Income Tax Notices — What They Mean & How to Respond Correctly (FY 2024–25)

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

SectionNotice TypeWhat It Means
139(9)Defective ReturnYour ITR has missing or incorrect info
143(1)IntimationAdjustment or refund confirmation
143(2)Scrutiny NoticeSelected for detailed assessment
148Income Escaped AssessmentDept believes some income was not reported
245Refund AdjustmentRefund being adjusted against past demand
133(6)Information RequestDetails sought about financial transactions
142(1)Inquiry Before AssessmentDocuments/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]

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Income Tax Notices — What They Mean & How to Respond Correctly (FY 2024–25)

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