44ADA for Remote.com Income in India — Can You Use Presumptive Taxation?
Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team
If you earn through Remote.com and your gross receipts are under ₹75L (95%+ digital payments) or ₹50L otherwise, you may be eligible for Section 44ADA presumptive taxation. Remote.com contractor income is foreign professional income. You're responsible for Indian tax filing — Remote.com handles compliance for the hiring company, not for you.
Who this applies to
- Indian freelancers earning through Remote.com
- Remote.com earners with annual receipts under ₹75L
- Professionals wanting simplified tax filing for Remote.com income
- First-time filers unsure how to report Remote.com income
How this works for Remote.com
Under 44ADA, declare 50% of your total Remote.com receipts as taxable income. Your contract amount is your gross income. Remote.com charges the employer — their fees don't affect your income reporting.
File ITR-4 (Sugam) — no P&L, no books, no audit needed.
The ₹75L threshold applies if 95%+ receipts are digital. Since Remote.com payments are electronic, this usually applies.
All expenses are covered by the 50% deemed deduction — no separate claims.
Pay advance tax in a single installment by March 15 under 44ADA.
44ADA applies to 'professional' income under Sec 44AA(1). If your work is classified as business, Section 44AD may apply instead (6-8% deemed profit).
Real examples
Remote.com earner using 44ADA
A freelancer earning ₹24L/year through Remote.com, opting for presumptive taxation.
High-earning Remote.com professional
A professional earning ₹40L/year through Remote.com with actual expenses under 50%.
What should you do?
If actual expenses are under 50% of income — 44ADA saves money and time.
If expenses exceed 50% (subcontractors, heavy tool costs), consider ITR-3 with actual deductions.
Remote.com payments are digital, so the ₹75L threshold likely applies to you.
If your work is more 'business' than 'profession', check 44AD eligibility with a CA.
Mistakes to avoid
Not knowing whether your work qualifies as 'profession' (44ADA) or 'business' (44AD).
Reporting Remote.com income under 'Other Sources' instead of 'Business/Profession'.
Claiming expenses on top of 44ADA — you can't.
Not paying advance tax by March 15.
Ignoring platform fees — your gross receipts are BEFORE Remote.com's cut, not after.
Documents you need
- Remote.com payout reports/statements
- Bank statements showing receipts
- Invoices issued (if applicable)
- PAN, Aadhaar linked
- Form 26AS / AIS
- FIRC/BRC for foreign remittances
Not sure if 44ADA works for you as a Remote.com?
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