Received an income tax notice and worried? Don’t panic.
Notices from the Income Tax Department are common — and in most cases, they’re just requests for clarification, correction, or routine assessment.
In this blog, we break down:
- Types of notices you might receive
- What each notice number means
- What actions you must take
- How BizGuardian can help you respond safely
Common Types of Income Tax Notices
| Section | Notice Type | What It Means |
| 139(9) | Defective Return | Your ITR has missing or incorrect info |
| 143(1) | Intimation | Adjustment or refund confirmation |
| 143(2) | Scrutiny Notice | Selected for detailed assessment |
| 148 | Income Escaped Assessment | Dept believes some income was not reported |
| 245 | Refund Adjustment | Refund being adjusted against past demand |
| 133(6) | Information Request | Details sought about financial transactions |
| 142(1) | Inquiry Before Assessment | Documents/information required for assessment |
What Should You Do If You Receive a Notice?
First: Read it carefully. Check:
- Section mentioned
- AY (Assessment Year)
- Reason for the notice
- Deadline to respond
- Whether it is just intimation or requires action
Second: Do not ignore it.
Even if it looks harmless, always acknowledge and take timely action.
How to Respond to the Most Common Notices
143(1) — Intimation
- Usually received after return processing
- Shows tax calculation vs what you filed
- Could be:
->Refund intimation
->Small mismatch (like 26AS / Form 16 / deduction) - Action: Accept or disagree online within time
139(9) — Defective Return
- Missing info like:
->ITR form mismatch
->Incomplete income/deductions
->Capital gains missed - Action: Correct and file revised return within 15 days
148 — Income Escaped Assessment
- Dept believes you underreported income
- Usually based on AIS, bank transactions, or property/sale data
- Action: Consult tax expert immediately; prepare records
245 — Refund Adjustment
- Your refund is being adjusted against previous year’s demand
- Action: Accept if correct OR object if dispute exists
Common Triggers for Notices
- Not reporting FD or dividend interest
- Form 26AS / AIS mismatch
- Claiming high refunds repeatedly
- High-value cash deposits or property purchases
- Not filing return despite high TDS
- Mismatch in Form 16 and actual filing
What Happens If You Ignore the Notice?
- Refund gets stuck
- You may face a penalty or best-judgment assessment
- Non-compliance can lead to reopening of assessments
- You may be marked for future scrutiny
Real-Life Example
Mr. Naveen filed his return claiming ₹25,000 refund.
A few weeks later, he received a 143(1) intimation showing a TDS mismatch — AIS had extra ₹10,000 FD interest not reported.
✅ He responded in time and filed a revised return → refund processed after correction.
⚠️ Had he ignored it, refund could’ve been denied with penalty interest.
How BizGuardian Helps You Handle Notices Smoothly
- We review your notice and decode what it means
- Prepare accurate responses and documents
- File replies on income tax portal (in time)
- Represent you in case of assessment
- Help revise return or submit feedback in AIS
👉 Don’t panic — just contact us and we’ll take it from there.
[ Email: support@bizguardian.in / WhatsApp : 9003009901]


