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Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) – Complete Guide on Appeals, Procedure & Powers

The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) is the second appellate authority in India's income tax dispute resolution system and serves as the final fact-finding body for tax matters. Established under the Income Tax Act, 1961, ITAT is a quasi-judicial institution that operates independently from the Income Tax Department, ensuring impartial adjudication of disputes between taxpayers and tax authorities. As a critical component of the appeals hierarchy, ITAT hears appeals against orders passed by the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] and certain orders of the Commissioner under revision provisions. Unlike administrative authorities, ITAT comprises both Judicial Members (typically retired High Court judges or senior advocates) and Accountant Members (Chartered Accountants or senior IRS officers), bringing together legal expertise and technical tax knowledge to decide complex cases. ITAT's decisions, while binding on all income tax authorities nationwide, can be further appealed to High Courts only on substantial questions of law - not on factual findings, making ITAT the final arbiter of facts in tax disputes. With benches located across major cities in India, ITAT handles thousands of appeals annually, establishing important precedents that shape tax jurisprudence. This comprehensive guide for FY 2026-27 covers everything about ITAT including its composition, jurisdiction, powers, appealable orders, filing procedure, time limits, stay of demand provisions, hearing process, types of benches (Division Bench, Single Member Bench, Special Bench), rectification powers, appeals to High Court, recent reforms including e-filing initiatives, practical tips for taxpayers, and detailed FAQs to help navigate the ITAT appeal process effectively.

What is ITAT (Income Tax Appellate Tribunal)?

ITAT - India's Premier Tax Tribunal

Full Name: Income Tax Appellate Tribunal

Nature: Quasi-judicial appellate authority

Established: 1941 (one of the oldest tribunals in India)

Governed By: Sections 252 to 255 of the Income Tax Act, 1961

Independence: Completely independent from Income Tax Department and Ministry of Finance

Headquarters: New Delhi

Key Characteristics:

  • Second Appellate Forum: Hears appeals against CIT(A) orders and certain CIT revision orders
  • Final Fact-Finding Authority: Factual findings are generally final (not appealable on facts to High Court)
  • Quasi-Judicial: Court-like procedures with independence from executive
  • Expert Composition: Judicial + Accountant Members for balanced perspective
  • Both Parties Can Appeal: Taxpayer and Department have equal appeal rights
  • Pan-India Jurisdiction: Benches across major cities

Historical Significance: ITAT is the oldest Tribunal in India and has served as a model for establishment of various other tribunals in the country.

Appeal Flow to ITAT: CIT(A) Order / Section 263 Order → ITAT → High Court (on substantial question of law only)

Why ITAT is Called "Mother Tribunal"

ITAT is often referred to as the "Mother Tribunal" of India because:

  • Oldest tribunal: Established in 1941, predating India's independence
  • Model for others: Its structure and procedures became template for numerous other tribunals (CAT, CESTAT, NCLT, etc.)
  • Judicial excellence: Known for high-quality, well-reasoned orders
  • Independence: Maintained independence despite being under executive control
  • Expertise: Specialized expertise in complex tax matters

ITAT vs Courts - Key Differences

Aspect ITAT High Court / Supreme Court
Nature Quasi-judicial Tribunal Constitutional Courts
Scope of Review Facts + Law Law only (factual findings by ITAT final)
Members/Judges Judicial + Accountant Members Judges only
Procedure Simplified tribunal procedures Formal court procedures
Cost Lower fees, less expensive Higher court fees, expensive
Time Typically faster (2-4 years) Longer (5-10+ years)
Specialization Tax law specialists General jurisdiction
Appeal Rights To High Court (limited) To Supreme Court (further limited)

Composition & Structure of ITAT

ITAT's unique composition combines judicial and technical expertise, ensuring comprehensive evaluation of tax disputes.

Members of ITAT

ITAT Membership Structure

1. President
  • Qualification: Retired High Court Judge or person qualified to be High Court Judge
  • Appointment: By Central Government
  • Role: Administrative head, assigns cases, constitutes benches
  • Powers: Supervisory and administrative control over all benches
2. Vice President(s)
  • Qualification: Senior Judicial or Accountant Member with at least 3 years as ITAT member
  • Role: Assists President, heads specific benches
  • Powers: Administrative powers for their respective zones
3. Judicial Members
  • Qualification (any one):
    • High Court Judge (serving or retired) or qualified to be HC Judge
    • Advocate with at least 10 years' practice in direct tax matters
    • IRS officer of rank of Commissioner with at least 3 years in that grade
  • Expertise: Legal interpretation, procedural law, constitutional matters
  • Role: Decides legal questions, ensures procedural compliance
4. Accountant Members
  • Qualification (any one):
    • Chartered Accountant with at least 10 years' practice in direct tax matters
    • Cost Accountant with similar experience
    • IRS officer of rank of Commissioner with at least 3 years in that grade
  • Expertise: Accounting principles, tax computation, financial analysis
  • Role: Analyzes technical accounting issues, assesses factual evidence

Current Strength (2026): Approximately 60+ members across all benches

Term: Up to age 62 years (earlier was 65, reduced by Tribunal Reforms)

Types of Benches

ITAT hears cases through different types of benches based on case complexity and monetary threshold:

1. Division Bench (Regular Bench)

Composition: 1 Judicial Member + 1 Accountant Member

Cases Heard: Majority of appeals (approximately 90%)

Jurisdiction: All appeals except those assigned to Single Member or Special Bench

Decision: Both members must agree; if disagreement, matter referred to Third Member

Example: Appeal against CIT(A) order involving disallowance of business expenses totaling ₹50 lakh

2. Single Member Bench

Composition: 1 Judicial Member OR 1 Accountant Member

Cases Heard: Appeals where disputed tax does not exceed specified limit (currently ₹50 lakh as per CBDT guidelines)

Purpose: Faster disposal of smaller cases, reduce pendency

Limitation: Cannot hear cases involving substantial questions of law or policy matters

Example: Appeal involving tax demand of ₹30 lakh with straightforward factual issues

3. Special Bench

Composition: 3 or more members (includes at least 1 Judicial and 1 Accountant Member)

When Constituted:

  • Question of law of special importance
  • Conflicting decisions of two Division Benches of same ITAT
  • President considers it necessary for uniformity
  • Upon request from Division Bench facing complex legal issue

Purpose: Settle divergent views, establish precedents within ITAT

Binding Nature: Decision binds all Division Benches and Single Member Benches of that ITAT

Example: Two Division Benches of Mumbai ITAT have conflicting views on whether certain expenditure is capital or revenue - Special Bench constituted to settle

4. Larger Bench

Composition: More than 3 members (rare)

When Constituted: Highly complex constitutional or policy matters requiring wider consensus

Authority: Constitution requires Chief Justice's approval in consultation with President

Rarity: Very few cases (less than 1% of total)

Third Member Reference

When Division Bench Members Disagree

If Judicial Member and Accountant Member of a Division Bench have different opinions on the case:

  • Procedure: Case referred to Third Member (either Judicial or Accountant Member as decided by President)
  • Third Member's Role: Hears both members' views and gives own opinion
  • Decision: Majority view (2 out of 3) becomes the ITAT order
  • Time Impact: Adds several months to case disposal
  • Frequency: Happens in less than 5% of cases

Example: In an appeal, Judicial Member holds that reassessment under Section 147 is valid while Accountant Member holds it's invalid. Matter referred to Third Member who agrees with Accountant Member. Result: Appeal allowed 2-1.

Jurisdiction & Powers of ITAT

Territorial Jurisdiction

ITAT has benches across India, each with defined territorial jurisdiction:

  • Principle: Appeal filed at ITAT bench having jurisdiction over the area where CIT(A) who passed the order is located
  • Example: If CIT(A) in Mumbai passed order, appeal goes to Mumbai ITAT bench
  • Transfer: President can transfer cases between benches in interest of justice or for expeditious disposal

Subject Matter Jurisdiction

ITAT has jurisdiction over appeals arising from:

  • Income Tax Act, 1961: All appeals under income tax matters
  • Wealth Tax Act, 1957: Wealth tax appeals (Act abolished from AY 2015-16 onwards but pending appeals continue)
  • Gift Tax Act, 1958: Gift tax appeals (Act abolished but legacy appeals)
  • Expenditure Tax Act: Now largely defunct

Monetary Jurisdiction: No monetary limit - ITAT can hear appeals of any value from ₹1 to thousands of crores

Powers of ITAT (Section 254)

ITAT possesses extensive powers to decide appeals comprehensively:

Power Description Section
Confirm Order Uphold CIT(A)'s order if correct 254(1)
Reduce Assessment Reduce income/tax determined by lower authorities 254(1)
Enhance Assessment Increase income/tax beyond CIT(A)'s determination (after giving opportunity) 254(1)
Annul Order Cancel/set aside entire order as illegal or without jurisdiction 254(1)
Remand/Set Aside Send matter back to AO/CIT(A) for fresh consideration with directions 254(1)
Modify Order Make any modifications deemed fit in facts and law 254(1)
Admit Additional Evidence Allow parties to produce fresh evidence (Rule 29 - rarely exercised) 254(1)
Rectify Mistakes Correct mistakes apparent from record in its own orders within 4 years 254(2)
Stay Tax Demand Grant stay of demand recovery pending appeal (typically with conditions) 254(2A)
Summon Witnesses Summon and examine witnesses, require production of documents 131
Suo Moto Amendment Amend order to correct any error apparent from record (within 6 months) 254(2)
Dismiss for Non-Prosecution Dismiss appeal if appellant fails to prosecute (can be restored) ITAT Rules

ITAT as "Final Fact-Finding Authority"

What it means: ITAT's findings on questions of fact are generally final and conclusive.

Implications:

  • High Court cannot re-appreciate facts or re-examine evidence
  • Appeal to High Court possible only on "substantial questions of law"
  • If ITAT finds facts properly on basis of evidence, High Court cannot disturb
  • Perverse findings (no evidence or against all evidence) can be challenged as error of law

Example: If ITAT examines evidence and finds that cash found in search belongs to taxpayer (factual finding based on evidence), High Court cannot re-examine same evidence and come to different conclusion. However, if ITAT made finding without any evidence at all, that can be challenged as legal error.

Supreme Court on ITAT: "The Tribunal being the final fact-finding authority, its factual findings are binding unless shown to be perverse or based on no evidence."

What Orders Can Be Appealed to ITAT?

Section 253 of the Income Tax Act specifies orders appealable to ITAT:

Appeals by Taxpayer (Assessee)

Order Type Passed By Section Description
CIT(A) Orders CIT(A) 250 Orders on appeals against AO's assessment/penalty orders
Revision Orders CIT under Section 263 263 Orders revising AO's order as erroneous and prejudicial to revenue
DRP Directions Dispute Resolution Panel 144C Orders in transfer pricing cases
Certain Assessment Orders AO 143(3) with 144BA In specific cases involving search/requisition where DRP route not opted
TDS Orders CIT(A) 250 Orders on TDS/TCS matters under Chapter XVII
Registration Denial CIT(A) 250 Orders refusing registration to trusts/institutions
Penalty Orders CIT(A) 250 Orders upholding penalties under various sections

Appeals by Income Tax Department

Department can file appeals against:

  • All CIT(A) orders where relief granted to taxpayer (full or partial)
  • Certain orders under Section 264 (revision in favor of assessee)
  • DRP directions adverse to Department

Monetary Limits: Department can appeal only if tax effect exceeds threshold prescribed by CBDT Circular (currently varies: ₹50 lakh to ₹1 crore depending on court level)

Orders NOT Appealable to ITAT

  • Orders passed by ITAT itself (remedy: rectification or appeal to High Court)
  • Intimation under Section 143(1) (summary assessment) - first remedy is CIT(A)
  • Orders of High Court or Supreme Court
  • Show cause notices, draft assessment orders (only final orders appealable)
  • Certain administrative orders not affecting tax liability

Who Can File Appeal to ITAT?

Eligible Appellants

1. Taxpayer (Assessee)
  • Any person: Individual, HUF, Company, Firm, AOP, BOI, Trust, Estate
  • Legal heir: In case of deceased assessee
  • Authorized representative: Through CA, Advocate, Tax Practitioner
  • Condition: Must have received adverse CIT(A) order or Section 263 order
2. Income Tax Department
  • Filed by: Principal Commissioner of Income Tax (PCIT) or Commissioner of Income Tax (CIT)
  • Through: Standing Counsel or Departmental Representative
  • Condition: Order adverse to revenue AND tax effect exceeds monetary limit
3. Third Parties (in specific cases)
  • Persons affected by order: If third party affected by penalty or other adverse order
  • Example: Director penalized under Section 179 for company's default

Time Limits for Filing Appeal to ITAT

Appeal Filing Timeline - Critical Deadlines

Standard Time Limit (Section 253)

60 days from the end of the month in which order communicated

How to Calculate:

  1. Identify date on which CIT(A) order or Section 263 order received/uploaded on portal
  2. Note the last day of that month
  3. Count 60 days from that date

Example Calculation:

  • CIT(A) order dated: 12th February 2026
  • Order uploaded/received: 15th February 2026
  • Month ends: 28th February 2026
  • 60 days from 28th February = 29th April 2026
  • Last date to file appeal: 29th April 2026

For Department: Same 60-day period applies

Condonation of Delay (Section 253(5))

ITAT can condone delay if satisfied with sufficient cause

Key Points:

  • No maximum limit: Unlike CIT(A) (30 days max condonation), ITAT can condone any length of delay if cause shown
  • Application required: Must file separate application explaining delay reasons
  • Bona fide cause: Delay must be for reasons beyond appellant's control
  • Not automatic: ITAT exercises discretion based on facts

Common Grounds for Condonation:

  • Medical emergency, hospitalization, serious illness
  • Death in immediate family
  • Natural calamity, pandemic-related issues
  • Bonafide belief that appeal not required (if based on professional advice)
  • Postal delays, courier issues
  • Technical issues with e-filing portal (with proof)
  • Professional consultant's negligence (if clearly established)
  • Waiting for CIT(A) to supply certified copy of order

Grounds NOT Generally Accepted:

  • Financial difficulties (not sufficient cause)
  • Ignorance of law
  • Casual or deliberate negligence
  • Lack of funds to pay appeal fee
  • Waiting to see if Department will appeal
Supreme Court Guidelines on Condonation

Supreme Court has held: "Substantial justice should prevail over technicalities. Liberal approach should be adopted in condoning delays when sufficient cause shown."

However: Courts also emphasize that limitation is the rule, condonation is exception. Vigilance, not indolence, should be rewarded.

⚠️ Don't Miss the Deadline!

Best Practices:

  • File appeal immediately upon receiving CIT(A) order - don't wait till last day
  • Set calendar reminders for deadline
  • If delay unavoidable, file detailed condonation application with supporting documents
  • Medical grounds: Attach medical certificates
  • Death in family: Attach death certificate
  • Technical issues: Attach screenshots, error messages
  • Professional negligence: Attach correspondence showing consultant's fault

Consequences of Not Filing in Time:

  • Appeal becomes time-barred
  • CIT(A) order becomes final
  • Tax demand must be paid
  • No remedy except condonation application (which may or may not succeed)

Step-by-Step Procedure for Filing Appeal to ITAT

Complete ITAT Appeal Filing Process

Step 1: Prepare Appeal Memorandum

For Taxpayer: Form 36

For Department: Form 36A

Where to obtain forms: ITAT website (www.itat.gov.in) or registry of respective ITAT bench

Contents of Appeal Memorandum:

  • Name, address, PAN of appellant
  • Assessment year
  • Details of CIT(A) order (date, appeal number, order details)
  • Grounds of appeal (detailed and specific)
  • Facts of the case (brief summary)
  • Prayer/relief sought
  • Verification and signature

Number of copies: 4 copies of appeal memorandum + 1 extra for acknowledgment

Step 2: Draft Comprehensive Grounds of Appeal

Critical Component - Most Important Part of Appeal

Guidelines for Drafting Grounds:

  • Specific and detailed: Each ground should clearly state the error in CIT(A)'s order
  • Numbered: Ground 1, Ground 2, etc.
  • Both factual and legal grounds: Separate factual errors from legal errors
  • Reference to evidence: Mention evidence/documents supporting your case
  • Legal precedents: Cite relevant case laws if applicable
  • Comprehensive: Cover ALL issues you want to challenge

Sample Ground Format:

  • "On the facts and in the circumstances of the case and in law, the learned CIT(A) erred in confirming the addition of ₹25,00,000 made by the Assessing Officer under Section 68 as unexplained cash credit, ignoring the fact that complete details of creditors along with confirmations, bank statements, and income tax returns were filed before the AO."

Additional Grounds: Can be raised later with ITAT's permission under Rule 11 of ITAT Rules (if bona fide reasons exist)

Step 3: Prepare Paper Book

Paper Book = Compilation of all relevant documents

Contents (properly indexed and paginated):

  1. Index
  2. Copy of appeal memorandum (Form 36/36A)
  3. Copy of CIT(A) order (certified or plain copy)
  4. Copy of assessment order against which CIT(A) appeal was filed
  5. Copy of notices issued by AO
  6. Grounds of appeal (detailed version if not fitting in Form 36)
  7. Statement of facts
  8. List of dates (chronological events)
  9. Copies of documentary evidence filed before lower authorities
  10. Copies of case laws relied upon
  11. Any other relevant documents

Number of copies: 4 paper books (one for ITAT, one for each member, one for Department/assessee)

Binding: Properly bound with index and page numbers

Step 4: Pay Appeal Fees
Appellant Type Appeal Fee Cross Objection Fee
Individual / HUF ₹500 ₹250
Other Assessees (Company, Firm, etc.) ₹1,500 ₹750
Department Nil (No fee) Nil

Mode of Payment:

  • Demand Draft: In favor of "Registrar, ITAT [City Name]"
  • Payable at: City where ITAT bench is located
  • Bank: Any nationalized bank

Fee to be attached with appeal

Step 5: File Appeal at ITAT Registry

Physical Filing (Current Process as of Feb 2026):

  • Visit ITAT registry of appropriate bench
  • Submit 4 copies of appeal + 4 paper books + demand draft for fee
  • Registry staff will scrutinize for completeness
  • If defects found, defect memo issued (must be cured within 15 days)
  • Once accepted, appeal number allotted
  • Acknowledgment given with appeal number and date of filing

E-Filing (Under Implementation - Phased Rollout):

  • ITAT e-filing portal being developed
  • Expected to be operational across all benches by 2027
  • Will allow online filing similar to income tax e-filing
  • Presently in pilot phase at select benches
Step 6: Defects, If Any, Must Be Removed

Common Defects Pointed Out by Registry:

  • Insufficient copies of appeal/paper book
  • Appeal fee not paid or insufficient
  • Grounds of appeal vague or not specific
  • Certified copy of CIT(A) order not attached
  • Verification not properly done
  • Paper book not properly indexed or paginated

Time to Remove Defects: Typically 15 days (can be extended on request)

Consequence if defects not removed: Appeal dismissed for non-prosecution (can be restored later on application)

Step 7: Track Appeal Status

After Filing:

  • Appeal will be registered and entered in ITAT's system
  • Listed for preliminary hearing (can take 3-6 months)
  • Hearing notice sent to parties (by post/email/registered address)
  • Check status on ITAT website (cause list published online)

Cross-Objections - When Other Party Files Appeal

What are Cross-Objections?

If one party (say Department) files appeal to ITAT against CIT(A) order, the other party (taxpayer) can file cross-objections to:

  • Support CIT(A)'s order on grounds already decided
  • Raise additional grounds against CIT(A)'s order which taxpayer didn't appeal independently

Purpose: If Department's appeal succeeds and case goes back, taxpayer should not lose opportunity to challenge other adverse findings of CIT(A)

Time Limit: 30 days from date of receipt of notice of other party's appeal (or alongwith reply to appeal)

Fee: ₹250 (individuals/HUF), ₹750 (others)

Format: Similar to main appeal, in prescribed form

Advantage: Don't need to file independent appeal if other party has already appealed

Example: CIT(A) order: Disallowance of ₹10 lakh confirmed, addition of ₹5 lakh deleted. Department appeals against deletion of ₹5 lakh. Taxpayer can file cross-objections challenging the ₹10 lakh disallowance (which taxpayer had not independently appealed)

Stay of Demand at ITAT - Complete Guide

One of the most critical aspects when filing appeal to ITAT is obtaining stay of demand to prevent coercive recovery by the Department.

Stay of Demand - Why It's Crucial

Problem: Filing appeal to ITAT does NOT automatically stay the tax demand. Income Tax Department can continue recovery proceedings despite appeal filed.

Solution: File Stay Application to ITAT under Section 254(2A)

Legal Basis

Section 254(2A): ITAT can grant stay of demand pending disposal of appeal, subject to conditions

CBDT Circular No. 1914 (dated 18.05.1993): Department's own circular instructing field officers on stay guidelines:

  • Stay should be granted if 15-20% of disputed demand paid
  • If assessee demonstrates strong prima facie case and financial hardship, lower or nil pre-deposit possible
  • Stay period: Initially 180 days, can be extended to 365 days total
  • After 365 days, must dispose appeal or extend stay with specific reasons
Procedure for Filing Stay Application

Step 1: File Separate Stay Application

  • Form: Form 34C (prescribed form)
  • With: Main appeal or separately (preferably with appeal)
  • Fee: No separate fee for stay application

Step 2: Grounds for Stay Application

Must Demonstrate Three Things:

  1. Prima Facie Case on Merits:
    • Explain why you have strong case on merits
    • Point out errors in lower authorities' orders
    • Cite supporting case laws if available
    • Show that ultimate success in appeal is likely
  2. Financial Hardship / Irreparable Loss:
    • If demand recovered, will cause severe financial hardship
    • Business operations will be affected
    • Bank accounts will be attached affecting livelihood
    • Property may be attached/auctioned
    • Difficulty in getting refund if appeal succeeds
  3. Balance of Convenience:
    • Loss to taxpayer if no stay granted is greater than loss to revenue if stay granted
    • If taxpayer ultimately succeeds, refund process lengthy and cumbersome
    • Interest on refund doesn't fully compensate for loss of use of funds
    • Revenue not prejudiced as demand can be recovered quickly if taxpayer loses

Step 3: Supporting Documents

  • Copy of demand notice
  • Financial statements showing inability to pay
  • Bank statements
  • Any recovery notices received
  • Medical bills (if financial hardship due to medical reasons)
  • Any other documents supporting financial hardship claim

Step 4: Offer to Pay Pre-Deposit

  • Voluntarily offer to pay 10-20% of disputed demand as pre-condition for stay
  • Helps in expediting stay order
  • Shows bona fide intent
  • If strong case, can request unconditional stay (no pre-deposit)
ITAT's Decision on Stay

Options Available to ITAT:

Type of Stay Pre-Deposit When Granted
Unconditional Stay 0% (No pre-deposit) Very strong prima facie case, severe financial hardship, high probability of success
Partial Stay 10-20% of demand Good prima facie case, some financial hardship shown (most common scenario)
Higher Pre-Deposit 30-50% or more Weak prima facie case, no/insufficient financial hardship, low probability of success
No Stay N/A No prima facie case, frivolous appeal, no hardship, or taxpayer has history of defaults

Stay Period: Initially 180 days, extendable up to 365 days total

After 365 Days: ITAT must either:

  • Dispose the appeal (pass final order), OR
  • Extend stay with specific reasons in writing, OR
  • Vacate stay (taxpayer must then pay demand or approach High Court)
Recent Judicial Developments on Stay

Supreme Court Directions:

  • ITAT should endeavor to dispose appeals within 4 years from filing
  • Stay beyond 365 days should be granted only in exceptional circumstances with recorded reasons
  • If appeal not disposed within reasonable time due to ITAT's delay, stay should be extended
  • High pre-deposit should not be insisted if genuine financial hardship demonstrated

High Courts' Views:

  • Several High Courts have held that insisting on more than 20% pre-deposit (when CBDT's own circular says 15-20%) is arbitrary
  • If taxpayer makes out strong prima facie case, unconditional stay can be granted
  • Mechanical approach (fixed % in all cases) is improper - each case must be decided on its facts

Practical Example - Stay Application Success

Case: Mr. Sharma receives CIT(A) order confirming disallowance of ₹50 lakh. Demand (including tax + interest) = ₹18 lakh. He files appeal to ITAT.

Stay Application:

  • Prima facie case: Shows that expenditure was genuine business expenditure with complete supporting documents which were ignored by lower authorities. Cites similar ITAT decisions in his favor.
  • Financial hardship: Runs small business, annual income ₹15 lakh. Paying ₹18 lakh will completely wipe out working capital. Attaches financial statements showing business has loans of ₹25 lakh and limited cash reserves.
  • Pre-deposit offer: Voluntarily offers to pay ₹2 lakh (11% of demand)

ITAT Order: After hearing, ITAT grants stay on payment of ₹3 lakh (17% of demand) valid for 180 days initially. Order states "prima facie, assessee has made out a case. Balance of convenience favors stay."

Result: Sharma pays ₹3 lakh, gets stay order. Department cannot recover balance ₹15 lakh till appeal decided or stay vacated.

What If Stay Application Rejected or High Pre-Deposit Ordered?

Remedies if Dissatisfied with ITAT's Stay Order:

  1. Comply and Pay Pre-Deposit: If ordered pre-deposit is affordable, pay and get stay
  2. File Writ Petition to High Court:
    • Under Article 226 of Constitution
    • Challenge ITAT's stay order as arbitrary or unreasonable
    • Request High Court to grant stay with lower/nil pre-deposit
    • Success depends on strength of case and financial hardship demonstrated
  3. Pay Demand Under Protest and Claim Refund:
    • Pay demand to avoid coercive recovery
    • Continue with appeal
    • If appeal succeeds, claim refund with interest
    • Not ideal as blocks funds for long period
  4. Negotiate with Department:
    • In some cases, informal discussions with revenue authorities may help
    • Request for installment payments
    • Not a legal remedy but pragmatic approach

Hearing Process at ITAT

Once appeal is filed and admitted, the hearing process begins:

Timeline of Hearing Process

From Filing to Final Order - Typical Timeline

  1. Filing of Appeal: Day 1
  2. Scrutiny by Registry: 1-2 weeks
    • Registry checks for completeness
    • If defects, defect memo issued
    • Defects must be cured within 15 days
  3. Registration & Numbering: After defects removed (if any)
    • Appeal gets unique number
    • Entered in ITAT's records
  4. Awaiting First Hearing: 3-12 months
    • Depends on pendency at that bench
    • Some benches faster than others
    • Appeals listed chronologically (generally)
  5. First Hearing Date:
    • Notice sent to parties (by post/email)
    • Published in "cause list" on ITAT website
    • Parties must attend or seek adjournment
  6. Subsequent Hearings: 2-8 hearings typical
    • Each hearing may have gap of 1-6 months
    • Parties present arguments, submit documents
    • Bench may ask questions, seek clarifications
  7. Final Arguments:
    • When both sides have presented case fully
    • Final submissions made
    • Case "reserved for orders" or "pronounced in open court"
  8. Order Pronouncement: 1-6 months after final hearing
    • Simple cases: Order pronounced same day or within days
    • Complex cases: Reserved for detailed written order

Total Time from Filing to Final Order: 2-4 years typically (varies widely - some cases 1 year, others 6-7 years depending on complexity and pendency)

What Happens at ITAT Hearing?

Typical ITAT Hearing Proceedings

Setting: ITAT court room with Bench (Judicial + Accountant Member seated on dais), lawyers/CAs at bar, parties on benches

Procedure:

  1. Case Called Out:
    • Bench calls out appeal number and parties' names
    • Advocates/representatives stand up and identify themselves
  2. Preliminary Matters:
    • Check if both sides present (if absent, adjournment or ex-parte hearing)
    • Any preliminary objections or procedural issues
    • Stay application (if any) heard first
  3. Assessee's Side Arguments:
    • Appellant (usually assessee) argues first
    • Brief facts of case explained
    • Grounds of appeal taken up one by one
    • Evidence highlighted, documents referred
    • Case laws cited
    • Members may interrupt with questions, clarifications
  4. Department's Side Arguments:
    • Departmental Representative (DR) presents revenue's case
    • Defends lower authorities' orders
    • Counters assessee's arguments
    • Cites contrary case laws
    • May request remand to AO for further verification
  5. Rebuttal:
    • Assessee's counsel rebuts DR's arguments
    • Clarifications provided
  6. Bench's Queries:
    • Members ask questions to both sides
    • Seek clarifications on facts, law, evidence
    • May indicate preliminary views
  7. Adjournment or Conclusion:
    • If incomplete: Adjourned to next date for further arguments/documents
    • If complete: Reserved for orders OR order pronounced same day

Time Allotted: Typically 10-30 minutes per case (complex cases may get longer time)

Formality: Semi-formal - more relaxed than regular courts but decorum maintained

Record: Proceedings audio-recorded in some benches, written notes by clerks

Representation at ITAT Hearings

Who Can Represent:

  • Authorized Representatives:
    • Chartered Accountants (most common)
    • Advocates/Lawyers
    • Retired IRS officers (if enrolled with ITAT)
    • Tax practitioners enrolled with ITAT
  • Self: Taxpayer can appear personally (not advisable for complex cases)
  • Authorization Required: Must file Form 36 with authorization letter

For Department:

  • Departmental Representative (DR) - officer from legal cell
  • Standing Counsel (Senior advocates retained by Department)
  • Junior Standing Counsel

Adjournments

Seeking Adjournment - Use Sparingly

Valid Grounds for Adjournment:

  • Medical emergency of party or counsel
  • Counsel engaged in another court on same date
  • Need more time to file additional documents/submissions
  • Waiting for certified copies from lower authorities
  • Settlement discussions ongoing

Procedure:

  • Attend hearing or send representative
  • Request adjournment orally with reasons
  • If valid, Bench grants adjournment to next date
  • If frequent adjournments without valid reasons, Bench may impose costs or dismiss appeal for non-prosecution

Best Practice: Be prepared for hearing - don't seek unnecessary adjournments as it delays case and may annoy Bench

Virtual Hearings (Post-COVID Practice)

Since COVID-19 pandemic, ITAT has adopted virtual hearing option:

  • Platform: Video conferencing (typically VC apps approved by ITAT)
  • Availability: Optional - parties can request virtual hearing
  • Procedure: Similar to physical hearing, parties join via video link
  • Advantages: Saves travel time and costs, especially for outstation parties
  • Challenges: Technical glitches, internet connectivity issues
  • Hybrid Option: Some benches allow hybrid (one party physical, other virtual)

ITAT Orders - Types and Effects

After hearing, ITAT passes an order which is the culmination of the appellate process at this level.

Types of ITAT Orders

Type of Order Meaning Effect
Appeal Allowed Fully in favor of appellant Lower authority's order set aside, appellant's contentions accepted
Appeal Dismissed Against appellant Lower authority's order upheld, appellant's contentions rejected
Appeal Partly Allowed Mixed decision Some grounds allowed, some dismissed - partial relief
Appeal Allowed for Statistical Purposes Remanded back to lower authority Matter sent back to AO/CIT(A) for fresh consideration with ITAT's directions (no final decision on merits)
Appeal Dismissed for Non-Prosecution Appellant failed to prosecute Appeal dismissed due to repeated non-appearance, but can be restored on application
Appeal Withdrawn/Not Pressed Appellant withdrew appeal Lower authority's order becomes final

Contents of ITAT Order

A typical ITAT order contains:

  1. Title/Header: Parties, appeal number, assessment year, bench details
  2. Appearance: Who appeared for parties
  3. Brief Facts: Background of case, assessment history
  4. Grounds of Appeal: Grounds raised by appellant
  5. Submissions: Summary of parties' arguments
  6. Findings: Bench's detailed analysis on each ground
    • Facts examined
    • Law explained
    • Case laws discussed
    • Reasoning for conclusion
  7. Decision on Each Ground: Allowed / Dismissed / Remanded
  8. Final Order: "Appeal allowed/dismissed/partly allowed"
  9. Signature: Both members sign (if Division Bench)
  10. Date and Place of Pronouncement

Length: Varies from 5-10 pages (simple cases) to 100+ pages (complex cases)

Binding Nature of ITAT Orders

Who is Bound by ITAT Order?

Binding On:

  • All Income Tax Authorities: AO, CIT(A), CIT, PCIT, CCIT nationwide must follow ITAT decisions
  • Same Assessee: For same assessment year on same facts/issue, decision is binding
  • Other Assessees: Persuasive value - authorities should follow ITAT's interpretation
  • Departmental Authorities: Department's own manual requires following ITAT decisions unless contrary High Court/Supreme Court ruling exists

NOT Binding On:

  • High Courts and Supreme Court: They can differ from ITAT
  • Other ITAT Benches: One ITAT bench not bound by another bench's order (but usually follows for consistency)
  • If Conflicting: Special Bench constituted to resolve

Precedent Value:

  • ITAT orders extensively cited in later cases
  • Create body of tax jurisprudence
  • Especially valuable when High Court/Supreme Court not decided similar issue

Implementation of ITAT Order

After ITAT passes order:

  1. Order Uploaded: On ITAT website (usually within 2-4 weeks)
  2. Copies Issued: Certified copies issued to parties on request (fee applicable)
  3. Compliance by AO:
    • AO must give effect to ITAT order
    • Recompute tax as per ITAT directions
    • Issue fresh demand notice OR refund as applicable
    • Time limit: Should be done expeditiously (no specific time in law)
  4. Rectification: If any mistake in order, parties can file rectification application under Section 254(2) within 6 months
  5. Appeal to High Court: Either party can appeal to High Court (if substantial question of law exists)

Rectification of ITAT Order - Section 254(2)

Rectification (Miscellaneous Application - MA)

What is Rectification?

Application to ITAT to correct mistakes apparent from record in its own order

Types of Mistakes Rectifiable:

  • Arithmetical errors
  • Typographical/clerical errors
  • Factual errors (e.g., wrong figures quoted)
  • Omission to consider a ground raised
  • Omission to decide a particular issue
  • Self-contradictory findings

NOT Rectifiable:

  • Errors of judgment or legal interpretation (remedy: appeal to High Court)
  • Matters requiring detailed examination or fresh evidence
  • Change of opinion

Time Limit: Within 6 months from end of month in which order passed (Section 254(2))

Procedure:

  • File Miscellaneous Application (MA) in prescribed format
  • Fee: Same as appeal fee
  • Heard by same Bench that passed original order (if available)
  • Order passed within reasonable time

Effect: If rectification allowed, order amended accordingly. Amended order becomes effective order.

ITAT Benches Across India

ITAT has established benches across major cities in India for convenient access to taxpayers:

ITAT Benches - Location & Jurisdiction (as of Feb 2026)

Bench Location Territorial Jurisdiction (Major Cities/States) Number of Benches
Delhi Delhi, parts of Haryana, Chandigarh 21 benches (largest)
Mumbai Mumbai, parts of Maharashtra 17 benches
Kolkata West Bengal, Sikkim, Andaman & Nicobar 8 benches
Chennai Tamil Nadu, Puducherry 10 benches
Bangalore Karnataka 9 benches
Hyderabad Telangana, Andhra Pradesh 5 benches
Ahmedabad Gujarat, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Daman & Diu 7 benches
Pune Pune and surrounding areas of Maharashtra 4 benches
Chandigarh Punjab, Himachal Pradesh, J&K, Ladakh 3 benches
Jaipur Rajasthan 2 benches
Lucknow Uttar Pradesh (eastern) 2 benches
Agra Uttar Pradesh (western) 1 bench
Amritsar Parts of Punjab 1 bench
Indore Madhya Pradesh (western) 2 benches
Jabalpur Madhya Pradesh (eastern) 1 bench
Jodhpur Parts of Rajasthan 1 bench
Cuttack Odisha 1 bench
Visakhapatnam Parts of Andhra Pradesh 1 bench
Cochin Kerala, Lakshadweep 2 benches
Guwahati Assam, Northeast states 1 bench
Patna Bihar 1 bench
Ranchi Jharkhand 1 bench
Surat Parts of Gujarat 1 bench

Total: Approximately 100+ benches across 23+ cities

Circuit Benches: Some benches function as circuit benches (sit periodically in smaller cities)

How to Find Which Bench:

  • Check CIT(A) order - which city's CIT(A) passed it
  • Appeal goes to ITAT bench of that city/region
  • ITAT website has jurisdiction details

Appeal from ITAT to High Court

ITAT's order is not the end of road - can be appealed further to High Court, but with significant limitation:

Appeal to High Court - Section 260A

Critical Limitation: Appeal to High Court from ITAT order is ONLY on "substantial question of law"

What is "Substantial Question of Law"?

  • A question of law (not fact)
  • Of substantial importance (not trivial or academic)
  • Requiring judicial interpretation

Examples of Substantial Questions of Law:

  • Interpretation of specific provision of Income Tax Act
  • Whether ITAT applied correct legal test or principle
  • Constitutional validity of a provision
  • Conflicting judicial precedents need resolution

NOT Substantial Questions of Law (NOT Appealable):

  • Re-appreciation of facts
  • Sufficiency of evidence (unless no evidence at all - perverse finding)
  • Whether ITAT's factual conclusion correct
  • Mere disagreement with ITAT's view on facts

Time Limit: 120 days from ITAT order

Procedure:

  1. File appeal in High Court of state where ITAT bench is located
  2. Through advocate enrolled with that High Court
  3. Formulate substantial question(s) of law clearly
  4. High Court first decides if substantial question exists (admission hearing)
  5. If yes, admits appeal and frames question; if no, dismisses at threshold

Learn more: Complete Appeals Hierarchy Guide

Recent Reforms & Developments at ITAT (2023-2026)

Modernization and Reforms

1. E-Filing Initiative
  • Status: Under phased implementation
  • Portal: Dedicated e-filing portal being developed
  • Pilot: Running at Delhi, Mumbai, and Bangalore benches
  • Expected Full Rollout: 2027 across all benches
  • Features:
    • Online filing of appeals, stay applications, MA
    • Upload documents digitally
    • Online payment of fees
    • Track case status real-time
    • Download orders online
  • Advantage: Eliminate need for physical visits to registry, faster processing
2. Virtual Hearings Institutionalized
  • Started during COVID-19, now permanent option
  • Guidelines issued for virtual hearings
  • Technical infrastructure upgraded
  • Hybrid hearings (some parties physical, some virtual) allowed
  • Recording of proceedings for record
3. Tribunal Reforms Act (Finance Act amendments)
  • Reduced tenure: Member age limit reduced from 65 to 62 years
  • Search-cum-Selection Committee: For appointment of members
  • Single Member Bench threshold raised: From ₹15 lakh to ₹50 lakh disputed tax
  • Administrative control: Finance Ministry oversight increased
  • Concerns: Judicial independence concerns raised by some quarters
4. Digitization of Records
  • Old physical files being digitized
  • Orders uploaded on website within days of pronouncement
  • Searchable database of ITAT orders
  • Easier access to precedents
5. Fast Track Disposal Initiatives
  • Special drives to clear old pending appeals (5+ years old)
  • Additional benches constituted temporarily
  • Target set for disposal within 4 years
  • Monthly disposal targets for benches
6. National Bench at Delhi
  • Proposal to create National Bench for uniformity
  • To hear appeals involving substantial public importance
  • Status: Under consideration
7. Pendency Statistics (as of Feb 2026)
  • Total pending appeals: Approximately 70,000+ across all benches
  • Average disposal time: 2-4 years
  • Delhi & Mumbai: Highest pendency (20,000+ each)
  • Smaller benches: Relatively faster (1-2 years)
  • Old appeals (10+ years): Being prioritized for disposal

Practical Tips for Success at ITAT

Best Practices for ITAT Appeals

1. Preparation is Key
  • Thorough Case Study: Understand facts, law, precedents inside out
  • Comprehensive Paper Book: Well-organized, indexed, paginated
  • Case Laws: Compile 5-10 strong supporting judgments (ITAT, HC, SC)
  • Written Submissions: Prepare detailed written submissions to hand over to Bench
  • Practice Arguments: Rehearse oral arguments beforehand
2. Engage Right Professional
  • Experienced CA or Advocate: Who has appeared before ITAT regularly
  • Specialist: In your specific tax issue (transfer pricing, reassessment, TDS, etc.)
  • Local Counsel: Familiar with that particular bench's practices
  • Cost vs Benefit: Professional fees worth it - increases success probability significantly
3. Draft Strong Grounds
  • Specific and Detailed: Not vague or general
  • Cover All Issues: Don't miss any adverse finding of CIT(A)
  • Legal + Factual: Separate legal grounds from factual
  • Reference Evidence: Point to page numbers in paper book
  • Cite Laws: Mention relevant sections, rules, circulars
4. Be Present at Hearings
  • Don't Skip: Attend all hearing dates (or send representative)
  • Be Punctual: Reach before scheduled time
  • Be Prepared: Have all documents handy
  • Respect Bench: Proper court decorum and language
  • Answer Queries: If Bench asks questions, answer clearly and honestly
5. File Stay Application Immediately
  • With Appeal: Don't wait - file stay app with main appeal
  • Strong Grounds: Prima facie case + financial hardship clearly demonstrated
  • Supporting Docs: Financial statements, bank statements attached
  • Voluntary Pre-deposit: Offer 10-20% upfront shows bona fides
6. Follow Up Regularly
  • Check Status: Visit ITAT website, check cause list
  • Ensure Notices Received: Keep registry informed of address changes
  • Early Hearing: If urgent, file application for early hearing with valid reasons
  • Don't Let Case Become Cold: Regular follow-up ensures case doesn't get forgotten
7. Consider Settlement if Case Weak
  • Objective Assessment: Honestly evaluate merits of your case
  • Cost-Benefit: Compare litigation costs vs potential tax savings
  • Settlement Options: Approach Department for settlement if possible (see Settlement Commission)
  • Withdrawal: If case clearly weak, consider withdrawing appeal
8. Keep Detailed Records
  • All Correspondence: Keep copies of all documents filed
  • Order Copies: Obtain certified copy of ITAT order immediately
  • Hearing Notes: Maintain notes of what transpired at hearings
  • Essential for Further Appeals: If appealing to HC, these records crucial
9. Don't File Frivolous Appeals
  • Assess Merits: Only file appeal if reasonable grounds exist
  • Professional Advice: Seek CA/lawyer opinion on prospects
  • Costs: ITAT can impose costs for frivolous appeals
  • Wasted Time: Frivolous appeals waste everyone's time and resources
10. Learn from Others' Cases
  • Read ITAT Orders: Available on website - study similar cases
  • Legal Databases: Use taxmann, manupatra, SCC Online for case research
  • Understand Trends: How does particular bench view certain issues
  • Identify Arguments that Worked: Adopt successful strategies from similar appeals

Need Professional Assistance for ITAT Appeal?

Expert ITAT Representation Services:

  • Appeal Drafting: Comprehensive grounds of appeal with legal research
  • Stay Applications: Effective applications to minimize pre-deposit
  • Paper Book Preparation: Professionally compiled and indexed
  • Oral Arguments: Experienced CAs and advocates for ITAT hearings
  • Written Submissions: Detailed legal submissions with case law compilation
  • Follow-up & Coordination: Complete case management till final order
  • Further Appeals: Expert assistance if High Court appeal needed

Why Choose DisyTax for ITAT Matters:

  • Extensive experience before multiple ITAT benches
  • Deep understanding of ITAT procedures and practices
  • Strong track record of favorable orders
  • Specialization in complex tax disputes
  • End-to-end support from filing to final order

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Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs) on ITAT

Q1. What is the full form of ITAT?
ITAT stands for Income Tax Appellate Tribunal. It is the second appellate authority in India's income tax dispute resolution system and serves as the final fact-finding body for tax matters.
Q2. Who can file appeal to ITAT?
Both the taxpayer (assessee) and the Income Tax Department can file appeals to ITAT against orders passed by CIT(A), certain CIT revision orders under Section 263, and DRP directions. Any person aggrieved by CIT(A)'s order - whether individual, HUF, company, firm, trust, or any other entity - has the right to appeal.
Q3. What is the time limit for filing appeal to ITAT?
60 days from the end of the month in which the CIT(A) order or Section 263 order is communicated/received. For example, if order received on 15th February 2026, last date of that month is 28th February 2026, so 60 days from 28th Feb = 29th April 2026 is the deadline. Delay can be condoned by ITAT if sufficient cause shown.
Q4. What is the appeal fee for ITAT?
Appeal fees are: ₹500 for Individual/HUF and ₹1,500 for other assessees (companies, firms, etc.). Cross objection fee is ₹250 and ₹750 respectively. Department pays no fee for filing appeals.
Q5. Does filing appeal to ITAT automatically stay the tax demand?
No, filing appeal does NOT automatically stay the demand. You must file a separate stay application under Section 254(2A) requesting ITAT to grant stay of demand. ITAT typically grants stay on payment of 10-20% of disputed demand as pre-deposit, though percentage varies based on merits and financial hardship demonstrated.
Q6. How long does ITAT take to decide an appeal?
Typically 2-4 years from filing to final order, though it varies widely. Simple cases at less congested benches may be decided in 1-2 years, while complex cases at Delhi/Mumbai benches with high pendency can take 5-7 years. ITAT is making efforts to dispose appeals within 4 years as per Supreme Court guidelines.
Q7. What is Division Bench and Single Member Bench in ITAT?
Division Bench: Comprises 1 Judicial Member + 1 Accountant Member, hears most appeals (90%+). Single Member Bench: One member only (Judicial OR Accountant), hears appeals where disputed tax does not exceed ₹50 lakh with straightforward issues. Division Bench is the norm, Single Member for smaller cases.
Q8. Can ITAT decision be appealed further?
Yes, ITAT's order can be appealed to the High Court under Section 260A, but only on substantial questions of law - NOT on questions of fact. Time limit is 120 days from ITAT order. ITAT is the final fact-finding authority, so factual findings generally cannot be challenged further unless they are perverse (no evidence) or based on wrong legal principles.
Q9. What orders can be appealed to ITAT?
Main appealable orders:
  • CIT(A) orders under Section 250 (most common)
  • CIT revision orders under Section 263
  • DRP directions under Section 144C (transfer pricing cases)
  • Certain assessment orders in search/survey cases
  • Orders on penalties, TDS matters, registration denials
NOT appealable: Section 143(1) intimations (first appeal to CIT(A)), ITAT's own orders (remedy: rectification or High Court appeal), show cause notices, draft orders.
Q10. How many ITAT benches are there in India?
ITAT has 100+ benches across 23+ cities in India. Major benches include Delhi (21 benches - largest), Mumbai (17), Chennai (10), Bangalore (9), Kolkata (8), Ahmedabad (7), Hyderabad (5), Pune (4), and single/dual benches in cities like Jaipur, Lucknow, Patna, Ranchi, Chandigarh, Cochin, Guwahati, etc. Total strength approximately 60+ members nationwide.
Q11. What is Special Bench in ITAT?
Special Bench comprises 3 or more members (at least 1 Judicial + 1 Accountant Member) and is constituted when there are conflicting decisions of two Division Benches of same ITAT, or when a question of law of special importance arises. Special Bench decisions are binding on all Division Benches and Single Member Benches of that particular ITAT, ensuring uniformity in interpretation.
Q12. Who represents taxpayers at ITAT?
Authorized Representatives who can appear:
  • Chartered Accountants (most common)
  • Advocates/Lawyers
  • Tax practitioners enrolled with ITAT
  • Retired IRS officers (if enrolled)
  • Taxpayer can appear personally (though not advisable for complex cases)
Must file proper authorization in Form 36. For Department, Departmental Representatives (DRs) or Standing Counsel appear.
Q13. What is "Appeal Allowed for Statistical Purposes"?
When ITAT passes order stating "Appeal allowed for statistical purposes", it means the appeal is technically allowed BUT the matter is remanded back (sent back) to the Assessing Officer or CIT(A) for fresh consideration with specific directions from ITAT. It's not a decision on merits - just procedural. The lower authority must reconsider the issue following ITAT's guidelines. Called "statistical" because it counts as "appeal allowed" in statistics, though substantive relief not yet granted.
Q14. Can ITAT increase the tax demand beyond what CIT(A) determined?
Yes, ITAT has power to enhance assessment under Section 254(1) - meaning it can increase income/tax beyond what was determined by CIT(A) or even beyond original assessment. However, ITAT must give proper opportunity of hearing to the taxpayer before enhancing assessment. This power ensures that even if lower authorities made errors in favor of assessee, ITAT can correct them.
Q15. What is the success rate at ITAT?
Success rates vary, but generally: Taxpayers succeed fully or partially in approximately 60-70% of appeals at ITAT (various studies). However, this includes "remand back" cases (allowed for statistical purposes). Pure success on merits is approximately 30-40%. Department succeeds in about 20-30% cases. Remaining are dismissals, withdrawals, or technical disposals. Success depends heavily on case merits, quality of representation, and evidence presented.
Q16. Can I withdraw my appeal from ITAT?
Yes, you can withdraw your appeal anytime before final order is passed. File an application stating reasons for withdrawal (e.g., matter settled, want to file revised return, pursuing settlement commission route, etc.). ITAT will allow withdrawal after hearing both parties. Once withdrawn, CIT(A)'s order becomes final and you cannot re-file the same appeal. Consider implications carefully before withdrawing.
Q17. What is Third Member Reference in ITAT?
When the two members of a Division Bench (Judicial Member and Accountant Member) have different opinions on the case and cannot agree, the matter is referred to a Third Member appointed by the President. The Third Member hears both views and gives own opinion. The majority view (2 out of 3) becomes the final ITAT order. This ensures that deadlocks are resolved. However, it adds several months to case disposal time. Happens in less than 5% of cases.
Q18. Is physical presence mandatory at ITAT hearings?
No, not mandatory for assessee personally, but authorized representative (CA/Advocate) must attend. Since COVID-19, ITAT has institutionalized virtual hearings via video conferencing as permanent option. You can request virtual hearing while filing appeal or later. Hybrid option also available (one party physical, other virtual). However, physical presence often more effective for important hearings as allows better interaction with Bench.
Q19. What happens if I don't appear for ITAT hearing?
If you or your representative fails to appear on the hearing date without valid reason:
  • First time: ITAT usually grants adjournment (may impose small cost)
  • Repeated non-appearance: Appeal dismissed for non-prosecution
  • Department present, assessee absent: May proceed ex-parte (decide without hearing assessee)
However, dismissed appeals can be restored on application if valid grounds shown for non-appearance. Always inform ITAT if unable to attend and seek adjournment in advance.
Q20. Can I file rectification if there's mistake in ITAT order?
Yes, file Miscellaneous Application (MA) under Section 254(2) within 6 months from end of month in which order passed. ITAT can rectify mistakes apparent from record such as arithmetical errors, typographical errors, factual errors, omission to decide a ground raised, self-contradictory findings. However, ITAT CANNOT rectify errors of judgment or legal interpretation - remedy for those is appeal to High Court. Same bench that passed original order typically hears rectification application.
Q21. Are ITAT orders publicly available?
Yes, all ITAT orders are uploaded on the official ITAT website (www.itat.gov.in) and are publicly accessible. Orders usually uploaded within 2-4 weeks of pronouncement. You can search by appeal number, party name, assessment year, or bench. Many legal research platforms like Taxmann, Manupatra, SCC Online also maintain comprehensive searchable databases of ITAT orders. Certified copies can be obtained from ITAT registry on payment of prescribed fee.
Q22. What if ITAT stay period of 365 days expires?
Stay granted by ITAT is initially for 180 days, extendable up to 365 days total. After 365 days:
  • Option 1: ITAT disposes the appeal (passes final order)
  • Option 2: ITAT extends stay beyond 365 days with recorded reasons (if appeal not disposed due to ITAT's delay)
  • Option 3: Stay vacates - you must pay demand or file writ petition in High Court seeking stay
Recent judicial trend favors extending stay if delay in disposal is not attributable to assessee. File application for extension before 365 days expire.
Q23. Why is ITAT called "Mother Tribunal"?
ITAT is called "Mother Tribunal" because it is the oldest tribunal in India, established in 1941 (predating independence). Its structure, procedures, and functioning became the model for numerous other tribunals created later such as CAT, CESTAT, NCLT, NGT, etc. ITAT is known for judicial excellence, independence, and high-quality reasoned orders. It has maintained its reputation for impartial adjudication and specialized expertise in tax matters for over 8 decades.
Q24. Can I raise new grounds of appeal before ITAT that were not raised before CIT(A)?
Yes, but with ITAT's permission under Rule 11 of ITAT Rules. ITAT can admit additional grounds if they arise from the CIT(A) order or assessment order, and their consideration is necessary for proper adjudication. Grounds must be legal grounds (not requiring fresh investigation of facts). File application explaining why additional grounds should be admitted. ITAT exercises discretion - generally allows if genuine grounds and no prejudice to other party. Cannot raise completely new claims requiring fresh evidence.
Q25. What is the role of Accountant Member vs Judicial Member in ITAT?
Accountant Member:
  • Chartered Accountant or IRS officer with technical accounting expertise
  • Analyzes accounting principles, tax computations, financial statements
  • Examines technical aspects like valuation, method of accounting, business expenditure
Judicial Member:
  • High Court Judge or senior advocate with legal expertise
  • Interprets law, procedural compliance, constitutional issues
  • Ensures due process, natural justice, correct legal principles applied
Both members have equal powers and jointly decide cases in Division Bench. This unique combination ensures balanced adjudication with both technical and legal perspectives.

Conclusion

The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) stands as a crucial pillar in India's tax dispute resolution mechanism, providing taxpayers with an independent, expert forum to challenge adverse orders of tax authorities. As the final fact-finding authority, ITAT plays an indispensable role in ensuring justice while bringing together legal expertise and technical accounting knowledge through its unique composition of Judicial and Accountant Members. Understanding ITAT's procedures, powers, and practices is essential for every taxpayer and tax professional dealing with income tax disputes.

Key takeaways from this comprehensive guide include the importance of filing appeals within 60-day deadline, the critical need for securing stay of demand to prevent coercive recovery, the significance of drafting comprehensive and specific grounds of appeal, and the value of engaging experienced tax professionals who regularly appear before ITAT. With over 100 benches across India and ongoing reforms including e-filing initiatives and virtual hearings, ITAT continues to modernize while maintaining its reputation for impartial adjudication.

While the appellate process at ITAT typically takes 2-4 years, the tribunal's decisions carry significant weight as they bind all income tax authorities nationwide and establish important precedents. Success at ITAT depends not just on the merits of your case, but equally on quality of representation, thoroughness of preparation, and understanding of ITAT's procedures and expectations. Whether challenging assessment orders, revision orders under Section 263, or penalty proceedings, ITAT offers taxpayers a fair opportunity to present their case before an independent quasi-judicial body.

Remember that filing an appeal to ITAT is a serious legal proceeding requiring careful planning, meticulous documentation, and strategic presentation. Don't treat it casually or attempt to navigate complex tax disputes without professional guidance. The stakes are high - not just the immediate tax demand, but also interest, penalties, and potential prosecution in serious cases. Expert assistance from experienced tax professionals who understand ITAT's functioning can significantly enhance your prospects of success.

As India's tax administration becomes increasingly sophisticated with data analytics and digital monitoring, tax disputes are likely to rise, making ITAT's role even more critical. Stay informed about your appeal rights, understand the procedures, engage competent professionals, and don't hesitate to approach ITAT when you have genuine grievances against tax authorities' orders. ITAT exists to ensure that tax laws are applied fairly and that taxpayers receive justice - use this forum effectively to protect your rights.

📌 Final Checklist for ITAT Appeal

  • ☑️ File appeal within 60 days from month-end of CIT(A) order
  • ☑️ Draft comprehensive, specific grounds covering all adverse findings
  • ☑️ Prepare well-organized paper book with proper indexing
  • ☑️ Pay correct appeal fee (₹500 for individuals, ₹1,500 for others)
  • ☑️ File stay application immediately with financial hardship proof
  • ☑️ Engage experienced CA/Advocate familiar with ITAT procedures
  • ☑️ Compile supporting case laws and prepare written submissions
  • ☑️ Track case status regularly and attend all hearings
  • ☑️ Be prepared for multiple hearings over 2-4 years
  • ☑️ Obtain certified copy of ITAT order for further proceedings

DisyTax Expert Services: Need assistance with ITAT appeal? Our experienced team specializes in representing clients before ITAT benches across India. From appeal drafting to stay applications, paper book preparation to oral arguments, we provide end-to-end support. Contact us for expert guidance on your tax disputes.

Related Resources:

Disclaimer: This guide is for informational and educational purposes only and should not be construed as legal or professional tax advice. Income tax laws, rules, and procedures are subject to change. ITAT procedures may vary across different benches. Always consult qualified chartered accountants or tax advocates for advice specific to your case. The information provided is based on law and practices as of February 2026.

📧 For professional ITAT appeal assistance, contact DisyTax today!

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