An income tax notice to salaried employees is a formal communication from the Income Tax Department asking you to clarify, correct or confirm details in your tax filing. This article covers the most common types of income tax notices for salaried individuals, the key reasons they are triggered including TDS mismatches, undisclosed interest income and high-value transactions and a clear step-by-step guide on how to respond before the deadline.
What is an Income Tax Notice?
An income tax notice is an official written communication from the Income Tax Department of India, sent to a taxpayer when the department needs you to explain, verify or correct something in your tax records. It does not mean you have committed fraud or broken any law — in many cases, it is simply a request for more information or a prompt to fix a minor mismatch.
Salaried employees are among the most common recipients of income tax notices in India, largely because their income is automatically reported to the department through Form 16, Form 26AS and the Annual Information Statement (AIS). Any discrepancy between what you have declared and what these documents show can trigger a notice.
You might receive an income tax notice if:
- You have not filed your Income Tax Return (ITR) on time, or have not filed at all
- There is a mismatch between the income you declared and the figures in your Form 16, Form 26AS, AIS or TIS
- You have underpaid tax or missed disclosing certain income sources such as bank interest, rental income or freelance earnings
- You have claimed deductions or exemptions beyond the allowed limits under sections like 80C or 80D
- The department wants to assess your return in more detail under its scrutiny process
The notice will always mention the specific section of the Income Tax Act under which it is issued. It will include the nature of the discrepancy, the assessment year in question and the documents or clarification required from you.
DID YOU KNOW?
Receiving a salaried employees income tax notice does not automatically mean you owe more tax or have done something wrong. A large share of notices are routine intimations — they may simply confirm your return is correct, or flag a minor data mismatch that can be resolved with a quick online response.
Income Tax Notice Types in India
The Income Tax Act of 1961 has several provisions under which the department can issue notices. Here is a quick-reference summary of the key types relevant to salaried employees, followed by a detailed breakdown of each.
| Section | Type of Notice | Triggered By |
|---|---|---|
| 143(1) | Intimation — Processed Return | Return processed; tax calculation difference or refund due |
| 143(2) & 143(3) | Scrutiny Assessment | Return selected for detailed examination |
| 156 | Demand Notice | Outstanding tax dues, interest or penalties |
| 142(1) | Prior Notice / Enquiry | Late filing, missing income details or documents required |
| 139(9) | Defective Return | Errors, missing details or calculation issues in filed return |
| 148 | Escaped Assessment | Income not assessed in a prior year’s filing |
| 131 | Summons | Inquiry requiring personal appearance or specific documents |
| 245 | Intimation — Refund Adjustment | Adjusting current refund against outstanding old dues |
- Intimation Under Section 143(1): The most common notice for salaried employees. It is auto-generated once your return is processed and tells you whether your tax calculation matches the department’s figures. It may confirm no difference, indicate a refund or ask you to pay additional tax.
- Notice Under Sections 143(2) and 143(3): Issued when your return is selected for scrutiny. The assessing officer examines your income, deductions and TDS payments in detail. After the assessment, they may raise a tax demand or close the case.
- Demand Notice Under Section 156: Received when there are pending tax dues, interest charges or penalties. The notice specifies the exact amount owed and the deadline to pay.
- Notice Under Section 142(1): Sent to seek additional documents or clarification about your return. It may also arrive if your ITR was filed late or if certain income details are missing from the return.
- Notice Under Section 139(9) — Defective Return: Points out specific errors in your return, such as missing details, inconsistent data or calculation mistakes. You must correct and re-file the return within 15 days of receiving this notice.
- Notice Under Section 148 — Escaped Assessment: Issued when the department believes income was not assessed correctly in an earlier filing. You will need to file or revise your return for that assessment year and submit supporting documents.
- Summons Under Section 131: Requires you to appear in person before the assessing officer or submit specific documents for an inquiry. Ignoring this notice can lead to serious legal consequences.
- Intimation Under Section 245 — Refund Adjustment: Sent when the department plans to adjust your current year’s refund against unpaid dues from a previous year. You have 30 days to respond or confirm the adjustment.
PRO TIP
The most common income tax notice salaried employees receive is under Section 143(1). It is auto-generated, not a manual action by an officer, and is usually resolved without any visit to the tax office. Respond through the Income Tax e-filing portal within the given deadline.
Reasons for Income Tax Notices to Salaried Employees
Understanding why income tax notices for salaried individuals are triggered is the first step to preventing them. Here are the most common reasons:
1. Mismatch Between Form 16 and Form 26AS
This is the single most frequent trigger for a Section 143(1) intimation. If your employer deducted TDS but deposited a different amount with the government — or made an error in the TDS return — the figure in your Form 16 will not match what Form 26AS shows. The department’s system automatically flags this gap.
Example: Priya, a marketing executive in Mumbai, received a Section 143(1) notice because her employer had transposed two digits while filing the TDS return. Her Form 16 showed Rs 48,000 in TDS; Form 26AS showed Rs 84,000. She contacted her HR team, got a revised TDS certificate and responded on the e-filing portal within 20 days — case closed.
2. Interest Income Not Declared
Banks report interest paid on savings accounts, fixed deposits and recurring deposits directly to the Income Tax Department via the Annual Information Statement. If you earn Rs 10,000 or more in FD interest in a year and do not include it in your ITR, a mismatch is flagged automatically.
3. Claiming Excess Deductions
Deductions under Section 80C are capped at Rs 1.5 lakhs. Similarly, Section 80D has defined limits based on age and family coverage. Claiming amounts beyond these limits — or claiming deductions without eligible investments — is a common trigger for scrutiny notices.
4. Non-Filing of ITR
If your gross income exceeds Rs 2.5 lakhs in a financial year (Rs 3 lakhs for those aged 60-79; Rs 5 lakhs for those aged 80 and above) and you have not filed an ITR, you may receive a notice under Section 142(1) or 148. Even if your employer has deducted full TDS, filing your ITR remains mandatory above these thresholds.
5. TDS Discrepancy in Annual Information Statement
The AIS consolidates tax-related information from multiple sources — banks, employers, mutual funds and property registrars. If the TDS deducted by your employer differs from the figure visible in your AIS, the mismatch can trigger an intimation notice even if both figures are internally consistent in their source documents.
6. High-Value Transactions Not Matching Declared Income
Banks, registrars and financial institutions are required to report high-value transactions to the department. These include cash deposits above Rs 10 lakhs, credit card spends above Rs 2 lakhs in a year, mutual fund purchases above Rs 10 lakhs and property purchases above Rs 30 lakhs. If these transactions appear in your AIS but your declared income seems inconsistent with them, the department may issue a notice asking you to explain the source of funds.
WATCH OUT
Always keep documentary proof of the source of funds for any significant financial transaction. The Income Tax Department receives high-value transaction data automatically from banks, registrars and financial institutions — and may flag unexplained amounts even years later.
7. Non-Disclosure of Foreign Income or Assets
If you have worked abroad, hold a foreign bank account, own foreign securities or have earned income from overseas employers, you are required to disclose this under Schedule FA in your ITR. Failure to do so can trigger a notice under the Black Money (Undisclosed Foreign Income and Assets) Act, which carries significantly higher penalties than standard income tax notices.
8. Mismatch in Property Transaction Details
If you bought or sold property, the stamp duty value and TDS paid (reported in Form 26QB) are visible to the department. A mismatch between the declared sale value and the stamp duty value — or failure to deduct TDS on property purchases above Rs 50 lakhs — can trigger a demand or scrutiny notice.
9. Ignoring Previous Notices
If you received an earlier notice and did not respond within the deadline, the department may escalate — issuing a fresh notice under a stricter section (such as Section 131 summons) or completing an ex-parte assessment, where the officer determines your tax liability without your input. This almost always results in a higher demand than the actual tax owed.
QUICK STAT
A significant share of tax demand notices relate to mismatches in TDS data — a gap that salaried employees can easily prevent by cross-checking Form 26AS and AIS before filing their ITR each year. (Source: Income Tax Department, Annual Report)
Documents Required to Respond to an Income Tax Notice
The exact documents depend on the type of notice and the specific discrepancy raised. Below is a general checklist that covers most situations salaried employees encounter:
- Form 16 (Part A and Part B) issued by your employer for the relevant assessment year
- Form 26AS — download from the TRACES portal (traces.gov.in) or the e-filing portal
- Annual Information Statement (AIS) and Taxpayer Information Summary (TIS) — available on the e-filing portal under ‘Services’
- Salary slips for the full financial year
- Bank account statements showing interest income, large deposits or any credited amounts not included in your ITR
- Investment proofs for deductions claimed under Sections 80C, 80D, 80G, etc. (LIC premium receipts, PPF passbook, ELSS statements, mediclaim policy document)
- Property purchase or sale documents if the notice relates to a property transaction — including the sale deed, Form 26QB and stamp duty challan
- Home loan interest certificate if you claimed a deduction under Section 24(b)
- Revised ITR acknowledgement (ITR-V) if you have already filed a revised return in response to the notice
- Proof of foreign assets or income (bank statements, employer letters, overseas income slips) if the notice relates to Schedule FA disclosures
- Previous notice copy and your earlier response — always keep a record of prior correspondence with the department
PRO TIP
Before uploading documents to the e-filing portal, organise them in a single folder labelled with the notice section and assessment year (e.g., ‘143(1)_AY2024-25’). Reviewers process faster when documents are clearly labelled and grouped by the discrepancy they address.
How to Respond to an Income Tax Notice: Step-by-Step
Getting a salaried employees income tax notice can feel unsettling, but the process is straightforward if you follow these steps carefully.
- Read the notice carefully — Note the section under which it is issued, the specific discrepancy or request, and the assessment year it relates to. Every detail matters before you take any action.
- Verify the notice online — Log in to the Income Tax e-filing portal (incometax.gov.in). Go to ‘Pending Actions’ and then ‘e-Proceedings’ to confirm the notice is genuine. Fake notices do circulate; always verify before acting.
- Match your details — Compare the figures cited in the notice with your Form 16, Form 26AS, AIS and TIS. Identify exactly where the discrepancy lies — whether it is a TDS difference, an undisclosed income source or an excess deduction.
- Consult a tax professional if needed — For scrutiny notices under Sections 143(2), 142(1) or 148, it is advisable to consult a Chartered Accountant. These notices require detailed responses with supporting calculations and documentation.
- Respond within the deadline — Most notices give you 15 to 30 days to reply. Do not wait until the last day. Upload your response and documents directly on the e-filing portal under the relevant e-Proceedings tab.
- File a revised return if required — If the notice reveals an error in your original ITR (missing interest income, wrong deduction amount), file a revised return under Section 139(5) before the deadline for revision has passed.
- Pay any outstanding dues immediately — If you owe additional tax after the assessment, pay it through Challan 280 on the e-filing portal. Additional interest under Sections 234A, 234B or 234C will accrue until payment is made.
- Submit your proof on the portal — Upload all supporting documents in the ‘e-Proceedings’ section. Add a clear written response explaining how each document addresses the discrepancy raised.
- Save all records — Download and store digital copies of the notice, your response, uploaded documents and any acknowledgement issued by the portal. Keep printed copies as a backup.
Penalties for Ignoring an Income Tax Notice
Failing to respond to an income tax notice is never a safe option. The consequences escalate depending on which section the notice was issued under and how long you delay.
- Best-case assessment (Section 144): If you do not respond to a scrutiny or clarification notice, the assessing officer can complete an ex-parte assessment using available data. This typically results in a higher tax demand than what you actually owe.
- Penalty under Section 271(1)(b): Failure to comply with a notice under Section 142(1) can attract a penalty of Rs 10,000 per notice defaulted.
- Interest under Sections 234A, 234B and 234C: Non-payment of demand dues attracts simple interest at 1% per month from the due date until payment.
- Prosecution under Section 276D: Persistent non-compliance with notices — especially Section 131 summons — can lead to prosecution and imprisonment of up to one year.
- Penalty for concealment (Section 271(1)(c)): If the department concludes you deliberately concealed income, the penalty can range from 100% to 300% of the tax evaded.
- Escalation to Black Money Act: If the notice relates to undisclosed foreign income or assets and you do not respond, penalties under the Black Money Act can amount to 300% of the asset value.
WATCH OUT
Even a routine Section 143(1) intimation that you believe is incorrect must be formally responded to. Silence is treated as acceptance of the department’s assessment. Always respond — even if it is just to confirm that your figures are correct.
How to Avoid Income Tax Notices for Salaried Individuals
Most income tax notices for salaried individuals are preventable. Here are the practices that significantly reduce your risk:
- File your ITR on time every year — The deadline is typically 31 July for salaried employees not subject to tax audit. Early filing gives you time to correct mistakes before the deadline.
- Cross-check Form 26AS and AIS before filing — Download both documents from the e-filing portal before you begin your ITR. Flag any discrepancies to your employer’s HR or payroll team immediately.
- Report all income sources — Include every earning: salary, interest on savings and FDs, rental income, dividends, freelance earnings and capital gains from investments. The AIS captures most of these already — omitting them only creates a mismatch.
- Claim only eligible deductions — Keep original receipts and proof for every deduction you claim under Sections 80C, 80D, 80G and 24(b). Never claim estimates; the department can ask for proof during scrutiny.
- Report high-value transactions correctly — If you made a large deposit, sold a property or invested a significant amount, ensure these are reflected accurately in your ITR. The department receives this data automatically from banks and registrars.
- Disclose foreign assets if applicable — If you hold a foreign bank account or received income from abroad, fill in Schedule FA and Schedule FSI in your ITR every year without exception.
- Respond to all department communications promptly — Check your registered email and the e-filing portal’s ‘Pending Actions’ tab regularly. Ignoring one notice often leads to a more serious follow-up.
- Get a pre-filing review from a tax professional — A CA can spot mismatches and ineligible deductions before your return is submitted, which is far simpler than resolving them after a notice arrives.
Conclusion
For salaried employees, the two most common income tax notices are under Section 143(1) (auto-generated intimation after return processing) and Section 148 (escaped assessment from a prior year). The most frequent triggers are TDS mismatches between Form 16 and Form 26AS, and interest income that was not declared in the ITR. Whatever notice you receive, the single most important action is to respond before the deadline — typically 15 to 30 days from the date of notice.
When your documents are in order and your ITR is filed accurately, the likelihood of receiving a notice drops sharply. And even if you do receive one, it is not cause for alarm — the income tax notice process is designed to be resolved online, without visiting any office, as long as you act promptly and provide the right documents.
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FAQs on Income Tax Notices
1. I was late filing my ITR this year. Will I receive an income tax notice?
Yes, you may receive one. A late filing typically triggers a notice under Section 139(9) (if the return has errors) or Section 142(1), which asks you to explain the delay and submit the return with applicable late fees. File as soon as possible even after the deadline — a late filing is always better than no filing at all.
2. How do I check if an income tax demand notice is real?
Log in to the e-filing portal (incometax.gov.in) and check the ‘Pending Actions’ tab under e-Proceedings. All genuine notices issued to you will appear there. Always verify the PAN, date and notice section before responding. If in doubt, call the helpline at 1800-103-0025 or contact your jurisdictional Assessing Officer.
3. Within how many days do I need to respond to an income tax notice?
Most income tax notices for salaried individuals give you 15 to 30 days to respond. Notices under Sections 139(9) and 142(1) typically allow 15 days; Section 245 gives up to 30 days. Scrutiny notices under Section 143(2) set a specific compliance date. Always respond before the deadline — ideally a few days early — to avoid follow-up action.
4. Can a salaried employee with only Form 16 income get an income tax notice?
Yes, absolutely. Having a Form 16 does not exempt you from notices. Common triggers even for employees with only salary income include interest income from savings accounts or FDs not declared in the ITR, a TDS mismatch between Form 16 and Form 26AS, deductions claimed beyond eligible limits, or high-value transactions in your bank account that appear in the AIS.
5. What happens if I ignore an income tax notice?
Ignoring a notice leads to escalating consequences. The assessing officer can complete an ex-parte assessment (Section 144) using available data, which usually results in a higher tax demand. You may face a penalty of Rs 10,000 under Section 271(1)(b), plus interest under Sections 234A, 234B and 234C. For Section 131 summons, continued non-compliance can result in prosecution under Section 276D.
6. Can I get an income tax notice even if my employer has already deducted full TDS?
Yes. TDS deducted at source does not cover all income or discrepancies. You can still receive a notice if your interest income was not included in your ITR, the AIS shows income sources your employer was unaware of, you claimed excess deductions, or there is a mismatch between the TDS your employer deducted and the amount deposited with the government as shown in Form 26AS.
7. How do I respond to an income tax notice online on the e-filing portal?
Log in to incometax.gov.in. Go to ‘Pending Actions’ and then ‘e-Proceedings’. Click on the relevant notice and select ‘Submit Response’. Upload supporting documents (Form 16, Form 26AS, bank statements, investment proofs). Write a clear explanation addressing each discrepancy raised. Submit and download the acknowledgement. For Section 143(1) intimations, you may also need to pay additional tax via Challan 280 before submitting your response.
8. What is the difference between a notice under Section 143(1) and Section 143(2)?
Section 143(1) is an automated intimation generated by the Centralised Processing Centre after your return is processed. It indicates either a match, a refund or a demand based on the department’s calculation. Section 143(2) is a scrutiny notice issued by an Assessing Officer who has selected your return for detailed examination. Section 143(2) requires a more thorough response with documentation and is more serious than a routine 143(1) intimation.
