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Clause 286 Time limit for completion of assessment, reassessment and recomputation.
Clause 286 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 introduces a comprehensive framework governing the time limits for completion of assessment, reassessment, and recomputation of income under the proposed new legislation. This clause is pivotal in ensuring procedural certainty, administrative efficiency, and safeguarding taxpayer rights against protracted litigation or delayed tax proceedings. The time limits prescribed serve as a check on the revenue authorities, compelling them to act within a fixed period and thus upholding the principles of natural justice and certainty in tax administration.
Section 153 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, which Clause 286 seeks to replace or reform, has historically governed similar time limitations. However, the 2025 Bill's approach, as reflected in Clause 286, is more structured, tabular, and arguably more granular in its demarcation of different scenarios triggering the commencement and computation of limitation periods. This commentary undertakes a detailed, provision-wise analysis of Clause 286 and juxtaposes it with the existing Section 153, highlighting similarities, differences, and the practical and legal implications of the changes.
The legislative intent behind time-limiting assessment proceedings is multifold:
Clause 286, in seeking to rationalize and consolidate the various time limits, reflects a policy shift towards increased transparency, procedural discipline, and taxpayer protection, while also accommodating the legitimate needs of the tax administration in complex or exceptional cases.
Historically, Section 153 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, has undergone numerous amendments, reflecting the evolving needs of tax administration and judicial pronouncements. The 2025 Bill, through Clause 286, attempts to codify these lessons and provide a more streamlined and predictable regime.
Clause 286 departs from the textual, often convoluted, structure of Section 153 and instead presents a tabular format that delineates:
This approach enhances clarity, minimizes interpretational disputes, and facilitates easier compliance and administration.
| Sl. No. | Nature of Proceedings | Trigger Date | Time Limit |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Assessment order u/s 270(10) or 271 | End of the financial year succeeding the relevant tax year | One year |
| 2 | Assessment order u/s 270(10) or 271, where an updated return is filed u/s 263(6) | End of the financial year in which updated return furnished | One year |
| 3 | Assessment order pursuant to return furnished in consequence of order u/s 239(3)(b) | End of the financial year in which such return furnished | One year |
| 4 | Assessment, reassessment or recomputation u/s 279 (presumably corresponding to section 147 of 1961 Act) | End of financial year in which notice u/s 280 served | One year |
| 5 | Fresh assessment/order u/s 166, pursuant to appellate or revisionary order setting aside/cancelling assessment | End of financial year in which appellate/revisionary order received/passed | One year |
| 6 | Assessment/reassessment revived as per section 153A(2) (1961 Act) or section 292 | End of the month in which revived | One year |
| 7 | Assessment on partner consequent to assessment of firm u/s 279 | End of month in which firm's assessment order passed | One year |
| 8 | Assessment/reassessment/recomputation to give effect to appellate/revisionary/court order (other than appeal/reference under the Act) | End of month in which order received/passed | One year |
| 9 | Order giving effect to appellate/revisionary order (other than by making a fresh assessment/reassessment), where verification or opportunity of hearing is required | End of month in which order received/passed | One year |
| 10 | Order giving effect to appellate/revisionary order (other than by making a fresh assessment/reassessment) where no verification or hearing required | End of month in which order received/passed | Six months (extendable to nine months with approval) |
| 11 | Modification of assessment to give effect to order u/s 166 read with section 377 | End of month in which such order received by AO | Two months |
This granular categorization ensures that each scenario is addressed with a tailored time frame, reducing ambiguity.
Sub-section (2) provides that where a reference is made to the Transfer Pricing Officer (TPO) for determination of arm's length price u/s 166(1), the time limit is extended by twelve months. This mirrors the complexity associated with transfer pricing matters, where international transactions may require more time for analysis and adjudication.
Sub-section (3) lists a comprehensive set of scenarios where certain periods are to be excluded from the computation of the limitation period. These include:
The approach is both exhaustive and precise, providing administrative clarity and limiting litigation on what periods qualify for exclusion.
Sub-sections (4) and (5) ensure that after exclusion of the above periods, a minimum of sixty days must be available to the Assessing Officer (and similarly to the TPO) to complete the proceedings. If less than sixty days remain, the period is automatically extended to sixty days. This safeguard prevents situations where the exclusion of periods leaves an impractically short time for the authorities to act.
Sub-section (6) deals with abatement of proceedings before the Settlement Commission (now Interim Board for Settlement) and ensures at least one year is available post-abatement, aligning with the need for adequate time to complete complex, previously stayed assessments.
Sub-section (7) provides that if the limitation period ends before the end of the month (after excluding certain periods), it is extended to the end of the month, ensuring administrative convenience.
Sub-section (8) clarifies that where, by an appellate or court order, income is excluded from one year or one person and attributed to another, the assessment of such income in the other year or person is deemed to be made in consequence of or to give effect to such order, provided the affected person had an opportunity of being heard. This is a crucial anti-avoidance and procedural fairness provision.
Section 153 is drafted in a traditional, narrative style with multiple sub-sections and a proliferation of provisos, explanations, and cross-references. This has, over time, led to interpretational complexities and litigation. Clause 286, by contrast, adopts a tabular and scenario-specific approach, which is more user-friendly and administratively efficient.
Both Section 153 (Explanation 1) and Clause 286(3) list various periods to be excluded from limitation computation. The categories are largely similar:
However, Clause 286's list is more systematically organized and updated to reflect new provisions and processes.
Both provisions ensure a minimum of sixty days must be available after exclusions, with extension mechanisms. Clause 286 explicitly extends this to TPO proceedings and to the end of the month in certain cases, reflecting recent amendments and administrative needs.
Both provisions deal with abatement of Settlement Commission proceedings and revival of assessments, ensuring at least one year is available post-abatement. The language in Clause 286 is updated to reflect the transition from the Settlement Commission to the Interim Board for Settlement and to align with the new statutory framework.
Both provisions contain similar deeming clauses for situations where income is excluded from one year/person and attributed to another, ensuring the limitation period is computed accordingly and procedural fairness is maintained.
Clause 286 of the Income Tax Bill, 2025 represents a significant evolution in the law governing time limits for assessment, reassessment, and recomputation of income tax. By adopting a tabular, scenario-based approach, it enhances clarity, reduces ambiguity, and aligns with contemporary administrative needs. The provision largely preserves the policy rationale and substantive structure of Section 153 of the Income-tax Act, 1961, while introducing procedural improvements and greater specificity. The comparative analysis reveals a conscious effort to codify best practices, address past interpretational challenges, and provide a robust framework for timely and fair tax administration. The ultimate success of Clause 286 will depend on its effective implementation, ongoing administrative training, and, where necessary, timely judicial clarification of ambiguities.
Full Text:
Clause 286 Time limit for completion of assessment, reassessment and recomputation.
Time limits for tax assessments clarified: tabular framework sets fixed periods, exclusions and minimum residual time for authorities. Reform replaces narrative limitation provisions with a tabular, scenario-based regime specifying trigger dates and fixed completion periods-generally one year for routine assessments and reassessments-with special shorter windows for modifications. The draft adds a twelve-month extension for transfer pricing references, an exhaustive list of periods to be excluded from limitation computations (stays, reopenings, treaty exchanges, GAAR references, valuation reports, advance rulings, search handovers, etc.), and safeguards ensuring minimum residual time for authorities, end-of-month extensions, and abatement/revival protections to preserve procedural continuity.Press 'Enter' after typing page number.