Written by Pradnya Surana
Published on May 29, 2026 | 11 min read
Key Takeaways
Every year, while filing income tax returns, crores of Indians face a common question, Which ITR form do I use? In case you fill an incorrect form, you get a notice from the Income Tax department. Then you need to file returns again, leading to delays and unnecessary stress.
Before we go into the details,
Use ITR 1 (Sahaj) if your total income is up to ₹50 lakh from salary, pension and interest income, you own up to two house properties, and have incurred capital gains up to ₹1.25 lakh. Use ITR 2 if your income is from multiple streams.This includes capital gains over and above the basic threshold, you own more than two house properties, or hold foreign assets. If you are an NRI or a company director, then ITR 2 can be your form.
| Income Earned In | Law Applicable | Return Filing Period |
|---|---|---|
| FY 2025–26 | Old Income-tax Act, 1961 | AY 2026–27 |
| FY 2026–27 | New Income Tax Act, 2025 | Tax Year 2026–27 / filing in 2027 |
Before you start filing, check your Form 26AS and Annual Information Statement (AIS) on the Income Tax portal. These will show all income and TDS already recorded against your PAN.
ITR 1, also called Sahaj, is for resident individuals who are salaried or pensioners with simple income streams. For AY 2026-27, ITR 1 underwent two important changes, due to which more individuals can file their returns through this.
Change 1) Two house properties are now allowed.
Until last year, ITR 1 could only be used by taxpayers with income from one house property. From AY 2026-27, taxpayers can report income or loss from up to two house properties directly in ITR 1 itself. This can benefit many salaried individuals who own two residential properties. For example, someone with one self-occupied house and one rented property may now use the simpler ITR-1 form instead of shifting to ITR 2, provided all other ITR 1 eligibility conditions are met.
Change 2) Limited capital gains now allowed
Taxpayers can now report Long-Term Capital Gains (LTCG) from listed shares and equity mutual funds in ITR 1 itself. This is allowed if the gains under Section 112A do not exceed ₹1.25 lakh during the year and there are no carried forward capital losses.
You can file ITR 1 if you are a resident individual (not NRI or RNOR) and all of the following conditions are met,
You cannot use ITR 1 if any of the following apply to you:
ITR 2 is for individuals and HUFs who have more complex income but do not have income from business or profession. Think of it as the next step up from ITR 1. It covers everything ITR 1 covers, plus capital gains, foreign assets, multiple properties, and more. Simply put, if you are not eligible for ITR 1 and you do not run a business, there is a high chance that ITR 2 is your form.
You must use ITR 2 if any of the following apply,
ITR 2 does not apply if you have income from a business or profession. For business or professional income, you need ITR 3 for actual business income, or ITR 4 if you are opting for presumptive taxation under Section 44AD or 44ADA.
| Situation | ITR 1 | ITR 2 |
|---|---|---|
| Salary or pension income | Yes | Yes |
| Up to two house properties | Yes (new for AY 2026-27) | Yes |
| More than two house properties | No | Yes |
| Interest income (FD, savings) | Yes | Yes |
| LTCG u/s 112A up to ₹1.25 lakh (no carry-forward losses) | Yes (new for AY 2026-27) | Yes |
| LTCG above ₹1.25 lakh | No | Yes |
| Short-term capital gains (STCG) | No | Yes |
| Capital gains from property sale | No | Yes |
| Foreign assets or foreign income | No | Yes |
| NRI or RNOR | No | Yes |
| Director of a company | No | Yes |
| Unlisted equity shares | No | Yes |
| Agricultural income above ₹5,000 | No | Yes |
| Total income above ₹50 lakh | No | Yes |
| Business or professional income | No | No (use ITR 3 or ITR 4) |
Let us analyse some possible situations.
Scenario 1) Salaried employee, one rented flat, no investments sold.
Salary is ₹12 lakh, rental income from one flat ₹2.4 lakh, FD interest ₹60,000. Total income is under ₹50 lakh and there are no capital gains. Verdict - File ITR 1.
Scenario 2) Salaried employee with two flats and small mutual fund gains
Salary ₹18 lakh, two house properties (one self-occupied, one rented), sold equity mutual funds with LTCG of ₹80,000. That is under ₹1.25 lakh with no carry-forward losses. All within ITR 1 limits. Verdict - File ITR 1.
Scenario 3) Salaried employee who sold a flat
Salary ₹20 lakh, sold an apartment with LTCG of ₹18 lakh. Capital gains from property cannot be reported in ITR 1, regardless of the amount. Verdict - File ITR 2.
Scenario 4)Salaried employee with stock trading gains
Salary ₹15 lakh, STCG from selling stocks ₹1.2 lakh. Any STCG at all disqualifies you from ITR 1. File ITR 2.
Scenario 5) Company director with only salary income
Being a Director in any company means you must file ITR 2. No exceptions.
Scenario 6) NRI with salary and NRO FD interest
NRIs cannot file ITR 1 regardless of income level or amount. File ITR 2.
Scenario 7)Salaried person with crypto or VDA income
Virtual Digital Asset (VDA) income is reported under Schedule VDA. That schedule is only available in ITR 2 and ITR 3. File ITR 2.
For ITR-1
The new Income Tax Act, 2025 does not apply to AY 2026 - 27 returns. Income earned during FY 2025 - 26 will still be taxed entirely under the Income-tax Act, 1961. The new law will apply only to income earned from 1 April 2026 onwards, which means taxpayers will start dealing with it while filing returns in 2027.
| Return Type | Due Date |
|---|---|
| ITR 1 and ITR 2 | 31st July 2026 |
| ITR 3 and ITR 4 (non-audit cases) | 31st August 2026 |
| Audit cases | 31st October 2026 |
| Belated return | 31st December 2026 |
| Revised return | 31st March 2027 |
| Transfer pricing cases | 30th November 2026 |
Additional note: Late filing fees and interest may apply if the original return is filed after the applicable due date. Missing the 31st July deadline means a late fee of ₹1,000 if your income is up to ₹5 lakh, or ₹5,000 for higher income. You also pay interest at 1% per month on unpaid tax under Section 234A. And most important, you lose the right to carry forward losses from capital gains, stocks or property if you file late. House property losses are the only exception
If you file using the wrong form, the Income Tax Department will issue a defective return notice under Section 139(9). You get a 15- day window to respond and refile using the correct form. If you do not respond in time, the return is treated as invalid. It is as if you never filed at all. That can mean late filing penalties and loss of carry-forward loss benefits.
Yes. Anyone eligible for ITR 1 can choose to file ITR 2 instead. But ITR 1 is simpler, more pre-filled, and faster to complete. Unless you have a specific reason, use the simplest form that fits.
It depends on the type and amount. If the gain is LTCG under Section 112A from listed equity or equity mutual funds, is under Rs. 1.25 lakh, and you have no carry-forward losses, use ITR 1. If you have any STCG, or LTCG above Rs. 1.25 lakh, or gains from property, use ITR 2.
ITR 2, no question. Being a Director in any company, even an early-stage unlisted startup, disqualifies you from ITR 1. It does not matter whether you draw a director salary or have capital gains.
ITR 2. Any foreign income or foreign assets must be disclosed under Schedule FSI (Foreign Source Income) and Schedule FA (Foreign Assets), both of which are only in ITR 2.
Yes, as long as your income is only from salary, up to two house properties, and interest, and you have no capital gains, foreign assets, or directorship. Total income up to Rs. 50 lakh qualifies for ITR 1.
No. F&O trading is treated as business income. To carry forward F&O losses, you must file ITR 3. Filing ITR 2 will not let you carry forward those losses.
About Author
Pradnya Surana
Sub-Editor
is an engineering and management graduate with 12 years of experience in India’s leading banks. With a natural flair for writing and a passion for all things finance, she reinvented herself as a financial writer. Her work reflects her ability to view the industry from both sides of the table, the financial service provider and the consumer. Experience in fast paced consumer facing roles adds depth, clarity and relevance to her writing.
Read more from PradnyaUpstox is a leading Indian financial services company that offers online trading and investment services in stocks, commodities, currencies, mutual funds, and more. Founded in 2009 and headquartered in Mumbai, Upstox is backed by prominent investors including Ratan Tata, Tiger Global, and Kalaari Capital. It operates under RKSV Securities and is registered with SEBI, NSE, BSE, and other regulatory bodies, ensuring secure and compliant trading experiences.
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