Wednesday, June 3, 2026

Year-End Accounts Closure for FY 2025–26: Vendor Documents, MSME Compliance, and Form 3CD Obligations

By CA Surekha Ahuja

As Financial Year 2025–26 has closed on 31 March 2026, businesses are now required to complete their year-end accounting closure, statutory audit preparation, and tax audit documentation. A critical and frequently overlooked step in this process is obtaining specific confirmations and declarations from all vendors and service providers before 30 June 2026.

This post sets out the five documents required from every vendor, the legal basis for each, and the Form 3CD (Tax Audit Report) clauses that are directly triggered — applicable to all businesses subject to Tax Audit under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act, 1961.

Why This Is a Statutory Requirement — Not a Formality

Under the Income Tax Act, 1961, and the Micro, Small and Medium Enterprises Development (MSMED) Act, 2006, the accuracy and external verifiability of your creditor balances and vendor transactions are directly linked to your tax liability, audit opinion, and compliance standing. Standard on Auditing SA 505 (External Confirmations) further mandates that statutory auditors obtain independent confirmation of material balances from third parties.

Failure to collect these documents exposes businesses to:

  • Disallowance of expenses under Sections 43B(h), 40A(3), and 40(a)(ia)
  • Penalty under Sections 271D and 271E for cash transaction violations
  • Modified or qualified Statutory Audit Opinion
  • Adverse remarks in the Tax Audit Report (Form 3CD)

Document 1 — Statement of Accounts as at 31/03/2026

ParticularsDetails
Document RequiredStatement of all transactions for FY 2025–26 and closing balance as at 31 March 2026, duly confirmed and signed by the vendor
Why RequiredEnables ledger reconciliation between your books and the vendor's records. Unreconciled differences constitute a qualification risk in the statutory audit
Auditing StandardSA 505 — External Confirmations
Form 3CD ClauseClause 26 — Outstanding liabilities; Clause 44 — GST-registered vs unregistered vendor classification
Section — IT ActSection 145 — Method of accounting must be verifiable from external sources

Document 2 — Balance Confirmation Letter

ParticularsDetails
Document RequiredFormal written confirmation of the closing balance as at 31/03/2026, stamped and signed on vendor's letterhead
Why RequiredStandard audit evidence requirement. Without balance confirmations for material creditor balances, the auditor may be unable to express an unmodified opinion
Auditing StandardSA 505 — External Confirmations (mandatory procedure for significant balances)
Form 3CD ClauseClause 26 — Creditor balance verification
Section — IT ActSection 145 — Accuracy of closing balances

Document 3 — MSME Declaration

ParticularsDetails
Document RequiredSelf-declaration by the vendor of their MSME registration status (Micro / Small / Medium / Not Registered), signed on vendor letterhead
Why RequiredUnder Section 43B(h), amounts due to Micro and Small Enterprises unpaid beyond the statutory credit period are disallowed as a deduction in the year of accrual. Without this declaration, the buyer cannot determine their exposure
MSMED ActSection 15 — Buyer's obligation to make payment within agreed/statutory credit period
Form 3CD ClauseClause 26(B) — Specifically introduced from AY 2024–25; auditor must disclose amounts due to Micro/Small Enterprises beyond credit period and compute disallowance under Section 43B(h)
Section — IT ActSection 43B(h) — Deduction allowed only on actual payment within credit period

Note: Clause 26(B) in Form 3CD was inserted with effect from Assessment Year 2024–25. It is fully operative for AY 2026–27 (FY 2025–26) and requires the tax auditor to make a specific disclosure of all MSME dues, the credit period applicable, amounts paid within time, and amounts outstanding beyond the credit period.

Document 4 — Udyam Registration Certificate

ParticularsDetails
Document RequiredCurrent Udyam Registration Certificate of the vendor for FY 2026–27, if the vendor is MSME-registered
Why RequiredDetermines vendor's classification as Micro, Small, or Medium Enterprise. Section 43B(h) disallowance applies only to Micro and Small — not Medium. The applicable credit period (15 days or 45 days) is also determined by this classification
MSMED ActSection 2(e), 2(f), 2(g) — Definitions of Micro, Small, and Medium Enterprises
Form 3CD ClauseClause 26(B)(ii) — Requires vendor-wise disclosure of Udyam Registration details for MSME creditors
Credit Period15 days — where no written agreement; 45 days — maximum permissible under any written agreement


Document 5 — TDS Certificate (Form 16A)

ParticularsDetails
Document RequiredForm 16A for the period 01/01/2026 to 31/03/2026 (Q4 FY 2025–26), wherever TDS has been deducted at source on payments to the vendor
Why RequiredRequired to reconcile TDS deducted in your books against credits appearing in the vendor's Form 26AS and Annual Information Statement (AIS). Discrepancies are a common trigger for income tax notices
Section — IT ActSection 203 — Obligation of the deductor to issue TDS certificate; Section 203AA — 26AS reconciliation
Form 3CD ClauseClause 34(b) — Auditor must verify TDS deducted at correct rates, deposited on time, and Form 16A issued; short/non-deduction results in 30% disallowance u/s 40(a)(ia)


Form 3CD — Complete Clause Map for FY 2025–26 (AY 2026–27)

Form 3CD ClauseSubjectDocuments TriggeredRisk if Not Complied
Clause 21(d)Cash payments exceeding ₹10,000 to a single vendor — Section 40A(3)Statement of Accounts (Document 1) — for cross-verification of cash payments100% disallowance of the payment amount
Clause 26Outstanding creditor balances as at 31/03/2026Document 1 (Statement of Accounts) + Document 2 (Balance Confirmation)Modified audit opinion; adverse remark in Tax Audit Report
Clause 26(B)Amounts due to Micro/Small Enterprises beyond credit period — Section 43B(h)Document 3 (MSME Declaration) + Document 4 (Udyam Certificate)Disallowance of outstanding amount; higher taxable income for AY 2026–27
Clause 31Cash loans/deposits above ₹20,000 — Sections 269SS and 269TDocument 1 (Statement of Accounts) — for ledger verificationPenalty u/s 271D and 271E equal to full transaction amount
Clause 34(b)TDS deducted and deposited on vendor paymentsDocument 5 (Form 16A) + 26AS/AIS reconciliation30% disallowance u/s 40(a)(ia) for short or non-deduction
Clause 44Break-up of expenditure — GST registered vs unregistered vendorsDocument 1 (Statement of Accounts) — for GST registration statusITC reversal; GST mismatch disputes

The Tax Audit Report under Section 44AB is due on 30 September 2026. The tax auditor cannot certify Clause 26(B) without the MSME declarations and Udyam Certificates for each creditor.

Action Required — Timelines

ActionDeadline
Dispatch vendor request letter (all 5 documents)On or before 15 June 2026
Vendor response deadline30 June 2026
Non-responding vendors to be classified as Non-MSMEAfter 30 June 2026
Income Tax Return — non-audit cases31 July 2026
Tax Audit Report (Form 3CD) — Section 44AB30 September 2026

Important: Businesses should maintain documentary evidence of every vendor communication sent. In the absence of a vendor response by 30 June 2026, the vendor may be treated as Non-MSME for the purpose of Form 3CD disclosure — but this protection is available only if the request was formally made and documented.