01Why the Food & Beverage Industry Demands Special Tax Attention
The food and beverage industry is India's most cash-intensive and operationally complex business sector. A single restaurant owner in Mumbai simultaneously navigates daily cash and UPI turnover, perishable inventory management, multiple revenue streams — dine-in, delivery platform income, catering contracts, and alcohol bar sales — GST's strict no-ITC rule, TCS from Swiggy and Zomato, FSSAI compliance, and the MSME payment disallowance trap. Getting any one of these wrong creates cascading tax consequences.
The arrival of the Income Tax Act, 2025 (effective AY 2026-27) has reshuffled section numbers that F&B operators had memorised over decades under the 1961 Act. The widely-used Section 44AD for presumptive taxation, Section 44AB for audit triggers, and the critical Section 43B(h) MSME payment rule have all migrated to new numbers — creating fresh compliance risks for operators not updated. The CBDT's enhanced data-matching via AIS, GSTR-ITD exchange, and platform TCS reporting has made under-reporting structurally difficult and heavily scrutinised.
Shahnawaz and Associates, Chartered Accountants, Jogeshwari West, Mumbai handles ITR filing for hundreds of F&B clients across Mumbai — standalone restaurants, cloud kitchens, dhabas, catering companies, bakeries, and hotel food outlets. This comprehensive guide addresses every major compliance question for the sector — from a proprietor filing ITR-4 to a restaurant company filing ITR-6.
02Income Tax Act 2025 — Critical Section Changes for F&B
The Income Tax Act, 2025 is a structural re-codification of the 1961 Act. Tax rates, thresholds, and policy intent remain unchanged — only section numbering and arrangement have been rationalised. For F&B operators, four section migrations create the highest compliance risk.
Complete Cross-Reference Table — F&B-Relevant Sections
| Topic | Old Section (IT Act 1961) | New Section (IT Act 2025) | F&B Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|
| Presumptive Tax — Business | Sec 44AD | Sec 45 | Restaurants, dhabas, cloud kitchens with turnover ≤ ₹3 Cr |
| Tax Audit trigger | Sec 44AB | Sec 44 | F&B businesses exceeding ₹1 Cr (cash) / ₹10 Cr (digital) threshold |
| Books of Accounts | Sec 44AA | Sec 62 | Mandatory for F&B above prescribed turnover limits |
| MSME payment disallowance | Sec 43B(h) | Sec 37(2)(g) | F&B businesses paying vegetable vendors, packaging MSMEs |
| Depreciation on kitchen assets | Sec 32 | Sec 26 | Ovens, refrigerators, POS, delivery vehicles, furniture |
| Business income and receipts | Sec 28 | Sec 26 | All F&B revenue — dine-in, delivery, catering, franchise fees |
| Deductions for business expenses | Sec 37(1) | Sec 23 | Raw material, rent, staff, utilities, platform commissions |
| 80C / NPS deductions | Chapter VI-A | Sec 123–132 | F&B proprietor's personal deductions under old regime |
| Carry forward of losses | Sec 72 | Sec 97 | New cloud kitchens or restaurant chains in expansion loss phase |
| Cash payment disallowance | Sec 40A(3) | Sec 37(3) | Cash payments > ₹10,000 to single vendor in a day disallowed |
03Business Sub-Types & Income Covered
Income in the F&B sector flows from multiple streams — each with distinct GST treatment, TDS implications, and income classification. Dine-in revenue, delivery platform income, outdoor catering contracts, bakery retail sales, alcohol bar sales, franchise fees, and institutional meal contracts all require separate treatment. A sole proprietor running a single restaurant has radically different obligations than a company managing five cloud kitchen brands — this guide covers both ends of the spectrum.
Key Income Types and Their Tax Treatment
| Income Type | Head of Income | GST Rate | Special Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dine-in / takeaway food sales | PGBP | 5% (no ITC) | Primary revenue head for most restaurants |
| Delivery platform income (Swiggy/Zomato) | PGBP | 5% (no ITC) | 1% TCS deducted by ECO — reconcile in 26AS |
| Outdoor catering contracts | PGBP | 5% (no ITC) | TDS u/s 194C by payer if liable to deduct |
| Tiffin / subscription meal services | PGBP | 5% (no ITC) | Monthly billing; GST at 5% on food supply |
| Bakery / sweet shop retail | PGBP | 0–18% (item-wise) | Fresh bread 0%; branded / packaged items higher |
| Alcohol / bar sales | PGBP | OUTSIDE GST — State Excise/VAT | Separate register mandatory; never include in GST |
| Franchise fee received | PGBP | 18% | Licensor receives franchise fee — taxable at 18% |
| Interest income (FD, current a/c) | Other Sources | Not applicable | Taxable under IT Act; separate disclosure in ITR |
04Which ITR Form to Use — F&B Decision Framework
Choosing the wrong ITR form renders the return defective and attracts a Section 139(9) defective return notice. The correct form depends on entity type, income classification, and whether presumptive taxation is opted.
05Presumptive Taxation for F&B Businesses — Section 45 (formerly Sec 44AD)
The presumptive taxation scheme under Section 45 of the Income Tax Act 2025 (formerly Section 44AD of the 1961 Act) is the most widely used provision by small restaurant operators, dhabas, tiffin services, and cloud kitchens. It eliminates the need for maintaining detailed books of accounts and allows a fixed percentage of turnover to be declared as taxable profit — with no questions asked on expenses.
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Eligible Assessees | Individuals, HUFs, and Firms (but NOT LLPs and companies) running F&B businesses |
| Turnover Limit | ≤ ₹3 Crore in the previous year (AY 2026-27). Reduced to ₹2 Cr if >5% receipts/payments are in cash. |
| Deemed Profit — Cash transactions | Minimum 8% of total turnover must be declared as income |
| Deemed Profit — Digital transactions | Minimum 6% of turnover declared via digital mode (UPI, card, bank transfer) |
| Opt-Out Consequence | If declared profit is below 8%/6%, full books + tax audit mandatory for next 5 years |
| Books of Accounts | Not required if opting for presumptive — exempt under Sec 62 (old 44AA) |
| Food Business & Sec 46 | F&B is NOT eligible for Section 46 (professional presumptive — old 44ADA). Only Section 45 (business) applies. |
Step-by-Step: Applying Presumptive Taxation for a Restaurant
06Tax Audit — Section 44 (formerly Section 44AB)
Under the Income Tax Act 2025, Section 44 replicates the tax audit framework previously under Sec 44AB. The audit report must be obtained from a practising Chartered Accountant and submitted before the ITR filing due date. For most mid-size Mumbai restaurants and catering companies, tax audit is unavoidable.
| Entity Type | Threshold for Tax Audit (AY 2026-27) | Audit Report Form | Due Date |
|---|---|---|---|
| Individual / HUF Restaurant (Business) | Turnover > ₹1 Cr (if >5% cash); > ₹10 Cr (fully digital) | Form 3CB + 3CD | 30 September 2026 |
| Proprietor opting out of Presumptive | Any turnover (if declaring <8%/6% profit) | Form 3CB + 3CD | 30 September 2026 |
| Partnership Firm / Catering Company | Turnover > ₹1 Cr (cash); > ₹10 Cr (digital) | Form 3CB + 3CD | 30 September 2026 |
| Private / Public Ltd Restaurant Company | As applicable under Companies Act; always requires statutory audit | Form 3CA + 3CD | 30 September 2026 |
| Charitable Canteen / Mess Trust | Total income > ₹2.5 Crore | Form 10B + 3CA/3CB | 30 September 2026 |
Key Form 3CD Clauses Specific to F&B
- Clause 19 — Amounts debited for personal expenses (family meals, personal phone bills routed through restaurant books)
- Clause 21 — Inadmissible deductions including cash payments >₹10,000 per day to a single vendor (Sec 37(3) / old 40A(3))
- Clause 26 — MSME payment compliance (Sec 37(2)(g) / old Sec 43B(h)) — outstanding MSME vendor payments
- Clause 30 — Cash receipts/deposits exceeding ₹2 lakh from a single person — relevant for high-cash catering events
- Clause 44 — Breakup of expenditure into GST registered/unregistered suppliers — critical for restaurants procuring from unregistered vegetable vendors
07Books of Accounts — Section 62 (formerly Section 44AA)
Under Section 62 of the Income Tax Act 2025 (successor to Sec 44AA), F&B businesses must maintain prescribed books of accounts when turnover exceeds prescribed thresholds. These registers are the primary evidence in any income tax scrutiny or survey — their absence or incompleteness is a severe risk for restaurant operators.
| Register / Record | Content Required | Purpose in Scrutiny |
|---|---|---|
| Daily Sales Register (KOT / Billing System) | Date, table/order no., items sold, amount, mode of payment (cash/UPI/card) | Primary income evidence — every sale must be captured |
| Purchase Register (Raw Material) | Date, vendor name, item, quantity, amount, GST invoice reference | Reconcile with stock; validate expense claims |
| Stock / Inventory Register | Opening stock, purchases, consumption, closing stock — daily or weekly | Detect unexplained stock differences; validate wastage |
| Wastage / Spoilage Register | Date, item, quantity, reason (expired/damaged/spillage), responsible person's signature | Mandatory for wastage write-off claims; absence leads to disallowance |
| Staff Salary & Attendance Register | Name, designation, daily attendance, monthly salary, TDS, PF deductions | Verify salary expense; TDS and PF compliance evidence |
| Cash Book & Bank Book | Daily cash receipts and payments; bank-wise entries | Foundation of accounting; auditor's starting point |
| Delivery Platform Reconciliation | Swiggy/Zomato order-wise MIS matched to bank payouts and TCS deducted | Reconcile platform turnover with ITR and GST |
| Alcohol / Bar Sales Register | Separate register for all liquor sales — item, quantity, amount, excise challan reference | Alcohol is outside GST — must not appear in GST returns |
08GST in Food & Beverage — Rates, ITC Rules & Practical Issues
GST compliance is arguably the most error-prone area for F&B operators. The sector has a specific rate structure — predominantly 5% with an absolute prohibition on Input Tax Credit (ITC) — combined with complex supply types (food vs alcohol, dine-in vs catering vs hotel, outdoor vs indoor) that require careful segregation. Getting any part wrong triggers GST notices with interest and penalty.
| Supply Type | GST Rate | ITC Available? | Key Condition / Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restaurant (non-AC) — food & beverages | 5% | No | All standalone, dhaba, cloud kitchen, food truck |
| Restaurant (AC) — food & beverages | 5% | No | Post-2022 rationalisation — same 5% regardless of AC |
| Restaurant in hotel (room tariff < ₹7,500/night) | 5% | No | Applies even if AC/multi-star if tariff below threshold |
| Restaurant in hotel (room tariff > ₹7,500/night) | 18% | Yes | Higher rate unlocks ITC — applicable to luxury/5-star hotels |
| Outdoor catering | 5% | No | Wedding, corporate catering; no ITC irrespective of value |
| Packaged food / mithai (branded) | 12%–18% | Yes | Branded packaged food; ITC available to manufacturers |
| Unpackaged staples (rice, atta, dal) | NIL | N/A | Exempt supply; no GST liability on sale |
| Ice cream sold over-the-counter | 18% | Yes | Ice cream parlours — 18% regardless of whether AC |
| Alcohol / liquor sales | OUTSIDE GST | N/A | State Excise / VAT applies — NEVER include in GSTR |
| Soft drinks / aerated beverages | 28% + cess | Yes (mfr only) | Restaurants pay 5% on combo meals including beverages |
GST–Income Tax Reconciliation — Critical Points
Revenue declared in GSTR-1 (output) must reconcile with income disclosed in the ITR. The GST department and Income Tax Department now share data — mismatches between your GSTR-1 turnover and ITR revenue automatically trigger notices from both ends. Specific reconciliation items to track:
- Alcohol revenue: Must appear in ITR as business income but must NOT appear in any GST return.
- Swiggy/Zomato gross revenue vs net bank credit: GSTR-1 must show gross order value; ITR turnover must also be gross. The TCS collected by platforms reflects in GSTR-2B and Form 26AS.
- Advance received for catering events: GST time of supply triggered at receipt of advance; ITR income recognition follows the same event/service completion — ensure both are consistent.
- Complimentary meals / staff food: Treated as supplies under GST if ITC was availed on inputs (rare at 5% rate, but applicable if hotel at 18%).
09TDS Obligations for the F&B Industry
TDS Deducted From F&B Businesses (as Deductee)
| Payment Type | New Act Section 393(1) Code | Old Section | Rate | Threshold |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Swiggy / Zomato payout to restaurant (TCS) | 1035 | 194-O | 1% TCS | All ECO-routed sales |
| Catering payment by corporate client/Hotel food outlet payment by event company | 1027 | 194C | 1% (individual) / 2% (company) | > ₹30,000 single / ₹1L aggregate |
| Rent of restaurant premises | 1009 | 194I | 10% (building) | > ₹50,000/-pm. |
TDS to be Deducted By F&B Businesses (as Deductor)
| Payment Made By Restaurant | Section (2025) | Rate | Practical Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| Rent of outlet / commercial kitchen | 1009 | 10% | ₹80,000/month mall rent → deduct ₹8,000 TDS/month |
| Catering sub-contracts | 1024 | 1% / 2% | Large caterer subcontracting a portion of a wedding event |
| Consultant chef / nutritionist | 1027 | 10% | Guest chef for special event paid ₹50,000 — deduct ₹5,000 |
| Staff salaries | Section 392 | Slab rate | All permanent staff; contract labour may fall under 194C |
| Cold storage / warehouse rent | 1009 | 10% | Cloud kitchen paying ₹25,000/month for cold storage |
| Advertising / marketing agency | 1024 | 1% / 2% | Restaurant running digital marketing campaign |
10Swiggy / Zomato — TCS, ECO Classification & Compliance
Delivery platforms like Swiggy and Zomato are classified as E-Commerce Operators (ECOs) under both GST and income tax law. This creates layered compliance obligations for restaurant partners that go beyond simply reconciling bank deposits.
Under Income Tax: The same TCS deducted by the ECO appears in your Form 26AS and AIS. It must be claimed as a tax credit in your ITR to avoid paying income tax on that amount twice. Both reconciliations are independent — missing either one costs money.
Month-End ECO Reconciliation Checklist
- Download Swiggy/Zomato monthly payout statements and MIS reports
- Verify gross order value (what customers paid) vs net payout (what platform remitted) — the difference is commissions + packaging charges + TCS
- Cross-check TCS amount in payout statement with GSTR-2B (GST TCS) and Form 26AS (income tax TCS)
- Ensure gross order value is reported as turnover in GSTR-1 and in your ITR revenue — not the net bank credit
- Claim the platform commission as a business expense under Sec 23 (old Sec 37(1))
- File a reconciliation statement if there is any mismatch between platform MIS and your books
11Important Case Laws — Food & Beverage & Income Tax
12MSME Payment Compliance — Section 37(2)(g) (formerly Section 43B(h))
Effective from AY 2024-25 onwards and continuing under the IT Act 2025, any amount payable to a Micro or Small Enterprise (registered under MSMED Act, 2006) must be paid within the stipulated period — or the deduction is lost for that year.
If there is NO written agreement: payment must be made within 15 days of delivery.
If payment is delayed beyond this period, the expense is disallowed in the year of accrual and becomes deductible only in the year of actual payment.
The food and beverage industry is acutely exposed to this provision. Most restaurants source from vegetable vendors, spice suppliers, packaging manufacturers, condiment producers, and cleaning supply companies — the vast majority of whom are Micro or Small Enterprises with Udyam Registration. A restaurant with ₹1.5 crore of annual MSME procurement and typical 60-90 day payment cycles could face ₹20-30 lakh of disallowance under this provision — turning a profitable year into a loss on paper.
Action required: Request Udyam Registration certificates from all vendors. Tag MSME status in your vendor master. Identify all outstanding payables to MSMEs as at 31st March that exceed the 15/45 day limit. Add them back in tax computation. Disclose in Form 3CD Clause 26. Clear these payments before year-end wherever possible.
13Depreciation on Kitchen & Restaurant Assets — Section 26 (formerly Section 32)
For restaurants, hotels, and catering companies, depreciation is often the single largest deduction after raw materials and rent. Correct classification of assets into the right block — and timing of capitalisation — is critical to maximising legitimate tax savings.
| Asset Category | Depreciation Rate | Block | Note |
|---|---|---|---|
| Restaurant / Kitchen Building (owned) | 10% | Buildings | Leasehold improvements capitalised separately |
| Commercial Ovens, Tandoors, Grills | 15% | Plant & Machinery | Heavy kitchen equipment — standard P&M rate |
| Refrigerators, Cold Storage, Walk-in Chillers | 15% | Plant & Machinery | Standard P&M; critical for cloud kitchens |
| POS Systems, Billing Computers, KOT Printers | 40% | Computers | High accelerated depreciation — useful for tax planning |
| Restaurant Management / ERP Software | 40% | Computers | Cloud kitchen management software, delivery apps |
| Furniture — Tables, Chairs, Bar Counter | 10% | Furniture & Fixtures | All dining area, bar, and kitchen furniture |
| Air Conditioning Systems | 15% | Plant & Machinery | Central AC counted as P&M, not building fixture |
| Delivery Vehicles (petrol/diesel) | 15% | Motor Vehicles | Delivery bikes, vans; electric delivery vehicles 30% |
| CCTV, Security Systems | 15% | Plant & Machinery | Included in P&M block |
| Solar Panels (restaurant rooftop) | 40% | Plant & Machinery | Accelerated depreciation for renewable energy |
14Key Deductions Available to F&B Businesses
| Deduction | New Act Sec | Old Sec | Max / Rate | F&B Relevance |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Raw material & ingredient costs | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | Vegetables, spices, meat, dairy — largest cost head; fully deductible with bills |
| Staff salaries & wages | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | All cooks, waiters, delivery staff, kitchen helpers |
| Rent of premises | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | Commercial outlet rent — ₹1–3L/month in Mumbai; fully deductible |
| Depreciation (kitchen assets) | Sec 26 | Sec 32 | Per schedule | Ovens, refrigerators, POS, vehicles; see rates above |
| Platform commission (Swiggy/Zomato) | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual (18–25%) | Deductible as business expense; turnover must still be gross |
| Packaging materials | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | Containers, bags, labels — especially significant for cloud kitchens |
| Electricity, gas, water | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | Commercial kitchen utility bills — ₹40–80K/month for mid-size restaurant |
| FSSAI license fees | Sec 23 | Sec 37(1) | Actual | Annual renewal; late renewal attracts ₹5L penalty — not deductible |
| Interest on business loan | Sec 23 | Sec 36(1)(iii) | Actual | Restaurant renovation loan, working capital — fully deductible |
| LIC / PPF / ELSS (proprietor — old regime) | Sec 123 | Sec 80C | ₹1,50,000 | F&B proprietor's personal tax planning |
| Health insurance (proprietor — old regime) | Sec 126 | Sec 80D | ₹25,000–₹75,000 | Self + spouse + parents; higher limit for senior citizen parents |
| NPS (proprietor — old regime) | Sec 124 | Sec 80CCD(1B) | ₹50,000 | Additional ₹50,000 NPS above 80C limit |
15Practical Do's & Don'ts — F&B ITR Filing AY 2026-27
- ✅ Reconcile AIS + 26AS with all bank accounts before filing — check TCS credits from every delivery platform
- ✅ Maintain a daily Wastage/Spoilage Register — signed by kitchen head — for every write-off claimed
- ✅ Report gross order value as turnover — not the net amount after Swiggy/Zomato commission deduction
- ✅ Maintain a completely separate register for alcohol/bar sales — never include in GST returns
- ✅ Collect Udyam Registration certificates from all vendors; pay MSME suppliers within 15/45 days
- ✅ Claim depreciation on all kitchen assets under Sec 26 using correct block rates
- ✅ File GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B consistently — turnover must match ITR revenue
- ✅ File ITR by 31 July (non-audit) or 31 October (audit cases)
- ✅ Pay advance tax as single instalment by 15 March (presumptive tax filers)
- ✅ Ensure FSSAI license is renewed annually for every location — including new cloud kitchen outlets
- ❌ Don't claim ITC when paying 5% GST — the prohibition is absolute; recovery + 24% interest + penalty applies
- ❌ Don't understate turnover to stay within the ₹3 Cr presumptive limit — AIS captures UPI, card, and platform receipts
- ❌ Don't net off platform commissions before computing turnover — gross receipts are your turnover
- ❌ Don't include alcohol/bar sales in any GST return — state excise/VAT applies, not GST
- ❌ Don't accept cash receipts above ₹2 lakh from a single customer for a catering event — Sec 269ST attracts 100% penalty
- ❌ Don't mix personal expenses (family meals, home renovation, personal phone bills) in restaurant books
- ❌ Don't pay cash >₹10,000 to a single vendor in a day — disallowed under Sec 37(3) (old 40A(3))
- ❌ Don't ignore Form 10-IE (new tax regime opt-in) requirement if switching regime for business income
- ❌ Don't delay TDS deposit for rent, consultant chef, and staff salary — interest at 1.5%/month applies from deduction date
- ❌ Don't reference old section numbers (44AD, 44AB, 43B(h)) in documents — use IT Act 2025 numbers for AY 2026-27
16Special Topics — Bar Revenue, Tip Income & Tax Regime Choice
Alcohol / Bar Revenue — Outside GST, Inside Income Tax
Alcohol for human consumption is entirely outside the GST framework — it is governed by State Excise duty and State VAT. Bar and alcohol sales must be maintained in a completely separate register, reported separately in state excise returns, and must never appear in GSTR-1 or GSTR-3B. However, all alcohol revenue must be disclosed as business income in the ITR — it is fully taxable under income tax. Restaurants with mixed food+bar operations must bifurcate revenue precisely: food sales in GST returns, alcohol revenue only in income tax books.
Tip Income & Service Charges
As decided in the Hotel Blue Moon case (Case Law 04 above), the tax treatment of tips depends on the operational model. If the restaurant pools service charges and distributes them to staff through payroll, TDS under Sec 192 applies on the distributed amount — it is treated as employer-paid wages. If customers voluntarily tip individual staff directly (not pooled), the restaurant has no TDS obligation, but the staff members must report tip income in their personal ITR under "Income from Other Sources." Either way, tip income is taxable — the question is only at whose hands and through which mechanism.
Old vs New Tax Regime — Which Works for F&B Operators?
The new tax regime (now the default regime under IT Act 2025) offers lower slab rates but removes most personal deductions (Sec 123/80C equivalent, HRA, interest on housing loan). For F&B proprietors with high business expenses (raw material, rent, depreciation) — those expenses are deductible in both regimes as they are business expenses, not personal deductions. The regime choice only affects personal deductions. Young restaurant owners with minimal PPF/LIC investments and high income often benefit from the new regime. Proprietors with ₹1.5L+ in 80C investments, health insurance premiums, and housing loan interest typically benefit from the old regime. Always compute both — Shahnawaz and Associates provides a regime comparison as part of every ITR filing engagement.
17F&B Compliance Calendar — AY 2026-27 Key Dates
| Due Date | Compliance | Who |
|---|---|---|
| 11th each month | GSTR-1 filing (monthly filers) | All GST-registered F&B businesses; quarterly option for <₹5Cr turnover |
| 20th each month | GSTR-3B filing and GST payment | All GST-registered F&B businesses — 5% on food sales; 18% on applicable supplies |
| 7th each month | TDS deposit (deductions in previous month) | All F&B entities deducting TDS on rent, salaries, 194C, 194J payments |
| 15 June 2026 | Advance Tax — 1st instalment (15% of annual liability) | All F&B operators with annual tax liability >₹10,000 (except presumptive filers) |
| 31 July 2026 | ITR Filing — non-audit cases | Proprietors under Sec 45 presumptive; individual F&B operators below audit threshold |
| 15 September 2026 | Advance Tax — 2nd instalment (45% cumulative) | All F&B taxpayers with quarterly advance tax obligation |
| 30 September 2026 | Tax Audit Report (Form 3CB + 3CD) | Restaurants, catering companies, cloud kitchen cos above audit threshold |
| 31 October 2026 | ITR Filing — audit cases | All F&B entities with tax audit obligation |
| 15 December 2026 | Advance Tax — 3rd instalment (75% cumulative) | All non-presumptive F&B taxpayers |
| 15 March 2027 | Advance Tax — 4th instalment (100%); Single instalment for Sec 45 presumptive filers | All F&B taxpayers — this is the only instalment date for presumptive filers |
| Before license expiry | FSSAI License Renewal for all locations | All F&B operators — penalty ₹5L for non-compliance; ₹1L for each additional day |
18Common Scrutiny Triggers — What Gets F&B ITRs Noticed
The CASS (Computer Assisted Scrutiny Selection) system has specific filters calibrated for cash-intensive sectors. The F&B industry's high cash flow, daily digital transactions, and delivery platform reporting make it one of the most data-rich sectors from the department's perspective.
- 🔴 GSTR-1 turnover vs ITR revenue mismatch — the most common trigger; automatic cross-matching between GSTN and ITD flags any gap above a threshold
- 🔴 Platform TCS in 26AS not reflected in ITR — Swiggy/Zomato TCS appears in Form 26AS; if ITR revenue doesn't reflect corresponding turnover, a mismatch notice follows
- 🔴 Large cash deposits vs disclosed turnover — AIS captures every bank's cash deposit SFT data; unmatched cash deposits are red-flagged for F&B proprietors
- 🔴 ITC claimed in GST at 5% restaurant rate — GSTR-3B data is analysed; wrongly availed ITC triggers CGST Section 73/74 proceedings
- 🔴 Unexplained stock differences — where purchases (from GSTR-2B / purchase register) significantly exceed consumption implied by declared sales
- 🔴 High lifestyle indicators vs low declared income — vehicle registrations, property purchases, foreign travel cross-matched against declared business income
- 🔴 Cash receipts >₹2 lakh from single customer — Sec 269ST violations in catering events are flagged through banking SFT reports
- 🔴 MSME vendor complaints — MSME Samadhaan portal complaints about delayed payments can trigger an income tax inquiry into disallowance under Sec 37(2)(g)
19Conclusion — File Right, Run Right
The food and beverage industry's unique combination of high cash turnover, multi-channel revenue streams, the GST ITC prohibition, Swiggy/Zomato TCS reconciliation, alcohol revenue separation, FSSAI compliance, MSME payment rules, and the significant section number changes under the Income Tax Act 2025 together create a compliance landscape that demands year-round record keeping, proactive planning, and expert professional guidance.
The principles that protect F&B operators in any scrutiny: contemporaneous records (daily sales register, wastage register, platform MIS — all maintained in real time, not retrospectively); clean segregation (food vs alcohol, dine-in vs catering, business vs personal); honest disclosures (AIS and GSTN data exchange have made under-reporting structurally difficult); and correct section references under the new IT Act 2025 — especially Sections 45, 44, 37(2)(g), 26, and 23.
At Shahnawaz and Associates, Chartered Accountants, Jogeshwari West, Mumbai, we specialise in ITR filing for restaurants, cloud kitchens, catering companies, bakeries, hotel food outlets, and all allied F&B entities. Our deep understanding of F&B-specific tax issues — from GST rate structure to MSME payment compliance — means you get a filing that is technically correct, optimised, and defensible. Visit cashahnawaz.com or contact us today for expert ITR filing assistance.
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