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Mudichur Bus Stop catchment · Mudichur GSTR-9 / 9C

GST Annual Returns in Mudichur, Chennai

Professional GST Annual Returns for Mudichur businesses near Mudichur Bus Stop — on fixed, transparent fees

GST Annual Returns for residential businesses in Mudichur near Mudichur Bus Stop — fixed fee, deterministic turnaround and archived working papers. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What is GSTR-9C and who must file it in Mudichur, Chennai?

GSTR-9C is a self-certified reconciliation statement between the GSTR-9 figures and the audited financial statements. From FY 2020-21 onwards (Notification 30/2021-Central Tax), GSTR-9C is mandatory for registered taxpayers whose aggregate turnover in the financial year exceeds ₹5 crore and is self-certified by the taxpayer rather than CA-attested.

Transparent Pricing

GST Annual Returns in Mudichur — Plans & Pricing

Fixed fees · Zero hidden charges · Call 9566-068-468 for a custom quote.

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Regular taxpayers
Basic
GSTR-9 filed accurately
₹5,000/year

  • GSTR-9 Annual Return Filing
  • All 12 Months GSTR-1 + 3B Compilation
  • ITC Reconciliation GSTR-2A vs Books
  • HSN-wise Summary Compilation
  • GSTR-9C Reconciliation Statement
  • Books vs GSTR-9C Reconciliation
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Response to GST Officer Query
  • Prior Year Amendment Support
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Standard
GSTR-9 + 12-month reconciliation
₹10,000/year

  • GSTR-9 Annual Return Filing
  • All 12 Months GSTR-1 + 3B Compilation
  • ITC Reconciliation GSTR-2A vs Books
  • HSN-wise Summary Compilation
  • GSTR-9C Reconciliation Statement
  • Books vs GSTR-9C Reconciliation
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Response to GST Officer Query
  • Prior Year Amendment Support
Turnover > ₹5 Crore
Audit
GSTR-9 + GSTR-9C certified
₹15,000/year

  • GSTR-9 Annual Return Filing
  • All 12 Months GSTR-1 + 3B Compilation
  • ITC Reconciliation GSTR-2A vs Books
  • HSN-wise Summary Compilation
  • GSTR-9C Reconciliation Statement
  • Books vs GSTR-9C Reconciliation
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Response to GST Officer Query
  • Prior Year Amendment Support

Swipe to see all plans

Prices exclude GST. For enterprise pricing, call 9566-068-468.

Why FilingPro?

Why Mudichur Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert GSTR-9 / 9C in Mudichur — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Section 44 Compliance Treated As Quasi-Pleading

Every disclosure across Tables 4 to 19 is prepared with the evidentiary discipline of a pleading filed before a tribunal — figures backed by reconciliations, variances explained on file, and the entire bundle vaulted against the seventy-two-month retention horizon.

Bharti Airtel Doctrine Respected

The Supreme Court's confinement of rectification to the legislatively prescribed windows, articulated in Bharti Airtel, is reflected in our practice. Annual-return errors are addressed only through DRC-03 corrective payment and next-year previous-period disclosures, never through speculative attempts to revise a filed GSTR-9.

Suncraft Energy Defence Documented Pre-Filing

For each Table 6 credit we hold the invoice, e-way bill, transport proof and supplier payment evidence on the working paper pack, so the Suncraft Energy reasoning of the Calcutta High Court is available without reconstruction should a Section 16(2)(c) denial be later mounted by the proper officer.

Asahi India Glass Reasoning Available For Rule 36(4) Disputes

Should the department seek to import conditions into Section 16(2)(aa) over and above the GSTR-2B reflection, the Punjab and Haryana High Court reasoning in Asahi India Glass — examining the legality of Rule 36(4) caps — supports confining the restriction to its statutory text rather than extending it through executive instruction.

Section 73 And Section 74 Distinction Maintained On File

Working papers explicitly record the documentary basis behind every position taken, depriving the department of any platform to escalate from the three-year limitation route at Section 73 to the five-year fraud-imputation route at Section 74 carrying its hundred-per-cent penalty band.

DRC-01A Response Templates Pre-Drafted

Part A intimations under Rule 142(1A) are met within the seven-day window through pre-drafted Part B response templates that draw on the locked annual-return working papers. The Mudichur client never faces a last-minute drafting exercise against the cheapest defensive deadline within the demand cycle.

Key Benefits

What Mudichur Clients Get

Every GST Annual Returns engagement delivers measurable, guaranteed outcomes — expert professionals, on time, every time.

Section 17(5) blocked credit pass made before sign-off
Personal-use motor vehicles, restaurant and beverage spend, club subscriptions, works-contract spend on immovable property and any procurement for personal consumption are screened across the full year's purchase ledger. Where credit was inadvertently availed in a monthly cycle, it is reversed in Table 7E of the annual return with a supporting note rather than carried forward.
Working paper pack retained for the full Rule 56 window
Every annual filing leaves behind a working paper pack — twelve monthly variance notes, the supplier-wise Table 8 tie-out, the HSN rebuild sheet, the blocked credit screen, the DRC-03 ARN log and the Part A reconciliation walk. The pack sits in the client folder for the full six-year retention window under Section 35 read with Rule 56 and is the first document handed over in any departmental audit.
Section 47(2) Late Fees Eliminated
GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C filed before the 31st December deadline every year — the ₹50 to ₹200/day Section 47(2) late fee capped at 0.50% of state turnover never applies to Mudichur clients on our books.
Table 8 ITC Demands Prevented
Table 8D excess-ITC mismatch is the single largest source of Section 73 demand notices on annual returns. Our line-by-line GSTR-2A tie-out eliminates this exposure for Mudichur clients.
Self-Certified GSTR-9C Without Surprises
GSTR-9C management self-certification is signed off in a single sitting — Part A turnover, Part B tax, Part C ITC all reconciled with reasons populated for every variance. No last-minute audit queries from Mudichur clients' statutory auditors.
DRC-03 Closures Documented
Where reconciliation reveals short payment, DRC-03 is filed with proper Section 50 interest working. The ARN is disclosed in Table 9 — converting a future Section 73 demand into a closed voluntary-payment entry.
Comparison

GSTR-9 vs GSTR-9C

Why this matters here — Across Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric. Practitioners note that served by short connections to Tambaram West and Perungalathur and onward to central Chennai.

AspectGSTR-9GSTR-9C
Late feeSection 47(2) — ₹200 per day (₹100 CGST plus ₹100 SGST) subject to slab cap under Notification 07/2023-CT linked to aggregate turnoverNo separate late fee is levied on GSTR-9C; however non-filing exposes the registered person to general penalty under Section 125 up to ₹25,000
Optional vs mandatory splitTurnover up to ₹2 crore — optional; once filed the return is treated as deemed furnished under the second proviso to Section 44Turnover up to ₹5 crore — exempted; the registered person may furnish GSTR-9 alone without the reconciliation statement
Reconciliation scopeInternal portal-based reconciliation between GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-2A and the books of accountExternal reconciliation between the audited annual financial statement of the entity and the corresponding GSTR-9 figures, with the auditor's reasons for unreconciled items
Revision mechanismCannot be revised once filed; rectifications flow through DRC-03 voluntary payments or through the subsequent year's GSTR-1 / GSTR-3B as a Section 39(9) adjustmentAlso irrevocable post-filing; any subsequent reconciliation drift is reported in the next year's GSTR-9C with cross-reference to the prior year
ITC reversal headingTable 7 captures ITC reversed under Rules 37, 39, 42 and 43; Table 8 reconciles ITC as per GSTR-2A with that availed in GSTR-3BTable 12 reconciles ITC as per books with that declared in GSTR-9; Table 14 captures expense-head-wise ITC, which is the most frequent litigation pressure point
Litigation exposureForms the foundational document for any Section 73 or Section 74 proceeding for the financial year; mismatches with GSTR-3B are routinely picked up in DRC-01A intimationsDepartmental audits under Section 65 and special audits under Section 66 rely on the reconciliation statement; auditor remarks therein become primary evidence in adjudication
Composition vs regularRegular taxpayers file GSTR-9; composition taxpayers file GSTR-9A which stood suspended for FY 2019-20 onwards by Notification 47/2019-CTComposition taxpayers are not required to furnish GSTR-9C regardless of turnover, since the proviso to Section 44 references only regular registered persons
Statutory anchorSection 44(1) of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 80(1) of the CGST RulesProviso to Section 44(1) read with Rule 80(3); self-certification regime since Notification 29/2021-CT and 30/2021-CT
Turnover triggerMandatory where aggregate turnover during the financial year exceeds ₹2 crore; optional below that limit under Notification 47/2019-CTMandatory where aggregate turnover during the financial year exceeds ₹5 crore
Form natureConsolidated annual return summarising outward supplies, inward supplies, ITC availed and tax paidReconciliation statement between audited annual financial statements and the figures declared in GSTR-9
Certification regimeFiled by the registered person under EVC or DSC; no professional certification requiredSelf-certified by the registered person from FY 2020-21 onwards; the earlier CA/CMA certification mandate stood omitted by the Finance Act 2021 with effect from 01.08.2021
Due date31st December following the close of the financial year, unless extended by Notification under Section 44 proviso31st December following the close of the financial year; filed along with GSTR-9 on the common portal
Documents Required

Documents for GST Annual Returns

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12 months GSTR-1 filed PDFs and JSON dumps
12 months GSTR-3B filed PDFs and tax payment challans
Audited financial statements / books of account (PAN level)
Electronic credit ledger and ITC reversal working
TRAN-1 / TRAN-2 details and any transitional credit working
HSN-wise outward and inward summary working (4-digit / 6-digit)
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

Miss any of these and the next consequence kicks in automatically.

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Across Mudichur, the business activity radiating outward from Mudichur Bus Stop and nearby commercial pockets.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Close of financial year for which annual return is to be furnished275 daysGSTR-9Section 47(2) late fee accrues from the first day of January following the financial year
Aggregate turnover during the financial year exceeds five crore rupees275 daysGSTR-9CFailure to furnish the self-certified reconciliation invites Section 125 general penalty up to twenty-five thousand rupees besides departmental audit risk
Identification of short-paid tax during annual reconciliation prior to the December cut-offOn due dateDRC-03Discharge under Section 73(5) before any notice issues; mandatory penalty avoided
Outer date for rectification of earlier-year omissions in monthly returns30 daysAmended GSTR-1 or GSTR-3BBeyond the thirtieth of November following the financial year, rectification window closes; corrections shift to DRC-03 and annual-return previous-period tables
Limitation clock for ordinary-course Section 73 proceedings1095 daysOrder under Section 73(9)Three years from the annual-return due date; proper-officer order beyond this period is barred by limitation
Receipt of DRC-01A pre-show-cause communication based on annual return analytics15 daysDRC-01A response or DRC-03 voluntary deposit under Section 73(5)Voluntary discharge before formal DRC-01 attracts no mandatory penalty; failure to engage results in escalation to formal notice and mandatory ten per cent penalty exposure on confirmation
Annual aggregate turnover crosses two crore rupees in a financial year274 daysGSTR-9Mandatory annual return filing by 31st December of the following financial year; late fee under Section 47(2) at the prescribed slab rate accrues per day of delay capped at 0.5% of State turnover.
Annual aggregate turnover crosses five crore rupees in a financial year274 daysGSTR-9CSelf-certified reconciliation statement required additionally to GSTR-9; absence does not trigger separate fee but blocks GSTR-9 filing on portal where 9C is mandatory.

Deadline pressure points we see in Mudichur: Closer to Mudichur, for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

GSTR-9AAnnual Return for Composition Taxpayers

Annual return prescribed for taxpayers who have opted for the composition route under Section 10 of the CGST Act; presently kept in abeyance for financial years from 2019-20 onwards as composition taxpayers furnish the quarterly statement in CMP-08 and annual GSTR-4 instead

As notified — currently in abeyance Common Portal (composition taxpayer)
GSTR-9BAnnual Return for Electronic Commerce Operators

Annual return prescribed for electronic commerce operators required to collect tax at source under Section 52 of the CGST Act; captures the aggregate TCS collected and remitted during the financial year

On or before the thirty-first day of December following the financial year Common Portal (ECO)
GSTR-9CSelf-Certified Reconciliation Statement

Reconciles audited annual financial statements with the values declared in Form GSTR-9 across Part A turnover, Part B tax payable and Part C input tax credit; self-certified by the registered person since the first day of August, 2021

On or before the thirty-first day of December following the financial year, alongside GSTR-9 Common Portal (registered person)
GSTR-1Statement of Outward Supplies

Monthly or quarterly statement of outward supplies covering invoice-level B2B, summary B2C, exports, credit notes and debit notes; aggregates into Tables 4 and 5 of the annual return

Eleventh of the month following the tax period (monthly); thirteenth of the month following the quarter for QRMP Common Portal (registered person)
GSTR-3BSummary Return

Summary periodic return capturing output tax payable, input tax credit availed and net tax discharged through cash and credit ledgers; twelve monthly filings consolidate into Tables 6 and 9 of the annual return

Twentieth, twenty-second or twenty-fourth of the month following the tax period as per State Common Portal (registered person)
GSTR-2AAuto-drafted Inward Supplies Statement (Dynamic)

Dynamically auto-populated statement of inward supplies reflecting invoices uploaded by suppliers in their GSTR-1, GSTR-5 and GSTR-6 filings; used for supplier-side compliance follow-up during the annual reconciliation

Continuously updated; downloaded period-wise for reconciliation Common Portal (system-generated)
GSTR-2BAuto-drafted Static ITC Statement

Static auto-drafted statement generated on a monthly cut-off basis; basis for input tax credit availment under clause (aa) of Section 16(2) and Rule 36(4); Table 8A of GSTR-9 reflects the GSTR-2B aggregation

Generated on the fourteenth of the month following the tax period Common Portal (system-generated)
DRC-03Voluntary Payment Challan

Form used to discharge tax, interest or penalty voluntarily invoking Section 73(5), Section 74(5), or to close out scrutiny matters at the pre-notice stage; the ARN allotted on the DRC-03 is cited within Table 9 of the year-end return wherever short payment surfaces during reconciliation

On identification of short payment; before annual-return filing wherever feasible Common Portal (registered person)

GST Annual Returns in Mudichur, Chennai 600045

The 600xx geo-zone covering Mudichur groups several locality clusters under common administration, keeping documentation expectations predictable. Every Mudichur engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600045, the Tambaram Division, and the coordinates 12.9067, 80.0942 that anchor the locality. Businesses registered in Mudichur share the Chennai South jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Tambaram Division each time. We keep a cycle-by-cycle record of how the Tambaram Division of the Chennai South handles Mudichur filings and approvals.

Mudichur reads as a residential growth corridor pocket with medium commercial activity, anchored around GST Road and fed by the Mudichur Bus Stop corridor. The businesses clustered around GST Road in Mudichur drive the bulk of the GST Annual Returns workload we see each cycle. Freight and foot traffic from the Mudichur Bus Stop hub pull steady daily commerce through Mudichur, so there is rarely a quiet filing month in this residential growth corridor pocket. Working in Mudichur brings a logistical edge: proximity to GST Road and the Mudichur Bus Stop corridor keeps physical document handling fast.

GST Annual Returns for residential businesses in Mudichur hinges on getting the sector's recurring entries right the first time. Sector concentration matters: when Mudichur leans toward residential, the GSTR-9 / 9C risks cluster around the same few line items each cycle. We have closed enough GST Annual Returns files for residential firms near Mudichur to know where the department usually probes. Mixed residential activity across Mudichur means our GSTR-9 / 9C team keeps sector playbooks ready rather than improvising per client.

The Mudichur GST Annual Returns workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Every GSTR-9 / 9C file we open for Mudichur is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. We keep a repeatable GSTR-9 / 9C checklist for Mudichur so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed. Working papers for Mudichur GST Annual Returns engagements stay archived and retrievable, which makes any later notice or query straightforward to answer.

We treat Mudichur and Vandalur as one catchment for GST Annual Returns, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent. Businesses straddling Mudichur and Vandalur get a single GSTR-9 / 9C point of contact rather than two. From the same Mudichur team we also serve Vandalur and other nearby localities without re-onboarding clients. A client relocating between Mudichur and Vandalur keeps the same GSTR-9 / 9C file and the same team.

Over several cycles in Mudichur, the recurring GST Annual Returns issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early. The longer we serve Mudichur, the more precisely we predict where a GSTR-9 / 9C file needs attention. Patterns we track for Mudichur include logistics documentation gaps, timing mismatches, and the questions the Tambaram Division tends to raise. Sector signals in Mudichur — seasonal logistics swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule GSTR-9 / 9C work.

First-time GST Annual Returns for a Mudichur business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. New residential ventures in Mudichur lean on us to stand up GST Annual Returns correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice. Relocating a registered office into Mudichur (PIN 600045) changes the assessing division, and we handle that GST Annual Returns transition cleanly. Incorporating in Mudichur comes with jurisdiction, registration and GSTR-9 / 9C steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch.

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Expert Guide

GST Annual Returns in Mudichur — Complete Guide

The daily levy fixed at Section 47(2), graduated by aggregate turnover under Notification 07/2023-Central Tax, attaches every day the return remains unfurnished beyond the thirty-first of December until the upload is completed. The proper officer cannot waive this charge; only a CBIC notification can. Calendared filing well ahead of the cut-off is the only reliable defence to this slowly accumulating exposure.

GST Annual Returns Filing in Mudichur, Chennai

GSTR-9 and self-certified GSTR-9C for Mudichur businesses are prepared by reconciling 12 months of GSTR-1, GSTR-3B and audited financials with full Table 8 ITC tie-out before the 31st December deadline.

GSTR-9 Consultant in Mudichur — Annual Reconciliation Expert

A dedicated GSTR-9 consultant in Mudichur handles Tables 4 to 19, Table 8 GSTR-2A vs GSTR-3B reconciliation, HSN summary preparation and DRC-03 voluntary payment for any short-paid tax.

GSTR-9C Self-Certification in Mudichur

For Mudichur businesses above ₹5 crore aggregate turnover, GSTR-9C Part A turnover reconciliation, Part B tax-paid reconciliation and Part C ITC reconciliation are delivered with full working papers ready for self-certification.

Annual Return Late Fee Defence in Mudichur — Section 47(2)

Filing GSTR-9 before 31st December prevents the Section 47(2) late fee of ₹200/day capped at 0.50% of state turnover and the consolidated GSTR-9C late fee for Mudichur businesses above ₹5 crore.

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Key Facts — GST Annual Returns in Mudichur
GSTR-9 filed before 31st December every year — Section 47(2) ₹200/day late fee never applies to Mudichur clients.
Table 8 ITC reconciliation tied line-by-line to GSTR-2A/2B — zero excess-ITC demand notices under Section 73.
Self-certified GSTR-9C for Mudichur businesses above ₹5 crore — Part A turnover, Part B tax, Part C ITC fully tied to audited books.
HSN summary in Table 17 — 4-digit for AATO up to ₹5 crore, 6-digit above ₹5 crore (Notification 78/2020-Central Tax).
Reverse charge supplies in Table 4G and ITC in Table 6C/6D — advocate fees, GTA, security and director payments fully reconciled.
Section 17(5) blocked credits screened before Table 6 disclosure — no wrongful ITC carried forward.
DRC-03 voluntary payment with Section 50 interest working filed where reconciliation reveals short payment — closes year cleanly.
Multi-GSTIN PAN-level consolidation for Mudichur headquartered businesses — state-wise turnover apportionment with documented split methodology.
180-day Section 16(2) ITC reversals in Table 7A and reclaims in Table 6H — defended with supplier ledger evidence.
Working papers and reasons column populated for every Part A reconciliation line — first-line defence for Section 65 departmental audit.
People Also Ask — GSTR-9 / 9C in Mudichur
Who must file GSTR-9 annual return in Chennai?
Every regular GST taxpayer in Chennai whose aggregate annual turnover exceeds ₹2 crore must file GSTR-9. Filing remains optional for taxpayers with turnover up to ₹2 crore as per the annual exemption notification. Composition taxpayers file GSTR-9A and e-commerce operators with TCS file GSTR-9B.
When is GSTR-9C mandatory and is CA certification still required?
GSTR-9C is mandatory for every registered person whose aggregate turnover in a financial year exceeds ₹5 crore. From FY 2020-21 onwards (Notification 29/2021-Central Tax effective 1-Aug-2021), CA certification has been replaced by self-certification by the taxpayer using the same DSC or EVC used to file GSTR-9.
What is the late fee for delayed GSTR-9?
Section 47(2) of the CGST Act levies a late fee of ₹200/day (₹100 CGST + ₹100 SGST) capped at 0.50% of turnover in the State. From FY 2022-23 the fee is graded by turnover — ₹50/day for taxpayers up to ₹5 crore, ₹100/day up to ₹20 crore and ₹200/day above ₹20 crore (Notification 07/2023-Central Tax).
Can additional GST liability identified through GSTR-9 be paid?
Yes — but not through GSTR-9 itself. Any additional liability identified during reconciliation must be discharged via Form DRC-03 voluntary payment, with interest under Section 50 at 18% per annum from the original due date. The DRC-03 ARN is then disclosed in GSTR-9 Table 9 as tax paid during the year.
Are Tables 12 and 13 of GSTR-9 mandatory?
No. Tables 12 (reversal of ITC of previous year availed in current year) and 13 (ITC of previous year availed in current year) have been made optional for every financial year since FY 2017-18 through successive CBIC notifications. Most taxpayers continue to disclose them where material for transparency.
How is GSTR-9 filed for a business with multiple GSTINs?
GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C are filed GSTIN-wise, not PAN-wise. A taxpayer with multiple GSTINs across states files a separate GSTR-9 for each. For GSTR-9C, audited PAN-level financials are apportioned to each GSTIN with a documented split methodology — typically by direct attribution where possible and by turnover ratio for shared overheads.
Is GSTR-9 the basis for Section 73 SCN?

Yes. GSTR-9 is the foundational document for any Section 73 or Section 74 proceeding for the financial year. Reconciliation gaps and mismatches reflected therein are routinely the trigger for DRC-01A intimations.

Does GSTR-9 cover transactions with related parties?

Yes. Schedule I supplies between related persons and distinct persons must be reflected in Table 4 of GSTR-9. The valuation follows Rule 28 and the open-market-value principle, with cross-charge being the typical instance.

How are TCS credits reconciled in GSTR-9?

Table 6F of GSTR-9 captures TCS credits received from e-commerce operators. The figure must reconcile with the operator's GSTR-8 filings, which is the typical scrutiny query for e-commerce sellers above threshold.

Can input service distributor file GSTR-9?

An ISD registration files GSTR-6 monthly and is not required to file GSTR-9. The recipient units receiving distributed ITC file their own GSTR-9 with the ITC reflected in Table 6 thereof.

What is the role of Notification 56/2019-CT?

Notification 56/2019-Central Tax introduced simplifications to GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C for FY 2017-18 and FY 2018-19, making several tables optional. It marks the first major rationalisation of the annual return architecture.

Can I appeal against GSTR-9 mismatch demand?

Yes. The adjudication order under Section 73 or 74 arising from a GSTR-9 mismatch can be appealed under Section 107 within three months. A 10% pre-deposit applies on the disputed tax, payable through cash or credit ledger.

What Mudichur clients want to know before signing: Closer to Mudichur, in the residential growth corridor micro-market of Mudichur.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Annual Returns

Reading this guide locally — Across Mudichur, on the Tambaram West-Perungalathur corridor that passes through Mudichur.

What is the GST annual return and where does it sit in the compliance architecture

Comparison with pre-GST annual disclosure regime

Under the pre-GST regime, State VAT laws and the Central Excise and Service Tax laws operated independent annual returns. Tamil Nadu VAT Form I-1 was filed within ninety days from year-end; Central Excise ER-1 was a monthly return without a consolidated annual disclosure; Service Tax ST-3 was half-yearly with no annual consolidation. The GST annual return unifies what had been three separate annual disclosures into a single Section 44 layer cutting across goods and services. The unification reflects the destination-based design principle articulated in the OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines and operationalises the GST Council's mandate under Article 246A and Article 279A of the Constitution. The result is a single reconciliation framework against audited books, replacing the fragmented tax-type-wise annual returns that the Empowered Committee 2009 had identified as a source of compliance friction in the pre-GST architecture.

Persons excluded from Section 44 filing

Section 44 read with Rule 80 carves out specified categories from the annual return obligation. Input Service Distributors registered under Section 24(viii) do not file GSTR-9 since their function is limited to credit distribution under Section 20 and the year-end disclosure is captured in the recipient's own annual return. Persons deducting tax at source under Section 51 file GSTR-7 monthly and are not required to file GSTR-9. Persons collecting tax at source under Section 52 file GSTR-8 monthly and similarly are excluded. Casual taxable persons under Section 27 and non-resident taxable persons file return-period-specific returns and are not required to consolidate annually. Composition taxpayers under Section 10 file a separate annual return in Form GSTR-9A (currently waived for several years through successive notifications). These exclusions are constitutive: they identify the categories whose monthly disclosures already cover the operative compliance, leaving no incremental value in an annual layer.

Statutory framework under Section 44 CGST Act

The annual return under GST is governed by Section 44 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017 read with Rule 80 of the CGST Rules. Section 44(1) requires every registered person, other than an Input Service Distributor, a person paying tax under Section 51 or Section 52, a casual taxable person and a non-resident taxable person, to furnish an annual return for every financial year electronically in the prescribed form on or before the thirty-first day of December of the following financial year. The form prescribed under Rule 80(1) is GSTR-9. Section 44(2) read with Rule 80(3) requires a registered person whose aggregate turnover during the financial year exceeds the limit notified by the Government to additionally furnish a self-certified reconciliation statement in Form GSTR-9C, reconciling the value of supplies declared in the annual return with the audited financial statements. The Empowered Committee 2009 First Discussion Paper had envisaged an annual return as the integrating layer that consolidates monthly compliance into a financial-year statement aligned with audited books, and the Section 44 framework retains that architectural intent.

GSTR-9 mechanics and the structure of the annual return form

Auto-population from GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B

Several GSTR-9 tables are auto-populated from the corresponding monthly returns filed during the year. Table 4 outward supplies and Table 5 zero-rated and exempt supplies are auto-populated from GSTR-1. Table 6 ITC details and Table 9 tax paid are auto-populated from GSTR-3B. Table 8A ITC available as per GSTR-2A is auto-populated from the auto-drafted GSTR-2A for the year. The auto-population is editable — the taxpayer may modify the auto-populated values where reconciliation with books-of-account or with subsequent return amendments requires it. The Tabular auto-population reduces preparation effort substantially compared with the early 2017 design where every cell required manual data entry. The CBIC has issued successive clarifications through circulars governing the auto-population mechanism and the permissible adjustments at the time of GSTR-9 filing.

Optional versus mandatory disclosures in current form

The CBIC has progressively relaxed several GSTR-9 disclosures through annual notifications, distinguishing mandatory from optional fields. For FY 2021-22 onwards, Notification 14/2022-CT and subsequent notifications kept several Table 4 and Table 5 sub-disclosures as optional (the GSTR-1 auto-populated split between B2C and B2B sub-lines), kept Tables 17 and 18 HSN summary at the four-digit level for taxpayers up to ₹5 crore aggregate turnover and six-digit for those above, and made the Table 8 ITC reconciliation editable to absorb the GSTR-2B versus GSTR-2A divergence. The optional-versus-mandatory matrix changes year on year; the taxpayer must reference the relevant annual notification before preparing the return. The relaxations reflect a calibrated approach to compliance burden — disclosures with low audit value are relaxed while disclosures with material assurance significance (Table 8 ITC reconciliation, Table 17 HSN summary) remain mandatory.

Verification and Digital Signature requirements

GSTR-9 is verified under Rule 80 read with Rule 26 of the CGST Rules. Verification by Digital Signature Certificate is mandatory for companies, LLPs and certain other entities; verification by Electronic Verification Code is permitted for proprietorships, partnerships and HUFs. The verification is by the authorised signatory designated in REG-01 or any subsequent amendment. Once verified and filed, GSTR-9 cannot be revised — there is no facility for filing a revised annual return. The unrevisability is a structural feature that places a high premium on accuracy at first filing; any subsequent correction must be routed through DRC-03 (for liability) or through carry-forward into the next year's GSTR-9 Tables 10 to 14 (for spillover disclosures). The unrevisability also explains why the 30th November cut-off in Section 39(9) for prior-period GSTR-1 amendments is treated by practitioners as the operational deadline preceding the GSTR-9 filing window.

GSTR-9 turnover slabs and the mandatory filing thresholds

₹2 crore exemption under Rule 80(1A)

Rule 80(1A) of the CGST Rules provides that the Commissioner may, on the recommendations of the Council, by notification, exempt any class of registered persons from filing the annual return. The Government has used this power through successive notifications to exempt taxpayers with aggregate turnover up to ₹2 crore from mandatory GSTR-9 filing for specified financial years. The exemption is optional — taxpayers below ₹2 crore may still file GSTR-9 if they choose, and many do so to close the financial-year position cleanly for working-capital or compliance-rating purposes. The ₹2 crore threshold is computed on aggregate turnover per Section 2(6) — the PAN-level sum of taxable, exempt, export and inter-State supplies. The exemption does not affect Section 35 books-of-account retention obligations or Section 36 record-retention obligations; the underlying records must be maintained regardless of whether the annual return is filed.

₹2 crore to ₹5 crore band — GSTR-9 only

Taxpayers with aggregate turnover above ₹2 crore but not exceeding ₹5 crore are required to file GSTR-9 but are exempt from the GSTR-9C reconciliation statement obligation under Rule 80(3). For this band, the annual return alone constitutes the consolidating disclosure for the financial year; there is no separate audited-financials reconciliation requirement. The taxpayer's responsibility is to ensure the GSTR-9 disclosures reconcile internally — outward supplies in Tables 4 and 5 tying to GSTR-1, ITC in Table 6 tying to GSTR-3B, and Table 8 ITC reconciling against GSTR-2A. The band represents a deliberate policy choice articulated at the 45th GST Council meeting — that the audit-equivalent assurance value of the GSTR-9C reconciliation does not justify the compliance cost for mid-sized taxpayers, and that internal reconciliation within GSTR-9 itself is sufficient assurance for revenue.

Above ₹5 crore — GSTR-9 plus GSTR-9C self-certified

Taxpayers with aggregate turnover exceeding ₹5 crore in the financial year must file both GSTR-9 and the self-certified reconciliation statement in GSTR-9C under Section 44(2) read with Rule 80(3). The ₹5 crore threshold has been operative from FY 2020-21 onwards through Notification 30/2021-CT; the threshold previously stood at ₹2 crore for chartered-accountant-certified GSTR-9C under the pre-Finance Act 2021 regime. The current ₹5 crore threshold combined with self-certification represents two simultaneous policy moves discussed at the 43rd and 45th GST Council meetings — raising the threshold to reduce the number of taxpayers covered, and removing the third-party certification requirement to reduce per-return compliance cost. The combined effect is a substantially narrower and lighter assurance layer than the original 2017 design contemplated.

GSTR-9C self-certification and the reconciliation statement architecture

Comparison with OECD VAT reconciliation regimes

The GSTR-9C self-certification framework, viewed in the lens of the OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines, aligns with several OECD-member regimes that operate VAT-to-accounting reconciliation as a self-attested taxpayer obligation. Several EU member-State regimes operate a VAT-to-statutory-accounts reconciliation as part of the annual VAT return; the UK VAT system uses Making Tax Digital quarterly returns with annual accounting-tied reconciliation principles. The Indian GSTR-9C post-Finance Act 2021 sits closer to these self-attested regimes than to the pre-2021 chartered-accountant-certified design, reflecting the broader OECD Forum on Tax Administration shift toward co-operative compliance models. The architectural convergence is a deliberate alignment articulated in successive GST Council discussions on reducing compliance cost while preserving the integrity of the reconciliation layer through self-certification supported by risk-based administration verification.

Three-part structure of GSTR-9C

Form GSTR-9C is structured into three parts beyond the basic information part. Part A captures the turnover reconciliation — beginning with the turnover declared in the audited annual financial statement for the State or UT, adjusting for unbilled revenue, deemed supplies, ITC reversals affecting turnover, and other reconciling items, and arriving at the turnover as declared in the annual return GSTR-9. Part B captures the tax-paid reconciliation — beginning with the tax payable as per the audited books and reconciling to the tax declared as paid in GSTR-9 Table 9. Part C captures the ITC reconciliation — beginning with the ITC availed as per the audited books and reconciling to the ITC availed as declared in GSTR-9 Table 6. Each reconciling line includes a reasons column where variances must be explained. The three-part architecture follows the OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines approach of explicitly reconciling tax-system outputs against accounting-system outputs.

Self-certification mechanics post-Finance Act 2021

Under the substituted Section 44 effective 1 August 2021, GSTR-9C is self-certified by the registered person rather than certified by a chartered accountant or cost accountant. The self-certification is by the same authorised signatory who signs GSTR-9, verified by Digital Signature Certificate where mandatory or by Electronic Verification Code where permitted. The self-certification is a statement that the reconciliation has been prepared from the audited books for the period and that the disclosures are true and complete to the best of the signatory's knowledge. The certification language tracks the principles articulated by the OECD Forum on Tax Administration on co-operative compliance — placing primary assurance with the taxpayer subject to administration-side risk-based verification. The shift from third-party to self-certification has not diluted the underlying preparation discipline; practitioners report that internal preparation rigour has if anything increased because the assurance responsibility now sits directly with the registered person.

What Mudichur clients usually ask next: Closer to Mudichur, for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Table 8D variance

Table 8D variance is the difference between ITC as per GSTR-2A/2B for the financial year (Table 8A) and ITC availed in GSTR-3B for the same year (Table 8B), after adjusting for credit availed in later periods (Table 8C). A negative 8D figure indicates over-claimed credit; a positive figure indicates under-claimed credit or supplier-side delays.

DRC-03

DRC-03 is the challan-cum-intimation form prescribed under Rule 142(2) for voluntary payment of tax, interest or penalty by a taxpayer. It is the standard vehicle for settling short-payments identified during GSTR-9 reconciliation. For annual-return-driven liability the payment must be made in cash; the electronic credit ledger cannot be used per Circular 172/04/2022-GST.

Table 17 HSN summary

Table 17 of GSTR-9 is the outward-supply HSN summary that aggregates all sales for the year by HSN code, taxable value, and tax amount. The granularity required (four-digit or six-digit) depends on the preceding year's aggregate turnover under Notification 78/2020-CT. Mismatches between Table 17 and Table 4N outward turnover trigger portal-side validation errors that block filing.

PMT-03 refund

PMT-03 is the refund order form used to re-credit the electronic cash or credit ledger when a DRC-03 is later found to be excess or unwarranted. It is the route through which over-paid annual-return DRC-03 is reversed. The application is filed under Section 54 read with Rule 89, and the sanctioning officer is the proper officer for refunds.

Reconciliation statement

Reconciliation statement is the formal name of GSTR-9C, prescribed under Rule 80(3) for every registered person whose aggregate turnover during a financial year exceeds five crore rupees. It reconciles audited PAN-level financial statements with the GSTIN-level GSTR-9, explaining every difference between books of account and the annual return.

Optional table relaxation

Optional table relaxation refers to the year-by-year CBIC notifications (typically issued in mid-year) that permit taxpayers to leave certain GSTR-9 tables blank for that financial year. The relaxation does not waive the underlying transaction-reporting obligation; it only relaxes the granularity of disclosure within the form itself.

Aggregate turnover (annual)

Aggregate turnover for GSTR-9 threshold purposes is computed at PAN level across all GSTINs and across all categories of supply including exempt, zero-rated, and inter-State. It is the figure that determines whether GSTR-9 is required at all (above two crore rupees) and whether GSTR-9C is additionally required (above five crore rupees) for the financial year.

Late fee cap (Section 47)

Late fee cap under Section 47(2) for GSTR-9 is capped at 0.5% of turnover in State or Union Territory (0.25% CGST plus 0.25% SGST). The per-day rate has changed multiple times — currently it is turnover-slab linked under Notification 07/2023-CT, ranging from fifty rupees per day for small taxpayers to two hundred per day for larger ones.

GSTR-9 amendment

GSTR-9 amendment is not provided for in the statute. Once filed, the annual return cannot be revised through any portal route. Any error discovered post-filing must be addressed through DRC-03 (for short-payment) or refund claim under Section 54 (for excess payment), with a parallel working-paper trail in the audit file for future scrutiny.

ICEGATE reconciliation

ICEGATE reconciliation is the cross-check between import-side ITC claimed in GSTR-9 Table 6E and the Bill of Entry data available on the ICEGATE customs portal. Mismatches typically arise from BoEs filed late by customs brokers or from IGST on imports not flowing to the GST portal in time. The reconciliation is mandatory before signing off Table 8 for any importer.

Parking note (working paper)

Parking note is the practitioner's term for a written justification placed in the audit file against an unresolved residual variance in GSTR-9. Where a small variance cannot be eliminated through reconciliation, it is reported in Table 8E (lapsed credit) or as a reconciling item in GSTR-9C with a one-paragraph explanation. The note is what defends the position three years later during Section 65 audit.

Cross-charge reconciliation

Cross-charge reconciliation arises for multi-GSTIN entities where services rendered by one GSTIN to another within the same PAN must be reported as supply between distinct persons under Section 25(4). In GSTR-9C the cross-charge appears as a reconciling item between consolidated audited financials and GSTIN-level GSTR-9. The valuation follows Rule 28.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

Numerical examples showing tax + interest + penalty across common default scenarios.

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Job-work deemed-supply risk under Section 143 ring-fenced through ITC-04 retrospective filingNil (deemed supply averted)Nil₹10,000 (Section 125 negotiated minimum)₹10,000
Repeated late filing of GSTR-9 over three consecutive years for ₹7 crore turnover MSMENilNil₹84,000 cumulative late fee across three years post-slab cap₹84,000
Section 74 SCN proposed ₹3.4 crore demand on alleged ITC fraud disclosed via GSTR-9 mismatch₹3,40,00,000₹61,20,000 (18% × 12 months)₹3,40,00,000 (100% under Section 74(9))₹7,41,20,000 (worst-case adjudicated)
Registered person with aggregate turnover ₹3.8 crore filed GSTR-9 for FY 2021-22 with a delay of 180 daysNil (return only — no separate tax)Nil (interest accrues on tax liability, not on annual return)₹36,000 late fee under Section 47(2) at ₹200/day capped under Notification 07/2023-CT to 0.04% of turnover₹36,000
Registered person with turnover ₹12 crore did not file GSTR-9C for FY 2020-21 even after GSTR-9 was filed; departmental enquiry initiatedNil (reconciliation statement)Nil₹25,000 general penalty under Section 125₹25,000
Manufacturer with turnover ₹46 crore disclosed unpaid RCM of ₹38 lakh in GSTR-9 and paid through DRC-03 before SCN₹38,00,000₹4,56,000 (Section 50 at 18% × 8 months avg)Nil under Section 73(5) voluntary cushion₹42,56,000

How Mudichur businesses typically avoid these: Closer to Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric, which is why for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Mudichur

How the local trade mix shapes this — Across Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric.

Retail
Common issue: Multi-store retailers reporting aggregated B2C supplies in GSTR-1 Table 7 through the year find at annual return preparation that the rate-wise rollup in GSTR-9 Tables 4 and 5 does not align with the store-level POS reports relied on by the statutory auditor. The mismatch produces a GSTR-9C Part A variance that requires reasons populated in the disclosed column.
How we handle it: Maintain a store-to-Table-7 mapping sheet for each return period during the year and consolidate into an annual rollup before GSTR-9 preparation; align rate-wise outputs in the POS extract to the GSTR-9 Table 4 and Table 5 categories; carry the reconciliation as a working paper attachment under Section 36 to support any subsequent Section 65 audit.
Retail
Common issue: Apparel and footwear retailers traded through the rate restructuring at the 47th GST Council meeting in Chandigarh and the subsequent revisions face residual pre-revision stock that was sold at the new rate while ITC was availed at the old rate. The differential surfaces only in GSTR-9 Table 7 reversal disclosures and frequently produces a year-end DRC-03 payment that should have been spread monthly.
How we handle it: Identify pre-revision stock at the date of rate change and tag in the inventory system with the old-rate ITC quantum; compute the differential reversal monthly on the proportion of pre-revision stock sold; disclose the cumulative reversal in GSTR-9 Table 7 with reasons populated, supported by an inventory-roll working paper retained for the seven-year horizon.
Logistics
Common issue: Goods Transport Agencies that switch between the 5% RCM regime and the 12% forward-charge election under Notification 13/2017-CT(R) mid-year face a complex GSTR-9 Table 4 and Table 5 disclosure where supplies under different regimes must be separately classified. Many GTAs aggregate the disclosure and produce a GSTR-9C Part A variance that the auditor cannot reconcile to the books.
How we handle it: Maintain a regime-switch log capturing the date of Annexure V election and the consignments invoiced under each regime; populate GSTR-9 Tables 4 and 5 with regime-segregated values; document the switch chronology in the GSTR-9C Part A reasons column with the Annexure V copy retained as a Section 36 record.
Logistics
Common issue: Multi-modal logistics operators bundling road, rail and ocean legs frequently report the entire bundle under a single SAC code in GSTR-1 Table 12 HSN summary. The GSTR-9 Tables 17 and 18 HSN summary disclosure surfaces the under-classification, and where the bundle contains zero-rated ocean legs alongside taxable road legs, the place-of-supply tests in Section 12(8) and Section 13(9) IGST Act surface as separate issues.
How we handle it: Decompose the bundle into constituent legs at the invoicing stage and capture distinct SAC codes for each leg; populate GSTR-9 Tables 17 and 18 with leg-wise HSN summary aligned to the rate-wise outward supply in Tables 4 and 5; retain a leg-decomposition working paper into the GSTR-9C Part A reconciliation file.
Manufacturing
Common issue: Manufacturers issuing year-end price-revision debit notes for retrospective escalation under contract often book the upward revision in March of the closing year rather than tracing it to the original month of supply. Section 14 governs change in rate of tax but the time-of-supply principle still binds the entry; the misalignment shows up in GSTR-9 Table 4 as an unreconciled spike that the auditor flags in GSTR-9C Part A.
How we handle it: Distinguish debit notes issued under Section 34 from those reflecting price revision under contract; report retrospective escalations against the original month of supply through GSTR-1 amendments before the 30th November cut-off in Section 39(9); where the cut-off has lapsed, discharge through DRC-03 with Section 50 interest and disclose the workings in GSTR-9 Table 10 to 14.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

Real client situations (names changed); illustrative of the kind of work we do.

Fraud vs non-fraudFMCG

Section 73 vs Section 74 election in GSTR-9 disclosure

Issue: An FMCG distributor with turnover ₹74 crore identified a ₹1.6 crore Section 9(3) reverse-charge under-payment on freight services during GSTR-9 preparation. The risk was whether voluntary disclosure would attract Section 73 (non-fraud) or Section 74 (fraud) treatment.
Approach: Engaged with the distinction between Section 73 (non-fraud) and Section 74 (suppression with intent) framed in the explanation to Section 74. Documented the under-payment as arising from a freight-vendor classification error (mistake of fact, not suppression) and supported the voluntary disclosure with internal correspondence showing the discovery was internally driven. Paid through DRC-03 with Section 73(5) cushion and a Section 73(8) penalty waiver representation.
Outcome: Section 73 treatment accepted by the proper officer; Section 74 penalty risk neutralised; the distributor introduced a vendor-classification register tied to RCM tracking.
Supplier amendmentRetail

Re-credit on supplier amendment defended in Table 8

Issue: A retailer received supplier-side GSTR-1 amendments during FY 2021-22 relating to invoices originally raised in FY 2020-21. The amendments increased the ITC available by ₹38 lakh. The retailer reflected the additional ITC in GSTR-9 Table 8C of FY 2021-22, which the proper officer queried.
Approach: Reconciled the supplier amendments with the GSTR-2A/2B downstream effect, demonstrated that the additional ITC fell within the Section 16(4) window since the amendments were dated within the September-following-FY cut-off, and represented that Table 8C is precisely designed for such supplier-amendment timing scenarios. Cited the GSTR-9 instructions on Table 8 mechanics.
Outcome: Table 8C claim accepted; ITC of ₹38 lakh retained; the retailer introduced a supplier-amendment monthly alert tied to GSTR-2B downloads.
Pre-depositTrading

Section 107 appeal pre-deposit funded through electronic credit ledger

Issue: A wholesale trader sought to file an appeal under Section 107 against a Section 73 adjudication order arising from a GSTR-9 mismatch with demand of ₹62 lakh. The 10% pre-deposit of ₹6.2 lakh was sought to be funded through the electronic credit ledger.
Approach: Examined the CBIC Circular 172/04/2022-GST and the line of judicial decisions permitting pre-deposit through the electronic credit ledger for the disputed-tax component. Filed APL-01 with the pre-deposit debited from the credit ledger, supported by the CBIC Circular extract. Refrained from contesting the pre-deposit route at the appellate level to preserve focus on merits.
Outcome: Appeal admitted; pre-deposit route accepted by the appellate authority; substantive arguments on merits proceeded without procedural distraction; ITC route saved ₹6.2 lakh of cash outflow.
31st December deadlineRetail

31st December scramble — five files arrived in our office on 27th December

Issue: A textile-retail group with five GSTINs across Tamil Nadu approached us on 27th December 2023 after their existing consultant had a medical emergency. Each GSTIN had aggregate turnover between ₹6 crore and ₹11 crore, meaning all five required GSTR-9 and four required GSTR-9C. Across our last six annual-return seasons this is the worst late-pickup we have accepted and we did so only because the client had been with our office for income tax for nine years.
Approach: We deployed a four-person team — one partner, two seniors, one article — and triaged on a per-GSTIN basis. Day one was data extraction (12 months of GSTR-3B, GSTR-1, GSTR-2B, audited financials, books of account); day two was Table 6 and Table 8 reconstruction per GSTIN; day three was 9C reconciliation. We accepted that perfectionism was the enemy and used the 'parking note' technique — residual variances under ₹50,000 went into 8E with a paragraph of justification rather than being chased to zero.
Outcome: All five GSTR-9 and four GSTR-9C filed by midnight 31st December; total DRC-03 across the group was ₹3.2 lakh on identified short-payments; no late fee under Section 47(2); the client was put on a January-start internal SOP so this never recurs; office rule now declines new annual-return engagements after 15th December.

Why these Mudichur engagements look the way they do: Closer to Mudichur, the cluster of residential, retail, light manufacturing businesses that defines Mudichur's commercial fabric, which is why for the professional and salaried population of Mudichur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Client Reviews

What Mudichur Clients Say

Ramachandran K
GST Annual Returns
“FilingPro filed our GSTR-9 and self-certified GSTR-9C for FY 2022-23 by mid-December. Table 8 ITC tied to the rupee against GSTR-2A and our auditor signed off without a single qualification. The earlier consultant used to leave it to 30th December — we are never going back.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Sundararajan V
GST Annual Returns
“We had a Table 8D mismatch from FY 2018-19 that another consultant said would invite a Section 73 notice. FilingPro reconciled the supplier-side filings, identified ₹4.2 lakh as a timing difference and ₹38,000 as genuine short ITC. DRC-03 paid for the short portion and a clean GSTR-9C filed. No notice till date.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Kalaiselvi M
GST Annual Returns
“Our turnover crossed ₹5 crore in FY 2021-22 for the first time. FilingPro walked us through the GSTR-9C self-certification process, prepared Parts A B and C with full working papers and the management sign-off was signed in 30 minutes. Smooth handover compared to the earlier CA-attested regime.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Vijayalakshmi S
GST Annual Returns
“We have GSTINs in Tamil Nadu Karnataka and Telangana under one PAN. FilingPro prepared three GSTR-9s and three GSTR-9Cs with consistent turnover apportionment from the audited consolidated financials. Single point of contact and no version-control issues.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Kumaresh T
GST Annual Returns
“Section 47(2) late fee of ₹200/day on GSTR-9 was a real risk for us — we had filed late in FY 2019-20 and paid almost ₹37,000. With FilingPro since FY 2020-21 we have filed every GSTR-9 by 15th December. Zero late fees in three consecutive years.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Saravanan E
GST Annual Returns
“Got a Section 65 audit notice for FY 2020-21. FilingPro's GSTR-9C working papers — particularly the Part A reasons column tying audited turnover to GSTR-9 — closed the audit with a nil objection memo. Worth several times what we paid for the annual return work.”
1 month agoVerified Client
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Common Questions

GSTR-9 / 9C FAQ — Mudichur

Common questions from Mudichur clients. Call 9566-068-468 for specific queries.

GSTR-9C is a self-certified reconciliation statement between the GSTR-9 figures and the audited financial statements. From FY 2020-21 onwards (Notification 30/2021-Central Tax), GSTR-9C is mandatory for registered taxpayers whose aggregate turnover in the financial year exceeds ₹5 crore and is self-certified by the taxpayer rather than CA-attested.
Yes. Deemed exports under Section 147 (notified categories such as supplies to EOU, advance authorisation holders, EPCG holders) are shown separately in Table 5 (outward supplies without tax) and corresponding refund claimed shown in Table 15. Where the recipient claims the refund, the supplier still discloses the deemed export turnover for reconciliation.
Absolutely. Most Mudichur clients complete the entire GSTR-9 / 9C process remotely — we collect documents on WhatsApp or email, share drafts for your approval, and file on your behalf. A visit to our Maduravoyal office is optional, never required.
From FY 2017-18 the CBIC made several disclosures optional to ease compliance. Tables 4 and 5 (outward supplies) remain mandatory. Tables 6A, 6B, 6H, 8A, 8B, 8C and 8D are mandatory. Tables 12 and 13 (reversed ITC and ITC of last year), Table 14 (RCM ITC), Tables 15 and 16 (demands and refunds, deemed exports) and Table 17 HSN summary of inward supplies have been made optional through successive annual notifications.
The substantive obligation arises under Section 44 of the CGST Act, which directs every registered person other than specified exclusions — Input Service Distributor, casual taxable person, non-resident taxable person and tax deductor or collector — to furnish an annual return for every financial year. The procedural framework, including form, manner and due date, is laid down in Rule 80 of the CGST Rules. Sub-rule (1) deals with Form GSTR-9 and sub-rule (2) governs Form GSTR-9C. The due date is on or before the thirty-first day of December following the financial year, subject to extensions by CBIC notification.
Our work is led by Ravivarman R, a tax practitioner with 15+ years and 500+ engagements, backed by specialists in compliance and GST. We base every GST Annual Returns recommendation on current law and your actual facts — not generic templates — and we are happy to explain the reasoning.
ITC reversed during the financial year — under Rule 42, Rule 43, Section 17(5) blocked credits, 180-day non-payment to supplier and other reasons — is consolidated in Table 7 of GSTR-9 with sub-rows for each reversal head. ITC reclaimed after reversal is reported in Table 6H. Accuracy of Table 7 is critical to defend the net ITC position.
No. GSTR-9 itself does not have a tax payment facility for new liability. If reconciliation reveals a short payment of tax, the additional liability must be paid through Form DRC-03 voluntary payment, with interest under Section 50. Reference to the DRC-03 ARN is then disclosed in GSTR-9 Table 9 as tax paid during the year.
Call or WhatsApp 9566-068-468 with a one-line description of your requirement. We confirm exactly which documents your Mudichur case needs, share a fixed quote upfront, and start once you approve. The first discussion is free.
Section 47(2) of the CGST Act levies a late fee of ₹200 per day (₹100 CGST + ₹100 SGST) capped at 0.50% of the taxpayer's turnover in the State or Union Territory for delayed GSTR-9. From FY 2022-23 the fee is graded — ₹50/day for turnover up to ₹5 crore, ₹100/day up to ₹20 crore and ₹200/day above ₹20 crore — capped at 0.04% to 0.50% of state turnover (Notification 07/2023-Central Tax).
There is currently no separate Form GSTR-9D. A proposal to introduce GSTR-9D for taxpayers above ₹500 crore turnover was floated but not implemented; such taxpayers continue to file GSTR-9 and self-certified GSTR-9C under the same framework as taxpayers above ₹5 crore. Any future amendment will be effective only by CBIC notification.
Yes. Every GSTR-9 / 9C engagement is handled with strict confidentiality — your documents and data are used only for your work and never shared. Mudichur clients deal with the same trusted team throughout, so your information stays in one place.
GSTR-9 itself does not amend earlier returns — it is a consolidated annual statement. However, supplies of the previous financial year declared in current year returns (between April and the cut-off date for amendments under Section 39(9)) are captured in Table 10, 11, 12 and 13 of GSTR-9 for transparency. Any additional liability identified through GSTR-9 must be paid via DRC-03.
Section 35 read with Rule 56 requires retention of all records for 6 years from the GSTR-9 due date. For GSTR-9C, the working papers reconciling audited financials with GSTR-9 — including journal-entry-level mappings of each Part A line — must be retained. These are the first documents demanded in any Section 65 departmental audit or Section 66 special audit.
Advances on which tax was paid in the financial year but invoice was not issued by 31 March are shown in Table 4F of GSTR-9. Advances received in earlier years against which invoices were issued in the current year are adjusted in Table 4F itself by way of net presentation. From FY 2019-20 advance treatment for goods has been removed; only services advances under Section 13(2) remain reportable.
GSTR-9 mismatches — particularly Table 8D (excess ITC in GSTR-2A over GSTR-3B) and Table 9 (tax payable vs paid) — are the principal triggers for Section 73 short-payment notices. The limitation period under Section 73(10) is 3 years from the GSTR-9 due date. Accurate reconciliation before filing GSTR-9 is the single best defence against future Section 73 demands.

From Grand Southern Trunk Road, Perungalathur Maempalam, Perungalathur - Kolapakkam Road, Cheran Street and Kamaraj High Road through to Krishna Road, Muthuvelar Street, Nehru Main Road and Sarojini Street, our team covers GSTR-9 / 9C for businesses right across Mudichur and its main commercial roads.

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