New Tax Audit Rules for F&O Traders: Complete Guide for FY 2026–27
Introduction
Futures & Options (F&O) trading in India has witnessed explosive growth, with millions of retail participants actively trading on NSE and BSE. Yet, a large number of traders remain unaware of one of the most critical compliance requirements: tax audit obligations under Section 44AB of the Income Tax Act.
AY 2026-27 (for income earned in FY 2025-26) is a landmark year from a tax perspective. It falls under the old Income Tax Act, 1961 — but several game-changing amendments, new STT rates, clarifications on turnover calculation, and structural changes under the new Income Tax Act, 2025 directly impact F&O traders. Missing these updates can cost you heavily in penalties, disallowances, and loss of carry-forward benefits.
This blog is a complete, up-to-date guide covering everything an F&O trader must know for AY 2026-27.
1. How is F&O Income Taxed? The Foundation
Before diving into audit rules, understand the core classification:
F&O income is classified as Non-Speculative Business Income under Section 43(5) of the Income Tax Act — NOT as capital gains.
This classification has far-reaching consequences:
| Aspect | Impact |
|---|---|
| Tax Rate | Slab rate (5%, 20%, 30%) — NOT flat 15% STCG or 12.5% LTCG |
| ITR Form | ITR-3 (mandatory — not ITR-2 or ITR-4) |
| Books of Accounts | Required under Section 44AA |
| Tax Audit | May be mandatory under Section 44AB |
| Loss Set-Off | Against any income EXCEPT salary in the same year |
| Loss Carry Forward | Up to 8 Assessment Years |
⚠️ Common Mistake: Many traders file ITR-2 treating F&O as capital gains. This is a defective return that can be treated as invalid by the Income Tax Department.
2. What is an F&O Tax Audit?
A Tax Audit under Section 44AB is an examination and certification of your books of accounts and financial records by a Chartered Accountant (CA). For F&O traders, this means:
- Verification of all trading records, contract notes, and broker P&L statements
- Correct computation of F&O turnover using the prescribed ICAI method
- Filing of Form 3CA/3CB (audit report) and Form 3CD (statement of particulars)
- Certification of income, deductions, and compliance with tax provisions
The purpose is to ensure accurate reporting and prevent evasion — and non-compliance carries serious consequences.
3. The Most Critical Step: How to Calculate F&O Turnover
This is the most misunderstood aspect of F&O taxation. Get this wrong, and everything else follows incorrectly.
F&O Turnover ≠ Total Contract Value
As per the ICAI Guidance Note on Tax Audit under Section 44AB (2022 Edition), F&O turnover is calculated as:
For Futures:
Turnover = Sum of Absolute Values of Profit and Loss on Each Trade
For Options:
Turnover = Sum of Absolute Values of Profit and Loss + Premium Received on Options Sold
Example:
| Trade | Profit/Loss |
|---|---|
| Trade 1 (Nifty Futures) | +₹1,50,000 |
| Trade 2 (Bank Nifty Futures) | -₹75,000 |
| Trade 3 (Nifty Options Sell) | +₹50,000 |
| Trade 4 (Sensex Options) | -₹1,25,000 |
| F&O Turnover | ₹4,00,000 (1,50,000 + 75,000 + 50,000 + 1,25,000) |
Note: Even if the net profit is only ₹1,00,000, the turnover is ₹5,00,000 because you add absolute values.
Key Point: Even a trader with a net LOSS can have a very high turnover — and may be required to get a tax audit.
4. When is Tax Audit Mandatory for F&O Traders? (AY 2026-27)
Under Section 44AB, F&O traders must get a tax audit under the following conditions:
Condition 1: Turnover Exceeds ₹1 Crore
Tax audit is mandatory if F&O turnover crosses ₹1 crore.
Exception (Digital Transaction Relief): If more than 95% of all receipts and payments are through digital/banking channels, the audit threshold is enhanced to ₹10 crore.
Since virtually all F&O transactions happen digitally through SEBI-regulated brokers, most retail traders qualify for the ₹10 crore threshold. However, the 5% cash limit must be verified for ALL business transactions including those outside F&O.
Condition 2: Profit is Less than 6% of Turnover + Income Exceeds Exemption Limit
Even if turnover is below ₹1 crore, tax audit is mandatory when:
- Your net F&O profit is less than 6% of F&O turnover, AND
- Your total income (including salary, other sources) exceeds the basic exemption limit
This is the condition that catches most salaried F&O traders off guard. Even a small net loss with salary income above ₹2.5 lakh can trigger mandatory audit.
Condition 3: Presumptive Taxation Opted Earlier, Then Abandoned
If you opted for Section 44AD in any of the last 5 years and now want to exit (declare profit below 6% or claim a loss), a tax audit is mandatory for 5 consecutive years from exit.
⚠️ Important Note: F&O trading is NOT eligible for presumptive taxation under Section 44AD. The scheme excludes commission agents and agency business, and CBDT has clarified F&O traders cannot use Section 44AD.
Quick Reference Matrix:
| F&O Turnover | Net Profit | Income > Exemption Limit | Audit Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | ≥ 6% of turnover | Yes/No | ❌ No |
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | < 6% of turnover | No | ❌ No |
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | < 6% of turnover | Yes | ✅ Yes |
| ₹1 Cr to ₹10 Cr (95%+ digital) | Any | Any | ❌ No (digital relief) |
| ₹1 Cr to ₹10 Cr (cash > 5%) | Any | Any | ✅ Yes |
| Above ₹10 Cr | Any | Any | ✅ Yes (mandatory) |
| Loss (any turnover) | — | Yes (salary + F&O) | ✅ Usually Yes |
4. When is Tax Audit Mandatory for F&O Traders? (AY 2026-27)
Under Section 44AB, F&O traders must get a tax audit under the following conditions:
Condition 1: Turnover Exceeds ₹1 Crore
Tax audit is mandatory if F&O turnover crosses ₹1 crore.
Exception (Digital Transaction Relief): If more than 95% of all receipts and payments are through digital/banking channels, the audit threshold is enhanced to ₹10 crore.
Since virtually all F&O transactions happen digitally through SEBI-regulated brokers, most retail traders qualify for the ₹10 crore threshold. However, the 5% cash limit must be verified for ALL business transactions including those outside F&O.
Condition 2: Profit is Less than 6% of Turnover + Income Exceeds Exemption Limit
Even if turnover is below ₹1 crore, tax audit is mandatory when:
- Your net F&O profit is less than 6% of F&O turnover, AND
- Your total income (including salary, other sources) exceeds the basic exemption limit
This is the condition that catches most salaried F&O traders off guard. Even a small net loss with salary income above ₹2.5 lakh can trigger mandatory audit.
Condition 3: Presumptive Taxation Opted Earlier, Then Abandoned
If you opted for Section 44AD in any of the last 5 years and now want to exit (declare profit below 6% or claim a loss), a tax audit is mandatory for 5 consecutive years from exit.
⚠️ Important Note: F&O trading is NOT eligible for presumptive taxation under Section 44AD. The scheme excludes commission agents and agency business, and CBDT has clarified F&O traders cannot use Section 44AD.
Quick Reference Matrix:
| F&O Turnover | Net Profit | Income > Exemption Limit | Audit Required? |
|---|---|---|---|
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | ≥ 6% of turnover | Yes/No | ❌ No |
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | < 6% of turnover | No | ❌ No |
| Below ₹1 Cr (95%+ digital) | < 6% of turnover | Yes | ✅ Yes |
| ₹1 Cr to ₹10 Cr (95%+ digital) | Any | Any | ❌ No (digital relief) |
| ₹1 Cr to ₹10 Cr (cash > 5%) | Any | Any | ✅ Yes |
| Above ₹10 Cr | Any | Any | ✅ Yes (mandatory) |
| Loss (any turnover) | — | Yes (salary + F&O) | ✅ Usually Yes |
5. Key Amendments & Updates for AY 2026-27
🔴 Amendment 1: Higher STT Rates on F&O (Effective April 1, 2026)
This is the biggest change directly hitting every F&O trader:
| Transaction | Old STT Rate | New STT Rate (FY 2026-27) |
|---|---|---|
| Futures (Sell Side) | 0.02% | 0.05% (2.5x increase) |
| Options Premium (Sell Side) | 0.10% | 0.15% |
| Options Exercise | 0.125% | 0.15% |
Impact for AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26): The OLD rates (0.02% futures, 0.10% options) apply for FY 2025-26. The new higher rates kick in from FY 2026-27 onwards.
Good news: STT paid is a fully deductible business expense against your F&O income. Keep your broker’s annual P&L report ready — it shows the exact STT deducted which you can claim as a deduction.
🔴 Amendment 2: Penalty for Non-Audit Converted to “Fee” — Budget 2026
This is a landmark change for litigation reduction:
Old Provision: Non-compliance with Section 44AB attracted a penalty under Section 271B — 0.5% of turnover or ₹1.5 lakh, whichever is lower.
New Provision (Budget 2026): The amount is now classified as a fee rather than a penalty.
Why does this matter?
- The quantum (0.5% of turnover, max ₹1.5 lakh) remains unchanged
- But calling it a “fee” reduces the scope for litigation and disputes
- Courts had often waived penalties citing “reasonable cause” — this distinction may narrow those arguments
- The intent is to make the compliance charge more certain and automatic
Accepted reasonable causes (still valid): Resignation of key accountant, natural calamity, physical inability or death of partner in charge, labour strikes for extended periods.
🔴 Amendment 3: Unified Audit Form under New Income Tax Act, 2025
Under the Income Tax Act, 2025 (effective from Tax Year 2026-27 i.e., FY 2026-27 onwards):
- Forms 3CA, 3CB, and 3CD (three separate forms) are consolidated into a single unified Form No. 26
- Filed under Section 63 of the new Act
- Applies from Tax Year 2026-27 onwards
For AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26): You still use the old Forms 3CA/3CB and 3CD under the Income Tax Act, 1961. The new unified form applies from the NEXT year (FY 2026-27, to be filed in 2027).
🔴 Amendment 4: Separate Business Code for F&O in ITR-3
The Income Tax Department has introduced a separate Nature of Business Code specifically for F&O trading in ITR-3. This is a significant compliance change:
- Ensures proper classification of F&O income
- Reduces chances of mismatch notices
- Helps department track F&O trader compliance systematically
Action: Select the correct F&O business code when filing ITR-3 for AY 2026-27. Using a generic “other business” code can trigger scrutiny.
🔴 Amendment 5: Extended ITR Filing Deadlines
While audit deadlines remain unchanged, there are important deadline updates:
| ITR Type | Old Deadline | New Deadline (AY 2026-27) |
|---|---|---|
| ITR-3 / ITR-4 (Non-Audit) | July 31 | August 31, 2026 |
| ITR-1 / ITR-2 (Salaried/Capital Gains) | July 31 | July 31, 2026 (unchanged) |
| Tax Audit Cases (ITR-3 with audit) | October 31 | October 31, 2026 (unchanged) |
| Tax Audit Report | September 30 | September 30, 2026 (unchanged) |
| Revised/Belated Returns | 9 months from year end | December 31, 2026 (extended) |
Critical Warning for F&O Loss Traders: If you have F&O losses and want to carry them forward, you MUST file ITR-3 by the due date. A late filing — even by one day — permanently forfeits the carry-forward benefit.
🔴 Amendment 6: New Income Tax Act, 2025 — What Changes for F&O Traders?
The Income Tax Act, 2025 replaces the 1961 Act from April 1, 2026. For AY 2026-27 (FY 2025-26), you still follow the 1961 Act. But from FY 2026-27 onwards:
Terminology Change: “Previous Year” and “Assessment Year” are replaced by a single “Tax Year” — the year in which income is earned and assessed.
What stays the same for F&O traders:
- F&O income remains non-speculative business income
- Loss carry-forward period: still 8 years
- ITR-3 continues as the correct form
- Tax audit thresholds remain largely unchanged
- Slab rate taxation continues
What changes: Terminology, section numbers, and Form No. (3CA/3CB/3CD → Form 26 under Section 63).
6. Due Dates Summary for F&O Traders — AY 2026-27
| Milestone | Deadline |
|---|---|
| Tax Audit Report (Form 3CA/3CB + 3CD) | 30 September 2026 |
| ITR-3 Filing (Audit Cases) | 31 October 2026 |
| ITR-3 Filing (Non-Audit Cases, F&O with loss) | 31 August 2026 |
| Transfer Pricing Audit Cases | 31 October 2026 |
| Revised / Belated Returns | 31 December 2026 |
7. Deductible Expenses for F&O Traders
Since F&O is business income, you can claim the following expenses to reduce your taxable profit:
| Expense | Deductible? |
|---|---|
| Brokerage paid to broker | ✅ Yes |
| Securities Transaction Tax (STT) | ✅ Yes |
| Exchange transaction charges | ✅ Yes |
| GST on brokerage | ✅ Yes |
| SEBI turnover fees | ✅ Yes |
| Internet/broadband charges | ✅ Yes (for trading) |
| Advisory and CA fees | ✅ Yes |
| Market data subscriptions (Bloomberg, etc.) | ✅ Yes |
| Trading software / terminal charges | ✅ Yes |
| Computer/laptop depreciation | ✅ Yes (40% WDV rate for computers) |
| Dedicated mobile / phone charges | ✅ Partly |
Keep all invoices, bank statements, and broker tax P&L reports. These are verified during the audit.
8. F&O Loss Set-Off and Carry-Forward Rules
Same Year Set-Off:
F&O losses (non-speculative business losses) can be set off against:
- ✅ Short-Term Capital Gains (STCG)
- ✅ Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG)
- ✅ House Property income
- ✅ Other business income (non-speculative)
- ❌ Salary income (not allowed)
- ❌ Speculative income (intraday trading) — different head
Carry Forward:
- Unabsorbed F&O loss can be carried forward for up to 8 Assessment Years
- Example: F&O loss in FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27) can be carried forward till AY 2034-35
- Mandatory condition: ITR-3 must be filed by the due date (August 31 or October 31 as applicable)
Practical Example:
- FY 2025-26: F&O Loss ₹2,00,000 | STCG ₹60,000
- Set off in same year: ₹2,00,000 – ₹60,000 = Net carry forward ₹1,40,000
- FY 2026-27: F&O Profit ₹90,000 | Set off from carry forward ₹90,000 → Taxable F&O = ₹0
- Remaining carry forward: ₹50,000 (available till AY 2034-35)
9. Books of Accounts — What Must F&O Traders Maintain?
Under Section 44AA, F&O traders must maintain books if:
- Turnover exceeds ₹10 lakh, OR
- Income exceeds ₹2.5 lakh (basic exemption)
Required records:
- Cash book (if any cash transactions exist)
- Ledger accounts
- Trading journal / day-to-day record of all contracts
- Bank statements
- Broker contract notes and annual P&L reports
- Stock records (if applicable)
Most traders can maintain these digitally using broker statements and accounting software — a physical register is not mandated.
10. Compliance Checklist for F&O Traders — AY 2026-27
✅ Download full trading P&L report from your broker for FY 2025-26
✅ Calculate F&O turnover correctly using absolute profit + loss method (NOT contract value)
✅ Determine audit applicability based on turnover AND profit percentage
✅ Use the correct F&O business code in ITR-3
✅ Engage a CA well before August (audit report due September 30)
✅ Prepare list of deductible expenses with supporting documents
✅ Verify carry-forward losses from previous years (Schedule CFL in ITR-3)
✅ Ensure advance tax payments were made if applicable
✅ File ITR-3 (NOT ITR-2 or ITR-4) — F&O must always be filed in ITR-3
✅ File by due date — do NOT miss to preserve loss carry-forward rights
11. Penalties for Non-Compliance
| Default | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Not getting tax audit done when mandatory | Fee of 0.5% of turnover or ₹1.5 lakh (whichever is lower) under Section 271B |
| Filing wrong ITR form (ITR-2/ITR-4 instead of ITR-3) | Return treated as defective — losses may not be recognized |
| Late filing | Loss carry-forward forfeited permanently |
| Not maintaining books when required | Penalty under Section 271A |
| Concealment of income | Penalty up to 200% of tax under Section 270A |
Conclusion
F&O taxation and audit compliance is one of the most complex areas of Indian income tax — and AY 2026-27 brings several critical updates that every trader must be aware of. From the conversion of the Section 271B penalty into a statutory fee, to the introduction of a dedicated F&O business code in ITR-3, the extended ITR deadline for non-audit filers, and the upcoming shift to unified Form 26 under the new Income Tax Act, 2025 — staying updated is no longer optional.
Key Takeaways:
- F&O income = Business income, always file ITR-3
- Turnover = Absolute sum of profits and losses (not contract value)
- Audit required if profit < 6% and total income exceeds exemption limit — catches most salaried F&O traders
- Tax audit report due: September 30, 2026 | ITR due: October 31, 2026
- Missing the due date = permanent loss of carry-forward rights
- New higher STT rates apply from FY 2026-27 (not FY 2025-26)
- New Income Tax Act, 2025 applies from FY 2026-27 — AY 2026-27 still under old Act
Disclaimer: This blog is for educational and informational purposes only. Tax laws are complex and change frequently. Always consult a qualified Chartered Accountant before filing your income tax return, especially if you have F&O trading activity.
Last updated: April 2026 | Applicable for FY 2025-26 (AY 2026-27)