The Income Tax Department, as part of its major initiative to improve taxpayer profiling, ease of interaction and increase data accuracy in the tax administration system, has included a mandatory ‘Secondary Address’ field in the Income Tax Return (ITR) form for Assessment Year (AY) 2026-27.
These new fields have been added to all ITR forms from ITR-1 to ITR-7. This includes salaried people, professionals, businesses, firms, LLPs, companies, trusts and other types of taxpayers filing income tax returns. This step seems to be a major change towards capturing more complete and organized information of the taxpayer in the ITR form.
This can help the department keep contact and address information updated, reduce communication gaps, and provide better verification. This is especially helpful if a taxpayer has more than one required address, such as a permanent address, current address, place of work, or address used for financial/tax records.
However, the taxpayer should ensure that the secondary address provided is correct and matches with their records. If the secondary address and primary address are the same, the taxpayer can provide the same information in the utility instead of providing different information unnecessarily.
Which ITR forms have this new field?
For assessment year 2026-27, secondary address field has been added in ‘Part A General/Personal Information’ of the notified ITR forms. This includes ITR-1, ITR-2, ITR-3, ITR-4, ITR-5, ITR-6 and ITR-7, as the notified forms now have separate fields for primary address and secondary address for communication.
What exactly is a secondary address?
Secondary address may include any additional valid physical address associated with the taxpayer, in addition to the primary address stated in the Income Tax Return (ITR). This can be a place where the taxpayer lives, works, conducts business or receives official communications. CA (Dr.) Suresh Surana said in the FE report that no separate detailed definition of ‘secondary address’ has been given in the Income-Tax Act. However, the purpose is to obtain an alternative address for communication, such as a current home address, permanent address, office/registered address or any other relevant address other than the primary address. If a taxpayer has only one communication address, they can specify that the secondary address is the same as the primary address. If it is different, the different secondary address must be specified accurately.
How does the department define current, permanent and secondary addresses?
The IT Act does not separately define “current”, “permanent” and “secondary” addresses for the purpose of ITR for assessment year 2026-27. In the ITR form, primary address and secondary address are mainly mentioned as addresses for the purpose of communication. In practice, current address may mean the taxpayer’s current or principal place of residence or business at the time of filing the return, which will be used for principal communication.
Surana said that permanent address can mean a place of long-term residence or ancestral place which remains associated with the taxpayer despite temporarily living somewhere else. At the same time, the secondary address can include any additional valid physical address associated with the taxpayer in addition to the primary address mentioned in the Income Tax Return (ITR).
If secondary address is not updated in Aadhaar or PAN record then…
Just because the secondary address given in the ITR is not updated in the Aadhaar or PAN records, mismatch will not automatically lead to compliance issues. Surana said that however, taxpayers should ensure that the address mentioned is correct and genuine. Since ITR information can be cross-verified with PAN, Aadhaar, bank, employer and other records, major errors can lead to verification or communication issues. Therefore, where there has been a major change in address, it is important to keep important records up to date.
Can taxpayers update secondary address through revised ITR?
According to Surana, if a taxpayer finds that the secondary address mentioned in the original return is incorrect or incomplete, or there has been a change, the information can usually be corrected by filing a revised return under section 139(5) within the prescribed time limit. The condition is that the original return is filed within the due date.
Revised returns allow taxpayers to correct errors and omissions, including personal and contact information, as stated in the ITR. However, if the change is only for future communication, taxpayers can also update the address in their e-filing profile.
