What happens if you have undisclosed cash, gold and investments?
“Where the total income of an assessee, (a) includes any income referred to in section 68, section 69, section 69A, section 69B, section 69C or section 69D and reflected in the return of income furnished under section 139; or (b) determined by the ‘Assessing Officer’ includes any income referred to in section 68, section 69, section 69A, section 69B, section 69C or section 69Dif such income is not covered under clause (a), the income-tax payable shall be the aggregate of—(i) the amount of income-tax calculated on the income referred to in clause (a) and clause (b), at the rate of sixty per cent,” according to Section 115BBE of the IT Act.
Section 115BBE is punitive in nature and deals with undisclosed income. It imposes high IT rates on incomes that are not bought under the ambit of taxation. While section 68 is about unexplained cash, section 69 deals with unexplained investments, section 69A involves unexplained money, bullion and jewellery, section 69C is about unexplained expenditure and section 69D deals with amount borrowed or repaid in hundi.
A penalty of 10% on the tax payable under section 115BBE is levied under section 271AAC of the IT Act if you are unable to prove the source of income. For instance, if you have undisclosed income of ₹1 crore, you have to pay tax of ₹60 lakh, ₹15 lakh as surcharge (25% on ₹60 lakh) and ₹3 lakh plus interest (4% on ₹75 lakh) totalling ₹78 lakh in taxes (78% of the undisclosed income) but can prove the source of the income. But if you are not able to disclose the source of your income, you have to pay a penal tax of 10% on the tax levy of ₹78 lakh. This will work out to a total of ₹85.8 lakh in taxes or 85.8% of the undisclosed income.
How much cash can you keep at home?
There is no legal limit on the cash that you can keep at home. But you should explain how you got it and it should be through legal means. If the cash that you have at home is not disclosed in your ITR, not recorded in your books of accounts and has no credible proof of source, then the IT Department will treat the entire money as unexplained income and charge taxes as mentioned above.
How about the quantum of gold you can have?
Individuals get a little leeway in the quantum of gold that they can own as it is passed on from one generation to another. Married women can own 500 grams of gold, unmarried women can hold 250 grams of gold and men can own 100 grams of gold.
If your gold holdings are within these limits, tax authorities cannot confiscate them even if you do not show any proof of source. But you can own as much gold as you want as long as you can prove that you purchased them through legal sources of income.
Are there any exceptions? Are deductions allowed?
You can file an updated IT return after you receive a notice of reassessment from the tax authorities. Amendments made in the union budget, 2026, allows taxpayers to submit updated ITRs even after the issuance of reassessment notices. If you are able to explain the sources of your undisclosed incomes in the updated ITR, you do not have to pay punitive taxes under section 115BBE.
However, no deductions can be claimed when you pay punitive taxes. “Provided that, notwithstanding anything contained in any other provision of this Act, such unexplained expenditure which is deemed to be the income of the assessee shall not be allowed as a deduction under any head of income,” according to the IT Department.

