Scrutiny Assessment in India
Section 143(2) Scrutiny Notice Response, AO Hearings and Assessment Defence
A scrutiny assessment under Section 143(2) of the Income Tax Act is initiated when the Income Tax Department selects a taxpayer's return for detailed examination. Unlike the routine processing of ITRs under Section 143(1), a scrutiny assessment involves the Assessing Officer (AO) examining the correctness and completeness of the income tax return in depth -- calling for documentary evidence for income, deductions, expenses, and significant financial transactions. Scrutiny cases are selected either through a computer-based random selection process (CASS -- Computer Aided Scrutiny Selection) or through manual selection based on specific risk parameters identified by the department.
A scrutiny assessment is not necessarily an adverse finding -- it is an examination. The outcome depends critically on how well the taxpayer's position is documented and argued during the assessment proceedings. Our team provides complete scrutiny assessment defence -- from the first Section 143(2) notice through the final assessment order, and into the CIT(A) appeal if the order is adverse.
Types of Scrutiny Assessment in India
| Type | Selection Method | Scope |
|---|---|---|
| Limited Scrutiny | CASS -- selected for specific issues identified by the system | Only the specific issue identified in the CASS notice; AO cannot go beyond the specified issue |
| Complete Scrutiny | CASS -- all aspects of the return to be examined | All income, deductions, expenses, and transactions in the ITR |
| Manual Scrutiny | AO/PCIT identifies high-risk cases manually | Complete examination with specific focus on the risk identified |
| Faceless Assessment | CASS -- conducted through e-proceeding portal (no physical AO interaction) | All queries, submissions, and orders through the ITBA portal; no in-person hearings |
| International Transaction Scrutiny | Cases with international transactions automatically referred for scrutiny | Transfer pricing issues plus any other risk items in the return |
Our Scrutiny Assessment Services
Notice Analysis and Risk Assessment
Detailed analysis of the Section 143(2) notice -- identifying whether it is limited or complete scrutiny, the specific issues flagged, potential risk areas in the ITR, and immediate steps to begin document collection.
Document Organisation
Systematic collection and organisation of all documents required for the scrutiny -- financial statements, bank statements, contracts, investment proofs, purchase/sale documents -- in a structured format indexed to each AO query.
Written Submissions
Preparation of comprehensive, legally argued written submissions addressing each query raised by the AO -- supported by judicial precedents, CBDT circulars, and complete documentary evidence for each position taken.
Faceless Assessment Compliance
Complete management of faceless assessment proceedings through the ITBA e-proceeding portal -- timely uploading of responses, documents, and additional submissions within the prescribed deadlines on the portal.
AO Hearing Representation
Representation at physical or video hearings before the AO -- presenting oral arguments, addressing additional queries raised during hearings, and managing the overall assessment strategy for the best possible outcome.
Assessment Order Review and Appeal
Detailed review of the draft/final assessment order -- identifying all additions, their legal basis, and the appeal strategy. Seamless transition to CIT(A) appeal or ITAT appeal where the order is adverse.
Frequently Asked Questions
How is a limited scrutiny different from a complete scrutiny?
What is a faceless assessment and how is it different from traditional scrutiny?
What is the time limit for completing a scrutiny assessment?
Facing a Scrutiny Assessment? Our CA Team Builds Your Strongest Defence.
Notice analysis, document organisation, written submissions, AO hearing representation, and appeal transition -- complete scrutiny assessment support.
Contact Us TodayF.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.