Scrutiny Assessment Services in India –
Section 143(3) Notice Handling, Faceless Assessment Representation & Post-Order Remedies
A scrutiny assessment is the most demanding tax proceeding most businesses ever face. Getting it right matters. The Assessing Officer can question every line in the return — and a weak reply often converts a routine notice into a heavy demand.
Overview
Focused Scrutiny Assessment Services Across India
We deliver focused scrutiny assessment services at N D Savla & Associates. Our team handles Section 143(2) notices, Section 142(1) inquiry replies, and the full faceless assessment cycle. We represent taxpayers across income tax notice workflows — including Section 143(2), Section 142(1), Section 148 reassessment, and Section 144 best judgment cases.
Our income tax scrutiny practice covers every stage from notice to appeal.
The Proceeding
What Is a Scrutiny Assessment Under Section 143(3)?
A scrutiny assessment under Section 143(3) is a detailed examination of an income tax return by the Assessing Officer. The aim is to verify that every figure in the return is correct. Income, deductions, exemptions, and tax credits all come under review. The AO can call for documents and explanations during the process.
The proceeding begins with a Section 143(2) notice. Subsequently, the AO issues Section 142(1) inquiries for specific documents. The case then moves through faceless assessment hearings. Finally, the AO passes a Section 143(3) order — accepting the return or making additions. Every Section 143(3) scrutiny assessment follows a clear statutory path.
Selection Criteria
Why Cases Are Selected for Income Tax Scrutiny
Cases come into income tax scrutiny through two routes. First, the Computer-Assisted Scrutiny Selection (CASS) system flags cases on risk parameters. Second, the CBDT issues annual instructions for compulsory manual scrutiny. Selection is rarely random. Every notice carries a specific reason that shapes the reply strategy.
CASS picks up cases where the system spots a measurable mismatch. AIS or Form 26AS may show income that the return does not. Cash deposits, large investments, or property purchases above thresholds attract attention. High refund claims, unusual deduction patterns, and turnover mismatches with GST data also trigger selection.
The CBDT publishes compulsory scrutiny criteria each year. Search and survey cases automatically fall under it. Large refund claims and certain charitable trust cases attract mandatory selection. Manual selection cases tend to involve specific intelligence — not just data mismatch.
Scrutiny Categories
Types of Scrutiny Assessment — Limited, Complete, Manual & Compulsory
Not every income tax scrutiny case follows the same path. The Income Tax Department classifies scrutiny assessments into four types. Identifying the exact type is the first step in any defence.
| Type | Scope of Examination | How Selected | Risk Profile |
|---|---|---|---|
| Limited Scrutiny | Only the specific issues mentioned in the Section 143(2) notice — for example, AIS mismatch on a single deduction | CASS — Computer-Assisted Scrutiny Selection based on parameter triggers | Lowest — scope cannot widen without approval |
| Complete Scrutiny | Full ITR — every income head, deduction, exemption, and balance sheet item | CASS or manual selection on multiple risk flags | High — additions can be made on any return item |
| Manual Scrutiny | Specific issues identified by the Assessing Officer based on intelligence inputs | Manual selection under CBDT guidelines for the year | High — driven by specific information |
| Compulsory Scrutiny | Cases that must be examined under CBDT criteria — search/survey cases, large refunds, specific industries | Mandatory selection — no taxpayer can avoid it | Very High — almost always converts to additions |
Statutory Timeline
Section 143(3) Scrutiny Assessment Process — Step-by-Step Timeline
Every income tax scrutiny case follows a fixed statutory timeline. Missing a deadline often closes a defence option permanently. The table below maps the full process from Section 143(2) notice to Section 143(3) order.
| Stage | What Happens | Statutory Time Limit |
|---|---|---|
| 1. Section 143(2) Notice issued | First notice of scrutiny — taxpayer is told the case is selected for scrutiny | Within 3 months from the end of the financial year in which the return is filed |
| 2. Initial response on portal | Taxpayer accepts notice on e-filing portal and prepares to respond | 15 days from notice date (extendable by AO) |
| 3. Section 142(1) inquiry | AO calls for specific documents and information | Compliance period mentioned in the notice — usually 15 to 30 days |
| 4. Faceless / e-Assessment hearing | Submissions made through Faceless Assessment Centre (FAC) or via VC | Multi-round — guided by AO's queries |
| 5. Show-cause issued | AO issues draft additions and asks for objections | 7 to 15 days for taxpayer's reply |
| 6. Section 143(3) Order passed | Final scrutiny assessment order with computation and demand | 12 months from the end of the AY (Section 153(1)) |
Modern Framework
Faceless Assessment Under Section 144B — How Modern Scrutiny Works
Section 144B introduced the faceless assessment framework in 2020. Today, almost every Section 143(3) scrutiny assessment moves through the Faceless Assessment Centre (FAC). The taxpayer never meets the Assessing Officer in person. All notices, replies, and orders flow through the e-filing portal.
How Faceless Assessment Works
The system randomly allocates cases to assessment units across India. A Mumbai taxpayer may face an AO sitting in Bangalore or Kolkata. The AO raises every query electronically. The taxpayer responds through the portal. Draft assessment orders go to a separate review unit before issue.
Faceless assessment removes personal contact entirely. This also means hearings are limited and replies must be self-contained.
Video Conference Hearings
Taxpayers can request a Video Conference (VC) hearing in faceless cases. The AO grants this when proposed additions exceed the threshold. Complex factual or legal issues may justify a VC.
Our income tax scrutiny team prepares both the written reply and the VC presentation in advance.
Our Approach
Our Scrutiny Assessment Service Workflow
We follow a structured five-step approach to every income tax scrutiny engagement. The taxpayer gets the same disciplined process whether the case is limited or complete scrutiny.
Notice Review and Strategy Note
We examine the Section 143(2) notice carefully. We check the issuance date, the issuing authority, and the listed reasons. We verify the case type — limited, complete, or compulsory. We issue a strategy note to the client — the taxpayer knows the exposure before the first reply.
AIS, Form 26AS and ITR Reconciliation
Our team reconciles the ITR with AIS, Form 26AS, TDS certificates, and bank records. We identify mismatches before the AO does. We prepare working papers that show every figure in the return ties to source documents.
Section 142(1) Reply Drafting
We draft the reply to every Section 142(1) inquiry. We provide only the documents asked for — never more. We attach a clear factual narrative with each submission. The AO receives a complete, focused reply that closes the inquiry on that point.
Show-Cause Objection and Hearing
If the AO proposes additions, a show-cause notice follows. We file detailed objections supported by case law and documentary evidence. We represent the client at the VC hearing where granted. The show-cause stage is the last chance to block additions before the order issues.
Order Review and Post-Order Remedy
We review the Section 143(3) order line by line. Where additions are made, we evaluate three options: rectification under Section 154, appeal to the Commissioner (CIT Appeals), or appeal at ITAT if the issue progresses further. Our scrutiny assessment services do not stop at the order — they extend to the full appellate cycle.
Documentation
Documents Required for Scrutiny Assessment
Speed of reply depends on document quality. Organised records reduce review time. Complete documentation lowers the risk of incorrect submissions. Below is the working checklist our scrutiny assessment services team shares with every client during onboarding.
- Section 143(2) notice and any subsequent Section 142(1) communications
- Filed ITR, ITR-V acknowledgement, computation sheet, and tax payment challans
- AIS, TIS, and Form 26AS for the assessment year
- Books of accounts — ledger, journal, cash book, and bank book
- Bank statements for every operational and investment account
- Investment proofs — LIC, ELSS, PPF, NPS, home loan certificates, donation receipts
- Sale/purchase documents for property, securities, and other capital assets
- TDS certificates — Form 16, 16A, 16B, 16C, lower TDS certificate where applicable
- GST returns reconciliation for businesses — GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-9
- Earlier years' assessment orders if relevant to the current scrutiny
Recurring Triggers
Common Issues That Arise in Section 143(3) Scrutiny
Most income tax scrutiny additions come from a small set of recurring issues. Our scrutiny assessment services flag these areas at the very first review.
Interest income, dividend, mutual fund redemption not reported in the return.
Deposits during the year not matching declared business or salary income.
Property purchase, vehicle purchase, foreign travel, or investment above SFT thresholds.
Incorrect indexation, wrong cost of acquisition, missed Section 54 / 54EC claims.
Unexplained cash credit, investment, money or expenditure additions.
Vendors flagged in earlier search or survey, unverified payments.
Mismatch between balance sheet and Schedule FA disclosures.
Refund denied because the tax credit does not appear in Form 26AS.
Financial Impact
Penalties Linked to Section 143(3) Scrutiny Outcomes
Additions in a scrutiny assessment rarely come alone. The AO typically initiates penalty proceedings as well. The total cost of a poor defence is often double the addition itself. Our income tax scrutiny defence strategy always plans for the penalty stage in advance.
Section 270A — Under-Reporting and Misreporting
Section 270A applies in nearly every Section 143(3) case where additions stand. The penalty equals 50% of tax for under-reporting and 200% of tax for misreporting. Misreporting carries no immunity option. Our Section 270A page explains the full penalty framework.
Section 271AAC — Unexplained Income
Section 271AAC kicks in for additions under Sections 68 to 69D. These cover unexplained credits, investments, or expenditure. The penalty rate stands at 10% of the tax payable on such additions. Even small additions in this category trigger a meaningful penalty.
Section 234A / 234B / 234C Interest
Interest under Sections 234A, 234B, and 234C automatically applies on the additions. The rate runs at 1% per month or 12% per annum depending on the head. The longer a Section 143(3) case stays unresolved, the higher the interest grows.
Client Profile
Who We Serve in Our Scrutiny Assessment Practice
Our income tax scrutiny practice covers the full range of taxpayers. Every engagement is tailored to the specific notice type and exposure level.
AIS-driven scrutiny, deduction disallowance, multiple Form 16 cases.
Doctors, lawyers, architects, CAs, consultants under Section 143(3) scrutiny.
Section 44AB tax audit cases, GST-ITR mismatch, books-based scrutiny.
Large refund cases, related-party transactions, transfer pricing scrutiny.
Residential status disputes, foreign asset disclosures, DTAA issues.
Section 11 application, Section 13 violation, anonymous donation scrutiny.
Capital gains, foreign assets, large investment scrutiny.
Why N D Savla & Associates
Why Choose Us for Your Scrutiny Assessment Defence
Taxpayers choose our scrutiny assessment services for four reasons. First, a qualified Chartered Accountant leads every case with hands-on income tax scrutiny experience. Second, we treat Section 143(2) notices as serious from day one — never as a routine task.
Third, we draft replies with complete documentation, knowing faceless assessment limits live hearings. Fourth, our income tax scrutiny team works alongside our appellate practice. The same firm handles the case from notice through to ITAT if needed. The client gets continuity of strategy across every stage.
Related Services
Related Income Tax Notice and Appellate Services
Our wider practice supports every stage of the income tax notice and assessment cycle. Integrated coordination saves the taxpayer real time across overlapping deadlines.
Income Tax Notice
Hub page covering every type of income tax notice and reply support.
Section 143(2) Response
Reply support for the first notice that opens a scrutiny assessment.
Section 142(1) Notice
Inquiry-before-assessment notice handling under Section 142(1).
Section 147 / 148 Reassessment
Reopening of assessment under Section 147/148.
Section 144 Best Judgment
Best judgment assessment defence and rectification.
Section 270A Penalty
Penalty for under-reporting and misreporting of income.
Appeal to CIT (Appeals)
First appellate remedy against an adverse Section 143(3) order.
Appeal at ITAT
Second appellate stage before the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal.
Income Tax E-Filing
Annual ITR filing — the foundation of every clean assessment record.
Income Tax Audit
Section 44AB tax audit — closely linked to Form 3CD-based scrutiny issues.
Frequently Asked Questions
Scrutiny Assessment – FAQs
Received a Section 143(2) Notice? Get Expert Scrutiny Assessment Defence Today.
End-to-end scrutiny assessment services — Section 143(2) reply · Section 142(1) inquiry response · faceless assessment representation · AIS reconciliation · show-cause objection · Section 143(3) order review · CIT (Appeals) and ITAT appeal support.
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