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Clause 273 Faceless Assessment.
The Income Tax Bill, 2025, through Clause 273, proposes a statutory framework for "faceless assessment," seeking to further institutionalize and refine the process of electronic, non-contact assessment of tax returns. This move is a continuation and formalization of the faceless assessment regime first introduced through Section 144B of the Income-tax Act, 1961, and operationalized through various notifications and rules, including Rule 14C of the Income-tax Rules, 1962.
The faceless assessment regime marks a paradigm shift in the manner in which tax assessments are conducted in India. It aims to eliminate interface between the taxpayer and the tax authorities, thereby reducing the scope for discretion, corruption, and harassment, while promoting efficiency, transparency, and accountability. The legislative intent, as reflected in both Clause 273 and Section 144B, is to leverage technology for better tax administration and improved taxpayer experience.
This commentary provides a detailed analysis of Clause 273, compares it with the existing Section 144B of the Income-tax Act, 1961, and considers the relevant aspects of Rule 14C. The analysis will cover the objectives, detailed provisions, practical implications, and potential challenges, as well as highlight the similarities, differences, and possible future directions.
The principal objective of Clause 273 is to codify and expand the framework for faceless assessment in the new Income Tax Bill, 2025. The legislative intent is to:
Historically, the assessment process under the Income-tax Act, 1961, was largely manual and involved significant interaction between the taxpayer and the Assessing Officer (AO). This created opportunities for subjectivity and malpractices. The faceless assessment regime, first notified as a scheme and later codified in Section 144B, was a response to these challenges. Clause 273 of the 2025 Bill seeks to consolidate and update this regime, drawing on the experience of implementation since 2020.
Clause 273 is a comprehensive provision, structured into thirteen sub-clauses, each addressing a key aspect of the faceless assessment process.
Clause 273(2) empowers the Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) to specify the territorial areas, persons, incomes, or cases to which faceless assessment will apply. This flexibility allows the Board to implement the regime in a phased or targeted manner, based on administrative feasibility and policy priorities.
Clause 273(3) authorizes the Board to set up a National Faceless Assessment Centre (NFAC) and various functional units:
This multi-unit structure is designed to segregate functions, minimize discretion, and introduce checks and balances at various stages.
Sub-section (4) clarifies the respective roles:
Sub-section (5) provides that these units are to be manned by Assessing Officers with powers assigned by the Board, ensuring that only authorized officers perform these functions.
This sub-section lists the authorities eligible to be part of these units, including Additional/Joint Commissioners/Directors, Deputy/Assistant Commissioners/Directors, Income-tax Officers, and other staff or consultants as considered necessary. This ensures adequate seniority, expertise, and administrative support within the units.
All communications between units, the NFAC, the assessee, and third parties are to be routed through the NFAC and conducted exclusively by electronic mode, except for certain verifications as specified by the Board. This is vital for maintaining transparency, audit trails, and minimizing direct contact.
These sub-sections provide mechanisms for transferring a case out of the faceless regime to the jurisdictional AO, for example, where provisions of Section 268(5) are to be invoked (likely relating to special circumstances such as search, seizure, or complex cases). Transfers require Board approval, ensuring oversight and accountability.
Key terms such as "designated portal," "faceless assessment," and "registered account" are defined, ensuring clarity and alignment with digital processes.
Section 144B, introduced in 2020 and subsequently amended, is the statutory foundation for faceless assessment under the current law. A comparison with Clause 273 reveals the following:
Section 144B is more elaborate in laying out a step-by-step procedure for faceless assessment, including:
Clause 273 appears to provide a more compact framework, likely intending for the detailed procedure to be prescribed via subordinate legislation or rules, thus allowing greater flexibility for future modifications.
Section 144B contains detailed definitions relating to digital processes (automated allocation, electronic record, digital signature, hash function, real-time alert, etc.), reflecting its focus on technological precision. Clause 273 includes only the most essential definitions, again implying reliance on rules or notifications for operational details.
Both provisions allow for the transfer of cases to the jurisdictional AO where faceless assessment is not feasible or appropriate, subject to Board approval. The circumstances and mechanisms for such transfer are similar.
Section 144B applies to assessments u/ss 143(3), 144, and 147, whereas Clause 273 refers to assessments, reassessments, or recomputations u/s 270(10), 271, or 279 of the Bill. The specific cross-references may reflect a reorganization or renumbering of provisions in the 2025 Bill, but the overall scope-covering regular and special assessments-remains comparable.
Both provisions envisage a review mechanism to ensure quality control and consistency in assessment orders. The technical unit's role in providing specialized inputs is also preserved, reflecting the importance of subject-matter expertise in complex or high-stake cases.
Rule 14C, inserted in 2021, prescribes the manner of authenticating electronic records under the faceless assessment regime. It provides that any electronic record submitted by the assessee or any other person by logging into the registered account on the designated portal is deemed to be authenticated under the electronic verification code (EVC) mechanism.
This rule operationalizes the digital submission and authentication process, ensuring legal validity and evidentiary value of electronic communications and filings. It aligns with the definitions and procedures in Section 144B and is equally relevant for Clause 273, which adopts the same digital framework.
| Aspect | Clause 273 (ITB, 2025) | Section 144B (ITA, 1961) |
|---|---|---|
| Scope | Assessment, reassessment, recomputation under specified sections; Board to specify applicability | Assessment, reassessment, recomputation under specified sections; Board to specify applicability |
| Institutional Structure | NFAC, assessment, verification, technical, review units; no explicit RFACs | NFAC, RFACs, assessment, verification, technical, review units |
| Functional Division | Similar; functions assigned to units by Board | Detailed allocation of functions; stepwise procedure |
| Communication | Electronic mode via NFAC; exceptions for verification unit | Electronic communication; detailed authentication, real-time alerts |
| Opportunity of Hearing | Opportunity to be heard; modalities to be prescribed | Explicit provision for personal hearing via video conferencing |
| Transfer of Cases | NFAC can transfer case to jurisdictional AO with Board approval | Similar provision |
| Definitions | Key terms defined; concise | Extensive, with reference to IT Act, 2000 |
| Procedural Detail | Delegated to prescribed procedure/Board | Detailed in statute |
The faceless assessment regime, as codified and proposed, has significant practical implications for all stakeholders.
While the faceless assessment regime offers many advantages, certain challenges and ambiguities persist:
To ensure the continued success and fairness of the faceless assessment regime, the following areas merit attention:
Clause 273 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, represents the next step in India's journey towards a modern, technology-driven tax administration. By building on the foundation laid by Section 144B and operationalized through Rule 14C, it seeks to institutionalize faceless assessment as a core principle of tax governance. While the framework is robust and forward-looking, its success will depend on careful implementation, continuous technological upgradation, and an unwavering focus on taxpayer rights and procedural fairness.
Full Text:
Faceless assessment set as statutory default under proposed bill, expanding electronic non-contact tax assessments and procedural framework. Clause 273 makes faceless assessment the statutory default for specified assessments, empowers the Board to define applicability, establishes a National Faceless Assessment Centre with Assessment, Verification, Technical and Review Units, assigns distinct functions to each unit to minimize discretion, mandates electronic communications via the NFAC, and contemplates transfers to the jurisdictional officer where faceless procedure is unsuitable, with procedural details to be prescribed by the Board.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.