The Indian Income Tax Department is significantly stepping up its scrutiny of charitable trusts and non-governmental organizations (NGOs) following the detection of widespread discrepancies in their financial filings.
The tax department has started issuing targeted notices to numerous entities after advanced data analytics flags severe gaps between the information submitted by donors and the numbers reported by the trusts themselves.
Key Areas Under the Scanner
The heightened regulatory crackdown is focusing on several specific accounting friction points:
-
Donation Discrepancies: Massive mismatches between the tax deductions claimed by individual/corporate donors (via Form 10BE) and the actual donation receipts declared by the charitable trusts in their annual returns (Form 10B/10BB).
-
Anomalies in Accumulation of Funds: Under Indian tax laws, trusts are allowed to accumulate up to 15% of their income for future charitable purposes. Authorities are closely auditing instances where these funds were parked or utilized without proper, timely disclosure to the department (Form 10).
-
Anonymous & Cash Donations: Tax officials are aggressively tracking anonymous cash inflows that exceed the legally permitted threshold (higher than 5% of total donations or ₹1 lakh), which are subject to a heavy 30% tax rate under Section 115BBC.
-
Commercial Activities: Organizations operating under the guise of charity but generating substantial revenue from commercial, business-like activities without maintaining separate books of accounts are facing immediate risk of losing their tax-exempt status.
The Consequences for Non-Compliance
For a long time, charitable institutions operated under a relatively relaxed administrative environment. However, the integration of automated tax portals and cross-referenced data pooling means there is now nowhere to hide accounting errors.
Trusts that fail to reconcile these mismatches or provide satisfactory explanations to the tax notices face severe penalties. This includes the back-taxing of unexplained income at maximum marginal rates, and in severe cases of misclassification, the permanent cancellation of their tax-exemption registrations under Sections 12A/12AB and 80G.
