Income Tax Department Portal: Practical Guide for ITR Filing, AIS, Refunds and Tax Compliance
The income tax department portal is no longer just a website you visit once a year to submit your ITR. For Indian taxpayers, it has become the digital control room for filing returns, checking tax credits, paying taxes, e-verifying ITR, tracking refunds, viewing AIS, responding to compliance alerts and managing several tax-related services in one place.
Many taxpayers open the portal only when the filing deadline is close. That is where mistakes start. Your Form 16 may not include bank interest. Your AIS may show capital gains or dividends that you forgot to report. Your bank account may not be validated for refund. Your return may be submitted but not e-verified. A small portal step missed today can become a refund delay, defective return, mismatch notice or avoidable follow-up later.
This guide explains how to use the portal like a financially aware taxpayer, not just like a last-minute filer. You will learn what the portal is used for, how to approach login and profile checks, what to review before ITR filing, how AIS and Form 26AS help, how e-verification works, how refunds are tracked, and when you should consider expert-assisted support. WealthSure supports taxpayers with expert-assisted tax filing, tax planning, notice response, NRI tax filing and complex income reporting, but this article is designed to help you understand the process first.
The official portal is powerful, but it is not a substitute for tax judgement. It displays data, provides utilities and enables services. You still need to choose the correct assessment year, select the right ITR form, disclose income accurately, compare the old and new tax regimes, verify tax credits, pay dues correctly and preserve records. If you have only simple salary income, self-service may work with careful review. If you have capital gains, freelance income, business income, foreign income, NRI status, high-value transactions or tax notices, guided support can reduce risk and improve compliance confidence.
Tax rules, forms, due dates, portal labels and utilities may change by assessment year. Always verify current instructions on the official Income Tax e-Filing portal before filing or responding to a tax communication.
What is the Income Tax Department portal?
The Income Tax Department portal is the official digital platform through which taxpayers access income tax services in India. It allows registered users to file income tax returns, view tax-related information, pay taxes, verify returns, check refund status, submit forms, access certain notices and raise grievances. It is part of India’s wider digital tax administration ecosystem and is used by individuals, Hindu Undivided Families, firms, LLPs, companies, trusts, tax professionals and intermediaries.
For a salaried employee, the portal may look like a filing page. For a freelancer, it becomes a place to match TDS with professional receipts. For an investor, it helps review dividends, securities transactions and capital gains-related information reported through AIS. For an NRI, it may be used for Indian income reporting and refund tracking. For a business owner, it connects tax payments, forms and return filing.
Important: The portal provides access to tax records and filing tools, but the responsibility for correct income disclosure remains with the taxpayer. Pre-filled data should be reviewed, not blindly accepted.
Who should use the income tax department portal?
Any person with Indian income tax filing, payment, verification, refund or compliance needs may need to use the portal. Even taxpayers who file through a tax professional should understand the basics because they must review the final computation, verify the return and track status after submission.
Use the portal to file ITR, verify Form 16 details, check tax credits, validate bank accounts and track refunds.
Use it to match client TDS, report professional income, pay advance tax or self-assessment tax and file the correct return.
Use it to review AIS entries, report capital gains, disclose dividends and avoid mismatch with reported financial transactions.
Use it for Indian income reporting, refund tracking and compliance, while carefully evaluating residential status and disclosure requirements.
Use it to pay tax, file ITR, submit forms, respond to communications and manage compliance workflows.
Use it to create a taxpayer profile, understand pre-filled data, submit the first return and complete e-verification.
Key services available on the Income Tax Department portal
The portal brings several taxpayer services into one place. The exact labels and pathways can change, but the core service areas usually include return filing, tax payments, information statements, verification, refund tracking, forms and grievance support. The official Income Tax Department also provides service pages and help content through its tax information websites, including the Income Tax Department information portal.
| Portal Service | What It Helps You Do | Common Risk If Ignored |
|---|---|---|
| Income Tax Return filing | Prepare, submit and revise applicable ITR forms for the assessment year. | Wrong form, missing income or unverified return. |
| AIS and TIS | Review income and transaction information reported to the tax department. | Mismatch if interest, dividends, securities or other income are missed. |
| Form 26AS | Check TDS, TCS and tax payment credits linked to PAN. | Refund delay or tax demand due to credit mismatch. |
| e-Pay Tax | Pay advance tax, self-assessment tax or other eligible tax dues online. | Wrong assessment year or payment category may create follow-up work. |
| e-Verification | Verify submitted ITR using available methods such as Aadhaar OTP, EVC or net banking where eligible. | Submitted return may remain incomplete if not verified. |
| Refund status | Track processing and refund movement after filing and verification. | Bank validation or mismatch issues may remain unnoticed. |
| Grievance and support | Raise service-related grievances and track responses. | Unresolved technical, payment or refund issues may remain pending. |
Login, profile and bank validation checks before filing
Before you start filing, log in through the official portal and review your profile. Many ITR issues are not calculation errors; they are data hygiene issues. A wrong email, inactive mobile number, outdated address or unvalidated bank account can create friction during verification or refund processing.
Basic profile items to review
- PAN and Aadhaar linkage status, where applicable.
- Registered mobile number and email ID for OTP and communication.
- Residential address and contact details.
- Bank accounts added and validated for refund credit.
- Authorized signatory details for non-individual taxpayers, where relevant.
- Pending actions, notices, worklist items or compliance alerts.
Safety reminder: Do not log in using links from unknown messages. Type the official portal address manually or use a trusted bookmark. Never share your password, OTP, Aadhaar OTP, bank credentials or EVC with unauthorized persons.
How taxpayers use the portal for ITR filing
The income tax department portal is central to online ITR filing. You select the assessment year, choose the filing mode, select the appropriate ITR form, confirm personal details, review pre-filled data, add or correct income, claim eligible deductions, verify tax credits, pay tax if due, submit the return and then e-verify it.
Step 1: Select the right assessment year
The financial year and assessment year are different. Income earned during a financial year is reported in the relevant assessment year. Selecting the wrong assessment year is a common filing error, especially for first-time users. Before clicking submit, check the year on the return, challan and computation.
Step 2: Choose the correct ITR form
The portal may guide form selection, but the final responsibility remains with you. Salary-only cases may be simpler, while capital gains, business income, professional income, foreign assets, directorship, unlisted shares, NRI status and other conditions may require a different form. WealthSure offers form-specific support such as capital gains tax support through ITR-2 filing and business and professional ITR filing where applicable.
Step 3: Review pre-filled data, do not blindly accept it
Pre-filled data is convenient, but it may be incomplete or may need classification. For example, interest income may appear in AIS but not in your Form 16. Dividend income may be reported separately. Capital gains may require correct schedules. A freelancer’s client TDS may appear, but gross receipts and deductible expenses still need proper treatment.
Step 4: Compare tax regime options
The old and new tax regimes can lead to different outcomes. A taxpayer with HRA, insurance premiums, eligible investments, NPS, home loan interest or medical insurance may need a careful comparison. A taxpayer with fewer deductions may find the new regime simpler. The final choice should be based on calculation and eligibility, not hearsay. For structured planning, explore WealthSure’s personal tax planning support.
Step 5: Submit and e-verify
After filing, complete e-verification through an available method. The Government of India services directory notes that e-verification can be done online through methods such as Aadhaar OTP, EVC or net banking where eligible. You can read more on the official e-Verify return service page.
AIS, TIS and Form 26AS: why portal review matters
AIS, TIS and Form 26AS are among the most important portal-linked resources before filing. They help you identify income and tax credit information reported to the tax department. The Income Tax Department explains through its official AIS FAQ that from AY 2023-24 onwards, Form 26AS on TRACES displays only TDS and TCS related data, while other details are available in AIS.
What to check in AIS
- Salary and employer-reported details.
- Interest from savings accounts, fixed deposits and recurring deposits.
- Dividend income.
- Securities and mutual fund transactions.
- Property-related transactions where reported.
- Foreign remittance or high-value transaction information, where applicable.
What to check in Form 26AS
- TDS deducted by employer, bank, client or other deductor.
- TCS where applicable.
- Advance tax and self-assessment tax payments.
- Tax credits linked to PAN.
If AIS shows incorrect information, use the available feedback mechanism where applicable and keep supporting documents. If Form 26AS does not show TDS that was deducted, ask the deductor to check whether the TDS return was filed correctly and under the correct PAN.
Unsure about AIS mismatch?
WealthSure can help you compare AIS, Form 26AS, Form 16, capital gains statements and bank records before filing.
E-verification, refunds and post-filing actions
Filing does not end when you submit the return. Your ITR must be verified. After verification, the return moves through processing. If a refund is due, it is subject to processing, tax credit matching, bank validation and departmental checks. Refunds are not guaranteed merely because a return shows a refund claim.
Post-filing checklist
- Download the ITR acknowledgement after submission.
- Complete e-verification as soon as possible.
- Save the filed return, computation, challans and supporting documents.
- Track return processing status through the portal.
- Check refund status and bank validation if refund is expected.
- Read any intimation carefully and compare it with your filed return.
If you find an error after filing, you may need to file a revised return within the permitted timeline. If an earlier year needs correction subject to conditions, an updated return may be relevant. WealthSure offers revised or updated return filing support for taxpayers who need structured correction assistance.
Using the portal for tax payments and challans
The e-Pay Tax service helps taxpayers pay taxes online. This may include advance tax, self-assessment tax and other eligible payments depending on the context. Before making any payment, verify the assessment year, payment type, PAN, amount and tax head. A wrong challan can create avoidable reconciliation work.
Freelancers, consultants, investors with large capital gains and business owners should pay special attention to advance tax. If tax payable after TDS exceeds the applicable threshold, advance tax obligations may arise. You can use WealthSure’s advance tax calculation support to estimate liability and avoid last-minute surprises.
Portal notices, compliance alerts and grievance support
The portal may show communications, notices, intimation orders, demands, refund issues or pending actions. Do not panic when you see a notice. First, identify the section, assessment year, due date, issue type and required response. Then compare the notice with your filed return, AIS, Form 26AS, bank records, capital gains statements and supporting documents.
For service-related issues, the Income Tax Department provides grievance mechanisms on the portal. Taxpayers may also use government grievance systems such as CPGRAMS for eligible public grievance matters. However, a grievance is different from a tax response. If you have received a tax notice, mismatch communication, defective return notice or scrutiny-related communication, get the response reviewed before submission.
Received an income tax notice?
A rushed response can make a simple mismatch more complicated. Get the notice reviewed before you reply.
Practical examples: how real taxpayers use the portal
Example 1: Salaried employee filing ITR with Form 16
Situation: Rohan is a salaried employee. He logs into the portal and sees that his salary is pre-filled. He assumes Form 16 is enough and almost submits the return without checking AIS.
Common confusion: His savings bank interest and fixed deposit interest are visible in AIS but not included in his Form 16 computation. If he files only based on salary, his return may miss taxable income.
Correct approach: Rohan should compare Form 16, AIS, TIS and Form 26AS, include taxable interest, check regime choice and then file. If his case is simple, self-filing may work. If he changed jobs or has multiple income sources, expert review can help. WealthSure’s upload your Form 16 service can help salaried taxpayers who want assisted filing.
Example 2: Freelancer matching client TDS with professional receipts
Situation: Aditi is a freelance designer. Multiple clients deducted TDS during the year. She sees tax credits in Form 26AS but is unsure whether that means her tax filing is complete.
Common confusion: TDS credit is not the same as income reporting. She must report professional receipts, eligible expenses, other income and tax payable correctly. She may also need to evaluate presumptive taxation or regular books depending on facts.
Correct approach: Aditi should reconcile invoices, bank statements, Form 26AS and AIS. If tax is still payable, she may need to pay self-assessment tax before filing. Professional help can reduce errors in expense claims, form selection and tax computation.
Example 3: Investor with capital gains visible in AIS
Situation: Meera sold mutual funds and shares during the year. Her AIS shows securities-related entries, but she is not sure how to report capital gains in the ITR.
Common confusion: AIS entries do not automatically calculate every capital gains schedule correctly. The taxpayer needs broker statements, holding period classification, acquisition cost, indexed cost where applicable, and correct reporting schedules.
Correct approach: Meera should not ignore the entries or enter only sale proceeds casually. She should use capital gains statements and verify the correct ITR form. Expert help is useful where there are equity, mutual fund, property, ESOP, foreign asset or multiple broker transactions.
Example 4: NRI checking Indian income and refund status
Situation: Arjun is an NRI with rental income and bank interest in India. TDS has been deducted, and he expects a refund after filing.
Common confusion: He may assume refund will be automatic because TDS is deducted. However, he still needs correct residential status determination, income disclosure, eligible deductions, bank validation and return verification.
Correct approach: Arjun should evaluate residential status and Indian income carefully before filing. NRI cases can involve DTAA, foreign disclosures, refund banking, repatriation and documentation considerations. WealthSure provides a dedicated NRI tax filing service for such cases.
Common mistakes taxpayers make on the income tax department portal
- Using unofficial links or login pages instead of the official portal.
- Choosing the wrong assessment year while filing or paying tax.
- Accepting pre-filled data without comparing AIS, TIS and Form 26AS.
- Ignoring bank interest, dividends, capital gains or freelance receipts.
- Selecting the wrong ITR form for the income profile.
- Claiming deductions without checking regime eligibility and documentation.
- Paying tax under the wrong challan category or year.
- Submitting the return but forgetting e-verification.
- Not tracking refund status after filing.
- Responding to notices without understanding the issue.
When self-service is enough and when expert support is safer
Self-service may be suitable if your income is simple, records are clear, tax credits match, and you understand the form requirements. For example, a salaried taxpayer with one employer, no capital gains, no foreign income, no business income and clean Form 16 may be able to file carefully using portal guidance.
Expert support is safer when the tax position needs judgement. This includes capital gains, intraday trading, F&O, crypto or virtual digital assets, business income, freelance receipts, presumptive taxation, foreign income, NRI status, house property complexity, multiple employers, advance tax, updated returns, defective return notices or scrutiny communications.
WealthSure combines fintech-enabled workflows with expert advisory so taxpayers can move beyond basic filing. Depending on your case, you may need tax saving suggestions, investment-linked tax planning, goal-based investing support or retirement planning support in addition to accurate return filing.
Quick portal readiness checklist
| Checkpoint | Why It Matters | Action |
|---|---|---|
| Official portal access | Prevents phishing and wrong-site login risk. | Use the official portal or a trusted bookmark. |
| Profile updated | Ensures communication and OTP access. | Check mobile, email, address and PAN details. |
| Bank account validated | Supports refund processing. | Validate the refund bank account before filing. |
| AIS and Form 26AS reviewed | Helps avoid income and tax credit mismatch. | Compare with Form 16, bank records and investment statements. |
| Correct form selected | Prevents defective or incorrect return issues. | Review income sources and form eligibility. |
| ITR e-verified | Completes the filing process. | Verify promptly after submission. |
FAQs on the Income Tax Department Portal
1. What is the Income Tax Department portal and why is it important?
The Income Tax Department portal is the official digital platform for accessing income tax services in India. It is important because most taxpayers now interact with the tax department through online workflows rather than paper-based processes. The portal helps taxpayers file income tax returns, verify returns, pay taxes, view AIS, access Form 26AS through the tax ecosystem, track refund status, download acknowledgements, submit certain forms, raise grievances and review compliance communications.
For a taxpayer, the portal is not just a filing tool. It is also a financial data checkpoint. Before filing, you can review information reported by employers, banks, brokers, mutual fund platforms and other reporting entities. This can help identify missing income, TDS mismatches, incorrect bank details or high-value transaction reporting. The portal therefore plays a direct role in accurate tax filing, refund processing and long-term compliance hygiene.
However, the portal does not automatically decide the best tax position for every taxpayer. You still need to understand your income sources, choose the correct ITR form, compare tax regimes, maintain documents and verify the return. For complex cases, expert review can prevent errors that may not be obvious on the screen.
2. How do I safely log in to the Income Tax Department portal?
To log in safely, use only the official Income Tax e-Filing portal and avoid clicking unknown links received through SMS, email, WhatsApp or social media. Tax-related phishing messages often copy official language and create urgency around refunds, notices or PAN updates. A safe approach is to type the official portal address manually in the browser or use a trusted bookmark created by you.
Once on the portal, use your PAN or user ID, password and the applicable verification step. Keep your registered mobile number and email ID active because OTPs and alerts may be sent there. Do not share your password, Aadhaar OTP, bank OTP, EVC or net banking credentials with anyone. If you are working with a tax professional or a service provider, understand what access is being requested and avoid sharing credentials casually.
After login, check your profile details before filing. Review PAN, Aadhaar linkage status where applicable, contact details and bank accounts. Security and data accuracy go together. A secure login protects your tax information, while an updated profile helps avoid verification and refund-related issues during filing season.
3. Can I file my ITR directly through the income tax department portal?
Yes, eligible taxpayers can file their income tax return directly through the portal using available online or offline utilities, depending on the form and assessment year. The portal usually guides users through assessment year selection, taxpayer type, ITR form, pre-filled information, income details, deductions, tax computation, tax payment if required, submission and e-verification.
Direct filing may be suitable when your case is simple and you are comfortable reviewing details carefully. For instance, a salaried taxpayer with one employer, no capital gains, no foreign income, no business income and properly matched tax credits may be able to file with self-service. Still, the taxpayer should compare Form 16 with AIS, TIS and Form 26AS before submission.
Direct filing may not be enough when tax judgement is required. If you have freelance income, business income, capital gains, foreign assets, NRI status, crypto transactions, multiple employers, high-value transactions, tax notices or mismatch issues, expert-assisted filing is safer. The portal gives the filing interface, but it does not replace the need for correct legal classification, documentation and disclosure.
4. What should I check on AIS before filing ITR?
AIS, or Annual Information Statement, should be reviewed before filing because it contains a wider set of financial information reported to the tax department. Depending on your transactions, AIS may show salary, interest, dividends, securities transactions, mutual fund transactions, property-related information, foreign remittance-related information and other reported financial data. The exact information depends on what reporting entities have submitted against your PAN.
Do not treat AIS as a final tax return. Instead, treat it as a cross-checking tool. Compare AIS with Form 16, bank statements, broker capital gains reports, mutual fund statements, fixed deposit interest certificates, Form 16A, rent records and other documents. If AIS shows income that you forgot, include it correctly. If it shows incorrect or duplicate information, use the available feedback mechanism where appropriate and preserve supporting documents.
AIS review is especially important for investors, freelancers, taxpayers with bank interest, people with multiple accounts and those who changed jobs. Many mismatch notices arise because taxpayers file based only on Form 16 and ignore other income reported in AIS. A careful review can reduce avoidable follow-up after filing.
5. What is the difference between AIS, TIS and Form 26AS?
AIS, TIS and Form 26AS serve related but different purposes. Form 26AS is commonly used to review tax credit information such as TDS, TCS and tax payments linked to your PAN. If your employer, bank, client or other deductor has deducted tax, the credit should generally appear after the deductor files the relevant statements correctly.
AIS is broader. It provides a more detailed view of reported financial information. It can include income and transaction details that may not be limited to TDS or TCS. This makes AIS useful for checking bank interest, dividends, securities transactions and other data that may affect your return. TIS, or Taxpayer Information Summary, is a summarized view based on AIS information and may help taxpayers understand reported categories more easily.
For accurate filing, do not rely on only one document. Form 26AS helps confirm tax credits. AIS helps identify reported income and transactions. TIS helps summarize information. Your actual documents remain important because reporting data may need interpretation, correction or classification. WealthSure often recommends reviewing all three before filing, especially where refunds, capital gains, professional receipts or mismatches are involved.
6. Why is e-verification required after submitting ITR?
E-verification is required because submitting the return is only one part of the filing process. The return must be verified for the filing to be treated as completed in the intended manner. If a taxpayer submits the ITR but does not verify it within the applicable time limit, the return may not move forward properly for processing, and the taxpayer may face avoidable compliance issues.
The portal generally provides multiple verification methods, depending on eligibility and availability. These may include Aadhaar OTP, electronic verification code through bank or demat account, net banking or other permitted methods. The options can change, so taxpayers should check the portal at the time of filing. E-verification should be done as soon as possible after submission rather than being postponed until the last day.
After successful verification, download or save the acknowledgement. Then track the return status on the portal. If the return shows as verified and later processed, review the intimation carefully. If there is a refund, demand or adjustment, compare it with the computation filed. E-verification is a small step, but missing it can create a large filing problem.
7. How can I check income tax refund status through the portal?
You can check refund-related status after filing and e-verifying your return by logging into the portal and viewing the return processing or refund status area. The exact menu labels may change from time to time, but the process generally involves selecting the relevant assessment year and reviewing whether the return is submitted, verified, processed and whether a refund has been issued.
A refund shown in your tax computation is a claim, not a guarantee of immediate payment. Refunds are subject to Income Tax Department processing, matching of tax credits, correctness of income disclosure, validation of bank account and other checks. If your bank account is not validated, closed, inactive or not correctly linked, refund credit may be delayed. If Form 26AS does not match the TDS claimed in your return, the refund may also be delayed or adjusted.
If refund status is delayed, first check whether the return is verified and processed. Then check bank validation and intimation details. If there is a demand or adjustment, do not ignore it. For large refunds or mismatch cases, expert review can help identify whether the issue is due to TDS mismatch, incorrect reporting, bank validation or departmental processing.
8. What should I do if I receive a notice on the portal?
If you receive a notice or communication on the portal, do not panic and do not respond in a hurry. First read the full communication carefully. Note the assessment year, section, due date, issue raised, documents required and response method. A notice may relate to defective return, mismatch, demand, refund adjustment, verification, scrutiny, non-filing, high-value transaction reporting or other compliance matters.
Next, compare the notice with your filed return, computation, AIS, Form 26AS, Form 16, bank statements, broker reports, invoices, rent records and tax payment challans. In many cases, the issue may be a mismatch between reported data and return data. In other cases, the department may require clarification or supporting documents. The right response depends on facts, not assumptions.
If the notice involves a simple correction, you may be able to handle it carefully. If it involves income mismatch, capital gains, business income, foreign income, NRI issues, demand, scrutiny or legal interpretation, professional support is safer. A poorly drafted response can worsen the matter. WealthSure provides notice response and assessment support for taxpayers who want a structured and documented approach.
9. Can NRIs use the Income Tax Department portal for Indian tax filing?
Yes, NRIs can use the Income Tax Department portal for Indian tax filing, return verification, refund tracking and related tax services where they have Indian tax obligations or claims. Common NRI situations include rental income in India, interest income, capital gains from sale of Indian property, mutual funds or shares, TDS refunds, DTAA-related considerations and reporting of Indian financial transactions.
However, NRI filing should not be treated like a simple resident salary return. Residential status must be determined correctly. The taxability of income depends on residential status, source of income, type of account, treaty eligibility where relevant and documentation. Some taxpayers returning to India may also need to consider foreign income and asset disclosure rules depending on their status.
The portal enables filing, but it does not automatically resolve residential status or DTAA interpretation. NRIs should keep documents such as passport travel dates, Indian income records, TDS certificates, property documents, bank statements and foreign tax documents where relevant. Expert guidance can help with form selection, disclosure, refund banking and tax positions. This is especially useful when refunds are large or income is spread across India and another country.
10. How can WealthSure help me use the portal correctly?
WealthSure helps taxpayers use the portal with better preparation, cleaner documentation and expert-backed judgement. The portal provides access and workflows, but many taxpayers need help deciding what to enter, which form to choose, how to read AIS, whether a tax regime is suitable, why a refund is delayed, how to respond to a notice or whether a revised or updated return is needed.
For salaried taxpayers, WealthSure can help review Form 16, AIS, Form 26AS, deductions, regime comparison and refund claims. For freelancers and professionals, it can help reconcile receipts, TDS, expenses and form selection. For investors, it can support capital gains reporting. For NRIs, it can help with residential status, Indian income and disclosure considerations. For taxpayers with notices, WealthSure can help draft and file structured responses based on documents.
The goal is not to replace the official portal. The goal is to help you use it accurately and confidently. Self-service tools may be enough for simple cases, but expert-assisted support is useful when errors could lead to refund delays, tax demand, defective return notices or compliance risk. WealthSure’s fintech-enabled approach combines digital convenience with professional review.
Conclusion: use the portal as a tax planning checkpoint, not only a filing page
The income tax department portal is one of the most important financial compliance platforms for Indian taxpayers. It helps you file returns, review reported data, check tax credits, pay taxes, verify ITRs, track refunds and respond to tax communications. But the quality of your filing still depends on your understanding, records and judgement.
If your income profile is simple, the portal may be enough when used carefully. If your case includes capital gains, professional income, NRI status, business receipts, foreign income, notices, refunds, tax payments or mismatch concerns, expert-assisted support can be safer. The best approach is proactive: review AIS and Form 26AS early, validate your bank account, keep documents ready, compare tax regimes, disclose income accurately and complete e-verification without delay.
Want to file or review your ITR with confidence?
WealthSure can help you move from portal confusion to compliant, well-planned tax filing and smarter financial decisions.
At WealthSure, we don’t just file taxes — we simplify your financial journey and help you build long-term wealth with confidence.
Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only and does not constitute tax, legal, investment or professional advice. Income tax rules, portal features, forms, due dates, verification timelines, deductions, exemptions and departmental processes may change. Final tax liability depends on income, tax regime, deductions, exemptions, disclosures, documentation and applicable law. Refunds are subject to Income Tax Department processing. Please check official sources or consult a qualified professional before filing, responding to a notice or making tax decisions.