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Income Tax Notice Reply and Assessment Support Services India | Expert CA

Income Tax Notice Reply and Assessment Support

Expert Drafting of IT Notice Responses and Full Representation in Assessment Proceedings

Responding to an income tax notice correctly and on time is critical -- an incomplete, incorrect, or delayed response can result in adverse additions in the assessment order, disallowance of deductions you are legitimately entitled to, and costly appellate proceedings that could have been avoided. The Income Tax Department's notices range from simple intimations (Section 143(1)(a)) requiring only a short online response, to detailed scrutiny notices (Section 143(2)) requiring comprehensive documentation of every income item, deduction, and expense claimed in your ITR.

Our income tax notice reply and assessment support services cover the complete assessment lifecycle -- from the first notice through the final assessment order. We analyse each query raised by the Assessing Officer, prepare a comprehensive written response with documentary evidence, represent you at hearings before the AO, and negotiate to minimise additions while ensuring your legitimate positions are fully defended. Where the AO's order is adverse, we seamlessly transition to the CIT(A) appeal or ITAT appeal process.

Our Notice Reply and Assessment Support Services

Notice Analysis and Strategy

Detailed analysis of every query in the notice -- identifying the specific section, the concern raised, the documents required, and the best strategy for responding to protect the taxpayer's position in the assessment.

Section 143(1)(a) Response

Online response to intimations under Section 143(1)(a) -- agreeing with, partially disagreeing with, or fully contesting the adjustments proposed, with submission of relevant supporting documents on the e-filing portal.

Section 143(2) Scrutiny Compliance

Preparation of comprehensive submissions for scrutiny assessments -- organising financial statements, bank statements, contracts, bills, and legal documents; drafting written submissions; and filing responses on the ITBA e-proceeding portal.

Section 142(1) Document Production

Production of accounts, documents, and information called for under Section 142(1) -- with a well-structured response letter that addresses each specific query and provides appropriate context for each document produced.

AO Hearing Representation

Physical or e-proceeding representation before the Assessing Officer -- presenting oral arguments, responding to AO's queries, and negotiating on proposed additions to minimise the assessment impact.

Draft Order Response

Response to draft assessment orders proposing additions -- filing objections with the DRP (for eligible assesses) or preparing grounds of appeal for CIT(A), transitioning seamlessly from assessment to appellate stage.

Assessment Support Timeline

StageActivityOur Support
Notice ReceiptIdentify section, deadline, and queries raisedNotice analysis, strategy advisory, deadline calendar
Document CollectionGather all supporting documents for each queryDocument checklist, gap analysis, evidence structuring
Response DraftingPrepare written submission with legal and factual argumentsComprehensive reply drafting with judicial precedents
SubmissionFile response on ITBA e-proceeding portal or submit physicallyPortal filing, acknowledgement, follow-up tracking
HearingAttend AO hearing and present argumentsFull representation before AO, oral and written arguments
Assessment OrderReview final order; plan next stepsOrder analysis, appeal strategy if adverse additions made

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the time limit for responding to a scrutiny notice under Section 143(2)?
The Section 143(2) scrutiny notice specifies the date by which the taxpayer must respond. Typically, the initial response requires the taxpayer to appear or submit documents within 15 to 30 days from the notice date. The assessment proceedings themselves must be completed within 12 months from the end of the assessment year (e.g., March 31, 2025 for AY 2023-24), though time limits are extended for international transactions and search cases. Failure to respond to a Section 143(2) notice can result in the AO proceeding to complete the assessment ex-parte on the basis of available information -- usually resulting in significant additions.
What documents are typically required for a scrutiny assessment response?
For a standard scrutiny assessment, the AO typically calls for: audited financial statements (P&L, Balance Sheet) and tax audit report; bank statements for all accounts; details of major income items -- salary, business income, capital gains, rental income; supporting documents for deductions claimed -- Section 80C investments, health insurance, home loan interest certificates; purchase and sale deeds for property transactions; books of accounts (ledger, journal, cash book); contracts or agreements for major transactions; and any other item specifically highlighted by the AO in the notice. Organising these documents in a structured format before the first hearing significantly improves the assessment outcome.
Can additions in a scrutiny assessment be avoided entirely?
Not always, but a well-prepared, timely, and comprehensive response to the scrutiny notice significantly reduces the risk of additions. Most additions arise from: inadequate documentation of claimed deductions; unexplained cash deposits or bank credits; mismatch between ITR and Form 26AS/AIS data; large expense claims without supporting evidence; and high-value transactions reported in SFT (Statement of Financial Transactions). Proactively addressing each of these issues in the response, with complete documentary support and relevant legal precedents, often results in the AO accepting the taxpayer's position and completing the assessment without additions -- or with minimal additions on genuinely weak positions.

Received a Scrutiny Notice? We Respond Comprehensively, On Time, Every Time.

Notice analysis, document preparation, written response drafting, AO hearing representation, and appeal transition -- complete assessment support.

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F.A.Q.

It includes all yearly requirements such as filings, actuarial valuation, audits, and maintaining proper records.

Yes, regular compliance is required to maintain approval and tax benefits.

It helps determine the exact gratuity liability and required funding for the trust.

 

Yes, trusts must file necessary returns and maintain financial records as per regulations.

Non-compliance can lead to penalties, loss of tax benefits, or cancellation of approval.

Trustees and the employer are responsible for ensuring proper compliance.