What is Section 144B faceless assessment Under the Income Tax Act, 1961?
Section 144B faceless assessment under Section 144B of the Income Tax Act, 1961 is the faceless assessment framework (operational since 2020) — all assessments conducted through the National e-Assessment Centre (NeAC) in Delhi with no physical interaction between taxpayer and assessing officer. The AO's identity is never disclosed. Notices served electronically, responses filed on e-filing portal, hearings via video conference.
Process: (a) CASS (Computer Aided Scrutiny Selection) selects cases for scrutiny based on risk parameters and AI. (b) Assessment unit prepares draft assessment order. (c) Review unit verifies the draft. (d) If variation is proposed: show-cause notice to assessee with draft order. (e) Assessee responds within prescribed time. (f) Final assessment order passed. Multiple units in different cities handle different aspects — no single officer controls the case. Exception: search cases, international taxation, and central charges.
This comprehensive guide covers Section 144B faceless assessment — legal provisions, computation methodology, practical examples with calculations, applicable forms and filing deadlines, penalties for non-compliance, judicial interpretations, and a compliance checklist. Updated with CBDT notifications and circulars up to March 2026.
Chapter: Ch XIV — Assessment
Section(s): Section 144B
Rules: Income Tax Rules, 1962
Effective: Currently in force (until March 31, 2026)
Filing Portal: incometax.gov.in
Who Does Section 144B Apply To?
| Taxpayer Category | Applicable? | Key Conditions |
|---|---|---|
| Individual (Resident) | Yes | Global income taxable. Old/New regime choice available |
| Individual (Non-Resident) | Yes, limited | Only Indian-sourced income. DTAA benefits available |
| HUF | Yes | Same slab rates as individual. Partition provisions apply |
| Partnership Firm / LLP | Yes | Flat 30% tax rate. No slab benefit. Partner remuneration deductible |
| Domestic Company | Yes | 22% (115BAA) or 25%/30% normal rate. MAT 15% applies |
| Foreign Company | Yes, limited | 40% on Indian income. DTAA benefits. PE concept applies |
| AOP / BOI / Trust | Yes | MMR or slab rates depending on structure and income |
Section 144B faceless assessment — Detailed Analysis
Section 144B — Core Provisions
What it provides: Section 144B establishes the legal framework for Section 144B faceless assessment — covering the charging provision (what is taxable), computation methodology (how to calculate), applicable rates, exemptions/deductions available, and compliance requirements. It must be read with the applicable Income Tax Rules, 1962 and CBDT circulars for complete understanding.
Key aspects: (a) Scope — who is covered and what income is included, (b) Computation — step-by-step calculation methodology with specific inclusions and exclusions, (c) Rates — applicable tax rates including surcharge and cess, (d) Exemptions — conditions for claiming any available exemptions, (e) Filing — return forms, due dates, and documentation requirements.
Individual taxpayers: Must choose between old regime (with deductions) and new regime (lower rates, fewer deductions). New regime is default from AY 2024-25 under the 1961 Act. The 2025 Act continues this default position.
Business taxpayers: Must maintain books of account (Section 44AA/corresponding new section), get tax audit if turnover exceeds threshold (Section 44AB equivalent), file return by October 31, and pay advance tax in quarterly installments.
Compliance Framework
Return filing: ITR in prescribed form by due date (July 31 for individuals without audit, October 31 for audit cases, November 30 for transfer pricing). Belated return till December 31 with Rs. 5,000 penalty. Updated return (ITR-U) within 24 months with 25%/50% additional tax.
Advance tax: If tax liability exceeds Rs. 10,000 — pay in 4 installments: 15% by June 15, 45% by September 15, 75% by December 15, 100% by March 15. Interest under 234B (short payment) and 234C (deferment) at 1% per month.
TDS/TCS: Deductors must deduct at prescribed rates, deposit by 7th of next month (March: April 30), file quarterly returns (24Q/26Q/27Q/27EQ), and issue certificates (Form 16/16A). Late deposit: interest 1.5% per month from deduction to deposit date.
Practical Examples — Section 144B faceless assessment
Example 1 — Salaried Individual
Scenario: Rajesh, salaried employee in Delhi, gross salary Rs. 12 lakh, HRA received Rs. 2.4 lakh, rent paid Rs. 3 lakh, 80C investments Rs. 1.5 lakh, 80D medical insurance Rs. 25,000.
Under Old Regime: Gross Salary Rs. 12L − Standard Deduction Rs. 75K − HRA Exemption (calculated) − 80C Rs. 1.5L − 80D Rs. 25K = Taxable income approximately Rs. 8-9L. Tax at slab rates + 4% cess.
Under New Regime: Gross Salary Rs. 12L − Standard Deduction Rs. 75K = Rs. 11.25L. Tax at new regime slab rates. Rebate under 87A if income ≤ Rs. 12L effectively makes tax = NIL for income up to Rs. 12.75L (with standard deduction).
Example 2 — Business Person (Presumptive)
Scenario: Amit, retail trader, turnover Rs. 1.5 crore, all digital receipts.
Under 44AD: Deemed profit = 6% of Rs. 1.5 Cr = Rs. 9 lakh (digital receipts rate). No books required, no tax audit. File ITR-4 by July 31. Pay advance tax in single installment by March 15.
Example 3 — Capital Gains on Property
Scenario: Priya sells residential house for Rs. 80 lakh (held 5 years). Purchased for Rs. 40 lakh. Stamp duty value Rs. 85 lakh.
Computation: Sale consideration = higher of actual or stamp duty value = Rs. 85L. Indexed cost (using CII) approximately Rs. 52L. LTCG = Rs. 33L. Tax at 12.5% = Rs. 4.125L + cess. Can claim Section 54 exemption if reinvests in residential house within 2 years or constructs within 3 years.
Applicable Forms and Due Dates
| Form | Purpose | Due Date | Who Files |
|---|---|---|---|
| ITR-1/2/3/4 | Income Tax Return (Individual/HUF) | July 31 / October 31 | Taxpayer |
| Form 16 | TDS Certificate from Employer | June 15 | Employer issues |
| 26AS / AIS | Tax Credit Statement | Available online | Auto-generated |
| 24Q/26Q/27Q | TDS Returns (Quarterly) | 31st of month after quarter | Deductor |
| Form 3CA/3CD | Tax Audit Report | September 30 | CA files |
| Challan 280 | Advance Tax / Self-Assessment Tax | Quarterly / Before filing | Taxpayer |
Penalties and Interest
| Default | Consequence | Rate/Amount | Section |
|---|---|---|---|
| Late filing of return | Penalty | Rs. 5,000 (Rs. 1,000 if income ≤ Rs. 5L) | 234F |
| Late filing interest | Interest | 1% per month on unpaid tax | 234A |
| Short advance tax | Interest | 1% per month on shortfall | 234B |
| Deferment of advance tax | Interest | 1% per month on installment shortfall | 234C |
| Under-reporting income | Penalty | 50% of tax on under-reported income | 270A |
| Misreporting income | Penalty | 200% of tax on misreported income | 270A |
| Non-deduction of TDS | Interest + Penalty | 1% per month (from due date) + prosecution | 201/276B |
| Tax evasion | Prosecution | Imprisonment 6 months to 7 years + fine | 276C |
Judicial Interpretations
Supreme Court: Tax provisions are to be interpreted strictly — neither extended nor restricted beyond their plain meaning. Exemptions must be strictly construed. DTAA provisions override domestic law to the extent beneficial to the assessee (beneficial interpretation).
High Courts / ITAT: Burden of proof for claiming deductions/exemptions is on the assessee. AO cannot make additions without evidence. Principles of natural justice must be followed in assessment proceedings. Faceless assessment orders without proper hearing are quashed.
Compliance Checklist
| # | Action | Timeline | ☐ |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Collect Form 16/16A, 26AS, AIS from all sources | After June 15 | ☐ |
| 2 | Reconcile income with 26AS/AIS — resolve mismatches | Before filing | ☐ |
| 3 | Calculate tax under both regimes — choose beneficial | Before filing | ☐ |
| 4 | Pay any balance tax (self-assessment) before filing | Before filing | ☐ |
| 5 | File ITR in correct form by due date | July 31 / Oct 31 | ☐ |
| 6 | Verify ITR within 30 days (Aadhaar OTP/Net Banking/DSC) | Within 30 days | ☐ |
| 7 | Respond to any CPC intimation under 143(1) | Within 30 days | ☐ |
| 8 | Keep all proofs for 6 years (assessment + 4 years) | Ongoing | ☐ |