Follow Us:

Draft Form 26 Under Income-tax Rules 2026: Complete Analysis, 3CD Comparison, Audit Checklist & Impact on Businesses

Here’s a detailed analytical note on Draft Form No. 26 released as part of the Draft Income-tax Rules, 2026. This form is prescribed as the audit report and statement of particulars under section 63 of the Income-tax Act, 2025. It represents a major structural and reporting shift in tax audit documentation, both in scope and depth.

1. Purpose and Legislative Context

Draft Form 26 is intended to replace and modernize the existing tax audit reporting framework. It operationalizes section 63, which mandates audit reporting for certain categories of taxpayers engaged in business or profession. The form consolidates financial reporting, tax adjustments, compliance certifications, and disclosure requirements into one comprehensive reporting instrument.

Unlike earlier audit forms that largely focused on financial statement reconciliation and disallowance reporting, Draft Form 26 expands into:

  • Digital accounting system disclosures
  • International tax compliance
  • Specified financial transactions
  • Presumptive income cross-verification
  • ICDS-based computation adjustments
  • TDS/TCS compliance analytics
  • GST linkage and indirect tax reconciliation

This signals a clear policy direction: tax audit is no longer only about book-to-tax reconciliation — it is a full-spectrum compliance validation tool.

2. Structure of the Form

The form is divided into four core parts and multiple detailed schedules, creating a layered reporting system:

Part Coverage
Part A Basic assessee information
Part B Statement of tax particulars (core reporting section)
Part C Audit report (where accounts are audited under other law)
Part D Audit report (where not audited under other law)

This bifurcation ensures alignment with two types of assessees:

1. Those already subject to statutory audit under other laws (Companies Act, etc.)

2. Those subject only to tax audit

This reduces duplication while preserving audit accountability.

3. Part A – Foundational Tax Identity Reporting

Part A gathers structured identity data:

  • Legal name
  • Address with full geo breakdown
  • PAN
  • Status (individual, firm, company, trust, etc.)
  • Residential status
  • Contact information
  • Tax year

While seemingly basic, this section standardizes classification data, likely enabling automated PAN-linked analytics and cross-form integration within the income-tax system.

4. Part B – The Core Compliance Engine

Part B is the most significant and transformative component. It captures over 50 clauses across thematic blocks:

4.1 General Information & Business Profile

Requires disclosure of:

  • Relevant audit trigger clause
  • Opting for special taxation regimes
  • Partner/member changes
  • Nature of business changes
  • Cost audit linkages
  • Comparative turnover ratios

This creates a risk profiling base, helping authorities track structural and financial shifts year-on-year.

4.2 Books of Account & Digital Infrastructure

One of the biggest modern inclusions:

  • Books maintained (manual/digital)
  • Accounting software used
  • Cloud storage details including IP address and country
  • Compliance with prescribed backup server rules
  • Location of Indian data backup server

This reflects the government’s emphasis on data localization, digital audit trails, and forensic audit capability. Tax audit now validates IT governance, not just accounting.

4.3 Method of Accounting & ICDS Compliance

The auditor must report:

  • Cash vs mercantile system
  • Changes in accounting method
  • Inventory valuation method
  • Deviations from statutory valuation norms
  • Adjustments required under Income Computation and Disclosure Standards (ICDS)

Detailed schedules capture ICDS I to X adjustments, converting tax audit into a structured ICDS impact statement. This ensures book profit ≠ taxable income reconciliation transparency.

4.4 Income Reporting Beyond P&L

The form mandates reporting of income taxable but not credited to P&L, such as:

  • Deemed dividends
  • Buyback income
  • Subsidies
  • Forfeited advances
  • Business trust receipts
  • Compensation interest

This prevents omission of non-operational taxable income.

4.5 Property & Capital Transactions

Auditor must verify:

  • Conversion of capital asset into stock-in-trade
  • Property transfers below stamp duty value
  • Deemed income under negotiable instruments/hundi provisions

This expands tax audit into capital gains risk monitoring.

4.6 Expense Disallowance Matrix

This section is extensive and replaces scattered reporting with structured statutory tagging:

  • Employer contributions
  • Provisions
  • Bonus/commission
  • Bad debts
  • Capital expenditure
  • CSR expenses
  • Prohibited expenses
  • Penalties
  • Related party payments
  • MSME interest disallowance
  • TDS-linked disallowances

The format ensures clause-wise statutory mapping, facilitating automated mismatch detection.

4.7 Losses, Depreciation & Deductions

Includes schedules for:

  • Block-wise depreciation computation
  • Additional depreciation tracking
  • Capital gain adjustments within block
  • Brought forward loss continuity
  • Speculation loss tracking
  • MAT/AMT credit utilization

The depreciation schedule mirrors return schedules, enabling direct system validation.

4.8 International Taxation

New-age global reporting:

  • Transfer pricing primary adjustments
  • Excess money repatriation
  • Thin capitalization (interest limitation)
  • Remittances under Form 145

Tax audit now integrates BEPS-aligned monitoring tools.

4.9 Financial Transaction Compliance

Covers:

  • Loans/deposits beyond prescribed limits
  • Cash receipt/payment violations
  • Specified financial transaction (SFT) reporting
  • Unquoted share transactions
  • Deemed dividend loan reporting

This transforms tax audit into a financial integrity surveillance instrument.

4.10 TDS/TCS Reporting Analytics

The form requires granular data:

  • Payments liable for TDS/TCS
  • Short/non deduction
  • Late deposit interest
  • Disallowance u/s 35(b)
  • Statement filing status

This enables end-to-end TDS compliance analytics within tax audit.

Draft Form 26 Under Income-tax Rules 2026 Complete Analysis, 3CD Comparison, Audit Checklist & Impact on Businesses

4.11 GST & Indirect Tax Linkage

Auditor must report:

  • GST registration numbers
  • Expenditure split between registered/unregistered entities
  • Composition scheme suppliers
  • Exempt supplies

This bridges direct tax audit with GST ecosystem, improving cross-tax data triangulation.

4.12 Quantitative Details

Trading and manufacturing units must disclose:

  • Opening stock, purchases, sales, closing stock
  • Raw material consumption
  • Production yield %
  • Shortage/excess

This revives stock audit discipline in tax audit, aiding profit suppression detection.

5. Parts C & D – Auditor’s Certification Framework

Two alternate reporting structures exist:

Part Applicable where
Part C Assessee already subject to statutory audit
Part D Assessee not subject to other statutory audit

Both require:

  • Confirmation of audit procedures
  • Impact of qualifications on taxable income
  • Clause-wise qualification tagging (1–53)
  • Basis of audit evidence (test check / management representation / unable to verify)

This increases auditor accountability and traceability of audit limitations.

6. Key Policy Themes Emerging

1. Digitization of audit trail

2. Integration of direct and indirect tax data

3. ICDS enforcement

4. Financial transaction surveillance

5. Global tax risk monitoring

6. Structured auditor accountability

7. System-ready data architecture

The form is clearly designed for AI-driven scrutiny and automated risk flagging.

7. Impact on Stakeholders

For Assessees

  • Greater documentation burden
  • Need for stronger ERP and compliance systems
  • Increased exposure to cross-verification

For Chartered Accountants

  • Audit scope expands into IT systems and transaction analytics
  • Higher liability due to clause-wise certification
  • Need for ICDS expertise

For Tax Administration

  • Structured data ingestion
  • Better risk-based assessments
  • Reduced reliance on manual scrutiny

8. Conclusion

Draft Form 26 marks a paradigm shift. It transforms tax audit from a financial statement review into a multi-dimensional compliance certification spanning accounting standards, digital infrastructure, transaction monitoring, international taxation, and cross-law integration.

It reflects the evolution of India’s tax system toward data-driven governance, where tax audit functions as a primary compliance intelligence document rather than a procedural formality.

Once finalized, this form will significantly raise the depth, accountability, and technological orientation of tax audits in India.

Great additions — these three angles make the analysis far more practical and implementation-oriented. Below is a continuation of the earlier note, now incorporating:

1. Clause-wise comparison with existing Form 3CD

2. Practical audit checklist for Chartered Accountants

3. Impact on MSMEs vs Large Corporates

All references remain based on the Draft Form No. 26 under Draft Income-tax Rules, 2025.

9. Clause-Wise Comparison: Draft Form 26 vs Existing Form 3CD

Draft Form 26 is not merely a renumbered version of Form 3CD — it is a structural redesign. The philosophy has shifted from “report exceptions” to “map the entire tax risk universe”.

9.1 Structural Difference

Aspect Form 3CD (Old) Draft Form 26 (New)
Format style Clause-based narrative Data-structured schedules
Focus Book-tax differences Full compliance ecosystem
Digital system disclosure Not required Mandatory software & cloud details
ICDS reporting Limited Dedicated ICDS schedules
International taxation Minimal Integrated TP & BEPS-style reporting
TDS/TCS Summary-based Transaction analytics format
Indirect tax linkage Not integrated GST registration & expense mapping
Financial transaction reporting Select clauses Detailed loan, cash, SFT tracking
Auditor qualification tagging General remarks Clause-specific tagging (1–53)

9.2 Key Area-wise Mapping

(A) Basic Particulars

Form 3CD Clause Draft Form 26 Reference Change
Clause 1–8 (Name, address, PAN, etc.) Part A Similar but more structured, geo-coded address format

(B) Nature of Business & Accounting

Form 3CD Draft Form 26 What’s New
Clause 10 Part B – General Information Change in nature of business now schedule-based
Clause 11 Clause 13–14 Books of account now include software, cloud, IP location
Clause 13 Clause 15–16 Accounting method + inventory valuation compliance with statute
Clause 13(d) ICDS Clause 17–18 + Schedule ICDS now detailed line-item impact reporting

(C) Income Not Credited to P&L

| Form 3CD Clause 16 | Clause 20–21 | Expanded list including buyback, subsidies, business trust income |

(D) Capital Transactions

Form 3CD Clause Draft Form 26 Enhancement
Clause 17 Clause 22–23 Property undervaluation + capital asset to stock conversion structured

(E) Disallowances & Expenses

This is where the largest expansion occurs.

Form 3CD Clause Draft Form 26 Clause Change
21(a) General disallowances 27 series Now broken into statute-wise tagging
21(b)–(f) 27(c) & 27(d) CSR, penalties, illegal expenses mapped separately
23 (MSME interest) 33 Same concept but integrated into larger expense schedule
18, 19 (Depreciation) Clause 36 + detailed schedules Fully structured block-wise format aligned with ITR

(F) Related Party Transactions

| Form 3CD Clause 23 | Clause 29 | Similar concept but includes more data fields |

(G) TDS/TCS

| Form 3CD Clause 34 | Clause 49–51 + Schedule TDS/TCS | Moves from summary to transaction-level compliance analytics |

(H) Cash / Loan Restrictions

Form 3CD Clause Draft Form 26 Clause Expansion
31, 31A, 31B Clause 45 Detailed tracking of mode, code, peak amount

(I) International Tax

Form 3CD Draft Form 26 Major Shift
Clause 30A, 30B Clause 40–43 Transfer pricing primary adjustments, thin capitalization, repatriation tracking

Summary of Comparison

Draft Form 26 = Form 3CD + IT systems audit + global tax risk + transaction surveillance + GST linkage

It is effectively a compliance data statement, not just a tax audit annexure.

10. Practical Audit Checklist for Chartered Accountants

To adapt to Draft Form 26, CAs must upgrade their audit methodology. Below is a practical stage-wise checklist.

10.1 Pre-Audit Planning

√ Obtain ERP/Accounting software details

√ Identify cloud storage location and backup server compliance

√ Obtain partner/shareholder changes data

√ Review whether any special tax regime option exercised

√ Identify if ICDS adjustments are required

10.2 Books & Systems Verification

√ Verify list of books maintained (manual + digital)

√ Validate software audit trail functionality

√ Confirm server backup location in India

√ Cross-check inventory valuation method with statutory norms

10.3 Income Verification

√ Identify incomes taxable but not in P&L (subsidies, buyback, forfeitures)

√ Check property transactions vs stamp duty values

√ Verify conversion of capital asset into stock

10.4 Expense Scrutiny

√ Tag expenses under statutory disallowance heads

√ Check CSR expenditure classification

√ Verify MSME interest compliance

√ Scrutinize penalties and prohibited expenses

√ Review related party payments

10.5 Depreciation & Losses

√ Reconcile block-wise WDV with prior return

√ Verify additional depreciation eligibility

√ Track carry forward losses and continuity conditions

10.6 International Tax

√ Check TP primary adjustments

√ Review interest limitation computations

√ Verify foreign remittance reporting

10.7 TDS/TCS

√ Match expense ledger with TDS deducted

√ Verify short deduction / late deposit cases

√ Reconcile TDS returns vs books

10.8 GST & Indirect Tax

√ Obtain GST registration numbers

√ Map expense split: registered vs unregistered vendors

√ Identify composition scheme suppliers

10.9 Financial Transactions

√ Check loan/deposit acceptance modes

√ Identify cash receipts/payments beyond limits

√ Verify SFT reporting obligations

10.10 Reporting & Certification

√ Map audit qualifications clause-wise

√ Identify reliance on management representation

√ Document areas of inability to verify

This checklist effectively converts tax audit into a multi-disciplinary compliance audit.

11. Impact Analysis: MSMEs vs Large Corporates

Draft Form 26 does not affect all taxpayers equally.

11.1 Impact on MSMEs

Challenges:

Limited accounting system sophistication

Cloud/server reporting requirements difficult to comply

Inventory and quantitative reporting burdensome

TDS analytics and GST reconciliation require better records

Increased compliance cost and CA fees

Risk: Many MSMEs may struggle with documentation, increasing audit qualifications.

Likely Outcome:

Shift toward outsourced compliance systems and cloud ERPs

11.2 Impact on Large Corporates

Advantages:

√ Already use ERP systems

√ Have internal audit & compliance teams

√ Familiar with transfer pricing and global tax rules

New Pressure Areas:

Thin capitalization disclosures

Primary adjustment repatriation tracking

Detailed TDS/TCS analytics

Auditor qualification tagging increases exposure

Likely Outcome:

More integration between tax, finance, IT, and legal departments

11.3 Comparative Summary

Factor MSMEs Large Corporates
Compliance burden High Moderate
System readiness Low High
Audit complexity High relative to size High but manageable
Cost impact Significant Absorbable
Risk of audit qualification Higher Lower

12. Final Observations

Draft Form 26 signals a philosophical shift:

From: “Verify profit”

To: “Validate tax behavior, financial integrity, and system reliability”

It brings tax audit closer to:

  • Forensic accounting
  • Systems audit
  • Regulatory compliance certification

For professionals, this means the future tax auditor must understand:

Accounting + Tax Law + IT Systems + Data Governance + International Tax

Draft Form 26 is therefore not just a new form — it is a new compliance era.

Join Taxguru’s Network for Latest updates on Income Tax, GST, Company Law, Corporate Laws and other related subjects.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Ads Free tax News and Updates
Search Post by Date
February 2026
M T W T F S S
 1
2345678
9101112131415
16171819202122
232425262728