed |
What Section 270A Actually Covers
Section 270A replaced the old Section 271(1)(c) from AY 2017-18. The old provision — “concealment of income or furnishing inaccurate particulars” — was criticised for being vague, subjective, and open to arbitrary application. Courts had held that mens rea (guilty intent) was not always necessary under Section 271(1)(c), generating enormous litigation.
Section 270A attempted to bring structure and certainty. It creates two distinct categories of default with two distinct penalty rates. Consequently, the AO must now make a positive choice at the outset — is this under-reporting, or is it misreporting? The choice determines both the penalty rate and whether immunity is available.
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