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The Central Board of Direct Taxes (CBDT) is making big changes in the way it handles Income Tax Returns (ITRs). From the coming assessment years, AI (Artificial Intelligence) and ML (Machine Learning) will play a much bigger role in deciding which returns get picked up for scrutiny.

This move is part of CBDT’s ongoing efforts to make the tax system faster, more accurate, and less dependent on manual work. As CAs, it’s important to understand how this new process will work and what steps we need to take to avoid surprises later.

What Exactly Is AI-Based Scrutiny?

Earlier, the selection of ITRs for scrutiny was largely manual. Officers used to pick cases based on certain guidelines, past patterns, or even randomly. While that system worked, it had its own problems like delays, inconsistency, and sometimes unnecessary scrutiny for honest taxpayers.

CBDT’s New AI-Based Scrutiny for ITRs What Chartered Accountants Need to Know

The new system will allow computers to analyze tons of data automatically — things like income details, high-value transactions, GST returns, property purchases, and so on.

How Will the AI Scrutiny System Actually Work?

The backend process is quite interesting. Here’s a simple breakdown:

  • Data Collection: The system will pull information from multiple places — PAN records, AIS/TIS (Annual Information Statement / Taxpayer Information Summary), GST data, bank reports, property registries, and even past tax filings.
  • Risk Scoring: Based on the information gathered, the system will assign a score to each return. If there are major mismatches, unexplained income, or unusually high claims for deductions, the score will go up.
  • Flagging: Returns with higher risk scores will get flagged automatically for review.
  • Automated Notices: In some cases, the system might even suggest or generate notices automatically, though final approval will still involve human officers for now.

What Does This Mean for CAs and Taxpayers?

This shift means that accuracy and completeness are now more important than ever.

If there’s even a small mismatch between what a taxpayer reports and what’s reflected in the AIS or TIS, the system could pick it up instantly. Similarly, unexplained cash deposits, missing foreign income disclosures, or suspicious deduction claims could raise red flags.

For Chartered Accountants, this means two things:

  • Double-check everything before filing.
  • Educate clients that small mistakes or hiding small amounts may lead to bigger troubles.

Earlier, some errors used to get missed because of the manual nature of checks. With AI, that margin of error has become almost zero.

What Are the Likely Triggers for Scrutiny?

Here are some situations that might catch the AI’s attention:

  • Salary reported in ITR doesn’t match the Form 16, 26AS or AIS.
  • Large cash transactions not justified by declared income.
  • Claims for big deductions under Section 80C, 80D, etc., that don’t seem proportionate to the income.
  • Property purchases or foreign travel expenses not matching reported income.
  • Not reporting foreign assets or income (even small amounts).

Simply put, if something looks odd mathematically or financially, it might get flagged.

How Should CAs Prepare?

As CAs, our role is no longer limited to just filling up forms and uploading ITRs. We need to act more like auditors at the pre-filing stage itself.

Here’s what can help:

  • Always reconcile client AIS/TIS data before filing.
  • Maintain proper documentation for every deduction, exemption, and expense.
  • Encourage clients to disclose all income honestly, even if it feels small or “unimportant.”
  • Use tools that highlight inconsistencies automatically to save time.
  • Keep yourself updated on new risk parameters that the Income Tax Department may share from time to time.

Final Thoughts

CBDT’s move towards AI-based scrutiny is a big step toward a more efficient and transparent tax environment.
While it certainly makes the process smarter, it also demands a lot more caution and diligence from taxpayers and their Chartered Accountants.

#incometax #AI #CBDT

Author Bio

Chirag Jatwani & Associates is a Chartered Accountancy firm driven by a commitment to excellence, integrity, and client-centric solutions. Founded with the vision to deliver value beyond compliance, our firm offers a broad spectrum of services in Taxation, Audit & Assurance, Corporate Law, S View Full Profile

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4 Comments

  1. Wuppuluri Ratnam says:

    In multiple PAN card issues, why can’t AI decide about the correct PAN card and cancel totally the defective OAN cards issued by IT dept ?

  2. Chandra Mouli Bojja says:

    Everyone must know truthfulness of God Word. No one knows truthfulness of God Word since four yugas. Now God sent truthfulness through AI to bring all looters cunning corrupted conspirators disloyal disobedience prostitutes cruel treacherous falsehood brutal pride mindless laziness idleness placed before world to kill all looters to make entire earth as heavenly within no time. Rulers people must be think over and pray God Elon musk Beloved son of God.

  3. Srinivasan says:

    There is always gap between form 16 and income tax returns in savings and investments declaration as employers insist before January 30 th while March 31 last date of investments to claim exemption Assessee can chose regime before filing but employers will take the declaration early in financial year.

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