Income Tax Reassessment (Sec 147/148): New Time Limits & SC Rulings Explained

India’s reassessment law under Sections 147 and 148 was overhauled by the Finance Act 2021. Read the full guide: mandatory Section 148A procedure, revised time limits, the Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal Supreme Court rulings, and taxpayer rights.

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Income Tax Reassessment Under Sections 147 and 148: The New Law, Time Limits and Supreme Court Judgments Explained | Fiscal Zenith
Case Explainer — Income Tax — ReassessmentWhat this article covers: The Finance Act, 2021 replaced India’s income tax reassessment framework entirely. It introduced a mandatory four-step procedure under Section 148A, shorter time limits, and higher approval requirements. Two Supreme Court rulings — Ashish Agarwal (2022) and Rajeev Bansal (2024) — have firmly enforced this framework. The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 then further reduced the extended time limit from 10 years to 5 years. This article explains the complete picture: what changed, what the court held, and how to protect yourself.
1 Apr 2021
Finance Act, 2021 comes into force. Entire reassessment framework replaced.
3 years
General time limit for issuing a Section 148 notice (post-2021 reform)
5 years
Extended limit for escaped income above Rs 50 lakh (reduced from 10 years by Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024)
~90,000
Transitional notices affected by Supreme Court’s Ashish Agarwal ruling (2022)

Quick Reference: Statutory and Case Law Framework

ReferenceDetail
Primary SectionsSections 147, 148, 148A, 149, 151 of the Income Tax Act, 1961
Old Regime (repealed)Sections 147 to 151 before 1 April 2021. Key phrase: “reason to believe.”
Major AmendmentFinance Act, 2021 (effective 1 April 2021). Entire framework substituted. Section 148A introduced.
Pandemic Extension LawTaxation and Other Laws (Relaxation and Amendment of Certain Provisions) Act, 2020 (TOLA)
Further AmendmentFinance (No. 2) Act, 2024 (effective 1 September 2024). Extended limit reduced from 10 years to 5 years.
New Income Tax ActIncome Tax Act, 2025 (in force 1 April 2026). Renumbered: Section 148 becomes Section 280, Section 148A becomes Section 281, Section 149 becomes Section 282.
SC Landmark Case 1Union of India v. Ashish Agarwal, (2022) 5 SCC 321
SC Landmark Case 2Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal, Civil Appeal No. 8629 of 2024 (decided 3 October 2024)
Normal Time Limit3 years from end of relevant Assessment Year
Extended Time Limit5 years (down from 10 years) if escaped income exceeds Rs 50 lakh and is represented in the form of an asset
Key Procedural GatekeepingMandatory Section 148A inquiry and show-cause notice before any Section 148 notice

Why This Matters: The Reassessment Problem in Plain Language

Imagine filing your income tax return for a given year. The Assessing Officer examines it. The assessment concludes. Years pass. Then, unexpectedly, a notice arrives claiming income escaped assessment. You must file a fresh return. A dispute begins.

This experience is familiar to hundreds of thousands of Indian taxpayers. Reassessment is one of the most litigated areas in Indian tax law. The core tension is straightforward: the Income Tax Act gives the department power to reopen concluded assessments. However, this power was historically exercised with too much discretion and too little accountability. Officers issued notices on suspicion, on a change of opinion, or without sharing the basis for the notice with the taxpayer.

Parliament addressed this decisively in 2021. The Finance Act, 2021 replaced the old reassessment framework entirely. The Supreme Court then enforced the new framework strictly through two landmark decisions. Together, these changes have fundamentally restructured the rules.


The Old Regime: Why It Was Problematic

Before 1 April 2021, reassessment was governed by the old Sections 147 to 151. An Assessing Officer could reopen a concluded assessment if he had “reason to believe” that income had escaped assessment. The general time limit was four years from the end of the relevant Assessment Year. For cases where escaped income exceeded Rs 1 lakh, the limit extended to six years.

In practice, three problems plagued this regime. First, officers frequently confused “reason to believe” with “reason to suspect.” Notices were issued on thin or speculative material. Second, no mandatory hearing existed before a notice was issued. Taxpayers received notices without knowing what specific information the department held. Third, the approval requirement was not sufficiently stringent.

The old system gave too much discretion and too little accountability. The Supreme Court repeatedly clarified that “reason to believe” requires more than suspicion, and that a mere change of opinion by a new officer cannot sustain reopening of a completed assessment. However, enforcement required litigation case by case, generating enormous volumes of disputes.

The New Regime: Finance Act, 2021

The Finance Act, 2021 substituted Sections 147 to 151 entirely, with effect from 1 April 2021. The new framework rests on two foundational changes: the trigger for reopening is now “information” rather than “reason to believe,” and a mandatory four-step pre-notice procedure under Section 148A must be completed before any Section 148 notice can be issued.

The Section 148A Procedure: Four Mandatory Steps

StepSectionWhat the Assessing Officer Must Do
Step 1148A(a)Conduct a preliminary inquiry if required. Obtain prior approval from the specified authority.
Step 2148A(b)Issue a show-cause notice (SCN) to the taxpayer. Provide the information or material relied upon. Give the taxpayer at least 7 days (up to 30 days) to respond.
Step 3148A(c)Consider the taxpayer’s reply on its merits. Not merely acknowledge it.
Step 4148A(d)Pass a written, reasoned order deciding whether it is a fit case to issue a Section 148 notice. Obtain prior approval of the specified authority. Only then can the Section 148 notice be issued.

Each of these steps is mandatory. No step can be skipped. A Section 148 notice issued without completing the Section 148A procedure is invalid and can be challenged before a High Court by writ petition.


Time Limits Under Section 149

Section 149 sets the outer boundaries within which a Section 148 notice can be issued. The Finance Act, 2021 significantly shortened these limits compared to the old regime. The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 (effective 1 September 2024) further reduced the extended limit.

ScenarioTime Limit from End of Relevant AYAdditional Condition
General cases3 yearsAO must have information suggesting income has escaped assessment.
Escaped income exceeds Rs 50 lakh and is represented in the form of an asset, expenditure, or book entry5 years (reduced from 10 years by Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024, effective 1 September 2024)Specific information must exist. The Rs 50 lakh threshold must be demonstrably met.
Search / requisition cases3 AYs prior to AY of search. General limits apply thereafter.Separate provisions apply for search cases.
Example

For AY 2021-22, the 3-year window closed on 31 March 2025. For a notice to go beyond that date, the Rs 50 lakh asset-based threshold must be met and specific information must exist. Without it, the notice is time-barred.

The reduction from 10 years to 5 years by the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 is a significant taxpayer protection. A large number of cases previously open to a 10-year reassessment window became permanently time-barred with effect from 1 September 2024.


The Section 151 Approval Hierarchy

Section 151 requires prior approval before a Section 148 notice is issued. The approving authority depends on how much time has passed since the end of the relevant Assessment Year. This escalation is deliberate. Older cases require more senior approval.

Time Elapsed Since End of Relevant AYRequired Approving Authority
Within 3 yearsSpecified authority: Principal Commissioner or Commissioner of Income Tax
Beyond 3 years (up to 5 years for Rs 50 lakh+ cases)Specified authority: Principal Chief Commissioner or Chief Commissioner of Income Tax

A notice approved by the wrong level of authority is invalid. Courts have treated this as a jurisdictional requirement, not a mere technicality.


What “Information Which Suggests” Actually Means

Under the new regime, the trigger is “information which suggests that income chargeable to tax has escaped assessment.” This replaces the old “reason to believe” standard. The Explanation to Section 148 lists specific categories of qualifying information.

  • Findings or directions in any order passed by an authority, tribunal, or court
  • Results of a survey, search, or seizure conducted under the Income Tax Act
  • Information received under an agreement with a foreign country (FATCA data, CRS data, TIEA information)
  • Information flagged by the Risk Management System (RMS)
  • Annual Information Statement (AIS) or Statement of Financial Transactions (SFT) data
  • Audit objections raised by the Comptroller and Auditor General of India
What does NOT qualify: Mere suspicion, a change of opinion by a new officer, or a general perception that income may have escaped is not “information” within this definition. Fishing expeditions are not permissible under the new regime.

The TOLA Complication: Notices Issued Between April and June 2021

The Finance Act, 2021 came into force on 1 April 2021. However, TOLA had extended the deadline for issuing old-regime Section 148 notices until 30 June 2021. Between 1 April 2021 and 30 June 2021, officers issued a large number of reassessment notices following the old procedure, without complying with Section 148A. Taxpayers challenged these across multiple High Courts.

Ashish Agarwal (2022): The Supreme Court’s Pragmatic Solution

The Supreme Court exercised its powers under Article 142 of the Constitution. It treated all notices issued between 1 April 2021 and 30 June 2021 under the old regime as deemed show-cause notices under Section 148A(b) of the new regime. This required the department to supply the underlying information to taxpayers, give them an opportunity to respond, follow the new Section 148A procedure, and obtain fresh approval under Section 151 at the appropriate level. This ruling affected approximately 90,000 notices. However, the time-limit question for these newly regularised notices remained unanswered, leading to the second major Supreme Court ruling.

Rajeev Bansal (2024): Settling the Time Limit Question

A Constitution Bench settled this in Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal, Civil Appeal No. 8629 of 2024, decided on 3 October 2024.

IssueSupreme Court’s Ruling in Rajeev Bansal
Does TOLA apply after 1 April 2021?Yes, but only for assessment years whose original statutory deadline fell within the COVID exclusion period (20 March 2020 to 31 March 2021).
How is limitation computed for Ashish Agarwal notices?The period between issuing the Section 148A(b) SCN and the taxpayer’s response is excluded from the limitation period. The balance limitation revives after the taxpayer responds.
Must new procedural safeguards apply?Yes. All notices issued after 1 April 2021 must follow the new regime’s Section 148A procedure and Section 151 approval hierarchy.
What about genuinely time-barred years?They cannot survive. Section 149’s limitation is jurisdictional. AYs where limitation genuinely expired before the notice was issued remain permanently protected.

Taxpayer Rights Under the Current Framework

RightLegal Basis
Right to receive the specific information the department relies on before a notice is issuedSection 148A(b)
Right to respond with at least 7 days’ notice (up to 30 days)Section 148A(b) proviso
Right to a written, reasoned order before a Section 148 notice is issuedSection 148A(d)
Right to challenge reopening beyond 3 years unless escaped income exceeds Rs 50 lakh (asset-based)Section 149
Right to insist on senior-level approval (Principal CIT or above) for notices beyond 3 yearsSection 151
Right to challenge notices where limitation has genuinely expiredUnion of India v. Rajeev Bansal (2024)
Right to challenge any notice based on suspicion or change of opinion aloneExplanation to Section 148; consistent judicial precedent
Right to challenge a Section 148 notice issued without following Section 148AUnion of India v. Ashish Agarwal (2022)

Practical Guide: How to Respond to a Section 148A Notice

ActionWhy It Matters
Check the notice date against the end of the relevant AYDetermine whether the notice falls within the 3-year or 5-year window. A notice beyond the applicable limit is time-barred and can be challenged.
Verify the approving authorityNotices beyond 3 years require approval of the Principal Chief Commissioner or equivalent. Wrong-level approval is a valid ground of challenge.
Read the information supplied carefullyThe department must supply the specific material it relies on. A vague SCN without supporting material is open to challenge.
Respond on merit within the deadlineYour Section 148A(b) reply is your first and most important opportunity. A well-argued reply can result in a favourable Section 148A(d) order, stopping proceedings before a Section 148 notice is issued.
Review the Section 148A(d) orderThe order must give reasons. A non-speaking or mechanical order can be challenged by writ petition before the relevant High Court.
Consider Section 139(8A) Updated ReturnIf the notice is within 36 months of the end of the relevant AY, consider whether filing an updated return is more cost-effective than contesting. Evaluate with professional advice.
Consult a qualified tax professionalGiven the transition to the Income Tax Act, 2025 (effective 1 April 2026) and ongoing case law evolution, professional guidance is essential for any reassessment matter.

Old Regime vs New Regime

AspectOld Regime (Before 1 April 2021)New Regime (From 1 April 2021, as amended)
Trigger for reopening“Reason to believe” — subjective, frequently misread as reason to suspect“Information which suggests” — specific, from identified sources listed in Explanation to Section 148
Pre-notice procedureNone. AO could issue Section 148 notice directly.Mandatory four-step Section 148A procedure. No bypass permitted.
Right to know the basisNo. Taxpayer often received notice without knowing the specific information held.Yes. Information must be supplied along with the Section 148A(b) notice.
General time limit4 years from end of relevant AY3 years from end of relevant AY
Extended time limit6 years if escaped income > Rs 1 lakh5 years (reduced from 10 by Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024) if escaped income > Rs 50 lakh and represented as asset
Approval requirementRequired but at lower levelTiered: Principal CIT for within 3 years; Principal Chief CIT beyond 3 years

The Income Tax Act, 2025: What Changed for Reassessment

India’s new Income Tax Act, 2025 came into force on 1 April 2026. It preserves the information-led reopening trigger, the four-step pre-notice procedure, the threshold-based time limits, and the tiered approval hierarchy. The primary change is renumbering: Section 148 becomes Section 280, Section 148A becomes Section 281, Section 149 becomes Section 282, and Section 151 becomes Section 284. The procedure under Section 281 is structurally identical to Section 148A.

Transition provisions (Section 536(2) of the new Act) clarify that proceedings initiated under the Income Tax Act, 1961 via a Section 148A notice continue to be governed by the 1961 Act even after 1 April 2026. All case law on Sections 147 to 151 therefore remains directly applicable to pending reassessment proceedings.

Closing Thoughts

The reassessment framework has been transformed over the past four years. Parliament, through the Finance Act, 2021 and the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024, has given taxpayers a structured process with real procedural rights. The Supreme Court, through Ashish Agarwal and Rajeev Bansal, has ensured those rights are enforced.

That said, the framework continues to evolve. The transition to the Income Tax Act, 2025 introduces new numbering and procedural refinements. The volume of disputes from the transitional period continues to generate case law. And the interplay between TOLA, the new time limits, and the transition provisions still produces litigation in specific assessment years.

If you receive a Section 148A notice, do not ignore it. The law now gives you specific, enforceable rights. Check the limitation. Verify the approving authority. Read the information supplied. Respond on merit within the deadline. A well-argued response at the Section 148A stage can prevent a full reassessment from ever beginning. And if the procedural requirements have not been met, the courts have consistently shown they will enforce the law.

Frequently Asked Questions

Possibly. For AY 2018-19, the end of the Assessment Year is 31 March 2019. The 3-year window closed on 31 March 2022. To survive beyond that, the Revenue must meet the Rs 50 lakh asset-based threshold. Under the old 10-year regime, the deadline was 31 March 2029. Under the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 reduction to 5 years (effective 1 September 2024), the deadline is 31 March 2024 for the 5-year window. Whether TOLA extensions apply depends on whether the original deadline fell within the COVID exclusion period (20 March 2020 to 31 March 2021), as clarified in Rajeev Bansal. You should have this assessed professionally for your specific facts.

No. A mere change of opinion by a new Assessing Officer has never been a valid ground for reopening a completed assessment. This was the position even under the old regime. Under the new regime, the trigger requires specific “information which suggests” income has escaped assessment, from one of the identified sources listed in the Explanation to Section 148. A new officer’s different view of the same facts that were already assessed does not constitute such information and cannot sustain a Section 148A notice.

The Assessing Officer will proceed to pass the Section 148A(d) order on the basis of available material, without the benefit of your reply. This almost always results in a finding that it is a fit case for reopening, followed by the issuance of a Section 148 notice. You then face a full reassessment proceeding. More importantly, you lose your most effective opportunity to stop the proceedings early. The Section 148A(b) reply stage is where many reopenings can be effectively challenged and blocked. Ignoring it is a very costly mistake.

Yes. Section 148A(d) requires the Assessing Officer to pass a written order deciding whether it is a fit case for issuing a Section 148 notice. The courts have consistently held that this order must be a speaking order, meaning it must give reasons. A non-speaking or mechanical order that merely says “it is a fit case” without reasoning is challengeable by writ petition before the relevant High Court. The key arguments would be: failure to consider your reply on merits, failure to give reasons, and that the order does not meet the statutory requirement of Section 148A(d).

If your reassessment proceeding was initiated under the Income Tax Act, 1961 (via a Section 148A notice), it continues to be governed by the 1961 Act even after 1 April 2026. Section 536(2) of the new Income Tax Act, 2025 contains transition provisions that preserve the applicability of the 1961 Act for proceedings already underway. All the case law on Sections 147 to 151 of the 1961 Act remains directly applicable to your matter. The renumbering (Section 148 becoming Section 280, etc.) applies only to new proceedings initiated under the new Act.

This article is for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute legal or tax advice. All statutory references are to the Income Tax Act, 1961 unless otherwise noted. Readers should consult a qualified tax professional for guidance specific to their circumstances. Legislative details and case law verified as of June 2026.