A Section 245 intimation means the Income Tax Department plans to set off your current refund against an old outstanding demand. You can respond on the e-filing portal, agree or disagree with reasons, before the response-by date shown in your notice. If you do nothing, the refund is adjusted automatically.
Short on time? Jump to the step-by-step below and file your “Response to Outstanding Demand” before the date printed on your intimation.
Section 245 of the Income-tax Act, 1961 lets the department set off a refund due to you against any sum still payable by you for an earlier year. The law says this can be done only “after giving an intimation in writing” of the action proposed. That intimation is the notice you received.
The new Income-tax Act, 2025 came into force on 1 April 2026 and re-enacts this refund set-off power as section 438. Refunds and demands for earlier years stay under the 1961 Act through its savings provisions, so an intimation issued in 2026 on a prior-year refund still cites section 245. The response steps below apply the same way.
So this is not a penalty and not a fresh demand. It is a warning shot. The department is telling you: “You have a refund coming, but our records show an old demand. We intend to use one to clear the other. Object now if you think the old demand is wrong.”
The old demand often pertains to an earlier assessment year, sometimes one you forgot about or never saw. It may be a real demand, or it may be a ghost demand already paid, already rectified, or already under appeal. Your job in the response window is to tell the portal which.
People confuse three different income-tax messages. They are not the same.
If your notice quotes Section 245 and mentions an outstanding demand for an old year, you are in the right place.
The intimation states a period within which you must respond. The portal counts down from there. Historically this window has been 30 days and in recent years some intimations allow a shorter period, so do not rely on a fixed number, act on the exact date printed in your notice. If you miss it, the demand is taken as accepted and adjusted against your refund.
Log in to the e-filing portal at incometax.gov.in with your user ID and password. On the Dashboard, click Pending Actions, then Response to Outstanding Demand. This opens the list of demands on your record, with the assessment year and amount for each.
Match each demand against your own records. Ask: did I already pay this? Did I file a rectification or revised return that should have cleared it? Is it already under appeal? Was it reduced by an earlier order? The answer decides whether you agree or disagree.
For each demand, choose one option:
For partial disagreement, you enter details for the disputed part and can pay the balance you accept.
When you disagree, the portal asks you to select a reason. The common categories cover situations like: the demand was already paid and the challan has a CIN, the demand was already reduced by a rectification, revision, or appellate order, you have filed an appeal with a stay petition or a stay has been granted, you have filed a rectification or revised return at CPC or with the Assessing Officer, or “Others” for anything that does not fit. Select the one that matches your facts and attach proof.
The official Respond to Outstanding Demand user manual walks through the screens and confirms the “Others” reason is available as a catch-all.
Responding “disagree” tells the portal you object, but it does not fix a genuinely incorrect demand. To correct a mistake apparent from the record, for example a missing TDS credit or an arithmetical error, file a rectification under Section 154 of the Income-tax Act, 1961. Rectification can be sought within 4 years from the end of the financial year in which the order was passed, and it carries no fee. Our step-by-step on how to file an ITR rectification under Section 154 covers when rectification applies, when you must instead file a revised return, and how to do it on the portal.
Note: if the demand is already under appeal, you cannot rectify the same point, you defend it in the appeal and record “appeal filed, stay petition” or “stay granted” in your Section 245 response.
Dr. Shrawan Kumar Pathak, a salaried taxpayer in Patna, filed his return and expected a refund of about Rs 14,200. Instead he got a Section 245 intimation: the department wanted to set the refund off against a demand of Rs 11,800 for an earlier assessment year, a demand he had actually paid two years before.
He logged in, opened Pending Actions, then Response to Outstanding Demand, and saw the old year listed. He chose “Demand is correct but already paid,” attached the challan CIN from his old payment, and submitted before the response-by date on the notice. Because the old demand had also slipped through with a small arithmetical error, he separately filed a rectification under Section 154 to clean up the record. Once the challan was matched and the rectification processed, the ghost demand cleared and his refund was released in full.
The lesson: respond on time, attach proof, and use Section 154 to kill a wrong demand at the source.
Sometimes the portal shows a demand with no order, no reason, and no contact officer, and your “disagree” sits unactioned for weeks. Here a Right to Information request can help. You can ask the relevant income-tax office under the RTI Act, 2005 for the basis of the demand, the file notings on your rectification or grievance, and the status of action on your Section 245 response.
You can draft this in minutes with our AI RTI drafting tool, and if the reply is missing or evasive, escalate using the first appeal builder. For the wider strategy of using RTI to move a government file, see The RTI Playbook.
It means the Income Tax Department intends to set off a refund due to you against an outstanding demand from an earlier year. Under Section 245, Income-tax Act 1961, this can be done only after giving you written intimation, which is the notice you received, so you have a chance to object first.
You must respond within the period stated in your notice. The portal counts down from the response-by date printed on the intimation. This window has historically been 30 days, and some recent intimations allow a shorter period, so act on the exact date in your own notice rather than a fixed number.
If you do nothing within the response period, the demand is treated as accepted and your refund is adjusted against it automatically. That is why responding, even to disagree, matters more than the outcome you want.
Log in at incometax.gov.in, go to Pending Actions, then Response to Outstanding Demand. The official user manual confirms this is the path. You will see each demand by assessment year and can respond to each one.
Yes. Choose “Disagree with the demand, in full or in part,” click Add Reasons, and select a reason such as demand already paid with challan CIN, demand reduced by rectification or appellate order, appeal filed with stay, rectification or revised return filed, or “Others.” Attach proof for each reason.
No. A 143(1)(a) intimation proposes an adjustment to the return you just filed. A Section 245 intimation sets off this year's refund against a prior year's outstanding demand. Your current return can be fully correct and you can still get a 245 intimation.
Disagree on the portal to stop the set-off, then correct the demand at source. For a mistake apparent from the record, file a rectification under Section 154, Income-tax Act 1961, within 4 years from the end of the financial year the order was passed. There is no fee.
If the demand turns out to be wrong after adjustment, get the demand corrected through rectification under Section 154 or through your appeal. Once the demand is reduced or deleted, the adjusted amount becomes refundable again. Keep all challans and orders as proof.
See Section 245 Notice and IT 143(1)(a) Response and NRI PAN Tax Notice and TDS Refund Status.