F&O, Intraday and Share Trading Losses: How to Claim Maximum Tax Benefit Through ITR-3, Set-off and Carry Forward
Introduction
In recent times, many investors and traders have faced losses in the share market due to weak returns, high volatility and frequent market fluctuations. These losses often create practical confusion: whether an income-tax return is required to be filed, whether such losses should be reported, whether tax audit is applicable, and how these losses can be carried forward for adjustment against future profits.
This article is not limited merely to explaining the return form or tax audit requirement. It also explains how F&O losses, intraday losses and delivery-based share losses should be correctly reported so that the assessee can lawfully claim the maximum available benefit of such losses in future years. The objective is to provide a clear and practical guide on ITR-3, turnover calculation, tax audit applicability, set-off and carry-forward of losses, classification of share transactions and precautions while showing share trading as business income.
In this article, we will discuss each important aspect of share market taxation in depth. In case any further clarification is required, readers may contact us at the details mentioned at the end of this article.
Share trading taxation depends on the nature of transaction. F&O, intraday equity trading and delivery-based share transactions are not taxed in the same manner. Therefore, correct classification, correct ITR form, proper turnover calculation and timely filing are essential, especially where there is a loss.
1. Correct ITR Form
For an Individual or HUF having F&O trading income/loss or intraday equity trading income/loss, the generally applicable return form is ITR-3, because such income is reported under the head “Profits and Gains of Business or Profession”.
ITR-2 is not suitable where F&O or intraday income is to be reported as business income. However, where the assessee has only delivery-based share transactions treated as capital gains and no business income, ITR-2 may be applicable.
ITR-4 should be used cautiously. It should generally be avoided where the assessee has trading loss, brought-forward loss or loss to be carried forward, because ITR-4 is a simplified presumptive return and is not suitable for detailed reporting of trading losses, business schedules and carry-forward loss schedules.
2. Nature of Income: F&O, Intraday and Delivery Shares
| Type of transaction | Tax treatment | Relevant provision / principle |
| F&O trading on recognised stock exchange | Non-speculative business income/loss | Section 43(5)(d) |
| Equity intraday trading | Speculative business income/loss | Section 43(5); set-off governed by section 73 |
| Delivery-based shares held as investment | Capital gain/loss | STCG/LTCG/STCL/LTCL |
| Delivery-based shares held as stock-in-trade | Business income/loss | Depends on facts, books, frequency, intention and consistency |
Section 43(5)(d) provides that eligible derivative transactions carried out on a recognised stock exchange shall not be deemed to be speculative transactions. The Supreme Court in Snowtex Investment Ltd. v. PCIT, [2019] 414 ITR 227 (SC) also noted that derivative trading on recognised stock exchanges was removed from the scope of speculative business from AY 2006-07.
For delivery-based shares, the assessee must determine whether shares are held as investment or stock-in-trade. CBDT Circular No. 6/2016 dated 29.02.2016 recognises that listed shares and securities may be held either as capital asset or stock-in-trade, but the stand should be consistent and supported by facts.
3. Turnover Calculation for F&O and Intraday
For tax audit purposes, turnover is not the total contract value shown in contract notes. Turnover is calculated on the basis of differences/profits and losses as per the ICAI Guidance Note on Tax Audit under section 44AB.
| Type of trading | Turnover method |
| Intraday equity trading | Aggregate of positive and negative differences, i.e. absolute profit plus absolute loss |
| Futures | Aggregate of favourable and unfavourable differences |
| Options | Favourable/unfavourable differences; option premium treatment as per ICAI Guidance Note, avoiding double counting |
| Reverse trades | Difference on reverse trades is included |
| Open F&O position at year-end | Turnover is generally considered when the position is squared off |
Example
| Particular | Profit / Loss | Turnover |
| F&O trade 1 | Profit ₹1,20,000 | ₹1,20,000 |
| F&O trade 2 | Loss ₹80,000 | ₹80,000 |
| Total | Net profit ₹40,000 | ₹2,00,000 |
Thus, for turnover, profits and losses are added in absolute terms.
4. Tax Audit Applicability in Share Trading Loss Cases
Loss alone does not make tax audit mandatory. Tax audit depends mainly on turnover, cash transaction condition and section 44AD lock-in, if applicable.
Under section 44AB(a), tax audit is generally required where business turnover exceeds ₹1 crore. However, the threshold can extend to ₹10 crore where cash receipts and cash payments do not exceed the prescribed 5% limit. Since F&O and intraday trades are normally routed through banking and exchange mechanisms, the ₹10 crore threshold may apply, subject to verification of total receipts and payments.
| Situation | Tax audit position |
| F&O loss but turnover below audit limit | No audit merely because of loss |
| Intraday loss but turnover below audit limit | No audit merely because of loss |
| Delivery share capital loss | No tax audit, if treated as capital loss |
| F&O/intraday turnover above ₹10 crore | Audit generally required |
| Turnover above ₹1 crore and 5% cash condition not satisfied | Audit required |
| Earlier section 44AD opted and now loss/lower profit declared within lock-in period | Audit may apply under section 44AB(e) read with section 44AD(4)/(5), if income exceeds basic exemption limit |
Practical audit examples
| Case | Turnover | Other income | Audit position |
| F&O loss ₹2 lakh | ₹40 lakh | Salary ₹8 lakh | No audit, if no 44AD lock-in issue |
| F&O loss ₹5 lakh | ₹1.50 crore | Salary ₹10 lakh | Usually no audit if 5% cash condition is satisfied |
| F&O loss ₹5 lakh | ₹1.50 crore | Salary ₹10 lakh | Audit required if 5% cash condition is not satisfied |
| F&O loss ₹10 lakh | ₹12 crore | Any income | Audit required |
| Intraday loss ₹1 lakh | ₹25 lakh | Other income ₹7 lakh | No audit, if no 44AD lock-in issue |
| Delivery STCL/LTCL only | Any sale value | Any income | No tax audit, if treated as capital loss |
| Earlier 44AD used, now loss declared within restricted period | Below ₹2/3 crore | Total income above basic exemption limit | Audit may be required |
5. Section 44AD Caution
Section 44AD provides presumptive taxation for eligible businesses. It should be used cautiously in share trading cases, particularly where the assessee has F&O or intraday losses.
Section 44AD(4) provides that where an eligible assessee declares income under section 44AD and later declares income not in accordance with section 44AD within the prescribed period, the assessee may lose the benefit of section 44AD for subsequent years. Section 44AD(5) may require books and audit if section 44AD(4) applies and total income exceeds the basic exemption limit.
Therefore, audit may arise not because of trading loss alone, but because the assessee is hit by the section 44AD opt-out/lock-in provisions.
6. Loss Set-off and Carry Forward
| Loss type | Current year set-off | Carry forward period | Future set-off |
| F&O loss | Can be set off against business income and other heads except salary, subject to specific restrictions | 8 assessment years | Only against business/profession income |
| Intraday equity loss | Only against speculative business income | 4 assessment years | Only against speculative business income |
| Short-term capital loss from delivery shares | Against STCG and LTCG | 8 assessment years | Against STCG and LTCG |
| Long-term capital loss from delivery shares | Only against LTCG | 8 assessment years | Only against LTCG |
Speculative business loss cannot be set off against non-speculative business income. However, non-speculative business loss, such as F&O loss, can be set off against speculative business income, subject to the provisions of the Act.
7. Best and Worst Set-off Situations
F&O Loss + Delivery Share Capital Gain
This is generally a beneficial situation because F&O loss is a non-speculative business loss and can be set off against capital gains in the same year, subject to restrictions.
| Particular | Amount |
| Delivery STCG/LTCG | ₹5,00,000 |
| F&O loss | ₹3,00,000 |
| Net taxable income after set-off | ₹2,00,000 |
Intraday Loss + F&O Profit
This is not beneficial because intraday loss is speculative loss. It cannot be set off against F&O profit.
| Particular | Amount |
| F&O profit | ₹4,00,000 |
| Intraday loss | ₹2,00,000 |
| Set-off allowed | No |
| Intraday loss to be carried forward | ₹2,00,000 |
F&O Loss + Intraday Profit
This is comparatively better because non-speculative business loss can be set off against speculative business income.
| Particular | Amount |
| Intraday profit | ₹2,00,000 |
| F&O loss | ₹3,00,000 |
| Set-off allowed | ₹2,00,000 |
| Balance F&O loss to be carried forward | ₹1,00,000 |
Delivery Share Loss + F&O Profit
If delivery share loss is treated as capital loss, it cannot be set off against F&O business profit.
| Capital loss type | Set-off allowed against |
| Short-term capital loss | STCG and LTCG |
| Long-term capital loss | Only LTCG |
Delivery Trading Treated as Business
Delivery-based share transactions may be treated as business income only where the assessee is genuinely holding shares as stock-in-trade. This may make set-off easier, but it should not be done merely for tax benefit. Books, balance sheet, frequency, intention, treatment of closing stock and consistency must support the business treatment.
8. Due Date Filing is Essential for Loss Carry Forward
Where the assessee wants to carry forward F&O loss, intraday loss or capital loss, the return should be filed within the due date under section 139(1).
Section 139(3) covers return of loss and section 80 restricts carry-forward of losses unless the return is filed within the prescribed time. Therefore, belated filing may result in loss of carry-forward benefit.
9. Precautions While Showing Share Trading as Business Income
A. Maintain separate classification
| Segment | Classification |
| F&O | Non-speculative business |
| Equity intraday | Speculative business |
| Delivery investment shares | Capital asset/investment |
| Delivery trading shares | Stock-in-trade |
Investment shares and trading shares should not be mixed in the same ledger. If delivery shares are shown as stock-in-trade, they should be reflected as stock-in-trade in books and not as investments.
B. Maintain consistency
The assessee should not show delivery share profit as capital gain in profitable years and delivery share loss as business loss in loss years. Such inconsistent treatment may be treated as tax-driven classification and may invite litigation.
C. Understand tax impact before treating delivery shares as business
| If shown as capital gain | If shown as business income |
| STCG on listed equity may be taxable under section 111A, if conditions are satisfied | Taxable at normal slab/business rate |
| LTCG on listed equity may be taxable under section 112A, if conditions are satisfied | Taxable as business income |
| Capital loss can be set off only against capital gains | Business loss follows business loss set-off rules |
| Limited expense deduction | Business expenses may be claimed if wholly and exclusively for business |
Delivery shares should be treated as business income only where facts genuinely support trading activity.
D. Claim only genuine business expenses
Only expenses incurred wholly and exclusively for trading business should be claimed.
| Expense | Precaution |
| Brokerage | Match with broker ledger |
| Exchange transaction charges | Match with contract notes |
| SEBI/clearing charges | Match with broker statement |
| Internet/telephone | Claim reasonable business portion only |
| Advisory/research fee | Keep invoice and payment proof |
| Interest on trading capital | Keep loan and fund-flow proof |
| Depreciation on laptop/computer | Claim only business-use portion |
| STT | Deductible only if related transaction income is offered as business income |
Section 36(1)(xv) allows deduction of securities transaction tax paid in respect of taxable securities transactions entered into in the course of business, where the related income is included under the head “Profits and Gains of Business or Profession”.
E. Maintain proper documents
The following documents should be preserved:
1. Broker-wise tax P&L statement.
2. Contract notes.
3. Broker ledger.
4. Bank statement.
5. Demat statement.
6. Scrip-wise holding statement.
7. Capital gain statement, where delivery shares are treated as investment.
8. Turnover calculation working.
9. Expense bills and payment proof.
10. Balance sheet, profit and loss account and capital account.
In scrutiny, the department may verify whether the classification in ITR matches broker statements, demat records, bank entries and books.
10. Practical Filing Position
For a person having F&O, intraday and delivery-based share transactions, the safer filing approach is:
| Item | Practical treatment |
| ITR form | ITR-3 |
| F&O | Non-speculative business income/loss |
| Intraday equity | Speculative business income/loss |
| Delivery shares held as investment | Capital gains/loss |
| Delivery shares held as stock-in-trade | Business income/loss, only if facts support |
| Turnover | Difference-based method, not total contract value |
| Audit | Check section 44AB, 5% cash condition and section 44AD lock-in |
| Loss | File return within due date to protect carry forward |
| Records | Maintain broker statements, books, bank records and turnover working |
Conclusion
F&O and intraday trading should generally be reported in ITR-3 under business income. F&O trading on recognised stock exchange is normally non-speculative business, while equity intraday trading is speculative business. Delivery-based shares should be treated as capital assets unless facts clearly show that they are held as stock-in-trade.
Trading loss alone does not make tax audit mandatory. Audit is required only where section 44AB turnover limits are crossed or where section 44AD lock-in provisions apply. Proper classification, timely return filing, consistent accounting treatment and complete documentation are essential for claiming losses, avoiding audit mistakes and reducing future litigation risk.
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