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Scrutiny Notice Under Section 143(2)? A Guide for Salaried Taxpayers

Super User

Each year, many salaried individuals claim deductions while filing their income tax returns ranging from HRA to Section 80C investments. However, a significant number of these returns are later flagged by the Income Tax Department for scrutiny due to incorrect, inflated, or unsupported deduction claims.

If you are a salaried taxpayer and have received a notice under Section 143(2), this article explains why your return was selected, how the scrutiny process works, what the possible consequences are, and why professional guidance is strongly advised.

Common Deduction Claims That Trigger Scrutiny

Many salaried employees unknowingly (or sometimes deliberately) claim deductions without meeting the eligibility criteria or maintaining proper documentation. These include:

Returns with such claims—especially if resulting in high refunds—are often picked for scrutiny.

Why You Receive a Scrutiny Notice (Section 143(2))

A notice under Section 143(2) indicates that your return has been selected for a detailed examination (scrutiny assessment). This is usually triggered by:

It is important to understand that scrutiny is not an accusation—it is a verification exercise. But how you respond determines the eventual outcome.

Can You Recompute and Pay Tax After Receiving the Notice?

Yes. If you find an error or inflated deduction:

Such voluntary action may soften penalties, but it does not provide immunity. It does, however, reflect cooperation and good faith.

Scrutiny Process – Step-by-Step Breakdown

1. Notice under Section 143(2): Initiation of Scrutiny

This notice serves as the starting point of the scrutiny process. It notifies you that your return is under review and invites you to furnish further details. You will be asked to respond within 15 to 20 days via the income tax portal.

If you receive a 143(2) notice, your case is now subject to regular assessment under Section 143(3).

Is it necessary to submit documents at this stage? No , at this stage you are not required to submit supporting documents. The 143(2) notice is only an intimation that your return has been selected for scrutiny. Detailed queries and document requisitions will follow separately through a notice under Section 142(1).

However, it is mandatory to respond to the 143(2) notice via the portal within the stipulated time to avoid adverse consequences such as best judgment assessment under Section 144. The mandatory response is essentially a formal acknowledgment and confirmation that you are complying with the notice

While immediate submission of documents is not required, it is advisable to start organizing relevant records and consult a Chartered Accountant to prepare for the upcoming 142(1) notice and scrutiny process.

2. Notice under Section 142(1) of income tax Act: Requisition of Information

Shortly after the 143(2) notice, you’ll receive a more detailed notice under Section 142(1) requesting explanations and documents.

What Makes 142(1) Critical?

What Makes 142(1) Critical?

The scope of this notice is wide and often goes well beyond the deductions claimed. Using powerful tools like Project Insight, AI-based monitoring, and 360-degree taxpayer profiling, the Income Tax Department collects data from:

Common Queries in 142(1) Include:

Common Queries in 142(1) Include:

Clarification on large cash deposits or foreign remittan

ces

Don’t Take a Notice Under Section 142(1) of Income Tax Act Lightly

Handling a notice under Section 142(1) casually is one of the most common and costly mistakes taxpayers make. This notice is often the first step before a full-blown scrutiny assessment and must be responded to with utmost care.

Tip: Handling a 142(1) notice casually is one of the biggest mistakes taxpayers make. This is where most scrutiny cases go wrong.

At this stage, hiring a qualified tax professional becomes critical. A vague or inconsistent reply—such as stating “personal savings” or “loan from friend” without documents—can easily result in additions to income and massive tax demands.

A Chartered Accountant can:

A Chartered Accountant can:

3. Review by Assessment Unit

3. Review by Assessment Unit

After you submit your response to 142(1), the Faceless Assessment Unit will review it. Based on your documentation and explanations, they may:

Note: Even if your deductions are justified, the officer is permitted to go beyond them and examine any undeclared income or unexplained transaction they discover during assessment.

4. Draft Assessment Order (Show Cause Notice Stage)

Once the assessing officer completes the review, they will issue a Draft Assessment Order, also known as a Show Cause Notice. This is one of the most critical stages in the scrutiny process.

It outlines:

It outlines:

Failure to respond or rebut the proposed additions will result in finalisation of the draft , leading to a potentially large tax demand and downstream proceedings.

You are usually given 3 to 7 days to respond. This short deadline makes it essential to act promptly and carefully.

Why This Stage Needs a Chartered Accountant

This stage is not a procedural formality. it is a legal and technical juncture that can substantially affect your financial outcome. Responding without professional guidance can lead to irreversible consequences .

A Chartered Accountant with experience in handling scrutiny assessments can:

Strict adherence to the deadline is critical. If you approach a professional at the last minute, there may not be enough time to analyze the draft order, gather documentation, or prepare a strong defense

Well-drafted replies at this stage have led to many cases being closed without additions or with significantly reduced tax demands

5. Final Assessment Order under Section 143(3)

After considering your objections (if submitted), the department issues a Final Assessment Order. This is binding unless challenged through an appeal.

Consequences include:

Consequences include:

6. Penalty Proceedings

6. Penalty Proceedings

After completing the scrutiny assessment, the Income Tax Department may initiate penalty proceedings under Section 270A of the Income Tax Act if there is under-reporting or misreporting of income.

Penalty is not automatic, but once the department identifies incorrect reporting, a separate notice for penalty may be issued—often along with or shortly after the final assessment order under Section 143(3).

The officer may invoke penalties under Section 270A:

Voluntary payment or revision after receiving scrutiny notice may mitigate but not eliminate penalty exposure.

What Is Under-Reporting of Income?

What Is Under-Reporting of Income?

Under-reporting refers to cases where:

Under-reporting refers to cases where:

Example for salaried taxpayer:

Example for salaried taxpayer:

This results in under-reporting.

This results in under-reporting.

What Is Misreporting of Income?

What Is Misreporting of Income?

Misreporting is considered a more serious offense and includes:

Example:

Example:

In extreme cases, prosecution may be initiated under:

Section 277: False statement in verification

This could lead to imprisonment of 3 months to 7 years depending on severity.

7. Recovery Proceedings

7. Recovery Proceedings

Once the final assessment order is passed and a demand notice under Section 156 is issued, you are normally given 30 days to pay the tax, interest, and penalty (if any). If not paid within this period, the department may initiate recovery proceedings under Sections 220 to 226 of the Income Tax Act.

What Happens If You Don’t Pay?

What Happens If You Don’t Pay?

If the tax demand is not paid and no action is taken by the taxpayer:

What If You Don’t Have Funds to Pay the Tax Demand?

If you are unable to pay due to financial hardship, you still have options. But doing nothing is not an option.

You should:

You should:

Tip: You should either pay, appeal, or apply for stay within the 30-day window. If you ignore the demand, recovery will proceed automatically, often without further notice.

Important: Filing an appeal does not automatically stay recovery. You must separately request for stay of demand after filing appeal.

8. Appeal Remedies

If you disagree with the final assessment, you may file an appeal before the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) within 30 days. You may also:

Appeals require strong documentation and legal representation

Key Takeaways

Key Takeaways

Need Help with Scrutiny Proceedings?

Need Help with Scrutiny Proceedings?

At Balakrishna & Co., Chartered Accountants, we have over 35 years of experience in handling scrutiny assessments, tax disputes, penalty notices, and appeals. We assist clients across India in responding professionally and lawfully to every stage of the assessment process.

Email : prakasha@balakrishnaandco.com

prakasha@balakrishnaandco.com

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