“I completed the tax payment after selling my land, yet I’ve received a notice from the department. What could be the reason behind it?”

Selling land, paying the tax, and still getting a notice… classic bureaucracy plot twist. I can’t see your exact documents, but there are several common reasons this happens. Don’t panic yet, just don’t ignore the notice either.

Possible reasons:

  1. Mismatch between what you declared vs what govt records show
    Example: different sale value in your return vs Registrar records or TDS statements.
  2. Capital gains calculation issues
    Maybe the tax office thinks your cost of acquisition, indexation, exemptions, or deductions weren’t calculated correctly.
  3. Form 26AS / AIS / TIS data not matching
    If their system shows a transaction that doesn’t reflect properly in your ITR, they’ll poke you.
  4. Exemption proofs not attached / not claimed properly
    Stuff like 54, 54EC, 54F claims require proper documentation and timeline compliance.
  5. TDS deducted but not reflected
    If TDS wasn’t deposited or linked correctly, they may think you underpaid.
  6. ITR filed under wrong section or incomplete schedule
    Capital gains schedule missing or incorrectly filled.
  7. Scrutiny / random selection
    Sometimes you just get lucky… in the unfortunate lottery of compliance.
  8. Land ownership or category classification issues
    Agricultural vs non-agricultural, rural vs urban, residential vs commercial matters a lot.

Do not:
• ignore the notice
• guess and reply vaguely
• attach emotional stories

Do consider:
• checking AIS & Form 26AS
• reviewing your capital gains sheet
• responding within the given deadline
• consulting a qualified tax professional

You paid tax, good, but tax authorities want matching paperwork and proof, not just vibes.

Contact Tax works now

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