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ITA 2025 regimeAct — chapter commentary5 min read

Section 5 — Scope of Total Income

Chapter II — Basis of Charge

BLOCK 1 — VERBATIM TEXT OF SECTION 5 (drawn from official PDF) Marginal note — Scope of total income (1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the total income of any tax year of a person, who is a resident, includes all income from whatever source derived, which— (a) is received or deemed to be…

Section 5 — SCOPE OF TOTAL INCOME

BLOCK 1 — VERBATIM TEXT OF SECTION 5 (drawn from official PDF)

Marginal note — Scope of total income

(1) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the total income of any tax year of a person, who is a resident, includes all income from whatever source derived, which—

(a) is received or deemed to be received in India in that year by or on behalf of such person;

(b) accrues or arises, or is deemed to accrue or arise, to such person in India in that year; or

(c) accrues or arises to such person outside India in that year, but when such person is “not ordinarily resident” in India under section 6(13), such income shall be included only when it is derived from a business controlled in or a profession set up in India.

(2) Subject to the provisions of this Act, the total income of a tax year of a person, who is a non-resident, includes all income from whatever source derived, which—

(a) is received or deemed to be received in India in that year by or on behalf of such person; or

(b) accrues or arises, or is deemed to accrue or arise, to such person in India in that year.

(3) Income accruing or arising outside India shall not be deemed to be received in India under this section by reason only of the fact that it is taken into account in a balance sheet prepared in India.

(4) If an income has been included in a person’s total income on the basis that it—

(a) has accrued or arisen; or

(b) is deemed to have accrued or arisen, to such person, it shall not again be included on the basis that it is received or deemed to be received by that person in India. Residence in India.

BLOCK 2 — 1961 ACT COUNTERPART (Section 5)

INCOME-TAX ACT, 2025

INCOME-TAX ACT, 1961

INCOME-TAX ACT, 2025 — s. 5

INCOME-TAX ACT, 1961 — s. 5

(1) Resident — worldwide income

(1) Resident — worldwide income (substantively identical)

(2) Non-resident — Indian-source only

(2) Non-resident — Indian-source only

RNOR — foreign-source income controlled from India taxable

1961 s. 5(1) Proviso — same RNOR carve-out

Section 5 of the 2025 Act preserves the residence-based scope of total income in 1961 s. 5. The substantive distinctions — ROR (worldwide), RNOR (Indian-source + business-controlled-from-India + profession-set-up-in-India foreign income), NR (Indian-source only) — survive intact. Reference to 'tax year' replaces 'previous year'; otherwise the section is in pari materia.

BLOCK 3 — COMMENTARY

STATUTORY ARCHITECTURE

Section 5 establishes the residence-based scope of taxation. India follows the residence principle (worldwide taxation for residents) tempered with the source principle (Indian-source taxation for non-residents). The intermediate RNOR category provides a transition-period concession for newly-resident persons (typically returning NRIs).

Total Income — Three-fold Test

  • Receipt — income received or deemed to be received in India during the tax year
  • Accrual — income accruing or arising or deemed to accrue or arise in India during the tax year
  • Worldwide (resident only) — income accruing or arising outside India during the tax year

JUDICIAL EVOLUTION — Indirect Transfer (Vodafone)

The leading authority on indirect transfer of Indian assets through offshore structures is Vodafone International Holdings B.V. v. UOI, (2012) 341 ITR 1 (SC). The SC bench (Kapadia, C.J., Radhakrishnan and Swatanter Kumar, JJ.) held that indirect transfer through offshore structures does not attract Indian charge unless statutorily provided.

HELD: The transfer of CGP shares offshore did not transfer the underlying Indian assets or rights. The Indian tax authorities had no jurisdiction to tax the offshore transfer. The 'look-through' approach urged by the Department had no statutory foundation. (per Vodafone International Holdings ¶ 121).

FA 2012 introduced retrospective amendments via Explanations 4-7 to s. 9(1)(i) overriding the Vodafone ratio. These have been integrated in the 2025 Act, ss. 5(2)/(3) read with s. 9. Indirect transfers of Indian assets through offshore structures are now expressly chargeable under s. 5(2) where the underlying Indian asset value crosses prescribed thresholds (Rule 11UB / 11UC of 1962 Rules continue under 2026 Rules).

JUDICIAL EVOLUTION — Receipt vs. Accrual

CIT v. Toshoku Ltd., (1980) 125 ITR 525 (SC) — held that mere export of goods from India by a non-resident, without any business connection in India, does not result in income accruing in India. The accrual is in the country where the contract is concluded and the goods originate from the seller's perspective.

JUDICIAL EVOLUTION — Worldwide Taxation for Resident

CIT v. Smt. P.K. Noorjahan, (1999) 237 ITR 570 (SC) — confirmed that a resident is taxable on worldwide income; foreign-source income retains its character but is taxed in India on the resident-aggregation principle. The DTAA framework provides relief through credit / exemption methods (ss. 90, 91 of 1961 Act / ss. 159-160 of 2025 Act).

DEPARTMENTAL PRACTICE

Income-tax Rules, 2026 — Rule 21AB / 21AB-A — Form 10F for tax-residency certificate. Rule 11UB / 11UC — fair market value computation for indirect-transfer thresholds (preserved from 1962 Rules). CBDT Circular No. 5/2022 dated 22-09-2022 (legacy) clarifies indirect-transfer reporting. For DTAA-treaty-residents, Form 10F is mandatory under s. 90(4) — without TRC + Form 10F, treaty benefits are denied and full Indian-domestic-rate TDS applies.

PLANNING NOTES & LITIGATION DEFENCE

(i) For NRI clients with offshore investments, classify each income stream — Indian-source (taxable u/s 5(2)) or foreign-source (exempt for NR; taxable for resident). (ii) For RNOR transition (returning NRIs), the 'business-controlled-from-India' / 'profession-set-up-in-India' carve-out under s. 5(1) Proviso continues — document carefully through board-meeting locations, decision-makers' residency, etc. (iii) For indirect-transfer scenarios (offshore share sale where underlying Indian asset > 50% / ₹10 crore), the s. 5(2)/(3) charge applies — invoke Rule 11UB methodology. (iv) For DTAA-protected income, structure transactions to fall within treaty's residence-based exemption; obtain TRC + Form 10F. (v) For pre-2012 indirect transfers, cite Vodafone International Holdings — though FA 2012 retrospectively overrode, certain pre-amendment transactions may still benefit from Vatika Township prospective-construction principle.

CROSS-REFERENCES

  • Section 4 — Charge of income-tax (substantive charging provision).
  • Section 6 — Residence in India (resident / RNOR / NR classification).
  • Section 7 — Income deemed to be received (deeming for s. 5(1)(a) / 5(2)(a)).
  • Section 9 — Income deemed to accrue or arise in India (deeming for s. 5(1)(b) / 5(2)(b)).
  • Section 158 / 159 — DTAA / FTC framework (relief for double-taxed income).
  • Income-tax Rules, 2026 r. 11UB / 11UC — indirect-transfer FMV computation.