44ADA for No-Code Developers in India — Eligibility, Rules & Examples
Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team
No-Code Developers can generally evaluate Section 44ADA where their services are treated as eligible professional receipts. If gross receipts are within ₹75L with 95%+ digital receipts (otherwise ₹50L), 50% can be offered as presumptive professional income.
Who this applies to
- Freelance no-code developers earning under ₹75L/year
- No-Code Developers working with both Indian and foreign clients
- No-Code Developers who want simplified tax filing without maintaining books
- Independent no-code developers evaluating presumptive vs actual taxation
How this works for No-Code Developers
Under 44ADA, you declare 50% of your total gross receipts as taxable income. If you earned ₹15L, only half is treated as profit.
You may file ITR-4 where eligibility conditions are satisfied. In particular, ITR-4 has additional conditions (such as total income limits) and exclusions.
The ₹75L limit applies if 95%+ of your receipts are digital (bank transfer, UPI, etc.). Otherwise it's ₹50L.
All business expenses are already covered by the 50% deemed deduction — you can't claim them separately.
Under 44ADA, you can pay 100% advance tax in a single installment by March 15.
The 5-year lock-in rule is generally discussed for Section 44AD (business), not as a blanket rule for 44ADA (profession).
This section targets high-intent queries like '44ADA for freelancers in India', '44ADA eligibility', and '44ADA vs 44AD' with condition-based guidance.
Run a pre-filing classification check: nature of activity (profession/business), presumptive section fit, receipt threshold, and return-form eligibility before selecting ITR.
Maintain an annual working paper that maps gross receipts (invoice-wise) to bank credits and 26AS/AIS entries before computing presumptive income.
If you evaluate switching between presumptive and regular books, preserve comparative tax workings with assumptions and supporting records.
Common deductible tools for No-Code Developers
Commonly missed expenses
Real examples
No-Code Developer with Indian clients
A no-code developer earning entirely from Indian clients, opting for 44ADA presumptive taxation.
No-Code Developer with mixed clients
A no-code developer earning from both Indian and foreign clients, using 44ADA + export of services.
What should you do?
If your actual expenses are less than 50% of income — 44ADA saves you money and hassle.
If expenses exceed 50% (heavy equipment, subcontractors, office rent), consider ITR-3 with actual expenses.
If you earn from foreign clients, 44ADA still applies — combine it with GST LUT for zero-rated exports.
If income exceeds ₹75L, 44ADA doesn't apply. You'll need books and possibly a tax audit.
Use presumptive only when documentation quality is strong enough to defend gross-receipt reporting and eligibility assumptions.
Where receipts are close to threshold or mixed in nature, validate section applicability with a written professional note before final filing.
Mistakes to avoid
Claiming expenses separately on top of 44ADA — the 50% deemed profit already covers everything.
Filing ITR-3 when ITR-4 would be simpler and cheaper under 44ADA.
Not paying advance tax by March 15 — triggers interest under Section 234C.
Not knowing the ₹75L limit increased from ₹50L for digital payments.
Applying 44AD lock-in assumptions directly to 44ADA without checking profession-specific rules.
Selecting presumptive method first and checking eligibility later; sequence should be eligibility first, computation second.
Ignoring reconciliation gaps between invoice register and bank credits, which later create AIS/TDS mismatch notices.
Documents you need
- Bank statements showing all client receipts
- Invoices issued to all clients
- PAN and Aadhaar linked
- Form 26AS / AIS for TDS verification
- Form 16A from deductors where TDS is deducted (if applicable)
- Form 10-IEA for opting out/withdrawing tax regime choice for business/profession cases (if applicable)
- Form 3CB-3CD if tax audit u/s 44AB applies (if applicable)
- Form 3CEB for specified international/domestic transactions u/s 92E (if applicable)
- FIRC/BRC for foreign payments
- Form 26AS and AIS to reconcile TDS and reported receipts
- Form 16A for TDS on professional receipts (if applicable)
- Form 10-IEA for business/profession regime option changes (if applicable)
- Form 3CB-3CD if tax audit u/s 44AB becomes applicable
- Annual eligibility memo (activity classification + presumptive section rationale)
- Invoice-to-bank reconciliation sheet for full financial year
- Draft and final tax-computation worksheets retained with assumptions
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