'Fear Mongering': I-T Sources Clarify After Reports Say Tax Officers May Scan Emails, Social Media
'The tax department is not into snooping of social media accounts or online activities of a taxpayer,' an official privy to the matter told PTI.

Reports claiming that tax officers can scan the social media and email accounts of common taxpayers are "nothing but fear mongering", Income Tax Department sources said, while speaking to news agency PTI.
The clarification came in the backdrop of news reports that sparked concern over provisions in the new Income Tax Bill that allows officers to gain access to "virtual digital space".
This provision is related to search and survey operations where information is required to be accessed from a computer device or a digital space, the persons privy to the development told PTI.
Under Clause 247 of the Income Tax Bill, an authorised officer can "gain access by overriding the access code to any said computer system, or virtual digital space, where the access code thereof is not available."
A top I-T department official, who spoke to PTI, said this provision is not aimed at breaching the online privacy of common taxpayers, even if their case lands into scrutiny.
The official rejected claims made in some reports and opinion pieces that the tax authorities have been granted "additional" powers to breach the passwords of electronic records, including email, social media handles and Cloud storage space of the taxpayers.
The powers for such a coercive action "already existed" in the 1961 Act, and these have only been reiterated in the Income Tax Bill of 2025, he said.
"Such reports are nothing but fear mongering. The tax department is not into snooping of social media accounts or online activities of a taxpayer.
"These powers are only to be executed during the course of a search or survey operation, and that too when the assessee being searched or surveyed refuses to share the passwords for digital storage drives, emails, Clouds and communication platforms such as WhatsApp and Telegram, etc.,' the officer was further quoted as saying.
Notably, the new Income Tax Bill was introduced in the Parliament last month. The legislation aims to simplify the provisions of the existing Income Tax Act of 1961.
Under the existing law, Section 132 enables an authorised officer to require any person who is found in possession of books, accounts or other documents in the form of electronic record to afford facility to inspect such documents and also to seize such document (including electronic record as per Section 2(22AA) of Income Tax Act, 1961).
"Tax crimes and the methods of tax evasion have attained a new level of sophistication with the advent of smart Internet-based tools and technology,' the official said. Gaining access to digital devices and spaces during coercive actions like search and survey is vital to find evidence and these raids are limited when you see the data," a second official told PTI.
The tax department conducts about 100-150 "full blown" searches and surveys in a financial year, and this enforcement action is not aimed towards the common taxpaying individual or entity.
Also, out of the about 8.79 crore income-tax returns filed annually, only about 1% are selected for scrutiny, the official said. "The provisions related to 'virtual digital space' are not applicable even to these cases under scrutiny. It is applied only during the process of a search or survey and not even before this action is mounted.
"The tax department does not snoop or make a back door entry against any individual or entity through their social media accounts," the first official reportedly said.
As per officials in the tax department, gathering evidence from digital accounts is not only "essential" to prove tax evasion before a court of law, but also for computing the exact amount of tax evaded, the PTI report said. During search and seizure operations, it has been found in some cases that the person in control of books, documents and records, etc., does not cooperate with the proceedings or provide necessary facilities to access the evidence.
In this digital and e-enabled world, information is stored in servers and storage facilities abroad, which are not accessible from India and the access code is not provided by the person concerned. In such circumstances, the entire exercise of search and seizure gets redundant and can result in the tax evader going scot-free, the officials reportedly added.
(With PTI inputs)