At present, income tax searches are governed by Section 132 of the Income Tax Act, 1961. This provision allows authorized officers to enter premises and seize physical assets such as cash, jewelry, or documents if there is credible information suggesting undisclosed income.
From April 2026, these powers will no longer be limited to physical locations. Officers conducting authorized searches will be able to extend the operation to digital environments where financial evidence may exist. According to tax officials, the change is aimed at tackling sophisticated forms of tax evasion that rely on online platforms, offshore structures, and crypto assets rather than physical cash or paperwork.
Officials say that in many large cases, the money trail exists only in digital form, scattered across cloud storage, encrypted messages, and various online platforms. Without legal access to such data, enforcement agencies say it has become difficult to gather usable evidence. The government maintains that the law is simply updating old search powers to match a digital economy.
The new provision also allows authorized officers to demand access credentials during a search operation. If a person refuses to provide passwords or login details, officers can override digital access in a manner similar to breaking open physical locks during traditional raids. Tax officials say this is necessary to prevent evidence from being concealed behind encryption, particularly in cases involving digital wallets, online trading accounts and overseas financial platforms.
The income tax department has sought to allay fears of mass surveillance. Officials point out that search operations are relatively rare, with only around 100 to 150 conducted each year, typically in cases involving large-scale or complex tax evasion. “This is not meant for routine checks on common taxpayers,” a senior official said, dismissing concerns as “fear mongering”.
The department says ordinary salaried individuals and compliant taxpayers will not be affected. As with physical searches, officers must have a “reason to believe” that a person is concealing income or assets. That belief must be recorded before any search, including digital access, is authorized.
Despite repeated assurances from the tax department, the scope of the new powers has unsettled legal experts and privacy advocates. Their concern is not just about enforcement, but about the kind of personal information that could be swept up during a digital search. Emails, social media accounts, and cloud storage often contain private conversations, personal photographs, and data that have no connection to income or taxes.
Another point of concern is the absence of prior judicial approval. Income tax searches, unlike phone tapping or some other investigative actions, do not require clearance from a court. Critics say the absence of independent oversight, along with loosely defined terms such as “virtual digital space” and the subjective standard of “reason to believe”, leaves room for misuse and unnecessary intrusion.
For most taxpayers, the new provisions are not expected to make any difference. Taxpayers who report their income honestly and maintain proper records are not expected to be affected. The new powers will largely be used in cases of suspected tax evasion. In such investigations, officers can look at emails, online transaction details, cloud-based documents, and digital assets, including crypto, to trace unreported income. As financial activity continues to move online, the expanded powers underline the tax department’s intent to track digital money trails, even as questions around privacy and oversight remain.
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