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The Coorg Farmland Investor’s Tax Return: A Practical Guide to Declaring Agricultural Income Correctly

by | Jun 21, 2026

The agricultural income tax exemption under Section 10(1) is one of the most compelling financial benefits of Coorg farmland investment — and it is entirely genuine and legal. But “tax-free” does not mean “undeclared.” Agricultural income must be correctly reported in your annual income tax return, and the specific reporting requirements involve a few technical details that every farmland investor should understand before their first harvest income arrives. This guide explains the practical tax return implications — not as a substitute for advice from your chartered accountant, but as a foundation for an informed conversation with them.

Agricultural Income Must Be Disclosed

A common misconception: because agricultural income is exempt from tax, it does not need to be mentioned in the income tax return. This is incorrect. Agricultural income must be disclosed in the income tax return — it is the exemption that prevents tax from being levied on it, not its exclusion from the return.

Non-disclosure of agricultural income when you have received it is not a recommended approach, as it creates a compliance gap that may attract scrutiny if other income or asset information triggers a review. Proper disclosure, on the other hand, is straightforward and creates no tax liability on the agricultural income itself.

The Partial Integration Rule: How Agricultural Income Affects Tax on Other Income

This is the technical aspect of agricultural income taxation that most investors are not fully aware of. For individuals whose total income (excluding agricultural income) exceeds the basic exemption limit, there is a partial integration rule that affects the rate at which tax is calculated on the non-agricultural income — though not the agricultural income itself.

Under this rule, the tax is calculated on the total of agricultural income plus other income (at the rates applicable to the combined total), and then a tax calculated on agricultural income plus the basic exemption limit is deducted from this figure. The result is that agricultural income itself pays no tax, but it can push your other income into a higher slab for the purpose of calculating tax on that other income.

For most Coorg farmland investors whose agricultural income is in the two to five lakh range, this partial integration effect is modest — the slab impact on a few additional lakhs of other income at the margin is limited. For investors with very large agricultural incomes, the effect is more worth modelling specifically with a chartered accountant.

Which ITR Form to Use

The Income Tax Return form applicable to an individual with agricultural income depends on their overall income profile. ITR-1 (Sahaj) cannot be used if agricultural income exceeds five thousand rupees — most farmland investors will not be able to use ITR-1. ITR-2 is appropriate for individuals with agricultural income above five thousand rupees who do not have business or professional income. ITR-3 applies if you also have business or professional income alongside agricultural income.

Most salaried Coorg farmland investors with agricultural income from their estate will use ITR-2 — this is the form that accommodates salary income, investment income, and agricultural income together. Your chartered accountant will confirm the appropriate form based on your complete income profile.

Documentation to Maintain for Agricultural Income

Maintaining clean, organised documentation of your agricultural income makes the return filing process straightforward and provides the foundation for any future verification. Key documents to maintain include the Nature N Me crop income statement for each harvest season (showing harvest weight, sale price, management fee deduction, and net income paid), bank statements showing agricultural income credits to your account, the registered sale deed and current RTC confirming you own the agricultural land from which the income derives, and any correspondence from Nature N Me regarding crop sales, prices, or income calculations.

These documents, organised by financial year, are the complete evidentiary basis for your agricultural income declaration. They demonstrate that the income is genuine agricultural income from land you own — exactly what the Section 10(1) exemption requires.

State Agricultural Income Tax: Is There Any?

A question some investors ask: can state governments tax agricultural income separately? The Constitution of India places agricultural income in the state list, allowing states to levy agricultural income tax. However, as a practical matter, most Indian states including Karnataka do not currently levy state agricultural income tax on individual landowners’ agricultural income — the tax has historically been levied on large plantation companies in some states but not on individual small and medium landholders.

Karnataka does not currently impose state agricultural income tax on individual agricultural landowners at the scale of typical managed farmland investments. However, investors should verify the current position with a Karnataka-qualified chartered accountant at the time of filing, as state tax legislation can change.

Contact Nature N Me at naturenme.in or WhatsApp +91 98805 21637. We can facilitate introductions to chartered accountants experienced in agricultural income declaration for farmland investors.

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