Search and Seizure Provisions under Income-tax Act, 2025
Search and seizure is the most intrusive power available to the Income-tax Department. Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, these provisions continue to exist, but with clear statutory thresholds, procedural safeguards, and post-search accountability.
A search is not routine assessment. It is an exceptional action that must strictly comply with law.
When Can Search and Seizure Be Initiated
A search can be authorised only when the competent authority has reason to believe, based on credible information, that a person:
Is in possession of undisclosed income or assets
Has failed or is likely to fail to produce relevant books or documents
Is attempting to conceal income or property
Search power is not based on suspicion. It requires legally sustainable information.
Authority and Scope of Search
Once authorised, the department may:
Enter and search premises
Break open locks where access is denied
Seize books, documents, cash, bullion, or valuables
Place marks of identification
Examine persons on oath
However, the scope of search must remain confined to the authorisation. Any excess renders the action legally vulnerable.
What Cannot Be Seized
The law also places limits on seizure powers.
Generally:
Stock-in-trade of business cannot be seized
Reasonable cash explained through books cannot be seized
Personal effects are protected
Search is not a license for confiscation.
Statements Recorded During Search
Statements recorded during search proceedings carry evidentiary value. However:
Coercive statements are legally unsustainable
Admissions must be voluntary
Retraction is permissible if supported by evidence
Under judicial scrutiny, documents outweigh oral statements.
Post-Search Assessment Proceedings
Search triggers special assessment procedures:
Assessment of multiple years
Determination of undisclosed income
Levy of tax, interest, and penalty
However, additions must be based on seized material, not conjecture.
The concept of roving post-search additions has been consistently rejected by courts.
Safeguards and Taxpayer Rights
Even during search, taxpayers have rights:
Right to see authorisation
Right to medical assistance
Right to female occupants’ dignity
Right against illegal seizure
Right to appeal against additions
Search power is subject to constitutional and judicial control.
Consequences of Illegal or Improper Search
If search action violates legal requirements:
Entire proceedings can be quashed
Additions may not survive appellate scrutiny
Department faces judicial criticism
Legality of initiation is often the first battleground in litigation.
Conclusion
Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, search and seizure provisions remain powerful but not absolute.
They operate within:
Defined legal thresholds
Procedural discipline
Strong appellate oversight
For taxpayers, knowledge of rights is protection.
For authorities, lawful exercise of power is sustainability.
Search is a weapon of law, not a tool of pressure.
Written by:
Abhishek Gupta
Chartered Accountant
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