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Trusted GSTR-9 / 9C Consultants · Nerkundram Pathai (PIN 600107)

Nerkundram Pathai GST Annual Returns — Chennai North

the business activity radiating outward from Nerkundram Pathai Junction and nearby commercial pockets — handled by a qualified, in-house team

Nerkundram Pathai residential and retail units around Nerkundram Pathai Junction — transparent scope, no surprises, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What is GSTR-9C and who must file it in Nerkundram Pathai, 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 Nerkundram Pathai — 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
Most Popular ⭐
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 Nerkundram Pathai Clients Choose FilingPro

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

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 Nerkundram Pathai client never faces a last-minute drafting exercise against the cheapest defensive deadline within the demand cycle.

Section 107 Pre-Deposit And Cash Flow Modelled

If any adverse order issues following annual-return scrutiny, the statutory pre-deposit prescribed at Section 107(6) — ten per cent subject to the per-head cap — is modelled in advance of drafting the appeal memorandum. Cash-flow planning thus becomes part of the appellate strategy rather than a last-minute scramble.

Key Benefits

What Nerkundram Pathai Clients Get

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

Section 65 Audit Defence Built-In
Working papers tying every Part A line of GSTR-9C to journal-entry-level audited books are retained for the full 6-year Rule 56 window — first-line defence in any departmental audit or special audit under Section 66.
Section 17(5) Blocked Credits Reversed
Blocked credits under Section 17(5) — motor vehicles for personal use, food and beverages, club memberships, works contract — screened across the year and reversed in Table 7E. No exposure carried into the next year.
180-Day Reversals Tracked
ITC reversed under the second proviso to Section 16(2) for non-payment to suppliers within 180 days, and reclaims after subsequent payment, are tracked across the year with supplier ledger evidence.
Optional vs Mandatory Tables Optimised
Tables made optional under successive CBIC notifications — particularly Tables 12, 13, 14, 15, 16 and 18 — are populated only where material to Nerkundram Pathai clients' position. Compliance burden minimised without sacrificing audit defence.
Section 73 Year-Closure Certainty
Once GSTR-9 is filed clean with Table 8 reconciled and DRC-03 closures done, the 3-year Section 73(10) clock starts. Nerkundram Pathai clients gain certainty that the year is closed against future excess-ITC and short-payment demands.
Reconciliation of monthly outward supplies against the consolidated
Reconciliation of monthly outward supplies against the consolidated Tables 4 and 5, with credit and debit notes adjusted in accordance with sub-section (2) of Section 34, eliminating mismatches that ordinarily attract scrutiny under Section 61.
Comparison

GSTR-9 vs GSTR-9C

Why this matters here — In Nerkundram Pathai, the cluster of residential, retail, small trade businesses that defines Nerkundram Pathai's commercial fabric; served by short connections to Nerkundram and Maduravoyal and onward to central Chennai.

AspectGSTR-9GSTR-9C
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
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
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 — In Nerkundram Pathai, the business activity radiating outward from Nerkundram Pathai Junction 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 Nerkundram Pathai: On the ground in Nerkundram Pathai, for the professional and salaried population of Nerkundram Pathai navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

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)
DRC-01Show-Cause Notice for Demand

Formal show-cause notice issued by the proper officer under Section 73(1) or Section 74(1) where short payment is alleged after annual-return scrutiny; carries the demand quantification and grounds

At least three months before the limitation date for the order Jurisdictional Range or Audit Officer
DRC-01APre-Show-Cause Intimation

Pre-show-cause intimation by the proper officer giving the registered person an opportunity to discharge tax with interest under Section 73(5) or Section 74(5) before formal DRC-01 issues; the favoured analytics-triggered first communication on annual-return mismatches

Before issuance of formal DRC-01 Jurisdictional Range or Audit Officer
GSTR-10Final Return on Cancellation

Final return required to be furnished within three months of the effective date of cancellation of registration or the date of the cancellation order, whichever is later; captures stock-in-hand and tax payable thereon

Within three months of cancellation effective date or order date Common Portal (registered person)
GST APL-01Appeal to Appellate Authority

Memorandum of first-tier appeal under Section 107 against an adverse order arising from annual-return scrutiny; filed with statement of facts, grounds of appeal and pre-deposit of ten per cent of disputed tax subject to the statutory ceiling

Within three months of communication of the order, extendable by one further month Common Portal (registered person)

GST Annual Returns in Nerkundram Pathai, Chennai 600107

Statutory correspondence for Nerkundram Pathai businesses routes through the Anna Nagar Division, so we align every GST Annual Returns engagement to that jurisdiction from the start. Every Nerkundram Pathai engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600107, the Anna Nagar Division, and the coordinates 13.0700, 80.1858 that anchor the locality. Nerkundram Pathai is a busy commercial road through Nerkundram with neighbourhood retail strips coaching centres and small-trade establishments serving the surrounding residential pockets. Businesses registered in Nerkundram Pathai share the Chennai North jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Anna Nagar Division each time.

Document pickup near Nerkundram Bus Stop is a same-hour errand for our Nerkundram Pathai engagements rather than the half-day a typical Chennai client expects. Nerkundram Pathai sustains a medium flow of commerce for a dense residential corridor with neighbourhood retail locality, and that flow is the raw material for the GSTR-9 / 9C files we close here. The businesses clustered around Nerkundram Bus Stop in Nerkundram Pathai drive the bulk of the GST Annual Returns workload we see each cycle. The dense residential corridor with neighbourhood retail mix of Nerkundram Pathai shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of retail activity and the commercial pulse around Nerkundram Bus Stop.

The small trade character of Nerkundram Pathai commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a GST Annual Returns review needs. GST Annual Returns for small trade businesses in Nerkundram Pathai hinges on getting the sector's recurring entries right the first time. We have closed enough GST Annual Returns files for small trade firms near Nerkundram Pathai to know where the department usually probes. The small trade firms we serve in Nerkundram Pathai value a GSTR-9 / 9C partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm.

The qualified-review step on every Nerkundram Pathai GSTR-9 / 9C file is where errors get caught before they reach the portal. A Nerkundram Pathai client sees the same GSTR-9 / 9C cadence each cycle: intake, reconciliation, review, filing, acknowledgement. Our Nerkundram Pathai GSTR-9 / 9C process is built to be predictable, documented, and on time, cycle after cycle. We keep a repeatable GSTR-9 / 9C checklist for Nerkundram Pathai so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed.

We treat Nerkundram Pathai and Maduravoyal as one catchment for GST Annual Returns, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent. Businesses straddling Nerkundram Pathai and Maduravoyal get a single GSTR-9 / 9C point of contact rather than two. Serving Nerkundram Pathai and Maduravoyal from one team keeps GST Annual Returns turnaround identical across the cluster. Group companies spread across Nerkundram Pathai and Maduravoyal consolidate their GSTR-9 / 9C under one engagement with us.

The longer we serve Nerkundram Pathai, the more precisely we predict where a GSTR-9 / 9C file needs attention. Sector signals in Nerkundram Pathai — seasonal retail swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule GSTR-9 / 9C work. Each engagement in Nerkundram Pathai adds to a record of what the Chennai North jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next GSTR-9 / 9C file. Recurring gaps in Nerkundram Pathai retail records are the first thing our GST Annual Returns review closes out.

Shifting principal place of business to Nerkundram Pathai means updating jurisdiction to the Chennai North, and we manage the paperwork end-to-end. We onboard new Nerkundram Pathai entities onto a GST Annual Returns cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle. New small trade ventures in Nerkundram Pathai lean on us to stand up GST Annual Returns correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice. A startup setting up near Nerkundram Pathai Junction in Nerkundram Pathai gets a GSTR-9 / 9C foundation built for the Anna Nagar Division from day one.

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Expert Guide

GST Annual Returns in Nerkundram Pathai — Complete Guide

The OECD Forum on Tax Administration distinguishes a transactional VAT return from a periodic reconciliation instrument by reference to information density and cross-validation function. The Indian GSTR-9 belongs to the latter family — its informational role is to triangulate periodic returns, books of account and counter-party data into a single audit-ready record. The Nerkundram Pathai registered person's preparation discipline therefore aligns with the international benchmark of an annual instrument that closes informational loops rather than originates fresh assessments.

GST Annual Returns Filing in Nerkundram Pathai, Chennai

GSTR-9 and self-certified GSTR-9C for Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai — Annual Reconciliation Expert

A dedicated GSTR-9 consultant in Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai

For Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai — 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 Nerkundram Pathai businesses above ₹5 crore.

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Qualified professionals handle your GSTR-9 / 9C in Nerkundram Pathai. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹3,500/annual. Free consultation.
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Key Facts — GST Annual Returns in Nerkundram Pathai
GSTR-9 filed before 31st December every year — Section 47(2) ₹200/day late fee never applies to Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai 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 Nerkundram Pathai
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.
Can ITC reversal under Rule 42 be reflected in GSTR-9?

Yes. Table 7 of GSTR-9 captures ITC reversals under Rules 37, 39, 42 and 43. The annual Rule 42 true-up is commonly executed at GSTR-9 stage when monthly apportionment was provisional.

Is GSTR-9 required for an SEZ unit?

Yes. SEZ units holding regular GST registration must file GSTR-9 like any other registered person. Their outward supplies are typically zero-rated under Section 16 of the IGST Act read with the LUT route.

How is GSTR-9 different from income tax return?

GSTR-9 consolidates indirect-tax (GST) transactions under the CGST/SGST/IGST Acts. The income tax return covers direct-tax liability under the Income Tax Act 1961. The two are filed with different authorities under separate regimes.

Can I file GSTR-9 in instalments?

No. GSTR-9 is filed as a single annual return for each GSTIN. The portal does not permit instalment filing. Tax differential disclosed therein, however, may be paid through DRC-03 in instalments where the proper officer agrees.

Does GSTR-9C require auditor's qualification?

Post the Finance Act 2021 amendment, GSTR-9C is self-certified and does not require auditor qualification. However, internal qualifications or reservations should be noted in Table 16 to preserve a defensible audit trail.

What is Table 9 of GSTR-9?

Table 9 captures the tax payable and tax paid breakdown by IGST, CGST, SGST and cess. It reconciles the cumulative GSTR-3B cash and credit ledger debits with the annual liability determined in Tables 4 to 8.

What Nerkundram Pathai clients want to know before signing: On the ground in Nerkundram Pathai, around the Nerkundram Pathai Junction catchment of Nerkundram Pathai.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Annual Returns

Reading this guide locally — In Nerkundram Pathai, around the Nerkundram Pathai Junction catchment of Nerkundram Pathai.

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.

Common rejection reasons and the path to acceptance

Books-of-account inconsistency producing GSTR-9C reasons-column problems

GSTR-9C Part A, Part B and Part C reconciliation statements include reasons-column entries where any variance between audited books and GSTR-9 disclosures requires a written explanation. Common reasons-column issues include unsupported variance descriptions, variances that do not aggregate to the reconciliation totals, and reasons that reference standing policies not actually documented. The portal does not technically reject reasons-column entries — GSTR-9C accepts free-text — but a subsequent Section 65 audit or Section 73 scrutiny treats undocumented reasons-column entries as evidence of weak compliance. The discipline is to ensure every reasons-column entry references a specific working paper, policy document or notification that supports the variance treatment. The discipline protects against subsequent demand exposure where the reasons-column has been populated but the underlying support is absent.

DSC and EVC verification failures

Verification failures at GSTR-9 submission are a recurring operational problem. Companies and LLPs must verify with DSC under Rule 26 — DSC expiry, browser compatibility issues with the DSC token driver, and authorised-signatory designation mismatches in REG-01 produce verification failures. Proprietorships, partnerships and HUFs verifying with EVC face OTP delivery failures to the registered mobile number, mismatched mobile number in REG-01 versus current contact, and Aadhaar-OTP authentication failures where the authorised signatory's Aadhaar is not linked to the PAN. Each verification failure must be resolved before resubmission. The portal log of verification attempts is itself a record retained under Section 36; multiple failed attempts followed by a successful filing produce a portal-side audit trail that may surface in any subsequent administrative review.

Late-fee non-payment blocking submission

Where GSTR-9 is filed after the 31st December due date, the late fee under Section 47(2) is computed automatically by the portal based on the date of filing and the State turnover. The computed fee must be paid through the electronic cash ledger before submission — the portal does not permit GSTR-9 filing with unpaid late fee. The cash ledger top-up is through PMT-06 challan in the relevant head (CGST, SGST). For larger taxpayers with material delays, the late fee can run to several lakhs and the cash-ledger funding becomes a working-capital event that must be planned alongside the substantive return preparation. The combined discipline of preparing the return in time, computing the late fee correctly and funding the cash ledger is the operational reality of late-filed annual returns; practitioners advise clients to plan funding well ahead of the actual submission date.

Post-filing rectification options and the closure of the financial year

Non-revisability of GSTR-9 and the workaround mechanisms

Once filed and verified, GSTR-9 cannot be revised — there is no facility within the CGST Rules or the GSTN portal for filing a revised annual return for a financial year. The non-revisability is a structural feature placing a high premium on accuracy at first filing. Where a material error is identified after filing, the available workarounds are: DRC-03 voluntary payment under Rule 142(2) for any short-payment liability identified, with the ARN serving as the closure record; carry-forward of corrected disclosures into the next financial year's GSTR-9 Tables 10 to 14 spillover columns; and, where the error is in favour of the taxpayer (excess tax paid), Section 54 refund application within the two-year limitation from the relevant date. The non-revisability framework reflects the architectural intent that the annual return crystallises the year for Section 73 limitation purposes.

DRC-03 post-filing voluntary closure

Where a short-payment is identified after GSTR-9 has been filed, the operative closure mechanism is DRC-03 voluntary payment under Rule 142(2) with reference to Section 73(5). The DRC-03 captures the period, head-wise tax, Section 50 interest and any Section 73(6) penalty if applicable. The filing produces an ARN that becomes the closure record. The DRC-03 closure made within the Section 73 limitation window provides statutory immunity from further penalty under Section 73(6) — once the voluntary payment is made and disclosed, the proper officer's subsequent demand notice on the same matter is precluded. The DRC-03 mechanism therefore serves as both a remedial pathway and a strategic limitation-management tool for taxpayers who identify post-filing errors. The mechanism is consistent with the co-operative compliance design articulated in the OECD Forum on Tax Administration's frameworks.

Section 54 refund for excess tax paid

Where the post-filing identification reveals that excess tax has been paid during the year, Section 54 of the CGST Act provides for refund subject to the two-year limitation from the relevant date specified in the Explanation to Section 54. The refund application is filed in Form RFD-01 with the supporting documentation establishing the excess payment. The relevant date for excess tax paid by mistake is generally the date of payment of the tax. Where the excess payment is identified at GSTR-9 preparation but only paid in the relevant month of the financial year, the limitation runs from the original payment date. The refund processing follows Rule 89 with the proper officer's verification and the Section 54(10) interest if the refund is delayed beyond sixty days. The refund pathway is the mirror image of the DRC-03 pathway — one for under-payment, one for over-payment — and together they complete the financial-year closure architecture.

Section 44 framework and the statutory architecture of annual return

Comparison with Indian income-tax annual filing architecture

The GST annual return architecture differs structurally from the Income-tax Act annual return regime. The income-tax return is the primary return for the year and is the operative assessment document under Section 139 of the Income-tax Act 1961 read with Section 143. The GST annual return is by design a reconciliation layer on top of operative monthly returns — the GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for each month already constitute the operative tax-collection events under Section 39. The income-tax return is filed under self-assessment subject to scrutiny under Section 143(3); the GST annual return is filed under self-certification (post-Finance Act 2021) without further assessment unless Section 73 or Section 74 is invoked. The architectural distinction reflects the destination-based transactional nature of GST as articulated in the OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines, contrasted with the residence-based annual-income-aggregation nature of direct tax under the Income-tax Act.

Legislative history and the original Section 44 design

Section 44 of the CGST Act as enacted in 2017 provided for an annual return and a Section 44(2) reconciliation statement certified by a chartered accountant or cost accountant for taxpayers above the prescribed turnover threshold. The Finance Act 2021 substituted Section 44 with effect from 1 August 2021, removing the mandatory chartered-accountant or cost-accountant certification and replacing it with self-certification by the registered person. The substitution reflected a policy shift discussed at the 43rd and 45th GST Council meetings, where the certification cost burden on mid-sized taxpayers was identified as disproportionate to the audit value added. The current Section 44 retains the annual return obligation but reframes the reconciliation statement as a self-attested disclosure, shifting the assurance responsibility entirely onto the registered person and their internal compliance team. The architectural shift aligns with the OECD Forum on Tax Administration's articulation of co-operative compliance — placing primary assurance with the taxpayer subject to risk-based verification by the administration.

Rule 80 operationalisation

Rule 80 of the CGST Rules operationalises Section 44. Rule 80(1) prescribes Form GSTR-9 for the annual return and the thirty-first December deadline. Rule 80(1A) carves out an exemption for taxpayers with aggregate turnover up to ₹2 crore who may opt to file or not file GSTR-9 for specified financial years through successive Government notifications. Rule 80(3) prescribes the ₹5 crore aggregate turnover threshold for GSTR-9C self-certified reconciliation statement filing. Rule 80(2) addresses composition taxpayers through Form GSTR-9A (with successive notifications continuing the waiver). The rule structure reflects a calibrated approach — small taxpayers below ₹2 crore receive a notification-based exemption from GSTR-9, mid-sized taxpayers between ₹2 crore and ₹5 crore file GSTR-9 only, and large taxpayers above ₹5 crore file both GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C. The calibration follows the OECD principle of proportionate compliance cost relative to revenue significance.

What Nerkundram Pathai clients usually ask next: On the ground in Nerkundram Pathai, for the professional and salaried population of Nerkundram Pathai navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Table 13 ITC of previous year claimed in current year

Table 13 of GSTR-9 captures input tax credit relating to the previous financial year that was claimed in the current year's GSTR-3B, within the time-limit at sub-section (4) of Section 16 — being the thirtieth day of November following the financial year. Reporting is optional from financial year 2017-18.

Table 14 RCM ITC

Table 14 of GSTR-9 separately discloses input tax credit availed on inward supplies attracting reverse charge during the year. The disclosure has been retained as optional from FY 2017-18 onwards via the annual exemption notifications successively issued, though a great many reconciled annual returns still populate Table 14 as a defensive measure alongside Tables 6C and 6D.

Table 15 refunds and demands

Table 15 of GSTR-9 captures refunds claimed, sanctioned, rejected and pending during the year along with demand orders issued, taxes paid against demand and demand still pending. The figures must tie to RFD-06 refund sanction orders and DRC-07 demand orders available on the common portal.

Table 16 supplies received from composition deemed export and SEZ approval basis

Table 16 of GSTR-9 captures three categories of inward transactions — supplies received from composition taxpayers, deemed exports received and goods sent on approval basis but not returned inside the prescribed period. Reporting is retained as optional from FY 2017-18 onwards via annual notifications successively issued, though most reconciled returns continue to populate the line for completeness.

Table 17 HSN summary of outward supplies

Table 17 of GSTR-9 captures the HSN-wise summary of outward supplies during the financial year. Reporting granularity mirrors GSTR-1 — four-digit HSN where aggregate turnover during the preceding year was up to five crore rupees, and six-digit HSN where it exceeded five crore. Notification 78/2020-Central Tax governs.

Table 18 HSN summary of inward supplies

Table 18 of GSTR-9 captures the HSN-wise summary of inward supplies during the year. Reporting is kept optional from FY 2017-18 onwards via annual exemption notifications successively issued, though reconciled returns frequently populate the table as a defensive measure during any subsequent Section 65 audit.

Table 19 late fee payable and paid

Table 19 of GSTR-9 captures the late fee payable under Section 47(2) for delayed filing of the annual return and the late fee actually paid through PMT-06. Where the return is filed before the statutory due date the late fee is nil; the table operates only on delayed filings under the graded rate structure of Notification 07/2023-Central Tax.

GSTR-9C Part A turnover reconciliation

Part A of GSTR-9C walks audited annual financial-statement turnover at line A through eleven adjusting heads — unbilled revenue, deemed supplies, year-end credit notes, trade discounts, foreign-exchange gains or losses, deemed exports and others — to arrive at GSTR-9 turnover sitting at line P. Each adjusting head is supported by a working paper plus a reasons note keyed to the underlying journal entries.

GSTR-9C Part B tax-payable reconciliation

Part B of GSTR-9C reconciles tax payable as per the books with tax paid as declared in the annual return. The structure runs across CGST, SGST, IGST and cess. Variances are explained against each line and any additional liability is discharged through Form DRC-03 with interest under Section 50.

GSTR-9C Part C ITC reconciliation

Part C of GSTR-9C reconciles input tax credit availed as per the books with input tax credit availed in the annual return at Tables 6 and 8. Variances are explained against each line and any excess credit is reversed in the next GSTR-3B with interest at Section 50(3).

Reasons sheet

Reasons sheet is the contemporaneous working paper that records, against each reconciling line in GSTR-9C Part A, Part B and Part C and against each Table 8 variance line in GSTR-9, the explanation, the supporting documents and the reference to underlying ledger entries. The sheet is the foundation of any subsequent audit defence under Section 65.

Unbilled revenue

Unbilled revenue is income recognised in the audited financial statements on the accrual basis for which an invoice has not been issued by the close of the financial year. It is a reconciling addition in GSTR-9C Part A line B; the underlying GST liability is settled in the period in which time of supply at Section 12 or Section 13 is triggered.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
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
Trader with turnover ₹9 crore failed to file GSTR-9 for FY 2020-21; assessment under Section 62 best judgement₹1,42,000 (best-judgement uplift over disclosed liability)₹25,560 (18% × 12 months avg)₹14,200 (10% under Section 73(9))₹1,81,760
Pharma distributor disclosed ₹1.6 crore RCM under-payment in GSTR-9 with allegation of suppression₹1,60,00,000₹19,20,000 (18% × 8 months)₹40,00,000 (25% under Section 74(8) if voluntary; up to 100% if confirmed by adjudication)₹2,19,20,000 (voluntary) or ₹3,79,20,000 (adjudicated)
E-commerce seller turnover ₹4.2 crore omitted ₹28 lakh of marketplace sales from GSTR-9; non-fraud rectification through DRC-03₹5,04,000₹60,480 (18% × 8 months)Nil under Section 73(5)₹5,64,480
Hotel chain turnover ₹28 crore late-filed GSTR-9 by 92 days for FY 2021-22NilNil₹18,400 late fee under Section 47(2) capped at 0.04% of turnover₹18,400

How Nerkundram Pathai businesses typically avoid these: On the ground in Nerkundram Pathai, the cluster of residential, retail, small trade businesses that defines Nerkundram Pathai's commercial fabric; for the professional and salaried population of Nerkundram Pathai navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Nerkundram Pathai

How the local trade mix shapes this — In Nerkundram Pathai, the cluster of residential, retail, small trade businesses that defines Nerkundram Pathai'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.
Coaching
Common issue: Coaching centres collecting advance fees for multi-month programmes typically discharge tax at the time of advance receipt under Section 13(2)(a) without distinguishing continuous-supply structures available under Section 31(5). The GSTR-9 Table 4 outward supply for the year reflects the upfront pattern, producing a GSTR-9C Part A timing gap against the books-of-account fee income recognised on accrual.
How we handle it: Structure fee schedules as continuous supply of services under Section 31(5) with milestone-based invoicing tied to course progression; recognise time of supply at each milestone rather than at advance receipt; disclose the structural choice in GSTR-9C Part A reasons with the underlying contract-classification working paper retained under Section 36.
Restaurants
Common issue: Cloud-kitchen operators using multiple aggregator platforms face Section 9(5) liability where the platform discharges tax under the deemed-supplier framework. Many operators continue to report the gross outward supply in monthly GSTR-1, producing a double-disclosure that surfaces only at GSTR-9 Table 4 preparation against aggregator settlement reports.
How we handle it: Reconcile aggregator settlement reports monthly against the GSTR-1 outward supply register to identify Section 9(5) supplies; exclude such supplies from GSTR-9 Table 4 and disclose the value in Table 5 under no-supply head with reasons populated; retain platform statements as Section 36 records cross-referenced into the GSTR-9C Part A turnover reconciliation working file.
Education
Common issue: Educational institutions providing exempt core education alongside taxable ancillary services frequently treat the entire fee stream as exempt under Notification 12/2017-CT(R) Entry 66. The GSTR-9 Table 5 exempt disclosure does not bifurcate the ancillary stream, and the GSTR-9C Part A reconciliation against audited fee income reveals the inflated exempt classification.
How we handle it: Map each fee head against Entry 66 sub-clauses at the start of the academic year; bifurcate exempt and taxable receipts in the fee accounting system; populate GSTR-9 Tables 5A through 5D with the bifurcated values and disclose the methodology in the GSTR-9C Part A reasons column with a fee-mapping matrix retained as a working paper.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

HSN summary completenessFMCG

HSN summary deficiency in Table 17 cured pre-adjudication

Issue: A consumer-goods distributor was issued an ASMT-10 scrutiny notice for FY 2020-21 alleging that the HSN-wise outward summary in GSTR-9 Table 17 omitted four HSN codes accounting for ₹6.2 crore turnover. The proper officer proposed to treat the omission as concealment under Section 74.
Approach: Reconstructed the HSN classification from the SAP outward-invoice register, prepared a corrected Annexure showing the four omitted HSNs and the corresponding outward turnover with rate-wise tax already paid through GSTR-3B. Argued that an HSN summary deficiency in a non-tax-computation table cannot trigger Section 74 in the absence of suppression of taxable supply, citing the Suncraft and Bharti Airtel reasoning on procedural-versus-substantive defects.
Outcome: ASMT-10 dropped on filing the corrected HSN annexure; no DRC-01 issued; the registered person voluntarily corrected the HSN summary in the subsequent year's GSTR-9 with cross-reference.
TCS credit reconciliationE-commerce

E-commerce seller TCS reconciliation in Table 6F

Issue: An online seller on multiple marketplaces with turnover ₹9.4 crore was issued a notice for FY 2020-21 alleging Table 6F of GSTR-9 was overstated on TCS credit by ₹2.1 lakh as against the operator's TCS-08 filings.
Approach: Reconciled the TCS portal entries with each operator's GSTR-8 returns, identified two operators who had filed corrected GSTR-8 in the following year reducing the TCS credit, and demonstrated that the original Table 6F claim was correct as on the GSTR-9 filing date. Argued that downstream operator amendments cannot retrospectively invalidate the registered person's Table 6F claim once accepted in the TCS ledger.
Outcome: Demand dropped; the registered person agreed to reflect the downstream operator amendment in the subsequent year's GSTR-9 as an adjustment with a foot-note; no penalty levied.
Credit note adjustmentRetail

Retailer credit-note timing reflected in Table 4I

Issue: A consumer-electronics retailer with turnover ₹31 crore had issued ₹2.4 crore of credit notes in the books that were not reflected in GSTR-1 within the September-following-FY window. The GSTR-9 Table 4I showed the unbooked credit notes, raising a query.
Approach: Examined Section 34(2) and Notification 78/2020-CT on the credit-note time bar, conceded that the GST-side adjustment was lost but established that the commercial credit notes remained valid for the books. Filed a clarifying letter that the GSTR-9 Table 4I unreconciled portion did not represent suppression but a statutory time-bar leakage, and that the tax already paid in the original supply month was not refundable through GSTR-9.
Outcome: No demand raised; the unreconciled credit-note value was carried forward as a permanent reconciling item in the GSTR-9C, with a foot-note reference; the retailer redesigned its returns process to issue credit notes within the statutory window.
Books of accountTrading

Section 35(6) audit-trail reconciled with GSTR-9C

Issue: A trader with turnover ₹62 crore was subject to a Section 65 audit covering FY 2020-21. The audit team raised an issue that the GSTR-9C reconciliation did not tie up with the books maintained under Section 35 read with Rule 56, particularly the stock register.
Approach: Reconstructed the Rule 56 register from the SAP material-management module, prepared a stock-flow worksheet reconciling opening stock, purchases, sales and closing stock at HSN-wise level, and demonstrated that the GSTR-9C unreconciled-turnover figure of ₹84 lakh related to stock-write-off entries treated as outward supply in books but excluded from GST under Section 17(5)(h) ITC reversal already done.
Outcome: Section 65 audit closed with a nil-demand observation; the trader's Rule 56 register format was upgraded to capture write-off bifurcation; the workpaper was retained for future audits.

Why these Nerkundram Pathai engagements look the way they do: On the ground in Nerkundram Pathai, the cluster of residential, retail, small trade businesses that defines Nerkundram Pathai's commercial fabric; for the professional and salaried population of Nerkundram Pathai navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Client Reviews

What Nerkundram Pathai 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 — Nerkundram Pathai

Common questions from Nerkundram Pathai 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.
The Table 8D residual — the gap between auto-populated GSTR-2A reflection at Table 8A and credit availed at Table 8B, after adjustments at 8C, 8E and 8F — is the figure flagged most frequently by departmental analytics. Notices typically issue under Section 73 alleging excess credit, with the Calcutta High Court decision in Suncraft Energy v Assistant Commissioner supplying the principal defence where the supplier has defaulted. Defending such a notice requires invoice-level reconciliation, supplier payment proof, e-way bill records and the original filing reasons sheet. Where the officer has not engaged with the registered person's reconciliation submitted in reply, the order has been set aside in writ proceedings on grounds of non-application of mind.
Yes. Along with Nerkundram Pathai, we serve Maduravoyal and the wider Chennai North belt for GST Annual Returns. Wherever you are in this part of Chennai, the process and our 9566-068-468 line stay the same.
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.
Section 47(2) of the CGST Act prescribes a late fee of one hundred rupees per day under the central enactment, with an equivalent levy under the corresponding State or Union Territory enactment, subject to a ceiling expressed as a percentage of the registered person's turnover within the State or Union Territory. Notification 07/2023-Central Tax dated 31 March 2023 introduced a graded structure effective from financial year 2022-23 — fifty rupees per day under each enactment up to five crore aggregate turnover, one hundred rupees up to twenty crore, and two hundred rupees beyond that — with corresponding ceilings ranging from 0.04% to 0.50%.
No. The GSTR-9 / 9C fee we quote upfront is the fee you pay — any government fees or third-party charges are shown separately and explained in advance. Nerkundram Pathai clients get full transparency before committing.
For a moderately active business with thirty to eighty invoices a month, the consolidation, reconciliation and review cycle typically runs eight to ten working weeks. Our office begins the work in October once the September GSTR-3B is closed, completes the draft by end-November, and reserves December for partner review, DRC-03 closures where any short payment is found, and portal filing well before the 31st December statutory deadline. Where audited financials arrive late from the statutory auditor, the cycle compresses but the buffer against the deadline shrinks accordingly. A rushed annual return is the kind that produces a deficiency notice two years later.
Import IGST paid via Bill of Entry is reported in Table 6E of GSTR-9 as ITC availed on import of goods. Import of services with IGST under RCM is in Table 6F. Foreign currency invoices for export of services are in Table 5A (with tax) or Table 5B (without tax under LUT). Reconciliation against ICEGATE Bills of Entry and bank FIRC is mandatory.
Turnaround depends on the service and how quickly you share documents. Once we have a complete set, GSTR-9 / 9C for Nerkundram Pathai clients moves without avoidable delay, and we keep you posted at each stage. We give a realistic timeline upfront rather than an optimistic one.
Additional liability identified at the annual stage cannot be paid through GSTR-9 itself — the form has no payment facility for new tax. The mechanism is Form DRC-03 voluntary payment under Section 73(5) or 74(5) before any departmental notice is issued. The DRC-03 carries Section 50 interest computed from the original due date of the period in which the liability arose. The ARN of the DRC-03 is then disclosed in Table 9 of GSTR-9 as tax discharged during the year. The advantage of voluntary disclosure is that the same liability paid post-notice attracts mandatory penalty under Section 73 or higher under Section 74.
Table 15 of GSTR-9 captures refunds claimed during the year — split between sanctioned, rejected, pending — and demands paid. Refunds under Rule 89 (zero-rated supplies, inverted duty) and Rule 96 (IGST on exports) are aggregated. Reconciliation against the electronic cash ledger and RFD-06 sanction orders is essential before disclosure.
Our Maduravoyal office on Alapakkam Main Road (opposite KVB Bank) is well connected — from Nerkundram Pathai, the Nerkundram Bus Stop is a handy reference point on the way. That said, GSTR-9 / 9C rarely needs a visit; most of it is done online.
Table 15 of GSTR-9 also captures demands raised under Section 73, 74 and 76 during the year — split into demands raised, taxes paid against demand and demand pending. The figures must tie to DRC-07 demand orders and DRC-03 voluntary payment challans available on the GST portal.
The expression aggregate turnover bears the meaning ascribed by clause (6) of Section 2 of the CGST Act. It comprises the aggregate value of all taxable supplies excluding the value of inward supplies on which tax is payable under reverse charge, exempt supplies, exports of goods or services and inter-State supplies, computed on a Permanent Account Number basis across India. It is to be noted that the computation excludes central tax, State tax, integrated tax and the cess. The threshold determinations under Rule 80 are accordingly made at PAN level, not at individual GSTIN level.
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.
No. GSTR-9 cannot be revised once filed. Errors detected post-filing must be addressed through Form DRC-03 voluntary payment for additional liability or by adjusting in the next year's GSTR-9 disclosures of previous-year transactions. Section 39(9) re-filing window does not apply to annual returns.
GSTR-9 / 9C near Nerkundram Pathai:

We serve businesses in every part of Nerkundram Pathai, from 1st Avenue, bus stand street, 1st Main Road, C.D.N Nagar 1st Street, Dayasadan Salai and Gangai Amman Koil Street to the Golden George Ratham Salai, Justice Rathnavel Pandian Road, Link Road and Mettukuppam Link Road commercial pockets, with GSTR-9 / 9C handled end to end.

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Professional GST Annual Returns in Nerkundram Pathai, Chennai. Call @ 9566-068-468. Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming). 15+ years experience, 4.9★ rated.

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