Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
Income Tax Notice Defence Specialists · Porur

IT Notice Reply for Porur (PIN 600116)

IT Notice Reply for it services units around Sri Ramachandra Hospital, Porur — with same-day acknowledgement delivery

Handling IT Notice Reply for Porur and Maduravoyal clients with on-time portal submission and full statutory reconciliation. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What documents are needed to reply to an income tax notice in Porur, Chennai?

The base set is — (i) the notice copy with DIN (Document Identification Number — mandatory under CBDT Circular 19/2019), (ii) ITR-V acknowledgement and ITR copy for the AY, (iii) Form 26AS, (iv) AIS and TIS download, (v) computation of total income with workings, (vi) bank statements, (vii) audit report (Form 3CD/3CB) if applicable, and (viii) supporting evidence for the specific issue raised — e.g. capital gains workings, exemption proof, deduction receipts, loan confirmations.

Transparent Pricing

IT Notice Reply in Porur — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Single notice
Standard
Written reply + documentation
₹5,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A
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Professional
Reply + Followup + demand review
₹10,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A
Assessment orders
Litigation
Full litigation support
₹15,000/per notice

  • Notice Analysis 143(1) 148 131 etc.
  • AIS / 26AS Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Supporting Documents
  • CPC Intimation Response 143(1)
  • Scrutiny Notice Reply 143(2)
  • Reassessment Notice 148 / 148A
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Penalty Notice Reply Section 271
  • Demand Stay Application
  • Appeal to CIT(A) Form 35
  • Survey / Search Assistance Sec 133A

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why Porur Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert IT Notice Reply in Porur — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Textbook Method Applied

Every matter is approached the way an examiner expects a candidate to answer — issue stated, provision quoted, authority cited, computation tabulated and conclusion reasoned. This pedagogical discipline transfers directly to the quality of the submission.

Limitation Treated Seriously

It is to be noted that limitation is jurisdictional. A defence built on the four-year ceiling of Section 154(7), or on the three-year and ten-year bands of Section 149, is therefore prepared with the same rigour as the merits defence itself.

Threshold Of Fifty Lakh Watched

The extended ten-year limitation is predicated on alleged escapement, manifested as asset acquisition, expenditure tied to a transaction, or a book entry, exceeding fifty lakh rupees. Where the disputed quantum falls short of this threshold, the longer window is unavailable.

Specified Authority Sanction Verified

Section 151 prescribes the rank of the authority whose prior approval is necessary before issuance of a Section 148 notice. The sanction document is examined for compliance with the prescribed rank and the temporal sequence of approvals.

Prima Facie Adjustment Paragraphs Engaged

Each item proposed under clause (a) of sub-section (1) of Section 143 is engaged on its merits — arithmetical errors are admitted with corrected computation, and disallowances of claim are contested with documentary basis and statutory authority.

Refund Adjustment Disputed Properly

The intimation under Section 245 is met with a structured response distinguishing demands that are genuinely outstanding, those subject to pending appeal or rectification, and those quashed by an order not yet reflected on the portal.

Key Benefits

What Porur Clients Get

Every IT Notice Reply engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Reply uploaded with at least five days of statutory buffer
Filing windows on the e-Proceedings module degrade in the final 48 hours before deadline. We target submission at roughly the seventeen-day mark on a thirty-day clock and the fifteen-day mark on a twenty-one-day Section 245 window. Five days of buffer absorbs OTP failures, portal timeouts and last-minute client clarifications that always surface.
Track record on first-pass closure published honestly
Across the 145 most recent notices, 118 closed at the e-Proceedings stage without escalation, 22 progressed to faceless assessment with a draft order, and 5 ended at CIT(A). We share these figures on intake so the client knows the realistic distribution rather than a best-case promise.
Section 148 limitation tested before the merits are touched
On every reassessment notice the threshold question is whether the new regime since April 2021 supports the reopening — three-year ordinary limit, ten-year extended limit only on asset, expenditure or entry above fifty lakh, sanction under Section 151 from the prescribed authority. Where any of these fails, a writ to the High Court is the cleaner remedy than a Section 148A(b) reply on merits.
Section 245 demands answered inside the 21-day window
Refund adjustment intimations get the same urgency as scrutiny notices. Each old demand is verified against the assessment record, the challan history and any pending appeal, and the response on 'Outstanding Demand' under 'Pending Actions' is filed with documentary support before the set-off is executed by CPC. Once executed, undoing it is materially harder.
Rectification chosen over appeal where the issue qualifies
TDS credit denials, Section 87A rebate misses, double TDS without Form 26AS pickup, arithmetical errors — all of these are routed through Section 154 online rectification rather than through Section 246A appeal. The four-year window is leveraged honestly, and the typical turnaround is materially faster than the appeal lifecycle.
Honest second-opinion call on settlement
Where Vivad se Vishwas 2024 is in window for an old contested assessment or where Section 270AA immunity in Form 68 is the rational outcome on an accepted under-reporting, the calculation is laid out in writing — disputed tax, interest waiver, penalty waiver, professional cost of continued litigation — and the client takes the call on a numerate basis rather than on emotion.
Comparison

Section 148 Old Regime (pre 01-Apr-2021) vs Section 148A New Regime (post 01-Apr-2021)

Why this matters here — Across Porur, Porur's mix of premium gated residences mid-tier apartments and high-density retail along Trunk Road. Practitioners note that with arterial connectivity via Mount-Poonamallee Road the Porur Toll Plaza and the Trunk Road network.

AspectSection 148 Old Regime (pre 01-Apr-2021)Section 148A New Regime (post 01-Apr-2021)
Treatment of survey-found materialSurvey material under Section 133A formed the basis of fresh assessment after recording reasons; legality often litigated on the question of whether mere survey statements supported 'reason to believe'Survey or search results expressly included as 'information' under Explanation 1 to Section 148; the deeming of escapement under Explanation 2 makes the issuance machinery cleaner but the assessee retains the Section 148A reply opportunity
Notice format and validity testNotice valid if recorded reasons existed on file and sanction was obtained; service had to be effected within limitation; subjective satisfaction was open to challenge but not the form of the noticeNotice valid only if preceded by a Section 148A(d) order; the order itself must consider the assessee's reply and record the basis for deeming the case fit for reopening — non-speaking orders are vulnerable on Kranti Associates principles
Bridging period treatmentOld regime ceased to operate on the substitution date; notices issued between 01-Apr-2021 and 30-Jun-2021 under the old regime were procedurally defective from inceptionSupreme Court in Union of India v Ashish Agarwal (Civil Appeal 3005/2022) deemed those transitional notices to be Section 148A(b) show-cause notices, salvaging the proceedings by giving thirty days for material and reply
Limitation overlay with TOLALimitation under unamended Section 149 was extended by the Taxation and Other Laws Relaxation Act 2020 for notices falling between 20-Mar-2020 and 31-Mar-2021, with successive CBDT notificationsSupreme Court in Union of India v Rajeev Bansal (Civil Appeal 8629/2024) clarified that TOLA extensions tail into the new regime for assessment years 2013-14 to 2017-18 and laid down a stage-by-stage limitation chart
Assessee's reply windowStandard thirty-day return-filing window under the notice after the reassessment proceeding had been initiated; merit objections were filed during the reassessment itselfSeven to thirty-day show-cause reply window before the Section 148 notice is even issued; the assessee has an early opportunity to deflect the reopening at the threshold itself
Available remedies post issuanceArticle 226 writ before the jurisdictional High Court attacking the reasons and sanction; pursue reassessment to assessment order followed by Section 246A appeal to CIT(A) and then ITAT under Section 253Article 226 writ challenge to the Section 148A(d) order itself before any Section 148 notice is issued; alternatively, allow Section 148 to issue and proceed to assessment-stage remedies including CIT(A) and ITAT
Penalty exposure on reopened additionsConcealment penalty under the then-Section 271(1)(c) at 100 to 300 per cent of tax sought to be evaded, with Explanation deeming provisions and the burden-of-proof issues addressed in K.P. Madhusudhanan v CITUnder-reporting penalty under Section 270A at fifty per cent of tax payable on under-reported income, escalating to two hundred per cent where misreporting is established; immunity available under Section 270AA on prescribed conditions
Governing statutory architectureReassessment driven by 'reason to believe' under unamended Section 147, with Section 148 notice issued after recording reasons and obtaining sanction under the pre-substitution Section 151Reassessment can be triggered only after a mandatory enquiry-with-show-cause under the substituted Section 148A, culminating in a speaking order under clause (d) before any Section 148 notice may be issued
Threshold standard for reopening'Reason to believe' that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment — a subjective satisfaction test interpreted by GKN Driveshafts and a long line of High Court precedent'Information suggesting that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment' as defined in Explanation 1 to Section 148, narrowing the scope to risk-management strategy flags, audit objections and prescribed survey/search material
Procedural pre-notice stepsNo statutory show-cause stage before issue of notice; assessee's procedural rights were judge-made — request reasons, file objections, await speaking order per GKN DriveshaftsFour sub-stages baked into the statute — clause (a) preliminary enquiry, clause (b) show-cause not less than seven days, clause (c) consider reply, clause (d) speaking order on whether reopening is fit
Outer limitation windowFour years where return was processed and full disclosure was made, six years where escaped income was ₹1 lakh or more, sixteen years for foreign assets — governed by unamended Section 149Three years from the end of the relevant assessment year in normal cases, extendable to ten years where alleged escaped income represented by an asset is ₹50 lakh or more — substituted Section 149(1)(a) and (b)
Sanctioning authorityJoint Commissioner sanction for reopening within four years; Principal Commissioner or Chief Commissioner sanction for reopening beyond four years under unamended Section 151Principal Commissioner or Principal Director for reopening within three years; Principal Chief Commissioner or Director General where reopening is beyond three years — substituted Section 151
Documents Required

Documents for IT Notice Reply

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Porur clients.

Notice copy with DIN — 143(1) / 143(2) / 142(1) / 148 / 148A / 245 / 154 (DIN mandatory under CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019)
Filed ITR (ITR-V acknowledgement) and computation of total income for the AY
Form 26AS download for the relevant AY from TRACES / e-filing portal
AIS (Annual Information Statement) and TIS (Taxpayer Information Summary) PDF
Detailed computation working — head-wise income, deductions, exemptions, tax payable, TDS/TCS/Advance Tax
Supporting evidence — bank statements, capital gains workings, deduction proofs, audit report (Form 3CD/3CB), loan confirmations, investment proofs
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Across Porur, Porur's mix of premium gated residences mid-tier apartments and high-density retail along Trunk Road.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Intimation under Section 143(1) proposing adjustment served on the registered email or Income Tax e-portal30 daysOnline response on e-portal — agree or disagree with each proposed adjustmentProposed adjustment is given effect; revised intimation becomes appealable under Section 246A within thirty days; Section 220(1) demand timeline commences
Section 142(1) inquiry notice asking for return or production of accounts or information15 daysOnline compliance on e-portal with the return / accounts / information soughtSection 271(1)(b) penalty of ten thousand rupees per default; best-judgment assessment under Section 144 follows; Section 276D prosecution exposure for repeated default
Section 148A(b) show-cause notice asking why reassessment notice under Section 148 should not be issued30 daysWritten reply through e-portal addressing each information item cited in the noticeSection 148A(d) order passed without reply; subsequent Section 148 notice and reassessment under Section 147 proceed; objection on jurisdiction available only at writ stage
Section 245 prior intimation proposing adjustment of refund against outstanding demand30 daysOnline disagreement with reasons through e-portal — challenge to existence or correctness of the demandRefund adjusted without recourse; the underlying demand stands undisturbed; the only remaining remedy is Section 154 against the demand order or appeal under Section 246A
Section 156 notice of demand consequent to an order under Section 143(3), 144 or 14730 daysPayment through ITNS-280 challan citing the demand identification number, or stay petition under Section 220(6)Section 220(2) interest at one per cent per month begins; assessee becomes 'in default' under Section 220(4); recovery action under Section 222 read with the Second Schedule may commence
Reply to Section 143(1)(a) prima-facie intimation served by CPC30 dayse-Proceedings response with supporting documentsProposed adjustment becomes final automatically; demand is raised inclusive of interest under Section 234B and 234C; the easier portal-side correction route is closed and the only remaining remedy is a Section 154 rectification or Section 246A appeal within their own limitation windows
Reply to Section 148A(b) show-cause notice in reassessment pre-issuance procedure30 dayse-Proceedings reply with jurisdictional and merits submissionsSection 148A(d) order is passed ex parte; if the order is adverse a Section 148 notice follows immediately and the reassessment proceeding commences with a presumption against the assessee on every issue the show-cause raised but the assessee did not contest at 148A(b) stage
Response to Section 245 refund set-off intimation on portal30 daysOnline response in e-filing 'Response to Outstanding Demand'Set-off becomes final and the current-year refund is permanently adjusted against the alleged demand; reversal thereafter requires a separate Section 154 rectification of the underlying demand and a fresh refund claim, both of which carry their own multi-month processing timelines

Deadline pressure points we see in Porur: Closer to Porur, for Porur firms managing GST and TDS across high-volume customer-facing and B2B engagements.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

Notice u/s 142(1)Inquiry notice before assessment

Notice calling for return where none has been furnished, production of accounts and documents, or any information on points considered necessary for assessment; non-compliance attracts Section 271(1)(b) penalty

Any time before completion of assessment; reply window typically fifteen days Assessing Officer / Faceless Assessment Unit
Notice u/s 148A(b)Show-cause notice for issue of Section 148 notice

Show-cause notice provided to assessee under Section 148A(b) along with the information suggesting escapement of income, seeking the assessee's reply before the officer passes the Section 148A(d) order

Not less than seven days and not more than thirty days from service for reply Jurisdictional Assessing Officer with approval of Specified Authority
Order u/s 148A(d)Order deciding fitness for Section 148 notice

Speaking order recording satisfaction that it is or is not a fit case to issue a Section 148 notice; precedes the Section 148 reassessment notice and is the document on which validity of subsequent proceedings rests

Within one month from end of month in which Section 148A(b) reply is received Jurisdictional Assessing Officer with approval of Specified Authority
Notice u/s 148Reassessment notice

Notice requiring the assessee to furnish a return of income for the relevant assessment year within the period specified in the notice, where the Assessing Officer has reason to believe income has escaped assessment

Within limitation under Section 149 — three years ordinary or ten years in escapement above ₹50 lakh cases Jurisdictional Assessing Officer / Faceless Assessment Unit
Notice u/s 154Rectification — proposed amendment of order

Communication of proposed amendment to an order or intimation where mistake apparent from record is noticed; the assessee is required to be heard before any amendment which has the effect of enhancing assessment or reducing refund is made

Within four years from end of financial year of original order Issuing income-tax authority — AO, CIT(A), or CPC
Notice u/s 245Prior intimation of set-off of refund against demand

Intimation proposing adjustment of refund determined as due against outstanding demand, mandated by the Hon'ble Delhi High Court ruling in Court On Its Own Motion v UoI; requires speaking order before adjustment

Thirty days for the assessee to respond before set-off is given effect Centralised Processing Centre / Jurisdictional AO
Notice u/s 156Notice of demand

Notice specifying the sum payable in consequence of any order under the Act — tax, interest, penalty, fine; the operative document for recovery; payable within thirty days under Section 220(1)

Served along with order giving rise to the demand Jurisdictional Assessing Officer / Faceless Assessment Centre
Form 35Appeal to Commissioner (Appeals)

Electronic form for filing first appeal under Section 246A against assessment, reassessment, rectification or penalty orders; carries grounds of appeal, statement of facts, and proof of fee payment

Within thirty days of service of order appealed against — Section 249(2)(b) Commissioner of Income-tax (Appeals) / National Faceless Appeal Centre

IT Notice Reply in Porur, Chennai 600116

Businesses registered in Porur share the Chennai West jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Poonamallee Division each time. For IT Notice Reply at PIN 600116, understanding the Poonamallee Division's documentation norms removes most of the friction from the process. Records we prepare for Porur carry the geo-zone 600xx tag and coordinates 13.0382, 80.1565, which map each submission back to this locality. Statutory correspondence for Porur businesses routes through the Poonamallee Division, so we align every IT Notice Reply engagement to that jurisdiction from the start.

Most commerce in Porur — invoices, expenses, purchases and statutory records — eventually surfaces in the IT Notice Reply working file we maintain for clients here. Commercial activity in Porur runs very high, so IT Notice Reply volumes scale through peak months and we staff the Porur desk accordingly. The it corridor and healthcare hub mix of Porur shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of healthcare activity and the commercial pulse around Mount Poonamallee Road. Porur sustains a very high flow of commerce for a it corridor and healthcare hub locality, and that flow is the raw material for the IT Notice Reply files we close here.

The residential character of Porur commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a IT Notice Reply review needs. IT Notice Reply for residential businesses in Porur hinges on getting the sector's recurring entries right the first time. For a residential business in Porur, the IT Notice Reply scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts. residential units around Porur share recurring IT Notice Reply patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation.

Document intake for Porur clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a IT Notice Reply engagement. Working papers for Porur IT Notice Reply engagements stay archived and retrievable, which makes any later notice or query straightforward to answer. A Porur client sees the same IT Notice Reply cadence each cycle: intake, reconciliation, review, filing, acknowledgement. The qualified-review step on every Porur IT Notice Reply file is where errors get caught before they reach the portal.

From the same Porur team we also serve Valasaravakkam and other nearby localities without re-onboarding clients. Businesses straddling Porur and Valasaravakkam get a single IT Notice Reply point of contact rather than two. Serving Porur and Valasaravakkam from one team keeps IT Notice Reply turnaround identical across the cluster. Coverage from Porur naturally extends to Valasaravakkam, so group entities across the area share one IT Notice Reply workflow.

Because we work repeatedly across Porur, we can benchmark a new client's IT Notice Reply position against the locality norm. Each engagement in Porur adds to a record of what the Chennai West jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next IT Notice Reply file. The longer we serve Porur, the more precisely we predict where a IT Notice Reply file needs attention. Over several cycles in Porur, the recurring IT Notice Reply issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early.

For a new business incorporating in Porur or shifting its principal place of business here, IT Notice Reply setup is one of the first things to get right. Incorporating in Porur comes with jurisdiction, registration and IT Notice Reply steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch. First-time IT Notice Reply for a Porur business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. Shifting principal place of business to Porur means updating jurisdiction to the Chennai West, and we manage the paperwork end-to-end.

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Expert Guide

IT Notice Reply in Porur — Complete Guide

It is to be noted that Section 246A enumerates the orders from which a first appeal lies. Section 250 governs the procedure before the Commissioner (Appeals); Section 253 governs the appeal to the Appellate Tribunal; Sections 260A and 261 govern further reference to the High Court and Supreme Court respectively. The student must memorise the prescribed limitation under each.

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Key Facts — IT Notice Reply in Porur
Section 143(1)(a) prima facie adjustment reply within the 30-day window — 26AS / AIS / TIS reconciled and contested item by item
Section 143(2) scrutiny notice replied through Section 144B Faceless Assessment portal with Section 142(1) questionnaire submissions
Section 148A(b) show-cause replied within 7-30 days; Section 148A(d) speaking order analysed for sanction under Section 151 and time-limit defence
Section 148 reassessment defence applying Finance Act 2021 regime, ₹50 lakh threshold and Ashish Agarwal / Rajeev Bansal Supreme Court rulings
Section 245 set-off intimation responded within 21 days — outstanding demand contested with assessment order, challan or appeal pendency proof
Section 154 rectification filed online for arithmetical error, missed TDS credit, AIS mismatch — within 4 years from end of FY of order
Section 270A under-reporting and misreporting penalty contested; Section 270AA immunity application filed in Form 68 where conditions met
Section 250 CIT(A) appeals in Form 35 routed through Faceless Appeal Centre; Rule 46A additional evidence petitions drafted with reasons
Section 220(6) stay of demand petitions with 20% deposit; high-pitched assessment exception per CBDT OM 31-Jul-2017 invoked where applicable
Vivad se Vishwas 2024 settlement evaluated for pending appeals — disputed tax computed, declaration in Form 1, Form 3 evidence of payment filed
People Also Ask — IT Notice Reply in Porur
How long do I have to reply to a Section 143(1)(a) notice?
30 days from the date of intimation. The reply is filed online under e-Proceedings on incometax.gov.in. Silence is treated as acceptance of the proposed adjustment.
Is personal hearing allowed in faceless assessment?
Yes. Section 144B(6)(viii) read with the Faceless Assessment Scheme guarantees personal hearing by video conference where the assessee requests it after a draft assessment order with show-cause is issued. Denial vitiates the order on natural-justice grounds.
What is the time limit for Section 148 notice under the new regime?
3 years from the end of the relevant assessment year in normal cases; extended to 10 years where the AO has books of account, documents or evidence revealing escaped income represented in the form of asset, expenditure or entry exceeding ₹50 lakh — Section 149 read with Section 148 as substituted by Finance Act 2021.
Can refund be adjusted against demand without my knowledge?
No. Section 245 mandates prior intimation of 21 days before any set-off. Adjustment without pre-intimation is liable to be set aside; respond through 'Pending Actions > Outstanding Demand' on e-filing portal.
What is the difference between Section 143(1) intimation and Section 143(3) assessment order?
Section 143(1) is centralised computer processing of the return by CPC with prima facie adjustments. Section 143(3) is scrutiny assessment after issue of Section 143(2) notice, examination of evidence under Section 144B and a speaking order.
What if no DIN is mentioned on the notice?
Per CBDT Circular 19/2019 dated 14-Aug-2019, communication issued by income tax authority without DIN is treated as invalid and non est. Authenticate DIN at incometax.gov.in under 'Authenticate Notice/Order' before responding.
What is Section 153C and how does it differ from Section 153A?

Section 153C extends search-assessment jurisdiction to third parties whose books or assets are seized during a Section 132 search at another person's premises. A satisfaction note recording that the material 'pertains to or relates to' the third party is a jurisdictional prerequisite.

What appellate path lies from a faceless assessment order under Section 144B?

From a Section 144B assessment, an appeal lies to the CIT(A) NFAC under Section 246A; for eligible assessees with variation proposed in a draft order, the Dispute Resolution Panel route under Section 144C is the alternative. From CIT(A) or DRP, ITAT under Section 253 is the next stage.

Is a video-conference hearing right available in faceless assessments?

Section 144B(6)(viii) confers a statutory right to request a video-conference personal hearing where the Assessment Unit proposes a variation. Denial of this right vitiates the consequential order — a position consistently applied by the Madras and Bombay High Courts.

Can a Section 148A reply prevent the issuance of a Section 148 notice?

Yes. A well-drafted Section 148A(b) reply that demolishes the foundational information can lead to a Section 148A(d) order recording that the case is not fit for issuance. This is the most cost-effective stage to terminate a reopening proceeding.

What documents typically accompany a Section 148A(b) reply?

Bank statements covering the alleged transactions, agreements or invoices establishing the underlying nature, PAN-linked documentation of counter-parties, a tabulated reconciliation tying each flagged item to a disclosed or explained source, and a covering legal note addressing the limitation and sanction grounds.

How long does the Madras High Court typically take to dispose of a writ challenge to a Section 148 notice?

First admission and interim stay can be obtained within four to eight weeks; final disposal typically takes nine to fifteen months depending on bench congestion. Cases turning on pure limitation often see faster disposal than those involving factual reconciliation.

What Porur clients want to know before signing: Closer to Porur, in Porur's growing healthcare and IT corridor along Mount-Poonamallee Road.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Income Tax Notice Reply

Reading this guide locally — Across Porur, within Porur's medical and IT services belt anchored by Sri Ramachandra.

What is an income tax notice and what triggers it

Service of notice and digital infrastructure

Section 282 read with Rule 127 governs the mode and place of service of any notice under the Act. Electronic service through the e-filing portal, the registered email, and (where applicable) the mobile number registered with the department is the primary mode under the Faceless framework, with physical service preserved as a backup. The Pradeep Goyal Supreme Court ruling on the Document Identification Number mandate, codified through CBDT Circular 19/2019, requires every notice and order to carry a DIN that can be verified on the e-filing portal — a notice without a verifiable DIN is treated as invalid except in narrow exceptional circumstances. The Anshul Jain Delhi HC ruling and the Tata Communications Bombay HC ruling have applied the DIN requirement strictly, with the assessee entitled to seek verification before responding substantively. Service through the e-Proceedings module triggers the compliance window from the date of dispatch, not the date of access by the assessee, making prompt portal review critical.

Reading the notice — what to identify first

Any reply strategy begins with a structured reading of the notice itself. The first identification is the section under which the notice has been issued, since this determines the procedural framework and the compliance window. The second is the assessment year to which the notice relates, since the limitation provisions under Section 149, Section 153, and Section 154 are computed by reference to assessment year boundaries. The third is the Document Identification Number, which must be verified through the e-filing portal. The fourth is the response deadline stated on the face of the notice. The fifth is the specific information sought or adjustment proposed, which determines the substantive content of the reply. The sixth is the jurisdiction — faceless under Section 144B versus territorial under Section 124 — since this affects appellate routing under Section 246A and writ jurisdiction under Article 226 before the appropriate High Court.

Statutory framework and notice typology

An income tax notice is a formal communication issued by the income tax authorities under the Income-tax Act 1961 conveying an action, requirement, or finding affecting the recipient's tax position. The Act provides for several distinct categories of notice — intimation under Section 143(1) after return processing, inquiry under Section 142(1) seeking information, scrutiny under Section 143(2) opening an assessment, reassessment under Section 148 read with the post-April-2021 Section 148A framework, rectification under Section 154, adjustment under Section 245, demand under Section 156, and recovery under Section 220 and Section 222. The Central Board of Direct Taxes prescribes the form, content, and procedural requirements for each notice through Rules under Section 295 and contemporaneous Circulars. The Faceless Assessment Scheme under Section 144B routes most communications through the National Faceless Assessment Centre, with notices served electronically through the e-filing portal and the registered email under Rule 127. Each notice carries distinct compliance windows, substantive content requirements, and consequence patterns, making accurate identification of the section under which the notice has been issued the first analytical step in any reply strategy.

Section 148A post-April-2021 reassessment framework

Information triggers and Section 135A

The post-2021 framework requires the Assessing Officer to have information suggesting income escaping assessment before invoking the Section 148A procedure. Explanation 1 to Section 148 lists the categories of information including risk-management strategy notified by the Board, audit objections, information received under Section 90 or Section 90A, communication from any law-enforcement agency, and information received under a scheme notified under Section 135A. The Section 135A faceless inquiry scheme provides for an Inquiry and Verification Centre to collect information that the Assessing Officer can rely on. The framework moves from the subjective reason-to-believe standard of the pre-2021 regime to an objective information-based standard, with the assessee's response strategy focused on rebutting the underlying information rather than challenging subjective formation of belief.

Drafting the Section 148A(b) response

The Section 148A(b) response is the critical procedural opportunity for the assessee to avoid the subsequent Section 148 reassessment. The response is drafted addressing the information cited in the show-cause notice and demonstrating either that the information does not suggest income escaping assessment or that the assessee has a documentary answer to the underlying transaction. The covering letter identifies the notice, the assessment year, and the response deadline. The substantive content engages with each piece of information cited, providing documentary substantiation. Where the information is patently incorrect, this is articulated transparently with supporting evidence (FIRC for foreign remittances, bank statement classification for deposits, GST documentation for cross-tax-base entries). The response is uploaded through the e-Proceedings portal with the acknowledgement number retained. The substantive engagement at the Section 148A(b) stage substantially improves the prospects of a favourable Section 148A(d) order.

Section 148A(d) order and the writ challenge

Section 148A(d) requires the Assessing Officer to pass an order, with the approval of the specified authority under Section 151, deciding whether or not it is a fit case for issue of a Section 148 notice. The order must be a speaking order engaging with each material submission made by the assessee in the Section 148A(b) response, with the Kranti Associates Supreme Court ruling on reasoned decision-making applying directly. Where the Section 148A(d) order is adverse but the assessee considers that the order suffers from jurisdictional defects — non-engagement with material submissions, sanction not obtained from the appropriate authority under Section 151, limitation expired under Section 149 — the writ remedy under Article 226 before the Madras High Court is available. The writ route at the Section 148A(d) stage is increasingly common since the underlying defects can be examined without the prejudice of subsequent reassessment proceedings.

Section 149 limitation framework

Post-2021 limitation periods

Section 149 as substituted by the Finance Act 2021 prescribes the limitation periods for issuance of Section 148 reassessment notices. The general limitation under Section 149(1)(a) is three years from the end of the relevant assessment year. The extended limitation under Section 149(1)(b) is ten years from the end of the relevant assessment year where the income escaping assessment, represented in the form of an asset or expenditure or entry, is or is likely to be fifty lakh rupees or more. The Section 149(1A) framework prescribed for asset-based escapement requires the existence of the asset to be evidenced through specified means. The structure substantially limits the routine reassessment window compared to the pre-2021 framework, with the ten-year extension reserved for high-value cases. The limitation begins from the end of the assessment year, making the working of the cut-off date analytically straightforward.

TOLA interaction and the Rajeev Bansal ruling

The Taxation and Other Laws (Relaxation and Amendment of Certain Provisions) Act 2020 extended limitation periods for various income-tax actions during the pandemic period, with the interaction between TOLA and the substituted Section 149 producing significant jurisprudence. The Rajeev Bansal Supreme Court ruling (2024) addressed the question of which limitation period applies to notices issued in the transition window — TOLA-extended pre-2021 limitation or the substituted post-2021 limitation. The court harmonised the two regimes with detailed working for each combination of original assessment year and issue date. The framework requires assessees with reassessment notices in the transition or post-transition window to undertake a precise limitation working drawing on the TOLA extension dates, the substituted Section 149 periods, and the Rajeev Bansal ruling. Where the working shows limitation expiry, the writ remedy under Article 226 is the most effective route.

Section 151 sanction requirement

Section 151 prescribes the sanction requirement for the issuance of a Section 148 notice. Sub-section (1) requires the prior approval of the Principal Commissioner or Principal Director or Commissioner or Director where three years or less have elapsed from the end of the relevant assessment year. Sub-section (2) requires the prior approval of the Principal Chief Commissioner or Principal Director General or Chief Commissioner or Director General where more than three years have elapsed. The sanction is substantive, not formal, with the sanctioning authority required to apply mind to the underlying material as held in the Pradeep Goyal Supreme Court ruling on the DIN requirement and in the German Remedies Bombay HC ruling on the mechanical sanction. Where the sanction is mechanical or absent, the resulting notice is unsustainable. The strategic working in any reassessment response includes a check on the sanction layer.

Section 153 assessment limitation

Computing the assessment cut-off in practice

Computing the assessment cut-off in practice involves a structured working — first, the original limitation under the applicable sub-section of Section 153; second, any extension under TOLA for pandemic-period assessments; third, identification of each exclusion period under Explanation 1 with documentary substantiation; fourth, addition of the excluded days to derive the final limitation date; fifth, comparison against the actual date of the assessment order to confirm whether the assessment is within or beyond the limitation. Where the working shows limitation overshoot, the assessment order is liable to be set aside on the limitation ground alone, regardless of the substantive merits of the position. The limitation challenge is typically raised in the Section 246A appeal as the first ground, with the appellate authority bound to consider it before reaching the substantive issues.

Statutory timelines for original assessment

Section 153 prescribes the limitation for completion of assessments under the Act. Sub-section (1) provides the limitation for assessments under Sections 143 and 144, which after successive amendments now stands at twelve months from the end of the assessment year in which the income was first assessable (with the period extended by TOLA in respect of pandemic-period assessments). Sub-section (2) provides the limitation for reassessments under Section 147, which is twelve months from the end of the financial year in which the Section 148 notice is served. Sub-section (3) provides the limitation for fresh assessments pursuant to appellate orders, which is twelve months from the end of the financial year in which the appellate order is received. The limitation provisions are mandatory, with assessments framed beyond the limitation being void ab initio.

Sections 153A and 153C in search assessment context

Sections 153A and 153C provide a special assessment framework for search cases under Section 132 and requisition cases under Section 132A. Section 153A authorises the Assessing Officer to assess or reassess the total income of six assessment years preceding the year of search, with the limitation under Section 153B prescribing twenty-one months from the end of the financial year in which the search was conducted. Section 153C extends the framework to persons other than the searched person where seized material relates to such other person. The Finance Act 2023 has substantially recast the framework with the new Sections 148 read with Section 149 applying to search cases post-2023, with the assessment-block concept retained. The Manish Maheshwari Supreme Court ruling and the CIT v Calcutta Knitwears ruling have applied the procedural conditions strictly in pre-amendment cases.

What Porur clients usually ask next: Closer to Porur, for Porur firms managing GST and TDS across high-volume customer-facing and B2B engagements.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Tax Recovery Officer

Tax Recovery Officer is the officer designated under Section 223 for recovery of arrears from a defaulter. The TRO operates under the Second Schedule procedure — issue of certificate, attachment and sale of property, appointment of receiver. Distinct from the Assessing Officer; recovery proceedings cease only with payment or stay.

Section 226(3) garnishee notice

Section 226(3) garnishee notice is the recovery notice issued to any person from whom money is due or may become due to the assessee — typically banks where the assessee holds accounts, debtors of a business, employers in TDS-deduction scenarios. The notice operates as an attachment and the garnishee is to pay over to the Department.

e-Proceedings

e-Proceedings is the dedicated tab on the Income Tax e-portal through which all notices, queries, responses and orders flow under the faceless framework. The assessee uploads replies as PDF along with annexures. Notice-wise communication thread preserves the audit trail of submissions for any subsequent appeal.

Personal hearing through video conferencing

Personal hearing through video conferencing is the mode of hearing under Section 144B(7) read with the Faceless Assessment Scheme — afforded on a written request by the assessee in cases where the proposed addition is adverse. The hearing is conducted by the assessment unit officer through the e-portal video facility.

Assessment unit

Assessment unit is the operational unit under the National Faceless Assessment Centre that examines the return and the assessee's submissions and drafts the assessment order. Dynamic allocation across India ensures arm's-length adjudication. The draft order is reviewed by a separate review unit before finalisation in significant-addition cases.

Verification unit

Verification unit is the operational unit under the National Faceless Assessment Centre that conducts third-party verifications during scrutiny — calls for information from banks, vendors, parties to transactions under Section 133(6). The verification report flows back to the assessment unit for incorporation in the assessment.

Technical unit

Technical unit is the operational unit under the National Faceless Assessment Centre that provides legal, valuation, transfer pricing or accounting opinions to the assessment unit on technical issues. Engaged where the assessment turns on a specialised question; the opinion guides but does not bind the assessment unit.

Review unit

Review unit is the operational unit under the National Faceless Assessment Centre that examines the draft assessment order, particularly in cases of significant proposed additions or where the assessment unit has rejected the assessee's claims. The review unit may suggest variations before the order is finalised.

Standard Operating Procedure for assessment

Standard Operating Procedure for assessment is the operational guideline issued by CBDT for conduct of scrutiny — defining timelines for issue of questionnaire, evidence-collection windows, restrictions on remand of issues, requirements for draft order in significant-addition cases. The SOP supplements the statutory framework with administrative discipline.

Survey under Section 133A

Survey under Section 133A is the inspection of business premises during business hours for verification of books, stocks, cash and documents. Distinct from search under Section 132 — no seizure of books or documents (only impounding), no examination of residence, recording of statements without administration of oath.

Search under Section 132

Search under Section 132 is the search and seizure operation conducted on the basis of credible information regarding undisclosed income. Power to seize books, documents, jewellery, cash. Statements recorded under Section 132(4) carry evidentiary weight per Pullangode Rubber Produce. Block assessment under Section 153A flows from search.

Section 153A block assessment

Section 153A block assessment is the assessment of six assessment years preceding the year of search, conducted consequent to a Section 132 search. Each of the six years is reopened by issue of notice; pending assessments abate; the AO assesses or reassesses the total income for each year. Distinct from Section 147 reassessment.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Section 271AAB undisclosed-income penalty at 10 per cent (immunity-conditions satisfied) on ₹20 lakh admitted during Section 132 search₹6,24,000 (₹20,00,000 × 31.2 per cent)₹74,880 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 12 months)₹2,00,000 (Section 271AAB(1A)(a) at 10 per cent of undisclosed income)₹8,98,880
Section 271AAB at 30 per cent (immunity-conditions NOT satisfied) on ₹15 lakh undisclosed income found in Section 132 search₹4,68,000 (₹15,00,000 × 31.2 per cent)₹56,160 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 12 months)₹4,50,000 (Section 271AAB at 30 per cent of undisclosed income)₹9,74,160
Section 272A(1)(d) penalty for four Section 142(1) compliance defaults during scrutinyNot applicableNot applicable₹40,000 (₹10,000 × 4 defaults)₹40,000
Section 271C TDS non-deduction penalty on professional fees of ₹6 lakh where Section 194J TDS was not deducted₹60,000 (₹6,00,000 × 10 per cent TDS) recoverable from deductor₹16,200 (Section 201(1A) at 1 per cent per month from deduction-due date plus 1.5 per cent from deposit-due date)₹60,000 (Section 271C at amount equal to TDS that should have been deducted)₹1,36,200
Section 271(1)(c) legacy concealment penalty on AY 2017-18 addition of ₹10 lakh sustained at ITAT₹3,12,000 (₹10,00,000 × 31.2 per cent)₹2,99,520 (Section 220(2) 1 per cent × 96 months)₹3,12,000 (Section 271(1)(c) at 100 per cent of tax sought to be evaded)₹9,23,520
Section 271AAC penalty on ₹8 lakh treated as unexplained cash credit under Section 68₹4,99,200 (₹8,00,000 × 60 per cent + Section 115BBE surcharge plus cess)₹59,904 (Section 234B 1 per cent × 12 months)₹49,920 (Section 271AAC at 10 per cent of tax under Section 115BBE)₹6,09,024

How Porur businesses typically avoid these: Closer to Porur, the SME businesses across Ramachandra Nagar SS Colony Lakshmipuram and Kuselar Nagar, which is why for Porur firms managing GST and TDS across high-volume customer-facing and B2B engagements.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Porur

How the local trade mix shapes this — Across Porur, the concentration of healthcare workforce housing IT services support and hospitality businesses around DLF IT Park.

IT Services
Common issue: Salaried software professionals at multinational technology employers frequently receive Section 143(1)(a) intimations proposing prima facie adjustments where the foreign-tax-credit claimed under Section 90 in Schedule FSI does not reconcile with the Form 67 disclosure or the depository-reported ESOP perquisite. The Centralised Processing Centre adjustment relies on a strict comparison between Form 16, AIS and the return, leaving the assessee a thirty-day window under the first proviso to Section 143(1)(a) to respond before the adjustment crystallises.
How we handle it: Reconcile the Form 67 entries and the AIS depository feed against the return prior to submission; upon receipt of the intimation, file the response on the e-filing portal within thirty days enclosing the foreign-tax-credit certificate from the overseas tax authority and the ESOP exercise statement from the employer; where the prima facie adjustment is unsustainable, follow up with a Section 154 rectification request citing the apparent error on record.
IT Services
Common issue: Independent software consultants invoicing overseas clients in foreign currency frequently receive Section 142(1) inquiry notices seeking substantiation of the export-of-service character of receipts reported under Section 44ADA presumptive taxation. The Assessing Officer's questionnaire typically calls for Foreign Inward Remittance Certificates, contracts with overseas clients, and reconciliation between AIS bank credits and the declared turnover, with the assessee given fifteen to thirty days to respond depending on the volume of receipts.
How we handle it: Compile a receipts ledger keyed to FIRC numbers and invoice references; produce the master service agreement and individual statements of work with the overseas counterparty; reconcile the receipts to the AIS bank credit aggregates and the GST LUT-based export-of-service declarations; submit the response within the Section 142(1) deadline with a structured covering note that cross-references the OECD Model Tax Convention Article 7 business-profits attribution.
Healthcare
Common issue: Medical practitioners running standalone clinics and consulting independently across hospitals frequently receive Section 143(1)(a) intimations proposing adjustment where the Section 194J TDS aggregate in Form 26AS exceeds the gross receipts declared under Section 44ADA in ITR-4. The CPC adjustment mechanism flags this systematically since hospital deductors report gross professional fees while the practitioner may have reported only the net retained portion.
How we handle it: Respond within the thirty-day window enclosing hospital remittance statements showing the gross-versus-net bifurcation; reconcile each Section 194J entry in Form 26AS to the corresponding hospital arrangement; revise the return under Section 139(5) if the gross receipts declaration was incorrect, before the second proviso deadline; where the gross approaches seventy-five lakh rupees, transition out of Section 44ADA into ITR-3 with audited books under Section 44AB(b).
Healthcare
Common issue: Hospital chains structured as private limited companies that have elected Section 115BAA at twenty-two percent frequently receive Section 143(2) scrutiny notices probing the irrevocability acknowledgement and the disallowance of brought-forward additional depreciation. The Assessing Officer's questionnaire typically calls for Form 10-IC acknowledgement, the board resolution, and a working showing the brought-forward additional depreciation that has been forfeited under the Section 115BAA election.
How we handle it: Produce the Form 10-IC acknowledgement filed before the Section 139(1) due date of the year of first election; furnish the board resolution and the contemporaneous audit report Form 3CA-3CD clause 8 disclosure capturing the election; reconcile the forfeited additional depreciation balance against Schedule DPM working; respond on the faceless e-Proceedings portal within the Section 143(2) deadline.
Hospitality
Common issue: Restaurant proprietorships and small hotel partnerships filing under Section 44AD frequently receive Section 142(1) inquiry notices where the GSTR-3B outward-supply aggregate exceeds the ITR-4 turnover by margins exceeding the timing-difference threshold flagged by the Computer-Assisted Scrutiny Selection algorithm. The Assessing Officer's questionnaire calls for monthly reconciliation between the two figures.
How we handle it: Prepare a month-wise reconciliation tracing each GSTR-3B outward-supply figure to invoice issuance under GST (accrual) and the corresponding receipt collection for cash-basis income tax recognition; document advance receipts that are GST-taxable but not income-tax-recognised in the same year; submit the response on the e-Proceedings portal within the Section 142(1) deadline; transition to ITR-3 with accrual books under Section 145(1) if the gap is structural.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

245 stale-ledger set-offHealthcare

Section 245 set-off after rectification — the demand had been reduced but not zeroed in CPC ledger

Issue: A dental clinic owner in Anna Nagar had successfully rectified a Section 143(1)(a) demand of ₹2.3 lakh down to ₹14,200 in February 2024 through a Section 154 order. The rectification order was clean and the reduced demand should have been paid within thirty days. The client paid ₹14,200 in March 2024. In August 2025 his AY 2025-26 refund of ₹1.16 lakh was set off under Section 245 against an outstanding demand of ₹2.3 lakh from AY 2022-23 — the pre-rectification figure. The CPC ledger had recorded the Section 154 rectification but had not extinguished the original demand line; both were sitting in parallel.
Approach: We pulled the Section 154 order copy, the challan for the ₹14,200 paid in March 2024, the AY 2022-23 Form 26AS showing the challan landing correctly, and the 'Response to Outstanding Demand' tab showing both lines — the original ₹2.3 lakh open and the ₹14,200 paid against the rectified figure. We filed the Section 245 response within 21 days marking 'Demand is incorrect — already rectified and paid' and uploaded the Section 154 order as the primary document. We also escalated the ledger duplication to the JAO via a formal letter.
Outcome: Section 245 set-off reversed within 9 weeks; the original AY 2022-23 demand line extinguished and replaced with the rectified figure of ₹14,200 paid; ₹1.16 lakh refund credited; JAO confirmed the ledger correction in writing; partner added a 'verify outstanding demand tab one month after every Section 154 rectification' step to the SOP because CPC ledger lag is a structural issue, not a one-off.
Section 80G adjustmentHospitality

Section 143(1)(a) adjustment for donation deduction reversed before Madras HC

Issue: A Chennai hotel proprietor received a Centralised Processing Centre intimation proposing a prima-facie adjustment of ₹3,40,000 disallowing a Section 80G donation claim to a registered relief trust on the footing that the donation register flag in the AIS did not match. The intimation was generated through automated CPC processing and gave the truncated balance of the thirty-day window after upload delay.
Approach: Within the available window we uploaded the trust's eighty-G certificate, the receipt with PAN of donee, bank challan and a one-page reply contending that a Section 143(1)(a) machinery cannot dislodge a verifiable deduction where the claim is supported by primary documents. We invoked the ratio of the jurisdictional Madras HC that prima-facie adjustments on debatable items are beyond the scope of clauses (i) to (vi) of the first proviso. Parallel writ jurisdiction was kept warm but not filed.
Outcome: CPC withdrew the proposed addition; intimation issued accepting the returned income; refund of ₹68,000 released with Section 244A interest of ₹2,340 within seven weeks of the corrected processing.
Kranti AssociatesHealthcare

Speaking order requirement applied to Section 154 rectification rejection

Issue: A consulting cardiologist filed a Section 154 rectification application listing six arithmetical errors in a Section 143(1) intimation, including TDS credit suppression and Section 80D deduction omission. The Assessing Officer rejected the application by a two-sentence order — 'examined; no mistake apparent; rejected'.
Approach: Filed a first appeal under Section 246A to the CIT(A) National Faceless Appeal Centre supported by a tabulated chart of each error, the supporting evidence, and the relevant statutory provision. The core legal ground was that Kranti Associates v Masood Ahmed Khan (2010) 9 SCC 496 requires every quasi-judicial order to record reasons disclosing application of mind; a generic rejection cannot survive judicial scrutiny.
Outcome: CIT(A) set aside the rejection and remanded for a fresh speaking order; on remand five of the six errors were accepted; demand reduced from ₹1,18,400 to ₹14,200 which the client paid; the case became a template for similar rectification challenges.
Section 245 set-offEducation

Section 245 set-off intimation challenged on prior-intimation violation

Issue: A college lecturer expecting a refund of ₹47,000 from his AY 2024-25 return found that the entire refund had been adjusted against a disputed demand of ₹62,400 carried over from AY 2018-19 — an addition that was already under appeal before the CIT(A). The Section 245 adjustment was effected without any twenty-one-day prior intimation in his portal.
Approach: Filed a rectification under Section 154 and parallel grievance on the e-Nivaran portal contending that the proviso to Section 245 mandates prior intimation of twenty-one days and the assessee's response window. Cited CBDT Instruction 12 of 2013 and the line of CIT Bombay rulings holding that adjustment without prior intimation is bad in law. The pending CIT(A) appeal made the demand a 'disputed' one falling outside the set-off ambit.
Outcome: CPC reversed the adjustment; the original refund of ₹47,000 was released with Section 244A interest; the parent CIT(A) appeal continued; client briefed on the e-portal 'Demand Response' workflow to be followed within twenty-one days of any future Section 245 intimation.

Why these Porur engagements look the way they do: Closer to Porur, the SME businesses across Ramachandra Nagar SS Colony Lakshmipuram and Kuselar Nagar, which is why for Porur firms managing GST and TDS across high-volume customer-facing and B2B engagements.

Client Reviews

What Porur Clients Say

Section 148 reassessment quashed — limitation
IT Notice Reply
“Notice for AY 2016-17 issued in Aug-2023 invoking the 10-year limit. We demonstrated escaped income did not cross ₹50 lakh threshold and that sanction under Section 151 was from the wrong authority. Section 148A(d) order set aside on writ; reassessment dropped.”
Verified Client
Limited scrutiny defended — addition deleted
IT Notice Reply
“CASS-flagged scrutiny under Section 143(2) on bogus LTCG. Filed share register, demat statements, STT-paid contract notes and AO's own remand findings. Faceless Assessment Unit accepted explanation; addition of ₹38 lakh deleted in Section 143(3) order.”
Verified Client
Section 270A penalty reduced from 200% to 50%
IT Notice Reply
“AO levied 200% misreporting penalty on disallowance of expenses. Argued the disallowance was on a debatable issue — possible-view doctrine — not misreporting. Faceless Penalty Centre accepted plea; penalty restricted to 50% under-reporting. Saved ₹4.6 lakh.”
Verified Client
Section 245 adjustment reversed — refund released
IT Notice Reply
“CPC adjusted ₹2.1 lakh refund of AY 2024-25 against an old AY 2018-19 demand that was already stayed by CIT(A). Filed disagreement on outstanding demand portal with stay order; refund released within 6 weeks.”
Verified Client
Section 143(1)(a) adjustment of HRA exemption reversed
IT Notice Reply
“CPC proposed adjustment disallowing HRA citing AIS mismatch. Filed reply within 30 days with rent receipts, landlord PAN, bank rent payment trail and revised computation. Adjustment dropped; refund of ₹78,000 issued.”
Verified Client
CIT(A) appeal allowed under Faceless Appeal Centre
IT Notice Reply
“Section 143(3) addition of ₹62 lakh on unexplained cash deposits during demonetisation. Filed Form 35 with Rule 46A petition; produced sales register, cash book and pre-demonetisation cash trends. CIT(A) deleted addition; Section 220(6) stay of demand obtained pending appeal.”
Verified Client
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Common Questions

IT Notice Reply FAQ — Porur

Common questions from Porur clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

The base set is — (i) the notice copy with DIN (Document Identification Number — mandatory under CBDT Circular 19/2019), (ii) ITR-V acknowledgement and ITR copy for the AY, (iii) Form 26AS, (iv) AIS and TIS download, (v) computation of total income with workings, (vi) bank statements, (vii) audit report (Form 3CD/3CB) if applicable, and (viii) supporting evidence for the specific issue raised — e.g. capital gains workings, exemption proof, deduction receipts, loan confirmations.
NFAC sends a Section 143(2) notice through the e-filing portal. The Assessment Unit issues Section 142(1) questionnaires. Replies are uploaded online — no physical visit. Where addition is proposed, a draft assessment order with show-cause is issued. The assessee can request personal hearing by video conference, which must be granted under Section 144B(6)(viii) — denial vitiates the order on natural justice grounds.
Yes — we handle IT Notice Reply for individuals and businesses across Porur (PIN 600116) and nearby Maduravoyal. The work is done end-to-end by our own team, with documents collected online over WhatsApp or email and in-person meetings available at our Maduravoyal and Nerkundram offices. Call 9566-068-468 to begin.
On receipt of the Section 245 intimation, log in to e-filing portal, navigate to 'Pending Actions > Outstanding Demand', and respond within 21 days choosing 'Demand is correct', 'Demand is partially incorrect' or 'Disagree with demand'. For each disputed demand, upload assessment order, challan, rectification application or appeal pendency proof. Silence is treated as agreement and refund is adjusted.
Section 142(1) empowers the Assessing Officer to (i) call for a return where one has not been filed, (ii) require production of accounts, documents and information, including a statement of assets and liabilities, even those not appearing in the books. Non-compliance attracts best-judgment assessment under Section 144 and penalty of ₹10,000 per default under Section 272A(1)(d).
Yes — we work comfortably in both Tamil and English, which makes explaining IT Notice Reply to Porur clients straightforward. Ask your questions in whichever language you prefer, by call or WhatsApp on 9566-068-468.
Best-judgment assessment under Section 144 — the AO completes assessment ex-parte on the material available. Penalty under Section 272A(1)(d) is ₹10,000 for each default of non-compliance with Section 142(1)/142(2A)/143(2). Repeated non-appearance also weakens any subsequent appellate remedy because the appellate authority will require a justification for non-appearance before admitting fresh evidence.
The Faceless Appeal Scheme (Section 250(6B) read with Faceless Appeal Scheme 2021) routes CIT(A) appeals through the National Faceless Appeal Centre. Submissions, additional evidence under Rule 46A, and personal hearing (via video conference where requested) are conducted online. Appellate orders are computer-allotted to officers across India to eliminate jurisdictional bias.
The exact list depends on your case, but we send a short, plain-English checklist the moment you engage us — no jargon. Porur clients can share documents as phone photos or scans over WhatsApp on 9566-068-468, and we flag immediately if anything is missing.
The High Court's writ jurisdiction under Article 226 of the Constitution is not automatically barred by the existence of a statutory appellate remedy. The Supreme Court in Whirlpool Corporation v. Registrar of Trade Marks and a long line of subsequent authority has held that writ remains available in three classes of cases — breach of fundamental rights, violation of natural justice, and orders without jurisdiction. Tax matters that fit any of these heads — a 148 notice without DIN, a 148A(d) order without supply of material, a 144B assessment without the requested video-conference hearing — are amenable to writ even before the appellate route is exhausted, provided the writ petition is filed promptly.
Section 271AAB is the special penalty for undisclosed income found during search under Section 132. For searches on or after 15-Dec-2016, penalty is 30% where the assessee admits the undisclosed income in the Section 132(4) statement, substantiates the manner and pays tax and interest before specified date. In other cases, penalty is 60% of undisclosed income. The provision is in addition to tax and interest.
Your engagement is handled by our in-house team led by Ravivarman R (Founder, 15+ years, 500+ engagements), with M. E. Chokkalingam on compliance and S. Jayaprakash on GST matters. You deal with named, qualified people throughout your IT Notice Reply — not a call centre.
No statutory pre-deposit is required to file a CIT(A) appeal under Section 249. However, Section 249(4) bars admission unless tax on returned income is paid (where return was filed) or, where no return was filed, an amount equal to advance tax payable is deposited. For stay of demand pending appeal, CBDT Instruction 1914 (modified by Office Memorandum dated 31-Jul-2017 and 25-Aug-2017) generally requires 20% deposit, relaxable in genuine hardship cases.
Section 253 provides appeal to the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) against the order of CIT(A) under Section 250, DRP order under Section 144C, or 263/264 revision order. Appeal in Form 36 is filed within 60 days from the date of communication of the order. Filing fee under Section 253(6) ranges from ₹500 (income up to ₹1L) to ₹10,000 (income above ₹2L) — flat ₹500 for non-income matters.
If no response is filed within 30 days, the proposed adjustment is deemed accepted and the consequential intimation is issued with demand or reduced refund. Remedies: (i) file Section 154 rectification online citing the mistake apparent, (ii) where the issue is substantive, file appeal under Section 246A within 30 days of intimation. Condonation of delay can be sought under Section 5 of the Limitation Act with sufficient cause.
Section 264 is revision in favour of the assessee — the Pr.CIT/CIT may, on application or suo motu, revise any order passed by an authority subordinate to him if it is prejudicial to the assessee. Application must be filed within 1 year from the date of communication of the order. Unlike Section 263, no appeal lies against the original order — the assessee chooses between Section 246A appeal and Section 264 revision but cannot pursue both.
IT Notice Reply near Porur:

Our IT Notice Reply clients in Porur are spread right across the locality — along Mount Poonamallee Highway, Perumal Koil Street, Poothapedu Road, Samayapuram Nagar Main Road and 11th Street, and through the Chennai Bypass Expressway, Porur Bridge, Arcot Road and Kodambakkam – Sriperumbudur Road business stretches — so wherever your premises sit, expert help is close by.

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Professional IT Notice Reply in Porur, Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming). 15+ years experience, 4.9★ rated.

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