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Audit guide · Educational institution

Educational institution audit

A practitioner’s guide to the audit of schools, colleges, and universities claiming exemption under Section 10(23C) of the Income-tax Act, including the Form 10BB framework.

Last reviewed 28 May 2026 · India regulatory framework
Authoritative sources
  • Income-tax Act 1961 — Section 10(23C) sub-clauses (iiiad), (iiiae), (vi), (via)
  • Income-tax Rules 1962 — Rule 2C (notification of institutions), Rule 16CC (Form 10BB)
  • CBDT Notification 7/2023 — restructured Form 10B / 10BB
  • UGC / AICTE regulations for higher educational institutions
  • State Education Acts (RTE Act etc.) and state-level fee regulation

Regulatory framework as of May 2026. Always verify the latest position on the authority’s site before relying on any specific rule for a filing.

1 · The 10(23C) exemption framework

Section 10(23C) of the Income-tax Act 1961 exempts the income of certain institutions existing solely for educational purposes and not for profit. The relevant sub-clauses for educational institutions:

  • 10(23C)(iiiad) — schools / educational institutions with annual receipts up to ₹5 crore (no separate registration / notification needed)
  • 10(23C)(iiiae) — hospitals / medical institutions with annual receipts up to ₹5 crore
  • 10(23C)(vi) — schools / educational institutions wholly or substantially financed by the Government, or notified by CBDT (if not government-financed and receipts exceed ₹5 crore)
  • 10(23C)(via) — hospitals / medical institutions wholly or substantially financed by the Government, or notified

2 · When audit + Form 10BB is required

Audit under Section 10(23C) is required where annual receipts exceed the basic exemption limit (currently ₹2.5 lakh — effectively always, given operating scale of any institution). The audit report is in Form 10BB:

  • Filed electronically by 30 September of the assessment year (one month before ITR due date)
  • UDIN-mandated
  • Covers institutional financials + utilisation of income + Sec 13-equivalent disclosures (specified persons, foreign contributions)
  • Distinct from Form 10B which applies to Sec 12A/12AB-registered trusts

3 · Specific audit considerations

Educational institution audits have distinct flavour compared to corporate audits:

  • Fee structure — compliance with state fee regulation (Maharashtra FRA, Karnataka KEA, etc.) where applicable
  • Capitation fees / donations — Sec 10(23C) requires receipts to be "solely for educational purposes" — voluntary donations OK, capitation fees may invalidate exemption
  • Application of income — at least 85% applied for educational purposes per Sec 10(23C) proviso
  • Government grants — utilisation report to the grantor; segregated bank account; unutilised amounts to be refunded
  • Investments — restricted to Sec 11(5) modes (where receipts exceed ₹5 crore)
  • Specified-person transactions — equivalent of Sec 13(3) checks
  • RTE compliance — 25% reservation for EWS / DG students, fee reimbursement claim verification
  • Foreign contribution — FCRA registration where applicable

4 · Common pitfalls

Frequent observations on educational institution audits:

  • Surplus accumulation — repeated surpluses raise "not solely for educational purposes" questions
  • Capitation fees disguised as donations — Sec 10(23C) carve-outs
  • Specified-person transactions — payments to trustees / family for "services rendered"
  • Inter-trust transactions — transfers to other trusts as "application" without ensuring receiving trust’s exempt status
  • Capital expenditure treatment — claiming as both application + depreciation (no longer permitted post Finance Act 2014)
  • Form 10B vs 10BB confusion — picking the wrong form invalidates the report
Common questions

Educational institution audit — FAQs

My school has receipts of ₹4 crore — does it need Sec 10(23C)(vi) registration?
No. Under Sec 10(23C)(iiiad), schools with annual receipts up to ₹5 crore are automatically exempt without any separate notification or registration. The exemption is self-claimed in the ITR. Audit under Form 10BB is still required if receipts exceed the basic exemption limit.
Can a Section 10(23C) institution also be registered under Sec 12A / 12AB?
Not simultaneously. The institution opts for one regime. From Finance Act 2020 amendments, an entity already registered under 12A may apply for 10(23C) or vice versa, but it must surrender the existing registration. Audit forms differ — Form 10B for 12A/12AB, Form 10BB for 10(23C) (subject to thresholds).
Are voluntary donations to schools always exempt?
For Sec 10(23C)-claiming schools, voluntary donations are exempt provided they don’t convert into capitation fees (i.e. linked to admission). Anonymous donations (Sec 115BBC) are taxable at 30%. For Sec 12A-registered trusts running schools, corpus vs non-corpus distinction matters for income computation.
How CORAA helps with educational institution audit
Scrutiny hub — income / fee receipt classification, specified-person flaggingReporting hub — Form 10BB annexure
Related templates and tools:
Trust Audit Report (Form 10B variant)Engagement acceptance — educational
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