Explorer

ITR Filing: Received Intimation Notice Under Section 143(1)? Know What It Means

In case a lower tax is paid, the taxpayer will need to pay the balance amount. While in case of an excess tax, the tax refund will get disbursed by the department to the assessee’s bank account

Once a taxpayer files an income tax return (I-T return), the tax department sends an intimation under Section 143(1) to your registered email address mentioned in your e-filing account to intimate whether the income tax calculation in the ITR filed by you matches that of the tax department based on the records/other sources of information with them.

The notice may also point out a discrepancy that might arise from a lower tax paid than what was meant to be paid.

In case a lower tax is paid, the taxpayer will need to pay the balance amount to resolve the issue. While in case of an excess tax, the tax refund will get disbursed by the department to the assessee’s bank account.

ALSO READ: Interest Rate Hike On Post Office Time Deposits, Senior Citizen Savings Schemes, NSC Applicable From Today. Check Details (abplive.com)

Usually, the intimation notice is a password protected file. In order to open the notice received, the password is your PAN in lower case and your date of birth. For instance, if your PAN number is AAAAA0000A and date of birth is 01-Janauary-1990, then the password to open the document will be aaaaa000a01011990.

What is intimation under Section 143(1)?

Individuals need to file income tax returns on or before July 31 of the assessment year. Once the return is filed, the tax department carries out processing of the return.

Upon the receipt of intimation from the department, there are various scenarios that may arise from wrong deduction of TDS from salary and under-reporting of income.

There may be three likely scenarios. The first could be no demand raised for income tax which leaves the assessee free from worries. The second scenario could be that of a tax refund. And the third is that there is a tax demand.

“It is important for the taxpayer to first identify the scenario, and accordingly rectify the computation. For instance, if TDS is not considered by the department, then one can apply for it to be considered — thereby reducing the tax liability. There are, therefore, multiple permutations and combinations and the response will vary from case to case," founder of CA Chauhan & Co Chirag Chauhan was quoted as saying in the publication Mint.

There could be a situation that these changes are not reflected in the tax return by December 31. In such a case the return can be rectified later.

Time period

Even as you may get the notice within a short period of filing of tax return, the maximum time limit of sending this intimation is nine months from the end of financial year in which the return has been file.

Top Headlines

Will Cathcart Steps Down; CRED Founder Kunal Shah To Lead WhatsApp
Will Cathcart Steps Down; CRED Founder Kunal Shah To Lead WhatsApp
US May End Open-Ended Student Visas: What It Means For Indian Students
Studying In The US Could Get More Complicated Under New Visa Proposal
Changed Jobs? This One PF Mistake Could Hurt Your Savings And Cost You Tax Benefits
Changed Jobs? This One PF Mistake Could Hurt Your Savings And Cost You Tax Benefits
Can Bond Markets Predict The Future? Here's How The Yield Curve Predicts Recessions Before Stocks Do
What The Bond Market Knows About The Economy's Future That Stock Markets Don't

Videos

Maharashtra Politics: Shinde’s ‘Operation Tiger’ Puts Uddhav Camp on Edge as Rebel MPs Switch Sides
Lucknow Fire Alert: Massive Blaze Engulfs Coaching Building in Aliganj, Rescue Teams Race Against Time
UP Politics: Muslim Cleric Urges Akhilesh Yadav to Name Muslim CM Face for 2027, Sparks Fresh Political Debate
UP Politics: SP MP Anand Bhadauria Climbs Pole to Remove Anti-Akhilesh Posters in Sitapur
UK Politics: Keir Starmer Resigns as British Prime Minister, Labour Leadership Race Set to Begin

Photo Gallery

25°C
New Delhi
Rain: 100mm
Humidity: 97%
Wind: WNW 47km/h
See Today's Weather
powered by
Accu Weather
Embed widget