Rated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areasRated 4.9/5 by 312+ Chennai clientsZero penalty record across all filings24-hour response · WhatsApp-first supportOffices: Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)15+ years of expert tax & compliance consulting500+ active clients across 243 Chennai areas
on the Perungalathur-Mannivakkam corridor that passes through Vandalur

Vandalur GST Annual Returns — Chennai South

GSTR-9 / 9C delivery for education and tourism firms across Vandalur — with same-day acknowledgement delivery

for the professional and salaried population of Vandalur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST — qualified review, a 7-year workpaper archive and fixed fees from day one. Call 9566-068-468.

4.9
312+ Reviews
15+ Years
Zero Penalties
500+ Clients
Quick Answer

What is the relationship between GSTR-9 and Section 73 demand notices in Vandalur, Chennai?

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.

Transparent Pricing

GST Annual Returns in Vandalur — 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 Vandalur Clients Choose FilingPro

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

WhatsApp-First Document Pickup

Share your 12-month return PDFs, audited financials and ITC ledger on WhatsApp at our number — we handle the rest. Vandalur clients work with us entirely remotely through the entire annual return cycle.

Section 17(5) Blocked Credits Screened

Blocked credits under Section 17(5) — motor vehicles for personal use, food and beverages, club memberships, works contract for immovable property — identified across the year and reversed in Table 7E before any audit query.

Working Papers Audit-Ready

Every line of Part A reconciliation in GSTR-9C is supported by a working paper. Sales register, purchase register, GSTR-2A downloads, RCM register and reconciliation sheets retained for 6 years per Section 35 read with Rule 56.

180-Day ITC Reversal Tracked

ITC reversed in GSTR-3B under the second proviso to Section 16(2) for non-payment to suppliers within 180 days is consolidated in Table 7A. Subsequent reclaims after payment shown in Table 6H — both defensible against supplier-side scrutiny.

Section 73 Limitation Clock Closed

GSTR-9 due date is the start point for the 3-year Section 73(10) limitation. A clean GSTR-9 with reconciled Table 8 and DRC-03 closures gives Vandalur clients certainty that the year is closed against future excess-ITC and short-payment demands.

Every entry appearing within Table 8D is independently

Every entry appearing within Table 8D is independently traced to its corresponding line within auto-populated Table 8A and the recipient's purchase register, neutralising the principal vector through which proceedings under sub-section (1) of Section 73 are commenced by the jurisdictional officer.

Key Benefits

What Vandalur Clients Get

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

Identification of credits ineligible under sub-section 5
Identification of credits ineligible under sub-section (5) of Section 17 — encompassing personal-use motor conveyances, restaurant outdoor catering, recreational club subscription dues and immovable-property works contract expenditure — with consequential reversal disclosed in sub-row 7E.
Tracking of credits reversed pursuant to the second
Tracking of credits reversed pursuant to the second proviso to sub-section (2) of Section 16 on account of non-payment to the supplier within one hundred and eighty days, with reclaim subsequent to payment captured in sub-row 6H.
Three-Year Section 73(10) Window Closed Cleanly
Once GSTR-9 is filed with reconciliations documented and any short payment discharged through DRC-03, the three-year departmental window opens against a record we have curated. The Vandalur registered person carries a defendable position into the limitation period rather than an unresolved exposure.
Section 74 Suppression Allegation Pre-empted
Recording the documentary basis behind every Table 6 and Table 8 figure deprives the department of any platform to invoke fraud or wilful misstatement under Section 74. Without those ingredients pleaded and proved, a notice cannot be sustained at the elevated hundred-per-cent penalty band, regardless of the underlying figure.
Suncraft Energy Defence Built Into Working Papers
For each Table 8B credit availed against a supplier who later defaults on remittance of output tax, we preserve the invoice, e-way bill, transport documents and bank payment proof. Suncraft Energy v Assistant Commissioner from the Calcutta High Court is then immediately deployable when the proper officer attempts a Section 16(2)(c) denial.
ASMT-10 Scrutiny Response Drafted On Existing Record
If the proper officer issues an ASMT-10 scrutiny notice referring to GSTR-9 figures, the ASMT-11 reply is drafted from the working paper pack already on file, well within the thirty-day response period. Closure under ASMT-12 follows in most cases, sparing the Vandalur client a full Section 73 cycle.
Comparison

GSTR-9 vs GSTR-9C

Why this matters here — Vandalur businesses operate where the cluster of education, tourism, residential businesses that defines Vandalur's commercial fabric, and served by short connections to Perungalathur and Mannivakkam and onward to central Chennai.

AspectGSTR-9GSTR-9C
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
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
Documents Required

Documents for GST Annual Returns

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Vandalur clients.

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)
Ready to Get Started?
WhatsApp your documents to 9566-068-468 — our team begins within 24 hours. No office visit needed.
Share Documents on WhatsApp Call @ 9566-068-468 Send Enquiry Online
Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

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

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Vandalur businesses operate where the business activity radiating outward from Arignar Anna Zoological Park 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 Vandalur: Where Vandalur differs: for the professional and salaried population of Vandalur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

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)
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 Annual Returns in Vandalur, Chennai 600048

Every Vandalur engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600048, the Tambaram Division, and the coordinates 12.8919, 80.0822 that anchor the locality. Businesses registered in Vandalur share the Chennai South jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Tambaram Division each time. Statutory correspondence for Vandalur businesses routes through the Tambaram Division, so we align every GST Annual Returns engagement to that jurisdiction from the start. The 600xx geo-zone covering Vandalur groups several locality clusters under common administration, keeping documentation expectations predictable.

Vandalur reads as a residential with zoo and education anchors pocket with medium commercial activity, anchored around Arignar Anna Zoological Park and fed by the Vandalur Bus Stop corridor. Working in Vandalur brings a logistical edge: proximity to Arignar Anna Zoological Park and the Vandalur Bus Stop corridor keeps physical document handling fast. The businesses clustered around Arignar Anna Zoological Park in Vandalur drive the bulk of the GST Annual Returns workload we see each cycle. The residential with zoo and education anchors mix of Vandalur shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of tourism activity and the commercial pulse around Arignar Anna Zoological Park.

The residential firms we serve in Vandalur value a GSTR-9 / 9C partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm. A residential operator in Vandalur gets a GSTR-9 / 9C workflow shaped by sector norms, not a one-size-fits-all template. Sector concentration matters: when Vandalur leans toward residential, the GSTR-9 / 9C risks cluster around the same few line items each cycle. Mixed residential activity across Vandalur means our GSTR-9 / 9C team keeps sector playbooks ready rather than improvising per client.

Every GSTR-9 / 9C file we open for Vandalur is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. From the first GST Annual Returns cycle, a Vandalur engagement is set up to be audit-ready rather than reconstructed under pressure later. The Vandalur GST Annual Returns workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. We keep a repeatable GSTR-9 / 9C checklist for Vandalur so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed.

GST Annual Returns clients in Mannivakkam are handled by the same practitioners who run our Vandalur desk. Proximity to Mannivakkam means a Vandalur engagement can extend across the locality cluster with no change in cadence. We treat Vandalur and Mannivakkam as one catchment for GST Annual Returns, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent. A client relocating between Vandalur and Mannivakkam keeps the same GSTR-9 / 9C file and the same team.

Sector signals in Vandalur — seasonal tourism swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule GSTR-9 / 9C work. Because we work repeatedly across Vandalur, we can benchmark a new client's GST Annual Returns position against the locality norm. Over several cycles in Vandalur, the recurring GST Annual Returns issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early. Recurring gaps in Vandalur tourism records are the first thing our GST Annual Returns review closes out.

Shifting principal place of business to Vandalur means updating jurisdiction to the Chennai South, and we manage the paperwork end-to-end. First-time GST Annual Returns for a Vandalur business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. New residential ventures in Vandalur lean on us to stand up GST Annual Returns correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice. A startup setting up near Vandalur Railway Station in Vandalur gets a GSTR-9 / 9C foundation built for the Tambaram Division from day one.

4.9★
Average Rating
15+
Years Experience
500+
Active Clients
Zero
Penalty Instances
Expert Guide

GST Annual Returns in Vandalur — Complete Guide

The student must distinguish between three discrete year-end exercises. First, the consolidated annual return in Form GSTR-9. Second, the management-certified reconciliation in Form GSTR-9C against audited books drawn under the Companies Act or applicable accounting framework. Third, voluntary discharge of any short payment through Form DRC-03 with interest computed under Section 50.

GST Annual Returns Filing in Vandalur, Chennai

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

A dedicated GSTR-9 consultant in Vandalur 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 Vandalur

For Vandalur 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 Vandalur — 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 Vandalur businesses above ₹5 crore.

Get Expert Help Today
Qualified professionals handle your GSTR-9 / 9C in Vandalur. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹3,500/annual. Free consultation.
WhatsApp for Free Consultation Call @ 9566-068-468
From ₹3,500/annual
15+ years experience
Zero penalties guaranteed
Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)
Key Facts — GST Annual Returns in Vandalur
GSTR-9 filed before 31st December every year — Section 47(2) ₹200/day late fee never applies to Vandalur 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 Vandalur 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 Vandalur 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 Vandalur
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.
What is Table 8 of GSTR-9?

Table 8 reconciles ITC as per GSTR-2A with that availed in GSTR-3B during the financial year. It is the single most queried table during scrutiny and is the focus of most DRC-01A intimations.

Is GSTR-9C required if turnover is exactly ₹5 crore?

GSTR-9C is mandatory only where turnover exceeds ₹5 crore. At exactly ₹5 crore the proviso to Section 44(1) does not engage and the registered person may file GSTR-9 alone without the reconciliation statement.

Can I file GSTR-9 for a cancelled GSTIN?

Yes. Rule 80(1) requires the annual return for the period during which the registration was effective in the financial year. Stub-period GSTR-9 must be filed for the operative months even after cancellation.

Does GSTR-9 require RCM payment reconciliation?

Yes. Table 4G captures reverse-charge liability for the financial year and must reconcile with the RCM paid through GSTR-3B cash ledger. Any shortfall can be voluntarily paid through DRC-03 with Section 50 interest.

How is HSN summary disclosed in GSTR-9?

Table 17 captures outward supplies HSN-wise and Table 18 the inward HSN summary. HSN reporting thresholds depend on turnover under Notification 78/2020-Central Tax — 6-digit for above ₹5 crore, 4-digit otherwise.

Can ITC missed in GSTR-3B be claimed via GSTR-9?

No. GSTR-9 is not an independent ITC claim window. The Section 16(4) cut-off for claiming FY ITC is the November-following-FY GSTR-3B or the GSTR-9 filing date, whichever is earlier.

What Vandalur clients want to know before signing: Where Vandalur differs: around the Arignar Anna Zoological Park catchment of Vandalur.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Annual Returns

Reading this guide locally — Vandalur businesses operate where on the Perungalathur-Mannivakkam corridor that passes through Vandalur.

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

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.

Relationship to monthly and quarterly returns

The annual return is a consolidating disclosure, not a fresh assessment. The data flowing into GSTR-9 is drawn from the GSTR-1 outward supply returns, the GSTR-3B summary returns and the GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B inward supply auto-populated statements furnished during the year. GSTR-9 Tables 4 and 5 consolidate outward supply data from GSTR-1; GSTR-9 Tables 6 and 7 consolidate ITC and reversal data from GSTR-3B; GSTR-9 Table 8 reconciles ITC availed in GSTR-3B against ITC available in GSTR-2A. The annual return therefore presents the financial-year picture aggregated from twelve monthly returns (or four quarterly returns where the QRMP scheme has been opted under Section 39 and Rule 61A). It is not an independent re-determination of liability — it is a reconciliation layer that surfaces gaps between the monthly compliance and the audited books, and provides a Section 73 voluntary-payment opportunity via DRC-03 for any differential identified.

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.

HSN summary in Tables 17 and 18 of the annual return

Use of HSN summary by the GST administration

The HSN summary data flowing into GSTR-9 Tables 17 and 18 is a significant analytical input for the GST administration's risk-based audit selection. Sector-wise HSN aggregation across taxpayers allows the administration to benchmark gross margins, inverted-duty positions and rate-mix patterns by industry, surfacing outliers for targeted scrutiny. The discussion at the 47th GST Council meeting in Chandigarh referenced the use of HSN-summary analytics for rate-rationalisation policy work, and the GSTN data infrastructure supports the analytical layer. From the taxpayer perspective, the takeaway is that Tables 17 and 18 are not a back-office disclosure — they are read by the administration's risk-selection algorithms, and a taxpayer whose HSN-summary patterns deviate materially from the sector benchmark may attract Section 65 audit or Section 61 scrutiny ahead of any books-level review.

Table 17 outward supplies HSN summary

GSTR-9 Table 17 captures the HSN-wise summary of outward supplies for the financial year. The disclosure includes HSN code, unit quantity code (UQC), total quantity, total value, taxable value, central tax, State or UT tax, integrated tax and cess columns. The HSN-digit level depends on aggregate turnover — taxpayers with aggregate turnover up to ₹5 crore disclose at the four-digit HSN level for B2B supplies, and HSN disclosure is optional for B2C supplies; taxpayers with turnover above ₹5 crore disclose at the six-digit HSN level for both B2B and B2C supplies. The threshold-based digit-level requirement reflects calibrated compliance burden — smaller taxpayers face lighter disclosure granularity while larger taxpayers face the full chapter-heading-subheading specificity required for trade-data analytics and inverted-duty refund integrity.

Table 18 inward supplies HSN summary

GSTR-9 Table 18 captures the HSN-wise summary of inward supplies for the financial year. The structure mirrors Table 17 — HSN code, UQC, total quantity, total value, taxable value, central tax, State or UT tax, integrated tax and cess columns. Table 18 disclosure has been progressively relaxed through annual notifications; for FY 2021-22 onwards, Table 18 disclosure is optional for all turnover slabs, reflecting a policy view that inward-side HSN summary adds limited audit value beyond the supplier-side outward disclosure already captured in supplier GSTR-1 returns. Where the taxpayer chooses to populate Table 18, the underlying source is the purchase register tagged with input HSN codes, reconciled to the GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B inward summary. The optional status reduces compliance burden but practitioners often populate Table 18 voluntarily where the taxpayer is a manufacturer with significant inverted-duty refund claims under Rule 89(5) requiring HSN-level input-output mapping.

Year-end reconciliation discipline and the path from books to return

Tax-paid reconciliation to GSTR-9 Table 9

The third reconciliation step is the tax-paid reconciliation to GSTR-9 Table 9. Table 9 captures head-wise tax payable (CGST, SGST, IGST, cess), tax paid through cash, tax paid through ITC, interest, late fee, penalty and other amounts. The reconciliation begins with the books-of-account tax expense and indirect-tax-payable balances, traced through the electronic cash ledger and electronic credit ledger transactions for the year, validated against the GSTR-3B head-wise tax-paid disclosures month by month. Adjustments include DRC-03 voluntary payments during the year (with ARN disclosed in Table 9), any reverse-charge tax discharged in cash under Section 9(3) and 9(4), and inter-head transfers through PMT-09 under Section 49(10). The reconciliation supports GSTR-9C Part B tax-paid reconciliation with reasons-column entries for every variance between books tax expense and GSTR-3B head-wise figures.

DRC-03 closure workflow

Where the year-end reconciliation surfaces a short-payment, the operative closure mechanism is DRC-03 voluntary payment under Rule 142(2) and 142(3). The DRC-03 captures the period, the section under which liability is admitted (typically Section 73(5) for voluntary self-disclosure), the head-wise tax, the interest under Section 50, and any penalty under Section 73(6) if applicable. The DRC-03 is filed electronically and the ARN issued on filing is disclosed in GSTR-9 Table 9 under the relevant head. The voluntary payment closure crystallises the position for Section 73 limitation purposes — once a voluntary payment has been made and disclosed, the proper officer's subsequent Section 73 notice cannot demand the same amount again, providing finality. The DRC-03 closure is the standard year-end discipline for any reconciliation gap that cannot be resolved through GSTR-1 amendment within the Section 39(9) cut-off.

Books-of-account reconciliation to GSTR-9 turnover

The first reconciliation step in annual return preparation is from the audited books-of-account turnover to the GSTR-9 Tables 4 and 5 outward supply consolidation. For entity-level audited financials, the reconciliation must extract the State-or-UT-level turnover attributable to the GSTIN under preparation, deducting receipts taxable in other States and adding any unbilled revenue or accrued income captured in the books that has been crystallised into supply during the year. The reconciliation runs through deemed supplies under Schedule I, ITC reversal cases that flow into Section 17(5) blocked categories, and timing differences between books revenue recognition and GST time-of-supply under Sections 12 and 13. The reconciliation output feeds directly into GSTR-9C Part A turnover reconciliation for taxpayers above the ₹5 crore threshold, with reasons-column entries explaining every line-level adjustment.

Audit-trail requirements and the documentation standard

Electronic records and accounting-software audit trail

The Ministry of Corporate Affairs has, through amendments to the Companies (Accounts) Rules effective 1 April 2023, mandated that every company maintaining its books of account electronically must use accounting software that incorporates an audit-trail feature recording every transaction and any subsequent edit, with the trail itself not being capable of being disabled. The MCA audit-trail mandate operates alongside the CGST Rule 56 record-keeping obligation and reinforces the integrity of the underlying records that flow into GSTR-9 reconciliation. For GSTR-9 preparation purposes, the audit-trail feature provides verifiable evidence that the books-of-account figures reconciled against the return disclosures have not been altered post-fact. The audit-trail requirement is a structural complement to the self-certification framework introduced by Finance Act 2021 — the self-certification carries weight only where the underlying records are independently verifiable through the audit-trail mechanism.

Working paper pack for GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C

Practitioner standard for GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C preparation includes a working paper pack covering: GSTR-1 to GSTR-9 Tables 4 and 5 reconciliation; books-of-account ITC ledger to GSTR-3B Table 4(A) to GSTR-9 Table 6 reconciliation; GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B aggregation supporting Table 8 reconciliation; books-of-account turnover to GSTR-9 turnover reconciliation supporting GSTR-9C Part A; books-of-account tax expense to GSTR-9 Table 9 reconciliation supporting GSTR-9C Part B; HSN classification matrix supporting Tables 17 and 18; Rule 42 and Rule 43 reversal computation supporting Table 7; DRC-03 challans for any voluntary payments. The working paper pack is the operative supporting documentation for any subsequent Section 61 scrutiny, Section 65 audit or Section 67 inspection. The pack is retained under Section 36 for the seventy-two-month horizon and forms the primary defence against any subsequent Section 73 demand.

Standing accounting policy disclosures

A mature GSTR-9 preparation workflow includes standing accounting policy documents addressing the recurring judgment areas — principal-supply analysis for composite and mixed supplies under Section 8; Rule 42 and Rule 43 apportionment methodology for mixed exempt and taxable arms; Schedule I deemed-supply identification for inter-branch and related-party transactions; time-of-supply application for continuous-supply contracts under Section 31(5); HSN classification rationale for borderline SKUs. The standing policy is referenced in GSTR-9C reasons-column entries and provides consistency across the financial year and across years. The policy is reviewed and updated at the start of each financial year against any rate or rule changes notified during the year. The discipline of standing policy documentation reduces year-end preparation friction and provides a stable reference point against any subsequent Section 65 audit query on the methodology applied to recurring judgments.

What Vandalur clients usually ask next: Where Vandalur differs: for the professional and salaried population of Vandalur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Section 50(3) interest on excess credit

Section 50(3) interest on excess credit is interest at the prescribed rate of twenty-four per cent per annum on input tax credit wrongly availed and utilised. It applies where annual reconciliation discloses excess credit availment that has been used to discharge output tax liability; the rate is higher than the Section 50(1) rate on short tax.

Section 73(5) voluntary deposit

Section 73(5) voluntary deposit is the discharge of tax along with applicable interest at Section 50 by the registered person on their own ascertainment, before issuance of any show-cause notice. The mechanism is operationalised through Form DRC-03 and shields against mandatory penalty that would otherwise attach to a confirmed Section 73 order.

Section 74(5) voluntary deposit with penalty

Section 74(5) voluntary deposit is the discharge of tax, interest and a fifteen per cent penalty by the registered person on their own ascertainment in cases involving fraud, wilful misstatement or suppression. The shielding penalty steps up to twenty-five per cent if paid post-notice and to fifty per cent post-order, hence the value of pre-notice resolution.

Pre-deposit under Section 107(6)

Pre-deposit under Section 107(6) is the statutory deposit of ten per cent of the disputed tax amount, subject to a ceiling fixed by the section, required to be paid by the registered person while filing a first appeal in Form GST APL-01 against an adverse order. Without the pre-deposit the appeal is not entertained.

Section 65 audit

Section 65 audit is a departmental audit conducted by the Commissioner or an authorised officer for a financial period prescribed in the audit intimation. The exercise begins with ADT-01 intimation and concludes with ADT-02 audit report. The annual return and the GSTR-9C working papers are demanded as the foundational record at the outset.

Section 66 special audit

Section 66 special audit is a focused audit ordered by a proper officer not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner, with the prior approval of the Commissioner, where the officer has reason to believe that the value has not been correctly declared or credit has not been availed within the normal limits. The auditor is a chartered or cost accountant nominated by the Commissioner.

Section 168 power to issue notifications

Section 168 power to issue notifications is the source of authority for the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs to extend the annual-return due date in specific financial years where collective representations or system constraints justify accommodation. The exercise of the power is by notification in the official Gazette and operates only for the period it specifies.

Section 16(4) ITC time-limit

Section 16(4) ITC time-limit is the outer date for availing input tax credit in respect of any invoice or debit note for supply of goods or services for any financial year — being the thirtieth day of November following the end of that financial year or furnishing of the annual return, whichever is earlier. Credit not availed within this window lapses.

180-day reversal under Section 16(2) second proviso

180-day reversal under the second proviso to Section 16(2) is the reversal of input tax credit availed where the recipient has failed to pay the supplier the value of supply along with tax payable thereon within one hundred and eighty days from the date of invoice. Credit is reversed with interest in the next GSTR-3B and reclaimed on subsequent payment.

Rule 36(4) restriction

Rule 36(4) restriction is the limitation of input tax credit to invoices and debit notes that have been furnished by the supplier in their GSTR-1 and which appear in the recipient's auto-drafted GSTR-2B for the tax period. The provision works alongside clause (aa) of sub-section (2) of Section 16 in its current form, removing the earlier ten per cent buffer.

Rule 42 common-input apportionment

Rule 42 common-input apportionment is the formula prescribed for splitting input tax credit on common inputs and input services used partly for taxable and partly for exempt supplies — the exempt-attributable portion is reversed. Sub-rule (2) provides for an annual recomputation at the close of the financial year squaring up the provisional monthly working.

Rule 43 capital goods apportionment

Rule 43 capital goods apportionment is the formula for splitting input tax credit on common capital goods used partly for taxable and partly for exempt supplies. The reversal is spread over sixty months from the date of receipt of the capital goods; the annual recomputation at sub-rule (2) squares up the provisional monthly working at year-end.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
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
Trading firm late-filed GSTR-9 for FY 2018-19 with turnover ₹6 crore by 540 daysNilNil₹50,000 (statutory pre-notification cap; revised cap applies prospectively)₹50,000
Construction company disclosed ₹74 lakh ITC ineligibility under Section 17(5)(d) in GSTR-9 Table 7₹74,00,000 (reversal)₹13,32,000 (Section 50 at 18% × 12 months)Nil under Section 73(5) voluntary route₹87,32,000
Healthcare entity exempt-only filer failed to file GSTR-9 for three yearsNilNil₹60,000 (₹20,000 per year capped at lowest slab) + ₹15,000 Section 125₹75,000
MSME with turnover ₹1.4 crore did not file GSTR-9 for FY 2021-22 (optional category)NilNilNil (filing is optional below ₹2 crore under Notification 47/2019-CT)Nil
IT services firm late-filed GSTR-9C for FY 2020-21 by 60 days; turnover ₹17 croreNilNil₹12,000 (₹100 × 60 × 2 = ₹12,000) — under the GSTR-9 head as GSTR-9C is filed along with GSTR-9₹12,000

How Vandalur businesses typically avoid these: Where Vandalur differs: the cluster of education, tourism, residential businesses that defines Vandalur's commercial fabric. We see for the professional and salaried population of Vandalur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Vandalur

How the local trade mix shapes this — Vandalur businesses operate where the cluster of education, tourism, residential businesses that defines Vandalur'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.
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.
Education
Common issue: Private universities supplying online certification courses to international learners often treat the receipts as export of services in GSTR-9 Table 5 without verifying the recipient location and convertible foreign exchange conditions in Section 2(6) IGST Act. The GSTR-9C Part A reconciliation against books-of-account receipts can reveal that learners paid through domestic gateways or with addresses inconsistent with the export claim.
How we handle it: Capture recipient location through verified address proof at enrolment and route payments through gateways generating FIRC-equivalent documentation; classify receipts failing either Section 2(6) IGST Act limb as taxable and discharge IGST within the year; disclose the classification methodology in the GSTR-9C Part A turnover-reconciliation working paper.
Packaging
Common issue: Packaging units handling dual-HSN flows between paper-board HSN 48 and plastic-film HSN 39 frequently aggregate outputs under a single HSN code in monthly GSTR-1 Table 12. The GSTR-9 Tables 17 and 18 HSN summary disclosure surfaces the under-classification and where inverted-duty refund claims have been filed during the year, the HSN aggregation interferes with the Rule 89(5) computation reconciliation.
How we handle it: Capture each output line at the SKU level with chapter-correct HSN tagging; reconcile GSTR-1 Table 12 monthly against the SKU register; populate GSTR-9 Tables 17 and 18 with the SKU-level HSN summary and retain the SKU-to-HSN mapping as a working paper supporting any subsequent refund or audit reconciliation.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

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.
Composite supplyEducation

Coaching academy splits exempt and taxable streams

Issue: A coaching academy with turnover ₹13 crore offered competitive-exam coaching (taxable at 18%) and engaged a recognised university for a degree programme on a revenue-sharing basis (exempt under Notification 12/2017-CT Sl 66). The GSTR-9 reported the entire revenue as taxable in the first year of the tie-up, generating an apparent excess tax payment.
Approach: Distinguished the two streams by reference to the university tie-up agreement, established that the recognised-institution exemption flows through to the academy under the recipient-of-service test, and filed a representation seeking refund of the tax paid on the exempt stream through Section 54 read with Circular 188/20/2022-GST on the inadvertent-tax-paid route. Reflected the corrected position in the subsequent year's GSTR-9C reconciliation.
Outcome: Refund of ₹54 lakh sanctioned within seven months; subsequent years' returns correctly bifurcated; the academy redesigned its invoice templates with HSN-rate maps for each programme.
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 Vandalur engagements look the way they do: Where Vandalur differs: the business activity radiating outward from Arignar Anna Zoological Park and nearby commercial pockets. We see for the professional and salaried population of Vandalur navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

Client Reviews

What Vandalur 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
4.9
312+ reviews
500+
Active Clients
15+
Years Exp
5★
4★
3★
Common Questions

GSTR-9 / 9C FAQ — Vandalur

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

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.
GSTR-9 has 19 tables. Tables 4 and 5 capture outward supply (taxable, zero-rated, exempt). Tables 6 to 8 cover ITC availed, reversed and reconciled with GSTR-2A/2B. Tables 9 to 14 deal with tax paid, demands, refunds and supplies of previous year declared in current year. Tables 15 to 18 are demand, refund, deemed export and HSN summary. Table 19 is late fee payable.
A consultant who knows the Chennai South jurisdiction and how Vandalur businesses operate moves faster and spots issues an online-only provider would miss. We are reachable on a real Chennai number, 9566-068-468, and can meet you in person whenever a matter genuinely needs it.
Section 17(5) blocked credits — motor vehicles for personal use, food and beverages, club memberships, works contract for immovable property, goods/services for personal consumption — are not eligible ITC and should not appear in Table 6 at all. If wrongly availed and later reversed, they appear in Table 7E (blocked credits reversal) of GSTR-9.
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.
Vandalur (PIN 600048) falls under the Tambaram Division, Chennai South commissionerate. Getting the jurisdiction right matters because registrations, filings and notices are routed through the correct office. We confirm and handle the right jurisdiction for every Vandalur engagement.
Both GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C must be filed on or before 31st December of the financial year following the year to which they relate. For example, GSTR-9 for FY 2023-24 is due on 31st December 2024. The due date may be extended by CBIC notification in specific years.
Transitional credits availed under Section 140 through TRAN-1 and TRAN-2 in the first year (FY 2017-18) appear in Table 6K (TRAN-1) and 6L (TRAN-2) of GSTR-9. For subsequent years these tables are typically nil unless the Supreme Court Filco Trade Centre relief opened a fresh window. Accuracy here remains relevant for any pending TRAN-related litigation.
Yes — we handle GST Annual Returns for individuals and businesses across Vandalur (PIN 600048) and nearby Mudichur. The work is done end-to-end by our own team, with documents collected online over WhatsApp or email and in-person meetings available at our Maduravoyal and Nerkundram offices. Call 9566-068-468 to begin.
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.
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.
Turnaround depends on the service and how quickly you share documents. Once we have a complete set, GSTR-9 / 9C for Vandalur clients moves without avoidable delay, and we keep you posted at each stage. We give a realistic timeline upfront rather than an optimistic one.
From FY 2020-21 (Notification 29/2021-Central Tax effective 1-Aug-2021), GSTR-9C is no longer required to be CA-certified — it is self-certified by the taxpayer through the same DSC or EVC used for GSTR-9. The Part B reconciliation tables and Part C tax payable working are signed off by the management of the registered person.
A self-certified GSTR-9C with clean Part A reconciliation, Part B tax-paid reconciliation tied to DRC-03 ARNs and Part C ITC reconciliation tied to GSTR-2A/2B is the strongest documentation a taxpayer can place before a Section 65 audit team. Most departmental audit observations are cleared by reference to the GSTR-9C reasons column and supporting working papers.
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.
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.
GSTR-9 / 9C near Vandalur:

We serve businesses in every part of Vandalur, from 9th Main Road, Anna Street, Cholan Street, Kabilar St and Kalaimagal Street to the Kalaivanar Street, Grand Southern Trunk Road, Marmalong Bridge - Irumbuliyur - Vandalur - Mudichur - Oragadam - Walajabad Road and Cheran Street commercial pockets, with GSTR-9 / 9C handled end to end.

Free Consultation Available

Ready for Expert GSTR-9 / 9C in Vandalur?

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

From ₹3,500/annual
15+ years experience
Zero penalties guaranteed
Maduravoyal · Nerkundram · Nolambur (upcoming)
Call Now WhatsApp