Monday, June 22, 2026

ITR-3 for Traders (AY 2026-27): Intraday, F&O, Delivery Trading, Tax Audit, Turnover Calculation, Loss Set-Off & Filing Guide

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

For traders, filing ITR-3 is not merely about reporting profits and losses. The tax treatment of trading transactions depends upon their legal character, turnover computation, audit applicability, loss treatment, and proper disclosure in the return.

Intraday equity trading is generally treated as speculative business income, Futures & Options (F&O) trading as non-speculative business income, and delivery-based transactions may be taxable either as capital gains or business income depending upon the facts and consistent treatment adopted by the taxpayer.

This guide provides a practical framework for reporting trading income correctly and avoiding common filing mistakes.

Trader Compliance Matrix

ParticularsIntraday TradingF&O TradingDelivery-Based Shares
Nature of IncomeSpeculative Business IncomeNon-Speculative Business IncomeCapital Gains or Business Income
Head of IncomeBusiness & ProfessionBusiness & ProfessionCapital Gains / Business
ITR FormITR-3ITR-3ITR-2 or ITR-3
Turnover MethodAbsolute Profit & Loss MethodAbsolute Profit & Loss MethodBased on nature of activity
Expense ClaimAllowed, subject to conditionsAllowed, subject to conditionsDepends on classification
Loss TreatmentSpeculative Loss RulesBusiness Loss RulesCapital Gain / Business Loss Rules

How Is Trading Income Classified?

Trading ActivityTax TreatmentITR Form
Intraday Equity TradingSpeculative Business IncomeITR-3
Futures & Options (F&O)Non-Speculative Business IncomeITR-3
Delivery-Based Shares Held as InvestmentCapital GainsITR-2 / ITR-3
Delivery-Based Share Trading BusinessBusiness IncomeITR-3

Important Points

  • Intraday transactions generally fall within the ambit of speculative transactions under Section 43(5).
  • Eligible F&O transactions carried out through recognised stock exchanges are generally treated as non-speculative transactions under Section 43(5)(d).
  • Delivery-based transactions should be classified consistently based on intention, frequency, holding period, accounting treatment, and past reporting position.

Which Business Code Should Traders Use?

Nature of ActivityCommonly Used Business Code*
Intraday / Speculative Trading21009
F&O Trading21010
Share Trading Business21011

Business codes are based on the current ITR utility and should be verified from the applicable utility for the relevant assessment year.

How Is Turnover Calculated for Traders?

Correct turnover computation is critical for tax audit evaluation and return filing.

ActivityTurnover Method
F&O TradingAggregate of absolute profits and losses; option premium considered where applicable
Intraday TradingAggregate of absolute profits and losses
Delivery-Based Trading BusinessGenerally based on sale value reflected in business accounts and financial statements

Example

Trade ResultAmount
Profit₹40,000
Loss₹25,000
Profit₹35,000

Turnover = ₹1,00,000 (₹40,000 + ₹25,000 + ₹35,000)

Important

Turnover should generally be computed using accepted tax principles and not on the basis of gross contract value or total traded value.

Is Tax Audit Applicable to Traders?

Tax audit applicability is governed primarily by Section 44AB and depends upon turnover, declared profits, presumptive taxation provisions, and the facts of the case.

SituationGeneral Position
Turnover exceeds the applicable threshold prescribed under Section 44ABAudit may apply
Eligible taxpayer opts for presumptive taxation and satisfies conditionsAudit may not apply
Lower profit declared in cases attracting audit provisionsDetailed evaluation required
Turnover within prescribed limits and conditions satisfiedAudit may not be required

Tax audit should always be evaluated after correctly computing turnover.

Can Traders Opt for Presumptive Taxation?

Eligibility of traders for presumptive taxation under Section 44AD should be examined in light of the nature of trading activity and applicable legal provisions.

ParticularsPosition
Presumptive RateGenerally 6% / 8%, subject to conditions
Lower Profit DeclarationRequires careful evaluation
Opting OutFuture compliance implications may arise

Before opting for presumptive taxation, taxpayers should examine eligibility, turnover, and audit implications.

Which Expenses Can Traders Claim?

Expenses incurred wholly and exclusively for trading activity are generally deductible.

ExpenseGenerally Allowable
Brokerage & Transaction ChargesYes
Demat ChargesYes
Trading SoftwareYes
Research & Advisory FeesYes
Internet & Communication ExpensesYes
Office Rent (Business Use)Yes
Bank ChargesYes
Interest on Trading FundsSubject to conditions
Personal ExpensesNo

Maintain invoices, payment proof, and supporting records for all claims.

How Are Trading Profits and Losses Taxed?

ParticularsTax Treatment
Intraday ProfitSpeculative Business Income
F&O ProfitNon-Speculative Business Income
Delivery-Based Trading ProfitBusiness Income
Delivery-Based Investment ProfitCapital Gains

Loss Carry Forward

Loss TypeTreatment
Speculative Loss (Intraday)Generally set off only against speculative income
Non-Speculative Business Loss (F&O)Set off as permitted under business loss provisions
Capital LossGoverned by capital gains provisions

Timely filing under Section 139(1) is generally required for carrying forward eligible business and capital losses, subject to statutory exceptions.

Books of Account and Supporting Records

Maintenance of books should also be examined in light of Section 44AA, wherever applicable.

Core Books

  • Cash Book, Bank Book, Ledger, Journal, Trial Balance, Trading Account
  • Profit & Loss Account, Balance Sheet

Supporting Records

  • Broker Ledger, Contract Notes, Demat Statements, Trade Reports, Bank Statements
  • Expense Bills, Turnover Working Papers

Books should be reconciled with broker records before filing the return.

Documents Required for ITR-3

DocumentPurpose
Broker Statements & Contract NotesTransaction support
Broker LedgerReconciliation
Demat StatementDelivery verification
Bank StatementsFund flow verification
Turnover WorkingTax and audit support
Profit & Loss AccountIncome disclosure
Balance SheetFinancial disclosure
Expense ProofsDeduction support
Audit Report (if applicable)Statutory compliance

Common Reasons for Defective Returns

IssueConsequence
Wrong ITR FormDefective return risk
Intraday reported as Capital GainsIncorrect classification
F&O and Intraday income combinedIncorrect loss treatment
Incorrect Business CodeValidation issues
Turnover mismatchQuery risk
Incomplete business schedulesDefective return exposure
P&L or Balance Sheet mismatchValidation failure

Step-by-Step Filing Procedure

StepAction
1Classify transactions correctly
2Select the appropriate ITR form
3Choose the correct business code
4Compute turnover
5Prepare books and financial statements
6Review expenses, losses and audit applicability
7Complete business schedules
8Validate and e-Verify the return

Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)

Is ITR-3 mandatory for F&O traders?

Since F&O income is generally treated as business income, taxpayers reporting such income ordinarily file ITR-3, subject to the applicable return filing provisions.

Is F&O income speculative?

No. Eligible F&O transactions carried out through recognised stock exchanges are generally treated as non-speculative transactions under Section 43(5)(d).

Can intraday losses be adjusted against F&O profits?

Speculative loss from intraday trading generally cannot be set off against non-speculative business income such as F&O profits and is subject to separate set-off and carry-forward provisions.

Can brokerage and internet expenses be claimed?

Yes, where incurred wholly and exclusively for trading activity and supported by proper records.

Can a trader have both capital gains and business income?

Yes. A taxpayer may simultaneously have capital gains from investments and business income from trading activities, provided the distinction is genuine and consistently maintained.

Quick Compliance Checklist

✓ Correct classification of intraday, F&O, and delivery-based transactions

✓ Proper turnover computation

✓ Appropriate business code selection

✓ Books reconciled with broker statements

✓ Expenses supported by documentation

✓ Loss treatment reviewed

✓ Audit applicability examined

✓ Business schedules completed

✓ Return validated before upload

Conclusion

The tax treatment of trading transactions depends upon their true nature rather than the market instrument involved. Intraday trading is generally treated as speculative business income under Section 43(5), F&O trading carried out through recognised stock exchanges is generally treated as non-speculative business income under Section 43(5)(d), and delivery-based transactions may be taxable either as capital gains or business income depending upon the facts and consistent treatment adopted by the taxpayer.

Most trading-related tax disputes arise not from the trading activity itself, but from incorrect classification, turnover computation, loss reporting, incomplete disclosures, or inadequate documentation. Proper books of account, accurate turnover workings, consistent tax positions, and complete reporting in ITR-3 remain the strongest safeguards against defective return notices, assessments, and future tax litigation.