Profession Guide|Tax Filing

Tax Filing for Content Writers in India — ITR Form, Deadlines & Guide

Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team

Content Writers should file ITR-4 if using presumptive taxation (44ADA/44AD), or ITR-3 if claiming actual expenses. Report income under 'Business/Profession' — never under 'Other Sources'.

Who this applies to

  • Content Writers filing income tax for the first time
  • Content Writers confused about ITR-3 vs ITR-4
  • Content Writers with mixed Indian and foreign income
  • Former salaried professionals who switched to freelance content writer work
Typical Income Model
Per-article, monthly retainers, per-word rates
Client Mix
45% foreign, 55% domestic

How this works for Content Writers

1

Decide: 44ADA/44AD (presumptive) or actual expenses? This determines your ITR form.

2

ITR-4: Simple form for presumptive taxation. Declare deemed profit, no books needed.

3

ITR-3: Full form with P&L, balance sheet, and expense schedule. Use when actual expenses > deemed profit.

4

Report freelance income under 'Profits and Gains from Business or Profession' — never 'Other Sources'.

5

Check Form 26AS/AIS for TDS already deducted by clients and claim credit.

6

Due date: July 31 (no audit). October 31 (if audit required).

Common deductible tools for Content Writers

Google DocsWordPressGrammarlySurferSEONotion

Commonly missed expenses

GrammarlySEO toolsStock imagesLaptopInternet

Real examples

Content Writer using presumptive taxation

Filing ITR-4 under Section 44ADA with income under ₹75L.

Annual Income
₹12L
Estimated Savings
CA fees + audit costs saved
Without TaxTap
Complex ITR-3 with books of accounts
With TaxTap
Simple ITR-4, no audit needed

Content Writer with actual expenses

Filing ITR-3 with detailed P&L when expenses exceed 50% of income.

Annual Income
₹22L
Estimated Savings
Varies — often ₹50K-₹2L
Without TaxTap
Higher tax under 44ADA (50% deemed profit)
With TaxTap
Lower tax with actual expense deductions

What should you do?

Use ITR-4 if expenses are under the presumptive threshold — simpler and cheaper.

Use ITR-3 if heavy expenses on equipment, subcontractors, or office space.

Foreign income? Either form works but file Form 67 for Foreign Tax Credit.

Mixed salary + freelance income? Use ITR-3 regardless.

Mistakes to avoid

Filing income under 'Other Sources' instead of 'Business/Profession'.

Not reconciling TDS from Form 26AS before filing.

Missing July 31 deadline — late fees of ₹5,000 apply.

Not declaring foreign income — all global income is taxable for residents.

Filing ITR-1 by mistake — freelancers cannot use ITR-1.

Documents you need

  • Form 26AS / AIS
  • All client invoices and payment receipts
  • Bank statements for the financial year
  • Expense receipts (software, tools, travel)
  • FIRC/BRC for foreign income
  • PAN, Aadhaar, and bank details

Still confused about which ITR form to pick?

Wrong form = wrong deductions = more tax. Let a CA handle your filing end-to-end.

FAQs: Tax Filing for Content Writers

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