Calendar habit

Tax and money reminder calendar

Use recurring prompts to come back to calculators before decisions. The calendar file is a reminder system only; statutory due dates can change and must be verified on official portals.

Download reminders

Download .ics calendarOpen monthly checklist

The .ics file contains recurring personal finance review prompts, not official due-date guarantees.

What reminders are included

Official verification links

Before filing or paying anything, verify final dates and rules from the Income Tax Department, GST/CBIC portal, RBI/lender communications, or your professional advisor.

Source, accuracy and review note

Maintained by the RupeeCalc editorial workflow. Last checked: 29 May 2026. This page gives informational estimates only; verify official sources, your own documents, and a qualified professional before filing taxes, taking loans, investing, invoicing, or making compliance decisions.

Sources · Methodology · Disclaimer · Report a correction

Tax reminders by user type

UserReminderCalculator / guide
Salaried employeeCheck declaration, Form 16, AIS/TIS and regime choice.Salary Tax Playbook
Rent-paying employeeKeep rent proof and HRA details consistent.HRA Calculator
FreelancerTrack invoices, receipts and tax/GST records.GST guide
InvestorReview capital gains, interest income and AIS/TIS entries.Income Tax Guide

This page is a planning reminder, not an official due-date notification. Always verify deadlines from official portals.

Why tax reminders should start before filing season

Many salaried employees only think about tax after Form 16 arrives. By then, several choices are already locked: employer proof submission may be over, rent documentation may be incomplete, investment proofs may be scattered and TDS may already reflect earlier declarations. A tax calendar helps users avoid this last-minute rush.

Quarterly rhythm

  1. April–June: understand salary structure, choose declaration approach and start document folders.
  2. July–September: compare Form 16, AIS/TIS and interest income entries after filing season.
  3. October–December: review deductions while there is still time to correct documentation.
  4. January–March: finalize proof submission and avoid panic purchases made only for tax saving.

For freelancers and small businesses, the rhythm is similar but invoice, payment and GST records become more important than employer proof windows. The safest approach is to maintain records continuously and verify deadlines from official portals.

Reminder examples that reduce filing stress

A salaried employee can create three folders at the start of the year: rent/HRA, investments/deductions and salary/Form 16. A freelancer can create folders for invoices, receipts, GST records and bank credits. A borrower can keep interest certificates and prepayment receipts separately. These small habits prevent last-minute confusion when filing or responding to payroll proof requests.

RupeeCalc’s tax reminders are intentionally practical. The goal is not to replace official reminders. The goal is to help users prepare the numbers and documents that official filing utilities, payroll teams or advisors may later ask for.

Last-mile usage note

This page is intended to be used together with the calculators, not as a standalone rulebook. The safest workflow is to calculate, read the caveats, verify source-sensitive assumptions and then act. This keeps RupeeCalc useful for real decisions because each page connects a real decision with practical next steps.