Futures & Options (F&O) trading is treated as business income under the Income Tax Act. That means your reporting, tax calculation, and expense claims will follow business rules — not capital gains rules. Here’s a complete guide and a list of allowable trading expenses you can claim to reduce tax.
Turnover for F&O is not your total buy/sell value. It’s calculated as:
Turnover =
Example:
| Trade Type | Buy Price | Sell Price | Qty | Profit/Loss | Turnover |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| NIFTY Future | 18,000 | 18,050 | 50 | ₹2,500 | ₹2,500 |
| BANKNIFTY Option Sell | ₹200 | ₹150 | 25 | ₹1,250 | ₹5,000 (premium) |
| BANKNIFTY Option Buy | ₹100 | ₹80 | 25 | -₹500 | ₹500 |
Total Turnover = ₹2,500 + ₹5,000 + ₹500 = ₹8,000
Audit under Sec 44AB is mandatory if:
If you opt for normal taxation (not presumptive), you can deduct all expenses that are wholly and exclusively for trading, such as:
| Expense Type | Examples |
|---|---|
| Brokerage & Transaction Charges | Brokerage, STT (allowed for business), exchange fees |
| Internet & Communication | Broadband, mobile, trading platform subscriptions |
| Office Rent & Maintenance | Rent, cleaning, repairs |
| Electricity | Office or home office usage (proportionate) |
| Staff Salary | Office assistants, analysts, admin staff |
| Professional Fees | CA fees, tax consultant, research services |
| Software / Data Feeds | TradingView, Amibroker, broker APIs |
| Travel for Business | Broker visits, market seminars |
| Depreciation | Computers, office furniture, equipment |
Note:
If you have both investment income (like long-term shares) and trading income (F&O), maintain two separate portfolios:
Bottom Line:
Report F&O income as business income in ITR-3, calculate turnover as per ICAI rules, choose between presumptive and normal taxation, and claim all legitimate expenses if using the normal method. Proper reporting not only reduces your tax liability but also keeps you safe from notices.