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Section 133(6) – Information Call Notice: Compliance & Response

Professional Assistance for Responding to Section 133(6) Income Tax Information Notices

Under Section 133(6) of the Income Tax Act, 1961, income tax authorities are empowered to require any person to furnish information or produce documents relevant to any proceeding or inquiry. These notices are issued both to taxpayers under investigation and to third parties — banks, registrars, employers, brokers, and financial institutions — who hold relevant financial data. A Section 133(6) notice is a compulsory information call and non-compliance attracts significant legal consequences including penalty and escalation to summons.

A timely, carefully structured response is essential — disclosing too little invites further scrutiny while disclosing incorrectly can trigger assessment proceedings. Our professionals provide complete Section 133(6) compliance support, connecting with our Section 131(1A) Summons, Notice Reply Support, Section 148 Reassessment, and Section 156 Demand Notice services.

Our Services

Notice Analysis & Scope Assessment

Detailed review of the Section 133(6) notice to determine the scope of information demanded, the underlying proceeding, the issuing authority, and your precise legal obligations in responding.

Information & Document Compilation

Systematic compilation of all requested information and documents — cross-checked against ITRs, Form 26AS, AIS, and prior filings to ensure complete consistency and accuracy before submission.

Compliance Response Drafting

Preparation of a clear, complete written response providing the required information — while appropriately identifying and protecting any information outside the legitimate scope of the demand.

Risk Assessment Advisory

Analysis of the information sought to identify potential tax risks, advise on the safest approach to disclosure, and prepare for the possibility of follow-on assessment or reassessment proceedings.

Third-Party Recipient Compliance

Guidance for banks, NBFCs, registrars, employers, and other third-party recipients of Section 133(6) notices — advising on the precise scope of their disclosure obligation and managing compliance professionally.

Escalation Management

If the Section 133(6) notice leads to assessment proceedings, summons under Section 131(1A), or survey operations, providing complete representation and advisory support at every subsequent stage.

Key Facts About Section 133(6) Notices

  • Can be issued to any person — taxpayers, banks, NBFCs, registrars, employers, brokers, and third parties
  • Response deadline is typically 7 to 30 days from the date of the notice — specified in the notice itself
  • Late filing fee of ₹500 per day under Section 272A(2)(f) for each day of default — non-waivable
  • Non-compliance typically escalates to Section 131(1A) summons requiring personal attendance
  • Post-AIS, many Section 133(6) notices are driven by data-analytics targeting specific transactions flagged in the Insight Portal
  • Responses must be consistent with all prior filings — inconsistencies become red flags triggering deeper inquiry

Frequently Asked Questions

Who can receive a Section 133(6) notice?
Section 133(6) can be issued to any person — including the taxpayer whose assessment is under inquiry, banks, NBFCs, stock brokers, property registrars, employers, mutual fund houses, chartered accountants, and any individual or entity involved in a financial transaction with the taxpayer. The notice can be issued even without any pending assessment against the recipient. Common recipients include banks called upon to provide details of large deposits and financial transactions.
What types of information can be demanded?
Section 133(6) empowers the authority to call for books of account, bank statements, investment records, property purchase and sale details, foreign remittances, loan agreements, salary and TDS data, share subscription details, partnership agreements, and any other information relevant to an income tax proceeding. Post the introduction of AIS and the Insight Portal, these notices are increasingly targeted at specific high-value transactions flagged by the department's data analytics system.
What is the deadline to respond and can it be extended?
The notice specifies the response deadline — typically 7 to 30 days. Extensions can be requested in writing with valid reasons, applied for promptly. Do not ignore the notice even briefly — any delay without communication can trigger penalty and escalation. Our professionals routinely manage extension applications where genuine additional time is required.
What are the consequences of not responding?
Non-compliance attracts a penalty of ₹500 per day under Section 272A(2)(f). More seriously, non-compliance typically triggers escalation to a summons under Section 131(1A) requiring personal attendance on oath. It may also lead to survey operations under Section 133A. In any related assessment, non-compliance creates a strong adverse inference — the AO can draw negative conclusions and make additions based on presumed non-disclosure.
Does responding to Section 133(6) create assessment risk?
The information provided will be used in the underlying inquiry. If it reveals discrepancies with filed ITRs or highlights undisclosed transactions, it can form the basis for initiating or expanding an assessment. However, non-response creates even greater risk — penalty, adverse inference, and summons. The safest approach is to provide accurate, complete information with professional guidance ensuring disclosure is consistent with all prior filings.

Received a Section 133(6) Information Notice? Respond Correctly the First Time.

Our tax professionals will review the notice, compile accurate information, and draft a response that protects your interests.

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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.