The ₹2 Lakh Cash Rule — What Every Indian Must Know
This is the single most important cash rule that applies to every person in India — salaried, business owner, or professional.
The Rule (Section 269ST)
No person shall receive ₹2,00,000 or more in cash:
- In a single transaction, OR
- In multiple transactions related to one event or occasion, OR
- From one person in a single day
Who Does This Apply To?
| Applies To | Example |
| Business owners | A shopkeeper receiving ₹2.5 lakh cash for a bulk order |
| Professionals | A doctor receiving ₹2 lakh cash fees from one patient in a day |
| Any person | Receiving cash payment for sale of car, jewellery, goods, or services |
The Penalty (Section 271DA)
If you receive ₹2 lakh or more in cash → 100% penalty on the amount received.
| Scenario | Amount Received in Cash | Penalty |
| Shopkeeper receives cash for goods | ₹2,50,000 | ₹2,50,000 (100%) |
| Professional receives fees | ₹3,00,000 | ₹3,00,000 (100%) |
IMPORTANT
The penalty falls on the receiver, not the payer. If you run a business, never accept ₹2 lakh or more in cash from a single person in a single day — regardless of the reason.
Exceptions to the ₹2 Lakh Rule
The ₹2 lakh cash limit does not apply to:
- Receipts by Government
- Receipts by banking companies, post offices, and co-operative banks
- Transactions referred to in Section 269SS (loans/deposits — they have their own stricter limit)
Cash Loan Rules — The ₹20,000 Limit
Giving or Receiving a Loan in Cash (Section 269SS)
This is where cash rules get extremely strict. The limit is not ₹2 lakh — it is just ₹20,000.
| Action | Cash Limit | Penalty |
| Giving a loan in cash | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty on the receiver |
| Receiving a loan in cash | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty on the receiver |
| Repaying a loan in cash | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty on the repayer |
What Counts as a “Loan” Under This Rule?
- Money lent to a friend
- Money lent to a family member
- Money lent to a business associate
- Any amount given with an expectation of return
The Penalty (Section 271D)
If you receive a loan of more than ₹20,000 in cash → 100% penalty equal to the loan amount.
Example: You lend ₹50,000 cash to a friend → The friend (receiver) faces a penalty of ₹50,000.
WARNING
This rule applies even between family members. If you give ₹1 lakh cash to your brother as a loan, the penalty is ₹1 lakh. Always use bank transfer — NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, UPI, or cheque.
Loan Repayment in Cash (Section 269T)
Repaying a loan in cash also has the same ₹20,000 limit.
| Scenario | Limit | Penalty (Section 271E) |
| Repaying a personal loan in cash | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% of repayment amount |
| Returning security deposit in cash | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% of amount returned |
Cash Rules for Property Transactions
Buying or Selling Property (Section 269SS & 269ST)
Real estate transactions are heavily monitored by the Income Tax Department. The cash limit for property-related payments is just ₹20,000.
| Transaction Type | Cash Limit | Penalty |
| Token / advance for property | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty |
| Part payment for property | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty |
| Full payment for property | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty |
| Security deposit for rented property | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty |
| Refund of security deposit | ≤ ₹20,000 | 100% penalty |
Why Property Cash Transactions Are Risky
- Registrar reports to Income Tax — Every property registration is reported via SFT (Statement of Financial Transactions)
- Stamp duty mismatch — If declared value and cash component don’t match, scrutiny is triggered
- 100% penalty — Unlike business transactions (₹2 lakh limit), property cash has only a ₹20,000 limit
- Both parties at risk — The buyer and seller both face consequences
CAUTION
Never accept or pay more than ₹20,000 in cash for any property-related transaction — whether it is a purchase, sale, advance, token amount, or security deposit. The penalty is equal to the entire cash amount involved.
Gift Tax Rules for Cash
When Is a Cash Gift Taxable? (Section 56(2)(x))
Cash gifts are common in Indian culture — weddings, festivals, birthdays. The Income Tax Act treats cash gifts as follows:
| Gift Situation | Tax Treatment |
| Total cash gifts in a year ≤ ₹50,000 | ✅ Tax-free — no tax, no reporting needed |
| Total cash gifts in a year > ₹50,000 | ❌ Entire amount taxable as “Income from Other Sources” |
| Gift from spouse, parents, siblings, direct relatives | ✅ Tax-free — no limit applies |
| Gift on occasion of marriage | ✅ Tax-free — no limit applies |
| Gift received by way of inheritance / will | ✅ Tax-free — no limit applies |
| Gift from non-relatives exceeding ₹50,000 | ❌ Full amount taxable (not just excess) |
The ₹50,000 Trap
Many people misunderstand this rule. If you receive ₹60,000 as cash gifts from non-relatives in a year, the entire ₹60,000 is taxable — not just the ₹10,000 excess over ₹50,000.
Who Are “Relatives” Under Income Tax?
Gifts from the following are always tax-free regardless of amount:
- Spouse
- Brother or sister (including spouse’s siblings)
- Parents (including in-laws)
- Children and their spouses
- Grandparents and grandchildren
- Any lineal ascendant or descendant
Cash Gift Best Practices
| ✅ Do | ❌ Don’t |
| Accept wedding gifts in cash (tax-free) | Accept large cash gifts from friends/non-relatives without documenting |
| Keep records of all gifts received | Assume gifts between friends are always tax-free |
| Transfer large gifts via bank | Give gifts above ₹50,000 in cash to non-relatives |
| Maintain a gift deed for large amounts | Forget to report taxable gifts in your ITR |
100% Penalty Provisions — Complete Reference
Here is every situation where the Income Tax Act imposes a 100% penalty on cash transactions:
| Section | Violation | Cash Limit | Penalty |
| 271D | Receiving loan/deposit in cash above limit | > ₹20,000 | 100% of loan/deposit |
| 271E | Repaying loan/deposit in cash above limit | > ₹20,000 | 100% of repayment |
| 271DA | Receiving payment in cash above limit | > ₹2,00,000 | 100% of amount received |
| 270A | Unexplained cash found at home/premises | Any amount | Up to 84% tax (60% tax + 25% surcharge + cess) |
The 84% Tax on Unexplained Cash
This is the harshest penalty in the entire Income Tax Act. If unexplained cash is found:
| Component | Rate |
| Tax under Section 115BBE | 60% |
| Surcharge | 25% of tax (= 15%) |
| Health & Education Cess | 4% of (tax + surcharge) (= ~3%) |
| Effective Total Tax | ~78% |
| Additional Penalty (if applicable) | Up to 10% more |
| Maximum Combined Burden | Up to ~84% |
NOTE
There is no specific limit on how much cash you can keep at home. However, every rupee must be explainable — it should be traceable to legitimate, tax-paid income. If the Income Tax Department finds cash during a search and you cannot explain its source, up to 84% of that amount goes to the government.
TDS on Cash Withdrawal from Banks (Section 194N)
Banks deduct TDS when you withdraw large amounts of cash. The rates depend on whether you have filed your ITR in the previous 3 years:
If You Have Filed ITR (Past 3 Years)
| Cash Withdrawn in FY | TDS Rate |
| Up to ₹1 crore | ❌ No TDS |
| Above ₹1 crore | 2% TDS on amount exceeding ₹1 crore |
If You Have NOT Filed ITR (Past 3 Years)
| Cash Withdrawn in FY | TDS Rate |
| Up to ₹20 lakh | ❌ No TDS |
| ₹20 lakh to ₹1 crore | 2% TDS |
| Above ₹1 crore | 5% TDS |
Can You Get This TDS Back?
Yes. The TDS deducted under Section 194N can be claimed as a credit when you file your ITR for that financial year. It is not a penalty — it is an advance tax collection mechanism.
TIP
Always file your ITR on time. Non-filers face TDS from just ₹20 lakh of withdrawal, while regular filers get ₹1 crore of TDS-free withdrawal. Filing ITR alone saves you from unnecessary TDS deduction.
Business-Specific Cash Rules
Cash Sales Limit (Section 269ST)
| Rule | Limit |
| Maximum cash you can receive from one person in one day | ₹2,00,000 |
| Penalty for violation | 100% of amount received |
Cash Expense Limit (Section 40A(3))
| Expense Type | Cash Limit Per Person Per Day | Consequence If Exceeded |
| General business expenses | ₹10,000 | Expense disallowed — you lose the deduction |
| Payment to transporters | ₹35,000 | Expense disallowed above this limit |
What “disallowed” means: If you pay ₹25,000 cash to a supplier, that ₹25,000 cannot be deducted from your business income. You pay tax on that amount as if it were profit.
Cash Purchase of Capital Assets
If you buy a capital asset (laptop, machinery, vehicle, furniture) in cash:
- The purchase itself is not penalized
- But depreciation is NOT allowed on that asset
- This means you lose the tax benefit of the asset’s cost spread over its useful life
Example: You buy 10 laptops worth ₹5 lakh in cash for your business → You get zero depreciation on those laptops, increasing your taxable income for years.
Deductions You Lose When You Pay in Cash
Certain tax deductions are completely denied if you make the payment in cash:
| Deduction | Section | Cash Rule | Effect of Cash Payment |
| Donation to charity | 80G | Max ₹2,000 in cash | Donations above ₹2,000 in cash → No deduction |
| Health insurance premium | 80D | ₹0 — cash not allowed | Any cash payment → No deduction |
| Business expenses | 40A(3) | Max ₹10,000/person/day | Excess → Expense disallowed |
| Capital asset depreciation | 32 | Avoid cash entirely | Cash purchase → No depreciation |
WARNING
Paying health insurance premium in cash means you get zero deduction under Section 80D — even if the premium is just ₹5,000. Always pay through bank transfer, cheque, or UPI.
How the Government Detects Cash Transactions
Many people wonder: “How will the Income Tax Department even find out?” There are multiple reporting mechanisms:
1. SFT Reporting (Statement of Financial Transactions)
Banks and financial institutions automatically report high-value cash transactions to the Income Tax Department:
| Account Type | Cash Threshold (Per FY) | Reported To |
| Savings Account | Deposits or withdrawals > ₹10 lakh | Income Tax Department |
| Current Account | Deposits or withdrawals > ₹50 lakh | Income Tax Department |
| Fixed Deposits | FDs exceeding ₹10 lakh | Income Tax Department |
| Credit Card | Payments exceeding ₹10 lakh (₹1 lakh in cash) | Income Tax Department |
| Property Purchase | Registered at ₹30 lakh+ | Registrar reports to IT Dept |
| Mutual Funds | Investments exceeding ₹10 lakh | Fund house reports |
| Shares/Bonds | Purchases exceeding ₹10 lakh | Depository reports |
2. Search and Seizure (Raids)
The Income Tax Department conducts search operations based on intelligence inputs. If unexplained cash is found during a raid, the 84% tax + penalty applies immediately.
3. PAN-Aadhaar Linkage
All financial transactions are now linked through PAN and Aadhaar, creating a complete digital trail of your cash movements across banks, registrars, and financial institutions.
4. Annual Information Statement (AIS)
Your AIS on the Income Tax portal shows every high-value transaction reported against your PAN. The department cross-references this with your ITR to identify discrepancies.
How to Avoid Income Tax Penalties on Cash Transactions
The 10 Golden Rules
| # | Rule | Why It Matters |
| 1 | Never receive ₹2 lakh+ in cash from one person in a day | Avoids 100% penalty under 269ST |
| 2 | Never give/take loans above ₹20,000 in cash | Avoids 100% penalty under 269SS |
| 3 | Never deal in property above ₹20,000 in cash | Avoids 100% penalty under 269SS/269T |
| 4 | Keep all cash at home explainable | Avoids 84% tax on unexplained cash |
| 5 | File ITR every year without fail | Reduces TDS on cash withdrawal from 5% to 2% |
| 6 | Pay insurance premiums via bank | Preserves 80D deduction |
| 7 | Donate via bank transfer | Preserves 80G deduction (cash limit is just ₹2,000) |
| 8 | Buy capital assets via bank | Preserves depreciation benefit |
| 9 | Keep business cash expenses under ₹10,000/day/person | Preserves expense deduction |
| 10 | Monitor your AIS regularly | Catch errors before the department sends a notice |
Digital Alternatives to Cash
| Instead of Cash | Use |
| ₹2 lakh+ payments | UPI, NEFT, RTGS, IMPS, cheque, demand draft |
| Loan to family/friends | Bank transfer + simple loan agreement |
| Property token/advance | Cheque or bank transfer + receipt |
| Business purchases | UPI, credit/debit card, bank transfer |
| Donations | Online transfer, cheque (get 80G receipt) |
| Insurance premiums | Auto-debit, UPI, net banking |
Complete Cash Limit Quick Reference Chart
| Transaction Type | Cash Limit | Penalty/Consequence | Section |
| Receiving payment (business/personal) | ₹2,00,000 | 100% penalty | 269ST / 271DA |
| Loan given or received | ₹20,000 | 100% penalty | 269SS / 271D |
| Loan repayment | ₹20,000 | 100% penalty | 269T / 271E |
| Security deposit (rent) | ₹20,000 | 100% penalty | 269SS / 271D |
| Security deposit refund | ₹20,000 | 100% penalty | 269T / 271E |
| Property transaction | ₹20,000 | 100% penalty | 269SS |
| Business expenses | ₹10,000/person/day | Expense disallowed | 40A(3) |
| Transporter payment | ₹35,000/day | Expense disallowed above limit | 40A(3) |
| Donation (80G) | ₹2,000 | No deduction | 80G |
| Health insurance (80D) | ₹0 (no cash) | No deduction | 80D |
| Capital asset purchase | Avoid cash | No depreciation | 32/43 |
| Cash gift (non-relative) | ₹50,000/year | Full amount taxable | 56(2)(x) |
| Cash at home | No limit | Must be explainable — up to 84% tax | 69A / 115BBE |
| Savings a/c deposit/withdrawal | ₹10 lakh/year | SFT reporting triggered | — |
| Current a/c deposit/withdrawal | ₹50 lakh/year | SFT reporting triggered | — |
| Bank withdrawal (ITR filed) | ₹1 crore/year | 2% TDS above limit | 194N |
| Bank withdrawal (no ITR) | ₹20 lakh/year | 2% (₹20L-1Cr), 5% (above 1Cr) TDS | 194N |
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
How much cash can I keep at home legally in India?
There is no specific legal limit on how much cash you can keep at home. However, all cash must be explainable and traceable to legitimate, tax-paid income. If the Income Tax Department finds unexplained cash during a search, you could face up to 84% tax and penalty on the entire amount under Sections 69A and 115BBE.
What is the ₹2 lakh cash rule in India?
Under Section 269ST, no person can receive ₹2,00,000 or more in cash in a single transaction, or from a single person in a single day. Violation attracts a 100% penalty under Section 271DA — meaning the entire amount received is charged as penalty.
Can I give a ₹1 lakh cash loan to my brother?
No. Under Section 269SS, any loan exceeding ₹20,000 must be given through banking channels (cheque, NEFT, RTGS, UPI, etc.). This rule applies even between family members. Violation attracts a 100% penalty under Section 271D equal to the loan amount.
Is there a penalty for paying property advance in cash?
Yes. Any property-related cash transaction exceeding ₹20,000 attracts a 100% penalty under Sections 269SS/271D. This includes token amounts, advances, part payments, security deposits, and final payments. Always use bank transfer for property deals.
Are cash gifts taxable in India?
Cash gifts from non-relatives totaling more than ₹50,000 in a financial year are fully taxable as “Income from Other Sources.” However, gifts from relatives (spouse, parents, siblings, children) are completely tax-free regardless of amount. Gifts received on the occasion of marriage are also tax-free from anyone.
What happens if I withdraw ₹25 lakh cash without filing ITR?
If you have not filed ITR for the past 3 years, 2% TDS will be deducted on cash withdrawals between ₹20 lakh and ₹1 crore, and 5% TDS on withdrawals above ₹1 crore. This TDS can be claimed back when you file your ITR.
Can I pay health insurance premium in cash?
You can pay it in cash, but you will not get any deduction under Section 80D. Health insurance premiums must be paid through non-cash modes (cheque, UPI, bank transfer) to claim the tax deduction.
What is SFT reporting and how does it affect me?
Statement of Financial Transactions (SFT) is a reporting mechanism where banks and financial institutions automatically inform the Income Tax Department about high-value transactions. If you deposit or withdraw more than ₹10 lakh in a savings account or ₹50 lakh in a current account in a year, it gets reported. This doesn’t mean you’ll be penalized — but the department will check if it matches your declared income.
I run a business. Can I pay ₹15,000 cash to a supplier?
You can, but the amount exceeding ₹10,000 will be disallowed as a business expense under Section 40A(3). This means you’ll pay tax on that ₹15,000 as if it were profit. Exception: payments to transporters have a higher limit of ₹35,000 per day.
What is the safest way to handle cash transactions in India?
Use digital payment methods for all transactions above the prescribed limits. File your ITR every year to benefit from higher cash withdrawal limits. Keep records of all cash transactions. Monitor your Annual Information Statement (AIS) on the Income Tax portal regularly to catch and correct any discrepancies before the department sends a notice.






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