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Published: May 26, 2026 11 min read

ITR-7 AY 2026-27: The Essential Guide for Trusts, NGOs & Political Parties

The ITR-7 AY 2026-27 is the most specialized return form in the Indian tax system, and the most consequential to file correctly. A single misstep here can cost a charitable trust its Section 11 exemption, exposing decades of accumulated funds to taxation at the maximum marginal rate. ITR-7 covers every person required to furnish returns under Sections 139(4A), 139(4B), 139(4C), or 139(4D).

If your entity holds 12A registration, 80G approval, university recognition, or political party registration with the Election Commission, this is your form. Here is what changed for AY 2026-27 and how to file without compromising your tax-exempt status.


Who Must File ITR-7 for AY 2026-27

ITR-7 is mandatory for every person required to furnish a return under:

Section 139(4A): Charitable and Religious Trusts

Any trust or institution holding property under trust for charitable or religious purposes with total income (before exemption under Section 11) exceeding the basic exemption limit must file ITR-7. This covers:

Section 139(4B): Political Parties

Every political party registered with the Election Commission of India whose total income (before exemption under Section 13A) exceeds the basic exemption limit.

Section 139(4C): Specified Institutions, which includes:

Section 139(4D): Universities and Colleges

Every university, college, or other institution referred to in Section 35(1)(ii) or 35(1)(iii) claiming weighted deduction status for scientific research donations.

ITR-7 cannot be filed by any entity not falling under the four sub-sections above. Such entities use ITR-5 or ITR-6.


The 12A Registration: Foundation of Section 11 Exemption

A charitable trust’s tax exemption under Section 11 is conditional on holding a valid 12A registration (now structured as 12AB under the post-2020 regime). The registration:

The application is Form 10A (for fresh or provisional) or Form 10AB (for final or renewal). Filing ITR-7 without a valid 12AB registration disqualifies the Section 11 exemption, making the entire surplus taxable.

80G Registration for Donation Receiving

Separately, trusts that wish their donors to claim Section 80G deduction must hold 80G approval, which is also renewed every 5 years on Form 10AB. Lost 80G approval does not disqualify the Section 11 exemption (the trust itself remains exempt), but it stops donors from claiming the 80G deduction, drying up the donation flow.


The 85% Application Rule: The Heart of Section 11

The defining feature of Section 11 exemption is the 85% application rule:

A charitable or religious trust must apply at least 85% of its income during the relevant year for the charitable or religious purposes for which it is established. The remaining 15% may be accumulated without immediate restriction.

If less than 85% is applied:


Form 10B vs Form 10BB: The Audit Reports

Charitable trusts and institutions with gross income exceeding the basic exemption limit must get their accounts audited and file an audit report. Which form depends on the trust’s income level:

Audit Form When Required
Form 10B Trusts with gross income exceeding ₹5 crore OR foreign contribution received OR significant inter-trust transactions
Form 10BB Other trusts and institutions claiming exemption under Section 10(23C)

Both forms must be filed by the CA before the ITR-7 is filed. The audit report includes financial statements, application of income computation, accumulation details, anonymous donation analysis under Section 115BBC, and verification of restricted transactions with related parties.

Filing ITR-7 without the corresponding 10B or 10BB audit report, or filing the wrong one, disqualifies the Section 11 exemption for that year.


Restricted Transactions Under Section 13

Section 13 lists transactions that disqualify the Section 11 exemption if the trust engages in them. The most enforced:

A single Section 13 violation disqualifies the entire Section 11 exemption for the year, converting the full surplus into taxable income at the maximum marginal rate plus surcharge plus cess.


Anonymous Donations and Section 115BBC

Anonymous donations received by certain charitable trusts (other than religious trusts and certain medical or educational institutions) are taxed at 30% under Section 115BBC if they exceed the higher of:

This rule is designed to prevent unaccounted money from being routed through donations. Trusts must maintain donor identity records (name, address, PAN where available) for every donation above ₹2,000, and disclose this in ITR-7’s Schedule of donations.


ITR-7 Key Schedules

Schedule What it captures
Schedule AI Aggregate income before exemption
Schedule ER Expenses and revenue receipts
Schedule EC Expenditure on charitable or religious objects
Schedule HP Income from house property (often significant for trusts)
Schedule CG Capital gains
Schedule OS Other sources
Schedule VC Voluntary contributions (donations), including anonymous portion
Schedule IE-1 / IE-2 Income and expenditure of educational or medical institutions
Schedule LA Political party: income and details under Section 13A
Schedule J Statement showing investment of accumulated income (Section 11(5))
Schedule Part-B Details of corpus funds
Schedule Part-A IF Information on members or trustees
Schedule TDS / TCS Tax credits
Schedule TR Tax relief
Schedule FA Foreign assets and contributions
Schedule FSI Foreign source income (if any)
Schedule 80G Donations made by the trust (rare but possible)

ITR-7 Filing Deadline AY 2026-27

Category Deadline
Non-audit ITR-7 31 July 2026
Audit applicable (Form 10B / 10BB) 31 October 2026
Form 10B / 10BB upload 30 September 2026
Form 10 (accumulation), must be filed before ITR-7 Before ITR-7 due date
Form 10BD (donation statement under Section 80G) 31 May 2026
Belated return 31 December 2026
Revised return 31 March 2027

Critical: Form 10 for accumulation must be filed before the ITR-7 due date. Even one day late, and the accumulation is disallowed and the unapplied income becomes taxable at the maximum marginal rate.


Common ITR-7 Mistakes That Cost Section 11 Exemption

  1. 85% application shortfall without Form 10 filing. This is the most damaging error. Accumulation is disallowed and the entire shortfall is taxed at the maximum marginal rate.
  2. Investing trust funds outside Section 11(5) modes. Even a small investment in a private company share triggers Section 13(1)(d) and a full exemption loss.
  3. Salary paid to trustees or their relatives above reasonable market rate. This is a Section 13(2)(c) violation, resulting in full exemption loss.
  4. Missing 12AB renewal. Lost registration means no Section 11 exemption, making all income taxable.
  5. Wrong audit form: 10B filed when 10BB applicable (or vice versa). Some High Courts have treated this as curable; others as fatal. Do not risk it.
  6. Form 10BD donation statement not filed by May 31. Donors lose 80G deduction, leading to donor complaints and reduced future donations.
  7. Anonymous donation above the threshold not disclosed. Section 115BBC tax at 30% applies whether disclosed or not.
  8. Inter-trust transactions without exemption status verification. Funds transferred to another trust without checking that trust’s 12AB status can disallow application of income.
  9. Forgetting capital gains on sale of trust property. Capital gains are taxable separately unless reinvested per Section 11(1A).
  10. FCRA compliance gaps for foreign donations. Trusts receiving foreign contributions must maintain FCRA registration and file an FC-4 annual return, which is separate from ITR-7.

Political Party Filing (Section 13A)

Political parties enjoy a complete exemption under Section 13A, but only if all conditions are met:

Schedule LA of ITR-7 captures these compliance points. Failure on any of these conditions disqualifies Section 13A, making the entire income taxable.

The Electoral Bond regime was struck down by the Supreme Court in February 2024; only direct contributions (with disclosure) are now valid.


How Reconscribe Helps ITR-7 Filers

ITR-7 is unforgiving on data integrity. Donation registers must reconcile to Schedule VC. The 85% application calculation must tie to audited financials. Section 11(5) investment proofs must support Schedule J. Reconscribe ingests donor registers, bank statements, FCRA records, and Tally trust accounting data, and outputs structured schedule inputs with built-in compliance checks for 85% application, Section 13 transactions, and anonymous donation thresholds.

See Reconscribe for trust and NGO filings


Frequently Asked Questions

Our trust applied 82% of income this year. What happens?

You have two options before the ITR-7 due date: (a) file Form 10 to accumulate the 3% shortfall for up to 5 years, specifying the future purpose; or (b) accept the shortfall as taxable. If you do nothing, the 3% becomes taxable at the maximum marginal rate (~42.7% with surcharge and cess).

Do we need separate registrations for 12A and 80G?

Yes. 12A (now 12AB) covers the trust’s own tax exemption under Section 11. 80G covers the deductibility for donors. Both are applied for separately on Form 10A or 10AB but typically filed together. Renewal cycles are independent, so track each separately.

Can a Section 8 company file ITR-7?

Yes. A Section 8 company registered for charitable purposes and claiming Section 11 exemption files ITR-7. Section 8 companies that do not claim Section 11 (which is rare) file ITR-6 as regular companies.

What is Form 10BD?

Form 10BD is the annual donation statement filed by 80G-approved trusts by May 31 following the financial year, disclosing every donation received from each donor with the donor’s PAN. Donors then claim the 80G deduction based on the Form 10BE certificate issued by the trust, which is generated from the Form 10BD data.

Our trust missed 12AB renewal by 3 months. What now?

File a fresh Form 10AB application immediately and pursue condonation of delay under Section 119(2)(b) if eligible. The interim period (between expiry and fresh registration) is technically non-exempt, making that year’s income taxable. Consult a specialist tax advisor for the specific facts.


Related guides:


Last reviewed: May 26, 2026 | CBDT Notification: 45/2026

Official reference: Income-tax Act, 2025 (as amended by the Finance Act, 2026), Income Tax Department.

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