What is Form 16? A Complete Guide for Salary, TDS, ITR Filing and Tax Planning
What is Form 16? For most salaried taxpayers in India, Form 16 is the first document they open when they start filing their Income Tax Return. It tells you how much salary you earned, how much tax your employer deducted, which exemptions or deductions were considered, and how your salary income was reported for the financial year.
However, Form 16 is not just a salary certificate. It is also a practical compliance document. It helps you compare salary income, TDS, deductions, AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before submitting your ITR on the Income Tax eFiling portal.
Why Form 16 Matters More Than Most Salaried Taxpayers Think
Every year, millions of Indian taxpayers file their Income Tax Return online. The number has grown steadily because salary credits, TDS, mutual fund gains, bank interest, foreign income, rent, professional income and high-value transactions now appear across digital tax records. The Income Tax Department receives information from multiple reporting sources. Therefore, taxpayers must file returns with care.
For Assessment Year 2024-25, the Ministry of Finance reported record ITR filing volumes before the due date. This shows that more people now use the Income Tax eFiling portal and digital tax filing platforms. Yet, higher digital adoption also increases the need for accurate disclosures.
Many first-time filers assume that Form 16 is enough to file ITR. That is a common mistake. Form 16 covers salary and TDS reported by your employer. However, your final Income Tax Return may also need bank interest, dividend income, capital gains tax details, foreign assets, freelance income, rental income, advance tax, deductions and other disclosures.
This is where confusion begins. A salaried person may ask whether to choose the old tax regime or the new tax regime. A freelancer may wonder whether Form 16 applies to professional income. An NRI may have Form 16 from an Indian employer but also foreign income or DTAA relief questions. A taxpayer with salary and mutual fund redemptions may need ITR-2 instead of ITR-1.
In short, Form 16 is important, but it is not the full tax picture. Before filing, you should match Form 16 with AIS, TIS and Form 26AS. You should also check your deductions, tax regime, ITR form and refund claim. This prevents errors, notices, delayed refunds and revised return situations.
WealthSure helps taxpayers read Form 16 correctly, identify gaps, compare tax regimes and file accurate returns through expert-assisted tax filing. The goal is simple. You should not just file your ITR. You should file it confidently, correctly and with proper tax planning.
What is Form 16 in Income Tax?
Form 16 is a TDS certificate issued by an employer to an employee. It confirms that the employer deducted tax at source from salary and deposited it with the government. It also gives a structured summary of salary, exemptions, deductions and tax calculation.
The Income Tax Department describes Form 16 as a certificate for tax deducted from salary. It generally has two parts. Part A shows employer, employee and TDS deposit details. Part B shows the salary breakup, deductions and tax computation. You can refer to the official tax information resources of the Income Tax Department of India for broader TDS guidance.
If your employer deducted TDS under the salary provisions, they should issue Form 16 after the financial year ends. Usually, salaried employees receive it around June. However, the timing can depend on TDS return processing and employer payroll compliance.
Form 16 does not automatically mean your ITR is complete. It is a starting document. You still need to verify other incomes and deductions. For example, interest from savings accounts, fixed deposits, capital gains on mutual funds, foreign income, freelance receipts and rental income may not appear fully in your Form 16.
Simple meaning: Form 16 tells you what your employer reported as salary income and how much TDS they deducted. Your ITR tells the Income Tax Department your total income from all sources.
Who Issues Form 16?
Your employer issues Form 16. The employer must have deducted TDS from your salary and filed the relevant TDS return. If you changed jobs during the year, you may receive Form 16 from each employer for the period of employment.
Who Uses Form 16?
Form 16 is mainly useful for salaried individuals. However, it also helps tax advisors, payroll teams and financial planners review income tax return filing online. Freelancers and business owners usually do not receive Form 16 for professional receipts. Instead, they may receive Form 16A for non-salary TDS, depending on the nature of payment.
Form 16 Part A and Part B: What Each Section Means
Understanding Form 16 becomes easier when you split it into two parts. Part A is mostly about TDS deposit details. Part B is mostly about salary, exemptions, deductions and taxable income.
| Form 16 Section | What It Contains | Why It Matters for ITR |
|---|---|---|
| Part A | Employer TAN, employer PAN, employee PAN, assessment year, TDS deducted and deposited | Helps you verify TDS credit with Form 26AS and AIS |
| Part B | Gross salary, exempt allowances, standard deduction, Chapter VI-A deductions and tax calculation | Helps you calculate salary income and deductions correctly |
| Annexure details | Perquisites, allowances and employer-provided benefits where applicable | Helps high-income employees and senior professionals avoid under-reporting |
Key Details You Should Check in Part A
- Your PAN should be correct.
- Your employer TAN should be visible.
- The assessment year should match the ITR year.
- The quarterly TDS amount should match Form 26AS.
- Your name should be reasonably consistent with PAN records.
Key Details You Should Check in Part B
- Gross salary and taxable salary should look correct.
- Standard deduction should be considered where applicable.
- House rent allowance exemption should match your proofs.
- Deductions under 80C, 80D, 80CCD and other sections should match submitted proofs.
- Tax regime selection should reflect your actual filing decision.
If you notice errors, contact your HR or payroll team quickly. In many cases, the employer may need to revise TDS records before a corrected Form 16 can be issued. You can also use WealthSure’s assisted filing support to review Form 16 before filing.
Form 16, Form 26AS, AIS and TIS: How They Work Together
Many taxpayers treat Form 16 as the final document. However, the Income Tax Department now uses multiple information sources. Therefore, your ITR should match your overall tax profile, not just salary details.
Form 26AS shows tax credits, including TDS and TCS. AIS gives a wider view of financial information such as interest, dividends, securities transactions and other reported data. TIS summarizes taxable information from AIS in a simplified format. Form 16 provides employer-reported salary and salary TDS.
Why Matching Matters
If your Form 16 says one thing and AIS says another, the Income Tax Department may ask for clarification. For example, your employer may report salary correctly, but your AIS may also show fixed deposit interest, dividends or mutual fund redemptions. If you ignore those details, your ITR may be incomplete.
Similarly, if TDS appears in Form 16 but does not appear in Form 26AS, you should investigate before claiming credit. Otherwise, your refund or tax computation may face delays.
WealthSure Tip
Do not file ITR only by copying numbers from Form 16. First, download AIS, TIS and Form 26AS from the eFiling portal. Then compare salary, TDS, interest, capital gains and deductions. If something looks confusing, use ask a tax expert support before submitting the return.
How to Use Form 16 for ITR Filing India
Form 16 helps you prepare your Income Tax Return, but you still need to follow a careful process. This matters because ITR filing India has become more data-driven. The portal may pre-fill information, but you remain responsible for final accuracy.
Step 1: Collect Your Form 16
Download Form 16 from your employer’s HR portal or request it from payroll. If you worked for more than one employer, collect Form 16 from each employer. Then check the financial year and assessment year.
Step 2: Verify PAN, Salary and TDS
Check your PAN, taxable salary and TDS. Even a small PAN error can create problems. Also check whether salary from the previous employer was considered by the current employer. If not, your final tax liability may be higher.
Step 3: Download AIS, TIS and Form 26AS
Visit the official Income Tax eFiling portal and download your tax records. Compare them with Form 16. This step is especially important if you have bank interest, dividends, capital gains, foreign income or other non-salary income.
Step 4: Select the Correct ITR Form
Many salaried taxpayers can use ITR-1. However, you may need ITR-2 if you have capital gains, more complex income, foreign assets or NRI considerations. You may need ITR-3 if you also have business or professional income.
Step 5: Compare Old Tax Regime and New Tax Regime
Your Form 16 may show tax calculation based on the regime selected with your employer. Still, you should compare both regimes before filing if the law allows it for your case. The old tax regime can benefit taxpayers with deductions and exemptions. The new tax regime can benefit taxpayers who prefer lower slab rates with fewer deductions.
Step 6: File, Verify and Track
After filing, e-verify your ITR. Then track refund status and notices. If you discover an error later, you may need a revised return or updated return. WealthSure provides revised or updated return filing support for eligible taxpayers.
Which ITR Form Should You Choose After Reading Form 16?
Form 16 helps with salary details. However, the right ITR form depends on your full income profile. Choosing the wrong form can lead to defective return notices or filing errors.
| Taxpayer Profile | Common ITR Form | WealthSure Support |
|---|---|---|
| Salaried resident with simple income | ITR-1, subject to eligibility | ITR filing for Salaried taxpayers |
| Salaried taxpayer with capital gains or NRI status | ITR-2 | capital gains tax support |
| Professional or business income | ITR-3 | business and professional ITR filing |
| Presumptive income taxpayer | ITR-4, subject to eligibility | ITR-4 presumptive income filing |
| Firms, LLPs, companies, trusts and NGOs | ITR-5, ITR-6 or ITR-7 | firm and LLP filing |
Do not select ITR-1 only because you received Form 16. For instance, a salaried person with listed equity capital gains generally needs ITR-2. Likewise, a salaried person with professional consulting receipts may need ITR-3. If you are unsure, use WealthSure’s Income Tax Return filing online assistance.
Form 16 and Old Tax Regime vs New Tax Regime
One of the biggest questions after receiving Form 16 is whether the old tax regime or new tax regime is better. The answer depends on your income, deductions, exemptions and financial goals. It also depends on the assessment year rules, because tax laws may change.
The old tax regime allows several deductions and exemptions. These may include section 80C investments, 80D medical insurance premium, HRA exemption, home loan interest, NPS deduction and LTA, subject to conditions. The new tax regime offers different slab rates and fewer deductions. Therefore, you should compare before filing.
Practical Example: Salaried Employee Earning Above ₹15 Lakh
Rohan earns ₹18 lakh per year. His Form 16 shows salary income and TDS under the new tax regime because he selected it with payroll. However, he also pays rent, invests in ELSS, contributes to NPS and pays health insurance premium for his parents.
The common mistake would be to file exactly as shown in payroll without comparing regimes. The correct approach is to calculate both old and new tax regime outcomes. If eligible deductions are strong, the old regime may be better. However, this depends on actual numbers and documentation.
Expert guidance can help Rohan compare tax regimes, review HRA, check 80C and 80D proofs, and file correctly. WealthSure’s tax planning services can help salaried taxpayers plan before the financial year ends, not only during filing season.
Common Mistakes Taxpayers Make While Using Form 16
Form 16 can make tax filing easier. Yet, wrong interpretation can create errors. Here are mistakes you should avoid.
- Filing ITR without checking AIS and Form 26AS.
- Ignoring savings account interest or fixed deposit interest.
- Choosing ITR-1 despite having capital gains.
- Claiming deductions without proof or eligibility.
- Assuming employer TDS means no additional tax is payable.
- Not reporting income from previous employment.
- Not checking old tax regime vs new tax regime.
- Ignoring foreign assets, NRI income or DTAA implications.
- Filing late and then missing refund tracking or notice timelines.
- Using free tax filing without reviewing complex income details.
Practical Example: Taxpayer Receives a Notice
Meera files ITR using only Form 16. She forgets to report dividend income and short-term capital gains from mutual funds. Later, her AIS shows these transactions, and she receives a communication from the Income Tax Department.
The common mistake was assuming Form 16 covers everything. The correct approach is to reconcile AIS, TIS, broker statements and bank records before filing. If she receives a notice, she should respond with facts, documents and corrected calculations.
WealthSure provides notice response support and income tax notice drafting and filing responses for taxpayers who need structured assistance.
Can You File ITR Without Form 16?
Yes, you can file ITR without Form 16 if you have the right salary and tax details. However, you must be careful. You can use salary slips, bank statements, AIS, Form 26AS, TIS and employer communication to prepare your return.
This situation can happen when you changed jobs, your employer delayed Form 16, no TDS was deducted, or you worked with a small employer. Still, your tax filing responsibility does not disappear.
Documents You May Need If Form 16 Is Missing
- Monthly salary slips.
- Bank statement showing salary credits.
- Form 26AS for TDS credit.
- AIS and TIS records.
- Investment and deduction proofs.
- Rent receipts and landlord PAN, where applicable.
- Previous employer salary details, if you changed jobs.
If Form 16 is unavailable, assisted filing becomes more useful. A tax expert can rebuild salary income, calculate taxable salary and prevent under-reporting. You can start by using WealthSure’s free income tax filing option if your case is simple, or choose expert assistance for complex income.
Form 16 for Freelancers, Professionals, NRIs and Business Owners
Form 16 mainly applies to salary. However, many taxpayers have mixed income. A person may have salary for part of the year and freelance income for the rest. An NRI may have Indian salary, rent or capital gains. A small business owner may have salary from one source and presumptive business income from another.
Practical Example: Freelancer With Professional Income
Aditi worked as a salaried employee until September. Then she became an independent consultant. She received Form 16 for salary and Form 16A from clients who deducted TDS on professional fees.
The common mistake would be filing ITR-1 using only Form 16. The correct approach is to report salary and professional income properly. She may need ITR-3, depending on her facts. She should also review expenses, advance tax, GST status and presumptive taxation eligibility.
WealthSure’s business and professional ITR filing service can help professionals avoid wrong form selection and missed disclosures.
Practical Example: NRI With Indian Income
Arjun moved abroad during the year. He received Form 16 from his Indian employer for the period he worked in India. He also has Indian bank interest and mutual fund capital gains.
The common mistake would be filing as a resident without checking residential status. The correct approach is to first determine residential status, then report Indian income, assets and eligible treaty relief where applicable. DTAA relief depends on facts, documents and country rules.
WealthSure offers NRI tax filing service, residential status determination, foreign income reporting and DTAA advisory for cross-border tax situations.
Practical Example: Small Business Owner Using Presumptive Taxation
Vikram runs a small consultancy and also receives director remuneration from a company. He may have salary-like income, professional income and TDS credits. His Form 16 does not explain the entire business picture.
The correct approach is to classify each income properly. He should review presumptive taxation eligibility, advance tax and business deductions. If eligible, he may use ITR-4. Otherwise, ITR-3 may apply.
For such cases, WealthSure provides ITR-4 presumptive income filing and business ITR support.
Tax Saving Deductions You Should Review With Form 16
Form 16 shows deductions considered by your employer. However, you should verify whether all eligible deductions were included. Sometimes employees miss declaring investments to payroll. In other cases, they invest after the employer’s proof submission deadline.
Common Deductions and Exemptions to Review
- Section 80C: EPF, PPF, ELSS, life insurance premium, tuition fees and eligible home loan principal repayment.
- Section 80D: Medical insurance premium, subject to eligibility and limits.
- Section 80CCD: NPS contribution, subject to applicable rules.
- HRA exemption: Available under the old tax regime if conditions are met.
- Home loan interest: Deduction depends on property type, regime and legal conditions.
- LTA: Available only under specific conditions and documentation.
Tax benefits depend on eligibility, documentation and the selected tax regime. Therefore, do not claim deductions only because they sound common. Review them properly. WealthSure’s tax saving suggestions, Tax Optimizer and automated deduction discovery can help identify possible deductions based on your profile.
Beyond Form 16: Tax Planning and Wealth Creation
Form 16 helps you file your Income Tax Return. However, good financial planning goes beyond filing. Once your tax records are clean, you can use the same financial information to improve savings, insurance, investments and retirement planning.
For example, a salaried person may use Form 16 to understand salary structure, taxable allowances and deduction gaps. Then they can consider salary restructuring, investment-linked tax planning, insurance planning and SIP investment India options based on goals and risk profile.
Market-linked investments carry risk. Therefore, SIPs and mutual funds should match your time horizon, risk tolerance and financial goals. You can refer to regulatory education and investor protection resources from SEBI for capital market awareness and RBI for banking and financial system information.
How WealthSure Connects Tax Filing With Financial Planning
- Review Form 16, AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before ITR filing.
- Compare old tax regime and new tax regime.
- Identify eligible deductions and missing disclosures.
- Plan tax saving options before the year ends.
- Support SIP investment solutions and goal-based investing.
- Build retirement planning and insurance protection strategies.
For long-term planning, explore WealthSure’s investment-linked tax planning, salary restructuring, retirement planning support and financial advisory services.
Free Tax Filing vs Expert-Assisted Filing: Which Is Better With Form 16?
Free tax filing can work well for simple salaried taxpayers with one employer, no capital gains, no foreign income, no complex deductions and clean AIS records. However, paid or expert-assisted filing becomes valuable when your tax profile is more detailed.
| Situation | Free Filing May Work | Expert Assistance Helps More |
|---|---|---|
| One employer and simple salary | Yes, if records match | Useful for review and peace of mind |
| Salary plus capital gains | Risky if details are not understood | Helpful for ITR-2 and capital gains schedules |
| NRI or foreign income | Usually not ideal | Helpful for residential status and DTAA |
| Freelance or business income | May lead to wrong form selection | Helpful for ITR-3, ITR-4 and advance tax |
| Notice or mismatch | Not recommended without review | Helpful for response and documentation |
If your case is simple, you can try WealthSure’s free income tax filing. If you need deeper review, choose expert-assisted tax filing or Elite 360 support for complex tax situations.
Need Help Reading Your Form 16 Before Filing ITR?
Upload your Form 16, compare it with AIS, TIS and Form 26AS, and get expert guidance for the right ITR form, tax regime, deductions and disclosures.
Quick Form 16 Checklist Before You File
Use this checklist before submitting your Income Tax Return filing online.
FAQs on What is Form 16 and ITR Filing
1. What is Form 16 and why is it important for salaried employees?
Form 16 is a salary TDS certificate issued by an employer to an employee. It confirms salary paid, tax deducted at source and tax deposited with the government. It is important because it gives the basic salary information needed for Income Tax Return filing. However, it does not always cover your full tax profile. For example, your Form 16 may not include savings account interest, fixed deposit interest, dividends, capital gains, rental income, freelance income or foreign income. Therefore, you should use Form 16 along with AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before filing. It also helps you check deductions, tax regime and employer-reported income. If the details do not match your actual income, ask your employer or tax expert before filing. Filing based only on Form 16 can create mistakes if you have multiple income sources.
2. Is free tax filing enough if I have Form 16?
Free tax filing may be enough if your case is very simple. For example, you have one employer, no capital gains, no foreign income, no business income and no major AIS mismatch. In that case, Form 16, Form 26AS and AIS may be easy to reconcile. However, free filing can become risky if your income profile has complexity. Salary plus mutual fund gains, salary plus freelance income, NRI status, multiple employers, HRA disputes, deductions not considered by payroll or income tax notice history need careful review. The government eFiling portal enables self-filing, but the responsibility for accuracy remains with the taxpayer. Expert-assisted filing helps when you need form selection, tax regime comparison, deduction review or documentation support. WealthSure offers both simple and assisted filing options, so taxpayers can choose based on complexity.
3. How do I choose the correct ITR form after receiving Form 16?
The correct ITR form depends on your complete income profile, not only Form 16. A resident salaried taxpayer with simple income may be eligible for ITR-1. However, ITR-1 may not apply if you have capital gains, foreign assets, NRI status, business income or certain other conditions. If you have salary and capital gains, ITR-2 may apply. If you have business or professional income, ITR-3 may apply. If you use presumptive taxation and meet eligibility conditions, ITR-4 may apply. Firms and LLPs generally use ITR-5, companies use ITR-6 and certain trusts or institutions use ITR-7. Choosing the wrong form can lead to defective return issues. Therefore, review Form 16, AIS, TIS, Form 26AS and all income sources before deciding.
4. Does Form 16 decide whether I should use the old or new tax regime?
Form 16 may show the tax regime considered by your employer for TDS calculation. However, it may not always decide the best regime for final ITR filing. Your final choice depends on assessment year rules, income, deductions, exemptions and eligibility. The old tax regime can be useful if you have significant deductions such as 80C, 80D, HRA, home loan interest or NPS. The new tax regime may work better if your deduction profile is limited and slab benefit is higher. You should compare both regimes before filing, where switching is allowed under the applicable law. Also, remember that deductions need proper documentation. WealthSure can help compare regimes and identify eligible deductions, but it does not promise guaranteed tax savings. Final tax liability depends on actual facts and tax rules.
5. How long does an income tax refund take after filing with Form 16?
Refund timelines vary. They depend on accurate filing, e-verification, processing by the Income Tax Department and whether there are mismatches or notices. Filing with Form 16 does not guarantee a refund. A refund arises only when taxes paid or TDS exceed the final tax liability. If your Form 16 TDS matches Form 26AS and your ITR disclosures match AIS and TIS, processing may be smoother. However, errors in bank account details, PAN, TDS credit, deductions or income reporting can delay refund processing. Always e-verify the return after filing. Also track your return status on the Income Tax eFiling portal. If a mismatch or notice appears, respond within the given timeline. WealthSure can help review refund-related issues and provide notice response support where needed.
6. What should I do if I receive an Income Tax notice despite filing with Form 16?
Do not panic if you receive an Income Tax notice. First, read the notice carefully and identify the section, issue and response deadline. Many notices arise due to mismatch between ITR, Form 16, Form 26AS, AIS or TIS. For example, you may have missed bank interest, dividend income, capital gains, previous employer salary or professional income. In other cases, TDS credit or deduction claims may need clarification. Collect relevant documents before responding. Do not submit a casual reply without checking facts. If the return has an error, a revised return may be possible within the allowed timeline. In some cases, an updated return may apply. WealthSure offers income tax notice response support, drafting and assessment support for taxpayers who need expert help.
7. Which tax saving deductions should I check in Form 16?
You should check whether your Form 16 includes eligible deductions and exemptions that you actually claimed or can claim under the selected tax regime. Common items include section 80C investments, section 80D medical insurance premium, NPS deduction under section 80CCD, HRA exemption, home loan interest and LTA, where applicable. However, each deduction has conditions, limits and documentation requirements. Also, many deductions are linked to the old tax regime. If you choose the new tax regime, several deductions may not be available. Therefore, do not assume every deduction applies automatically. Compare your investment proofs, rent receipts, insurance premium receipts and loan statements with Form 16. WealthSure’s tax saving suggestions and deduction discovery support can help identify eligible deductions, subject to applicable law.
8. Do investment-linked tax benefits shown in Form 16 mean my investments are financially suitable?
No. A tax benefit does not automatically make an investment suitable. Form 16 may show deductions for eligible tax-saving investments such as EPF, PPF, ELSS, life insurance premium or NPS. However, investment suitability depends on your goals, risk profile, liquidity needs, time horizon and family responsibilities. For example, ELSS is market-linked and carries risk. Life insurance should not be bought only for tax saving. NPS can support retirement planning, but it has withdrawal and lock-in rules. Therefore, tax planning and financial planning should work together. A smart approach is to first secure emergency funds and insurance protection, then plan tax-saving investments. WealthSure offers financial advisory services, SIP investment solutions and retirement planning support, but market-linked investments do not provide guaranteed returns.
9. I am a freelancer. Is Form 16 useful for my tax filing?
Form 16 is useful only for salary income. If you were employed for part of the year and freelanced for the rest, Form 16 helps report salary income. However, your freelance or professional income must be reported separately. Clients may issue Form 16A for TDS on professional payments, but that is different from Form 16. Freelancers should review receipts, expenses, TDS credits, advance tax, GST impact and presumptive taxation eligibility. Many freelancers wrongly file ITR-1 using salary details only. That can create under-reporting problems. Depending on facts, ITR-3 or ITR-4 may apply. If you have mixed salary and professional income, expert guidance is useful. WealthSure helps professionals choose the correct ITR form, reconcile TDS and plan advance tax.
10. Is expert-assisted filing worth it for NRI taxpayers with Form 16?
Yes, expert-assisted filing can be valuable for NRI taxpayers. Form 16 may cover Indian salary for the period of employment, but NRI tax filing often involves more questions. You may need to determine residential status, report Indian income, review foreign income reporting rules, check capital gains, claim DTAA relief and disclose foreign assets where required. You may also need to handle TDS on rent, interest or property sale. Filing as the wrong residential status can create compliance problems. Similarly, ignoring treaty documentation may result in incorrect tax treatment. WealthSure’s NRI tax filing service, residential status determination and DTAA advisory can help you file with better clarity. Final tax treatment depends on facts, documents, Indian tax law and treaty provisions.
Conclusion: Form 16 Is the Starting Point, Not the Whole Tax Story
So, what is Form 16 in practical terms? It is your salary tax certificate, your employer-reported TDS summary and one of the most important documents for salaried ITR filing. However, it is not the only document you need. Accurate Income Tax Return filing requires a full view of salary, other income, AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, deductions, tax regime and ITR form selection.
Free filing can work for simple cases. However, expert-assisted filing becomes useful when you have multiple employers, capital gains, NRI income, freelance income, old vs new tax regime confusion, deduction issues or notice concerns. It can also help you move from last-minute filing to proactive tax planning.
Good tax compliance also supports better financial decisions. Once your income, deductions and cash flows are clear, you can plan SIPs, insurance, retirement, loans and goal-based investments more confidently. WealthSure brings tax filing, compliance, advisory and wealth planning into one connected financial ecosystem.
File Your ITR With Confidence
Upload your Form 16, review your tax profile and get expert support for ITR filing, tax planning, notice response, NRI filing and financial advisory.
At WealthSure, we don’t just file taxes — we simplify your financial journey and help you build long-term wealth with confidence.
Compliance note: Tax laws, forms, deductions, tax regimes and filing rules may change by assessment year. Final tax liability depends on income, residential status, deductions, regime selection, disclosures and documentation. WealthSure may provide advisory, filing, documentation and compliance support. Investment services are advisory or execution-based as applicable. Market-linked investments carry risk. Tax benefits depend on eligibility and documentation.
For official public resources, taxpayers may refer to the Income Tax eFiling portal, Income Tax Department, National Portal of India, SEBI and RBI.