Appeal at Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) – Filing & Representation Services
Expert ITAT Appeal Filing, Case Preparation, and Professional Representation Before the Appellate Tribunal
The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) is the second appellate authority in the Indian income tax appellate hierarchy — positioned above the Commissioner of Income Tax (Appeals) [CIT(A)] and below the High Court. An appeal lies to the ITAT under Section 253 of the Income Tax Act, 1961 against orders of CIT(A) — or in certain cases, directly against orders of the Principal Commissioner or Commissioner. ITAT is a fact-finding tribunal and the final appellate authority on questions of fact, making it critically important for taxpayers to present their case with complete evidence and well-argued legal submissions at this stage.
ITAT proceedings are more formal and procedurally rigorous than CIT(A) proceedings. The tribunal consists of a Judicial Member and an Accountant Member. Cases are decided based on a memorandum of appeal, paper book of documents, and oral arguments. Our specialists provide comprehensive ITAT appeal services — from drafting the memorandum of appeal and preparing the paper book to appearing before the bench. This service connects with our CIT(A) appeal, CA for ITAT appeal, scrutiny assessment representation, and income tax advisory.
Our ITAT Appeal Services
ITAT Appeal Filing – Form 36
Preparation and filing of the ITAT appeal (Form 36) within 60 days of receiving the CIT(A) order — covering grounds of appeal, statement of facts, and verification — filed with the ITAT registry in the correct bench jurisdiction.
Grounds of Appeal Drafting
Expert drafting of comprehensive grounds of appeal challenging every adverse finding of the CIT(A) on both factual and legal grounds — with precise statutory references and relevant ITAT, High Court, and Supreme Court precedents.
Paper Book Preparation
Systematic preparation of the ITAT paper book containing all relevant documents, assessment records, CIT(A) order, evidence, and case law — organised and paginated as required by ITAT procedural rules for bench submission.
Oral Arguments & Bench Representation
Professional representation at ITAT hearings — presenting oral arguments before the two-member bench, answering the tribunal's questions, citing relevant precedents, and making effective factual and legal submissions.
Condonation of Delay
Where the 60-day filing deadline has been missed, preparation and filing of a condonation of delay application with detailed reasons and supporting affidavit — seeking the ITAT's indulgence to admit the appeal despite delay.
Stay of Demand Application
Filing of a stay application before ITAT under Rule 35 to stay the recovery of the disputed tax demand during the pendency of the ITAT appeal — including preparation of the stay petition and representation at the stay hearing.
Key Features of ITAT Appeals
- ITAT is the final fact-finding appellate authority — facts not raised at ITAT cannot generally be raised before the High Court
- Appeal must be filed within 60 days of receiving the CIT(A) order — delay requires condonation application
- ITAT bench consists of a Judicial Member and an Accountant Member — bench composition matters for case strategy
- ITAT orders are binding on both the taxpayer and the tax department for the specific case
- Stay of demand is available during ITAT pendency — protecting taxpayers from coercive recovery action
- Department can also file appeals at ITAT — our professionals handle both taxpayer and departmental cross-appeals
Frequently Asked Questions
What types of orders can be appealed to ITAT?
What is the filing fee for an ITAT appeal?
What happens if the ITAT order is adverse — can I appeal further?
How long does an ITAT appeal typically take?
Can new evidence be submitted before ITAT that was not submitted at lower levels?
Need Representation Before ITAT? Trust Expert Tax Professionals.
We prepare compelling ITAT appeals, paper books, and oral arguments — fighting for the best possible outcome before the tribunal.
Contact Us TodayF.A.Q.
GSTR-9 is an annual GST return that summarizes all transactions reported during the financial year. It is required to ensure proper reconciliation and compliance with GST laws.
All regular GST-registered taxpayers are required to file GSTR-9, except composition dealers, casual taxable persons, and non-resident taxpayers.
The due date is generally 31st December following the end of the relevant financial year, unless extended by the government.
It includes details of outward supplies, inward supplies, input tax credit claimed, taxes paid, and adjustments made during the year.
GSTR-9 is mandatory for most regular taxpayers, but certain small taxpayers may get exemptions based on turnover thresholds notified by the government.
Late filing may result in penalties and late fees, along with potential compliance issues or notices from GST authorities.