Budget 2016-17 has been presented in Parliament. The Finance Minister has kept the Personal Income Tax slab rates unchanged for the Financial Year 2016-17 (Assessment Year 2017-2018).
Let us understand all the important sections and new proposals with respect to Income Tax Deductions FY 2016-17. This list can help you in planning your taxes.
Section 80c
The maximum tax exemption limit under Section 80C has been retained as Rs 1.5 Lakh only. The various investment avenues or expenses that can be claimed as tax deductions under section 80c are as below;
Section 80CCC
Contribution to annuity plan of LIC (Life Insurance Corporation of India) or any other Life Insurance Company for receiving pension from the fund is considered for tax benefit. The maximum allowable Tax deduction under this section is Rs 1.5 Lakh.
Section 80CCD
Employee can contribute to Government notified Pension Schemes (like National Pension Scheme – NPS). The contributions can be upto 10% of the salary (or) Gross Income and Rs 50,000 additional tax benefit u/s 80CCD (1b) was proposed in Budget 2015.
To claim this deduction, the employee has to contribute to Govt recognized Pension schemes like NPS. The 10% of salary limit is applicable for salaried individuals and Gross income is applicable for non-salaried. The definition of Salary is only ‘Dearness Allowance.’ If your employer also contributes to Pension Scheme, the whole contribution amount (10% of salary) can be claimed as tax deduction under Section 80CCD (2).
Kindly note that the Total Deduction under section 80C, 80CCC and 80CCD(1) together cannot exceed Rs 1,50,000 for the financial year 2016-17. The additional tax deduction of Rs 50,000 u/s 80CCD (1b) is over and above this Rs 1.5 Lakh limit.
Section 80D
Deduction u/s 80D on health insurance premium is Rs 25,000. For Senior Citizens it is Rs 30,000. For very senior citizen above the age of 80 years who are not eligible to take health insurance, deduction is allowed for Rs 30,000 toward medical expenditure.
Preventive health checkup (Medical checkups) expenses to the extent of Rs 5,000/- per family can be claimed as tax deductions. Remember, this is not over and above the individual limits as explained above. (Family includes: Self, spouse, dependent children and parents).
Section 80DD
You can claim up to Rs 75,000 for spending on medical treatments of your dependents (spouse, parents, kids or siblings) who have 40% disability. The tax deduction limit of upto Rs 1.25 lakh in case of severe disability can be availed.
To claim this deduction, you have to submit Form no 10-IA.
Section 80DDB
An individual (less than 60 years of age) can claim upto Rs 40,000 for the treatment of specified critical ailments. This can also be claimed on behalf of the dependents. The tax deduction limit under this section for Senior Citizens is Rs 60,000 and for very Senior Citizens (above 80 years) the limit is Rs 80,000.
To claim Tax deductions under Section 80DDB, it is mandatory for an individual to obtain ‘Doctor Certificate’ or ‘Prescription’ from a specialist working in a Govt or Private hospital.
For the purposes of section 80DDB, the following shall be the eligible diseases or ailments:
(a) Dementia
(b) Dystonia Musculorum Deformans
(c) Motor Neuron Disease
(d) Ataxia
(e) Chorea
(f) Hemiballismus
(g) Aphasia
(h) Parkinson’s Disease
Section 24 (B)
The interest component of home loans is allowed as deduction under Section 24B for up to Rs 2 lakh in case of a self-occupied house. If your property is a let-out one then the entire interest amount can be claimed as tax deduction. (Read: Understanding Tax Implications of Income from house property)
Section 80EE
This is a new proposal which has been made in Budget 2016-17. First time Home Buyers can claim an additional Tax deduction of up to Rs 50,000 on home loan interest payments u/s 80EE. The below criteria has to be met for claiming tax deduction under section 80EE.
Section 80U
This is similar to Section 80DD. Tax deduction is allowed for the tax assessee who is physically and mentally challenged.
Section 80GG
As per the budget 2016 proposal, the Tax Deduction amount under 80GG has been increased from Rs 24,000 per annum to Rs 60,000 per annum. Section 80GG is applicable for all those individuals who do not own a residential house & do not receive HRA (House Rent Allowance).
The extent of tax deduction will be limited to the least amount of the following;
Section 80G
Contributions made to certain relief funds and charitable institutions can be claimed as a deduction under Section 80G of the Income Tax Act. This deduction can only be claimed when the contribution has been made via cheque or draft or in cash. But deduction is not allowed for donations made in cash exceeding Rs 10,000. In-kind contributions such as food material, clothes, medicines etc do not qualify for deduction under section 80G.
Section 80E
If you take any loan for higher studies (after completing Senior Secondary Exam), tax deduction can be claimed under Section 80E for interest that you pay towards your Education Loan. This loan should have been taken for higher education for you, your spouse or your children or for a student for whom you are a legal guardian. Principal Repayment on educational loan cannot be claimed as tax deduction.
There is no limit on the amount of interest you can claim as deduction under section 80E. The deduction is available for a maximum of 8 years or till the interest is paid, whichever is earlier.
Section 87A Rebate
If you are earning below Rs 5 lakh, you can save an additional Rs 3,000 in taxes. Tax rebate under Section 87A has been raised from Rs 2,000 to Rs 5,000 for FY 2016-17 (AY 2017-18).
In case if your tax liability is less than Rs 5,000 for FY 2016-17, the rebate u/s 87A will be restricted up to income tax liability only.
Section 80 TTA
Deduction from gross total income of an individual or HUF, up to a maximum of Rs. 10,000/-, in respect of interest on deposits in savings account with a bank, co-operative society or post office can be claimed under this section. Section 80TTA deduction is not available on interest income from fixed deposits.
Conclusion
It is prudent to avoid last minute tax planning. Do not invest in unwanted life insurance polices or in any other financial products just to save taxes. It is better you plan your taxes based on your financial goals at the beginning of the Financial Year itself. Plan your taxes from April 2016 itself, instead of waiting until late December 2016 (or) January 2017.
It is OK to pay some taxes when you can not save or cannot invest in right financial products. But, do not invest just to save TAXES. The cost of buying wrong financial products may outweigh the cost of taxes. Tax Planning is not a goal but a tool. Remember “Tax Planning alone is not Financial Planning.”
Also, kindly understand the tax treatment of the selected investment products across the different investment stages (i.e., investment, accrual & withdrawal) and then invest.
I believe that the above list is useful for your Tax Planning purposes. The above ‘Income Tax Deductions 2016-17’ are applicable for financial year 2016-2017 (Assessment Year 2017-2018).
(Image courtesy of Stuart Miles at FreeDigitalPhotos.net)
You may like reading : How Income Tax Dept tracks High Value Financial Transactions?
This post was last modified on July 11, 2023 11:06 am
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View Comments
Thanks ...it was very imp.
This is off the topic but can you plz share all method of calculation of Depreciation on assets.
i am a school teacher bu my husband has a small business. i can show my husband's lic policy in my taxable are?
Dera Soumen..Yes, you can claim it u/s 80C.
Dear Sreekanth,
I am a salaried employee. I am receiving HRA from my employer. I want to declare my HRA investment under 80GG instead of 80C which has a limit of 1,5 Lakh as I am already exceeding 1.5 Lakh limit with my other investments like(LIC,PF,Home Loan Principal,Car running and food expense). Could you please suggest if I can avail the tax deduction under 80GG for my house rent of say 60k?
Thanks in Advance!!
Dear Sourav,
Kindly note that HRA is exempted from your income and not shown as a deduction under section 80C. It is shown u/s 10.
As you are receiving HRA from your employer, you can not claim the rent u/s 80GG.
Dear srikanth sir,
I Paid rent to 3 houses at 1 year , example first 6 month one house Rs.108000/-, next 3 month another house Rs.45000/- & next 3 months third house paid rent rs.51000/-can i claim rent u/s 10 full amount.
Dear purusothaman,
It depends on the actual HRA received by you.
Dear Sreekanth, I am a salaried employee and my income is in 30% slab. Except Sec 80C (1.5 lacs) i dont have any othe rebate to claim. I am not having any Loan (housing, Vehicle, Education) and Medical Insuance policies. My EPF deduction is about Rs. 1.0 lac pa
Can you pl advice me on tax planning for this f/y
Dear Narendra,
You may buy a health cover and can claim tax deduction u/s 80D.
It's ok to pay taxes but you can plan investing in right investment options for your financial goals.
Read:
Think beyond TAXES when investing!
List of investment options!
Hi,
I have query, if you can help me it will be grateful for me. i am just confused about it.
I am salaried person and I have taken a personal loan of Rs.15 lac from 3 banks for purchasing a land for new house construction.Can I claim tax exemption for interest payment on EMI's under Section 80EE or 24B of Income Tax.some of my friends tell me that i can claim exemption if i am able to prove that personal loan i have taken is for land purchase or for construction of house.
--
Dear Nilesh,
There are conflicting opinions on this. There is no clear law on this.
Some tax experts believe that only business people can claim u/s 24 (personal loans). And some believe one can claim tax exemption.
I believe that section 80EE is on home loans only.
I moved to US in 2014 and I did not earn anything in India in year 2015-16. I am earning in US and paying taxes here. Do I need to file ITR in India? In 2014-15 I filed ITR in India for the earning in India.
In 2015-16 I got interest on savings bank account which is less than 10k.
Dear PB,
If your Residential status is NRI, and you do not have any earnings here in India then no need to file ITR in India.
Sir ,I am working in govt sector ,joined on 02 sept 2016 .now my basic pay us 44900/month( no allowance now),before that I was in training period from 02 sept 2014 that time my stipend was 10500/month.
I have an education loan ,for that I paid 30000 toward interest in February 2016.
Now tell me sir can I get tax benefit according to sec 80E??
Will I get rebate(5000)?
Please suggest me sir
Dear SURENDRA,
Yes, you can get tax deduction u/s 80E. Did you claim it in FY 2015-16 tax return?
Tax rebate of Rs 5,000 is applicable if your net income equals to or less than Rs 5 lakh (under section 87A ).
HI Srikant ,
A wonderful explanation .. appreciate it ..A quick question regarding NPS . AS a part of the employer provident fund a part of that amount goes as EPS can I take this into consideration for tax deduction ?
Dear Ashish,
Employer's contributions to EPS can not be taken for Tax deduction.
By the way are referring to NPS or EPF??
I have not paid earlier LIC premium (2014 to 2016) but now my income is taxable. I want to pay the last two year LIC premium in 2016-17 FY. Whether, it will come under tax deduction?
pls contact me for LIC
my no. 9711594809
You Can Pay and claim Tax deduction without contacting any one
Dear Arun..The payments related to FY 2016-17 only can be claimed in AY ITR 2017-18.
Dear Mr.Sreekanth,
I have a query related to section 87A. My Total earning is for the F.Y 2016-17 is Rs. 5,62,000 p.a. And i am claiming deduction under section 24B for repayment of homeloan principle amount of Rs. 50000 and conveyance deduction Rs. 20000. Am i eligible for the rebate under section 87A.
Dear Isha,
If your net total income (after deduction of allowances, tax claims like 80c , section 24 etc.,) is below Rs 5Lakh then you can claim Section 87A rebate.