Notice Under Section 147 of the Income-tax Act — Income Escaping Assessment
Mandatory Section 148A pre-notice procedure, Finance Act 2024 reduced time limits, Rajeev Bansal procedural defence, and full appellate coverage to Supreme Court. Reassessment is a procedural battlefield — win it on the notice.
Overview
What Is a Notice Under Section 147?
A notice under Section 147 of the Income-tax Act is the income tax reassessment trigger. Section 147 is the charging provision that authorises the Assessing Officer to reassess income for any assessment year where chargeable income has escaped assessment. The AO can also assess any other income that comes to notice during the reassessment proceedings. Every reassessment proceeding therefore begins under Section 147 — with Section 148 serving as the formal notice mechanism.
Section 147 reassessment now requires information suggesting escapement — the post-2021 standard replacing the older reason to believe test. Information-quality analysis drives every initial Section 147 defence. N D Savla & Associates handles complete Section 147 reassessment defence for individuals, businesses, professionals, HUFs, LLPs, and corporates across Maharashtra and pan-India. Our service connects with our Reassessment Defence (Form-146), Income Tax Notice, Tax Health Check, and Business Tax Filing services.
The Section 147 — 148 — 148A — 149 — 151 — 153 Chain
Section 147 operates through a five-section reassessment chain. Every section in the chain must comply for the reassessment to be valid — any defect in the chain typically voids the entire proceeding.
Examples of Income Escaping Assessment
Common examples illustrate when income is treated as having escaped assessment. Unreported foreign assets traced through FATCA-CRS data trigger Section 147 proceedings. Large property sales unreported in the ITR, AIS-mismatched bank deposits, and undisclosed share transactions also create classic reassessment cases. Even wrongly claimed deductions or excessive losses can fall within the section's scope. Our Tax Health Check engagement identifies every potential trigger before it becomes a Section 147 notice — proactive review remains far cheaper than retrospective defence.
Mandatory Pre-Notice Procedure
Section 148A — The Procedural Backbone of Every Modern Reassessment
Section 148A is the procedural backbone of every modern reassessment. The section introduced a four-step procedure that the AO must complete before any Section 148 notice can issue. Defects at any step typically void the reassessment.
AO Inquiry With Prior Approval
The AO conducts an inquiry on the information suggesting income escapement, with prior approval from the specified authority under Section 151.
Show-Cause Notice (SCN)
A show-cause notice is issued to the assessee setting out the information relied upon, accompanied by the underlying material wherever possible.
Assessee Reply Window
The assessee files a written reply within the prescribed window (typically 7 to 30 days). This is the critical defence checkpoint — the highest-leverage intervention.
Reasoned Order
The AO passes a reasoned order deciding whether reassessment is warranted. Only then can a Section 148 notice issue.
Rajeev Bansal (2024) — Supreme Court Confirmation
GKN Driveshafts (2003) — The Right to Recorded Reasons
Time Limits
Section 149 Time Limits — The Finance Act 2024 Regime
Finance (No.2) Act 2024 dramatically shortened reassessment windows effective 1 September 2024. Every Section 147 notice must be cross-checked against the new time-limit framework — many older notices are now time-barred.
The High-Value Test — ₹50 Lakh Threshold
The ₹50 lakh threshold determines which time window applies. The AO must have evidence of escaped income of ₹50 lakh or more to invoke the extended 5 years 3 months window. The evidence requirement is interpreted strictly — mere suspicion is insufficient. The threshold test must be applied to each individual assessment year separately. Our team challenges threshold determinations where the underlying evidence is weak — forcing the AO into the shorter 3-year-3-month window often results in time-barred notices.
Section 153 — Assessment Completion Time-Bar
Section 153 caps the time available to complete the reassessment itself. The assessment must complete within 12 months from the end of the FY in which the Section 148 notice was served. Late completion voids the reassessment order regardless of merits. Our Reassessment Defence (Form-146) engagement tracks every Section 153 expiry rigorously — calendar tracking remains a critical defensive habit.
Reference Matrix
Complete Time Limit and Approval Matrix
Multiple statutory provisions together govern every reassessment's validity. Time limits, approval authorities, and procedural rules interact across Section 147 to Section 153. The matrix below is the reference our team uses at every reassessment kickoff.
| Provision | Role | Time Limit | Approval |
|---|---|---|---|
| §147 | Charging provision — power to reassess | Bound by §149 limits | Internal |
| §148A(a) | AO inquiry on suggesting information | Before SCN | Specified authority (§151) |
| §148A(b) | Show-cause notice to assessee | 3 yrs or 5 yrs from AY-end | Specified authority |
| §148A(d) | Reasoned order on reassessment necessity | After assessee reply | Specified authority |
| §148 | Formal reassessment notice | 3y 3m / 5y 3m from AY-end | Specified authority |
| §149(1)(a) | Normal time limit (income < ₹50 lakh) | 3 years 3 months | Per §151 |
| §149(1)(b) | Extended time limit (income ≥ ₹50 lakh) | 5 years 3 months | Higher specified authority |
| §151 | Approval by specified authority | Before notice | Defined by AY age |
| §153 | Reassessment completion time-bar | 12 months from FY-end of notice | Internal |
Process Workflow
The Six-Stage Section 147 Reassessment Process
The Section 147 reassessment process follows a structured six-stage sequence. The workflow runs from information receipt through Section 148A inquiry to final reassessment order. Understanding each stage enables targeted defence at every checkpoint.
AO receives information (AIS, SFT, FATCA-CRS, search); Section 148A(a) inquiry begins
Section 148A(b) show-cause notice issued with underlying material
Reply consideration; Section 148A(d) reasoned order
Section 148 reassessment notice; ITR filed in response
Reassessment proceedings — documents, hearing, examination
Section 147 reassessment order — appeal to CIT(A), ITAT, HC, SC
Our Services
Our Section 147 Reassessment Defence Services
Our practice is procedurally rigorous and litigation-ready. We do not just respond to the notice — we audit the full statutory chain, deploy Rajeev Bansal and GKN Driveshafts authorities, and carry every challenge through to the Supreme Court where needed.
Section 148A(a) Inquiry Response & Section 148A(b) Show-Cause Reply
§148A – Rajeev Bansal (SC 2024)
Section 148 Reassessment Defence & Recorded Reasons
GKN Driveshafts (SC 2003)
Section 149 Time-Bar Analysis (Finance Act 2024)
Section 151 Approval Scrutiny & ₹50 Lakh Threshold Challenge
Section 139(8A) Updated Return Strategy
§139(8A) – Budget 2025
Penalty, Prosecution & Full Appellate Representation
§270A / §271AAB / §276
Defence Strategy
Defending a Section 147 Notice — Grounds & Strategy
Effective Section 147 defence demands multiple parallel workstreams. Procedural challenges, jurisdictional arguments, and substantive merits all play a role. Integrated defence planning is essential from the first notice.
Procedural Defences — Section 148A and Time-Bar
Procedural defences offer the strongest knockout grounds. Section 148A compliance failures void the entire reassessment under Rajeev Bansal. Time-bar challenges under Section 149 invalidate late notices automatically. Jurisdictional defects — wrong AO, wrong AY, missing Section 151 approval — also defeat reassessment. Our team prioritises every procedural challenge in the Section 148A reply itself, since procedural audits drive the strongest knockout outcomes.
Substantive Defences — Information Quality and Quantum
Substantive defences attack the AO's information itself. The assessee can challenge the reliability, sufficiency, and relevance of the information cited. The quantum claimed as escaped income can be disputed on documentary evidence. The ₹50 lakh threshold test can be challenged where evidence is weak — forcing the AO into the shorter 3-year-3-month window. We examine every AIS, SFT, and FATCA entry cited; evidence-quality analysis often reduces both quantum and time-window.
Updated Returns Under Section 139(8A) — The Voluntary Route
Section 139(8A) provides a voluntary correction route for taxpayers. An updated return can be filed within 24 months from the end of the AY with 25–50% additional tax. The route avoids penalty and prosecution exposure. Budget 2025 restricted Section 139(8A) where a Section 148A notice has been issued beyond 36 months. Voluntary filing within the 24-month window remains the cleanest cure for past omissions — the proactive route avoids reassessment exposure entirely.
Consequences
Consequences of Reassessment and Non-Compliance
Non-response to a Section 147 notice carries escalating consequences. The AO can complete best judgment reassessment, levy heavy penalty, and trigger prosecution. Every notice deserves immediate professional response.
Section 144 — Best Judgment Reassessment
Failure to file the reassessment ITR triggers Section 144 best judgment assessment. The AO computes income based on available information without taxpayer input. Best judgment cases typically carry adverse assumptions and inflated tax demand — the burden then shifts to the taxpayer to appeal and reduce the demand. Prompt response remains far cheaper than appellate cure.
Appellate Remedies — CIT(A), ITAT, High Court, Supreme Court
Every reassessment order is fully appealable. First appeal goes to the Commissioner (Appeals) within 30 days. Second appeal reaches the Income Tax Appellate Tribunal under Section 253. High Court appeals on substantial questions of law follow under Section 260A. Supreme Court SLPs reach via Article 136. No reassessment becomes final until every appellate remedy concludes.
FAQ
Frequently Asked Questions — Section 147
Related Services
Our Broader Tax Advisory & Reassessment Defence Practice
Section 147 reassessment rarely sits in isolation — it often coexists with parallel inquiries, special audits, foreign-asset disclosures, and Black Money Act proceedings. Our complete practice covers:
Received a Section 147 / 148 / 148A notice? The procedural window is short.
Talk to our Tax Litigation & Reassessment Defence team for Section 148A show-cause reply drafting, time-bar analysis, and full appellate coverage to the Supreme Court.
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