Hindustan Times (Ranchi)

TDS disclosure requiremen­ts for cryptos notified

- Press Trust of India feedback@livemint.com

NEW DELHI: The income tax department has come out with detailed disclosure requiremen­ts for TDS deductions for virtual digital assets, under which date of transfer and mode of payment will have to be specified.

From July 1, tax deducted at source (TDS) of 1% will be levied on payments towards virtual digital assets or cryptocurr­encies beyond ₹10,000 in a year, as the Finance Act 2022 has introduced Section 194S in the I-T Act.

In the run up to implementa­tion of the new provision, the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) on June 21 notified certain amendments in I-T Rules with respect to furnishing TDS returns in Form 26QE and Form 16E.

The CBDT has notified that the TDS collected under Section 194S shall be deposited within 30 days from the end of the month in which the deduction has been made. Deposit of tax so deducted shall be made in the challancum-statement Form 26QE.

Nangia Andersen LLP Partner Neeraj Agarwala said to furnish Form 26QE, the specified persons would be required to maintain details like date of transfer of virtual digital assets (VDAs), value of considerat­ion, mode of considerat­ion—whether cash or kind or in exchange of another VDA etc.

“These forms are in line with the recently introduced provisions of Section 194S. Complying with these sections, the forms require detailed disclosure­s. The specified persons should be wellequipp­ed to understand and obtain the informatio­n required for compliance, as well as main certificat­ion tain the appropriat­e documentat­ion to support these transactio­ns,” Agarwala said.

AKM Global Tax Partner Amit Maheshwari said since only a few days are left for the new TDS provisions like Section 194R and 194S to come into play, there was a greater need to have a clarity on the procedural compliance­s.

“The new forms such as 26QE require detailed informatio­n for payments on transfer of VDAs such as the date of transfer of VDA to amount paid/ credited either in cash or kind or in exchange of another VDA. This will help the tax department to trace the VDA transactio­ns,” Maheshwari said.

But it will also increase the compliance burden on taxpayers, he added.

The finance ministry is also working on an FAQ on taxation of cryptocurr­ency, which will give nuanced clarificat­ions on applicabil­ity of income tax on virtual digital assets.

 ?? ?? Payments towards virtual digital assets beyond ₹10K in a year will incur 1% TDS.BLOOMBERG
Payments towards virtual digital assets beyond ₹10K in a year will incur 1% TDS.BLOOMBERG

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