Received an income-tax order that hurts your cash flow or misstates your income for an AY/PY? Many taxpayers—salaried professionals, founders and MSMEs—feel stuck when an assessing officer’s order raises demand or disallows key deductions like Section 80C or HRA.
Summary: Section 264 lets you ask the Commissioner to revise an order that’s erroneous or prejudicial to your rights. Approach it as a focused correction exercise: gather the right records (Form 16, 26AS, AIS), prepare a crisp petition describing the error and the relief sought, and follow up with the jurisdictional Commissioner’s office or your tax advisor.
What’s the real problem in India?
- Tax orders often contain arithmetic mistakes, incorrect TDS/TCS credit or mischaracterised receipts (salary vs capital gains).
- Taxpayers miss opportunities to correct prejudicial orders because they assume appeal to CIT(A) or ITAT is the only route.
- Documentation gaps—mismatch between Form 16, 26AS/AIS and ITR—makes challenges messy and slow.
What people get wrong
Common misconceptions derail revision petitions:
- Thinking Section 264 is the same as a rectification under Section 154 — they serve different purposes and routes.
- Assuming there’s always a strict statutory deadline; while promptness matters, local practice and circumstances vary.
- Believing revision is adversarial litigation only—often it’s a technical correction that avoids prolonged appeals.
- Not reconciling TDS/TCS entries with 26AS/AIS and bank/broker statements before filing.
A better approach
- Clarify the ground: Is the order erroneous on the face of the record (arithmetic, mistaken facts, wrong credits) or a debatable legal point? Revision works best for clear, demonstrable errors.
- Reconcile records: Match assessor’s figures with Form 16, ITR, 26AS and AIS. For capital gains, prepare indexation calculations and sale/purchase proofs.
- Draft a focused petition: State error, show computations and attach documentary proof (TDS certificates, bank statements, rent receipts for HRA, investment proofs for Section 80C/80D claims).
- Choose the right forum: Submit the petition to the jurisdictional Commissioner (as per local practice—physical or electronic) and keep professional representation ready if the matter is complex.
- Follow up and, if needed, prepare fallback plans: appeal routes (CIT(A) / ITAT) or alternative corrections like rectification or amendment of ITR.
Quick implementation checklist
- Obtain the full assessment/revision/demand order and note the grounds of adverse findings.
- Download and reconcile 26AS and AIS against Form 16/Form 16A and ITR for the AY/PY in question.
- Prepare a clear computation showing the error and the corrected position (attach excel or PDF schedules).
- Collect supporting documents: Form 16, bank statements, broker statements, TDS/TCS certificates, rent receipts, proof of investments (80C/80D), bills for expenses, agreement/contract copies for receipts.
- Draft the revision petition: include assessee details, assessment year, file number, precise grounds, relief claimed and annexures list.
- Attach an affidavit or declaration if required by the jurisdictional Commissioner’s office.
- Submit to the Commissioner’s office (confirm physical/electronic mode locally) and obtain acknowledgement or diary number.
- Track updates and be ready to provide clarifications—often a short hearing or an officer’s query follows.
- If revision is declined, evaluate appeal options (CIT(A), appeals) and seek professional advice promptly.
What success looks like
Successful revision means a corrected order that reduces demand, accepts a deduction (e.g., Section 80C, 80D or HRA), restores correct TDS/TCS credit from 26AS/AIS, or reclassifies income (salary vs capital gains) with proper indexation for gains. Practically, success also includes reduced interest/penalty and clearing a wrongful notice—saving both money and compliance time.
Risks & how to manage them
- Risk: Commissioner rejects the petition or limits relief. Mitigation: Keep the petition narrowly focused on clear errors and avoid broad legal arguments that invite scrutiny.
- Risk: More scrutiny or additional demands after revision. Mitigation: Provide complete documentation and conservative computations; disclose material facts fully to avoid allegations of concealment.
- Risk: Delay and cash flow pressures. Mitigation: Consider interim measures—stay applications in appeals, deposit computation amounts to avoid interest escalation, or negotiate payment terms with the AO.
Tools & data
Use these routinely:
- Form 16 / Form 16A for salaried/TDS details.
- 26AS and AIS to reconcile TDS/TCS, refunds and self-assessment tax / advance tax entries.
- Income-tax e-filing portal — to download ITR copies, acknowledge communications and tax payment challans (though Section 264 petitions are typically submitted to the Commissioner’s office as per local practice).
- Bank statements, broker contract notes, PAN-linked documents, proofs for Section 80C/80D investments, rent receipts for HRA, and capital gains statements with indexation calculations.
FAQs
- Who can file a revision petition under Section 264? The assessee or their authorised representative can request the Commissioner to examine and revise an order that appears erroneous or prejudicial.
- Is Section 264 same as rectification under Section 154? No—rectification (Section 154) corrects mistakes apparent on record in the AO’s order, while Section 264 is a revision by the Commissioner; choose the route that fits the error.
- Do I need a lawyer or CA? For straightforward arithmetic/TDS corrections you may manage with a tax professional; for complex legal or high-value disputes, involve a Chartered Accountant or tax lawyer.
- Will filing a revision delay recovery? Filing a petition does not automatically stay recovery; you may need to apply for a stay or deposit a portion to pause demand—consult your advisor.
Next steps
If you see an obvious error in an assessment order—mismatched TDS, missed indexation on capital gains, or disallowed Section 80C/80D claims—start with a reconciliation using Form 16 and 26AS. Need help drafting the petition or deciding whether revision is the right path? Contact Finstory for a quick review and a tailored plan to reduce demand and protect cash flow. [link:ITR guide] [link:tax saving tips]
For hands-on support, reach out to our tax team at Finstory — we’ll review your order, reconcile records (AIS/26AS), draft the petition and liaise with the Commissioner’s office so you can focus on running your business.
Need help with Income Tax in India?
Book a 20-min consultation with our tax team. Individuals, founders & MSMEs welcome.
Prefer email or phone? Write to info@finstory.net
or call +91 44-45811170.
