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Trusted GST Consultants · Pattabiram

Pattabiram GST Cancellation for defence Businesses

GST Cancellation for defence units around Avadi Cantonment, Pattabiram — and a zero-penalty filing record

GST Cancellation for Pattabiram firms under Chennai West (Avadi Division) by qualified experts with a 15+ year, zero-penalty record. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

Is there a cooling period before fresh GST registration after voluntary cancellation in Pattabiram, Chennai?

No. After voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) and filing of GSTR-10, fresh registration in REG-01 can be applied immediately if business resumes or a new business commences. The new GSTIN is independent. However, where cancellation was suo motu under Section 29(2) for fraud, fresh registration may be subject to officer scrutiny and physical verification under Rule 25.

Transparent Pricing

GST Cancellation in Pattabiram — Plans & Pricing

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

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Straightforward
Basic
Online application filed
₹1,000one-time

  • GST Cancellation Application REG-16
  • Reason Documentation
  • ARN Tracking Until Cancellation
  • GSTR-10 Final Return Filing
  • Pending GSTR-1 / 3B Clearance
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Tax on Stock on Hand
  • All Outstanding Returns Filed
Most Popular ⭐
Standard
Cancellation + GSTR-10 return
₹2,000one-time

  • GST Cancellation Application REG-16
  • Reason Documentation
  • ARN Tracking Until Cancellation
  • GSTR-10 Final Return Filing
  • Pending GSTR-1 / 3B Clearance
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Tax on Stock on Hand
  • All Outstanding Returns Filed
With arrears
Complete
Cancellation + Followup + GSTR-10 Filing
₹5,000one-time

  • GST Cancellation Application REG-16
  • Reason Documentation
  • ARN Tracking Until Cancellation
  • GSTR-10 Final Return Filing
  • Pending GSTR-1 / 3B Clearance
  • ITC Reversal Computation
  • Tax on Stock on Hand
  • All Outstanding Returns Filed

Swipe to see all plans

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

Why FilingPro?

Why Pattabiram Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert GST Cancellation in Pattabiram — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Capital Goods Higher-of-Two

Capital goods reversal computed under Rule 44(1)(b) — higher of (i) ITC reduced by 5% per quarter from invoice date or (ii) GST on transaction value. Optimal method applied per asset for Pattabiram clients.

Multi-GSTIN Cancellation

For multi-state businesses, separate REG-16 filed for each State GSTIN with state-wise stock and capital goods reversal. GSTR-10 filed independently for each cancelled GSTIN within respective 3-month windows.

Records Retention Advisory

Books, registers and GSTR-2B downloads handed over to Pattabiram client with retention advisory — 6 years from due date of annual return per Section 35(1) and Rule 56, audit-ready for any Section 65 / 73 / 74 proceedings.

WhatsApp-First Document Pickup

Share business closure proof, last 3 months' returns and stock statement on WhatsApp at 9566-068-468 — we draft REG-16, compute reversal and file GSTR-10 entirely remotely. Pattabiram clients work without a single office visit.

15+ Years Chennai Experience

Our team has handled cancellations under VAT, service tax, excise and now GST since the 1 July 2017 rollout. Deep familiarity with Chennai jurisdictional officers, REG-19 patterns and revocation jurisprudence.

REG-16 Filed Under Section 29(1)

REG-16 application drafted with the correct ground — cessation of business, transfer or merger, change in constitution, fall below threshold, or death of proprietor. Effective date and supporting documents matched to the legal trigger.

Key Benefits

What Pattabiram Clients Get

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

Voluntary Lock-In Tracked
For voluntary registrations under Section 25(3), the Rule 20 one-year lock-in is tracked. NIL filings continued during lock-in; REG-16 filed immediately after the one-year window expires to avoid premature application rejection.
Records Retention Brief
Final brief delivered to Pattabiram client covering 6-year record retention under Section 35(1) and Rule 56, treatment of post-cancellation credit notes, and response protocol for any future Section 65 audit or Section 73/74 demand notice.
Clean Closure Documentation
Complete cancellation file — REG-16 acknowledgement, REG-19 order, GSTR-10 acknowledgement, ITC reversal working papers, stock statement, dues clearance challans — handed over for the 6-year Section 35 retention window.
Section 47 Late Fees Eliminated
All pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed within available amnesty caps before REG-19 issuance. Section 47 ₹50/day late fee, Section 47(2) ₹200/day GSTR-9 late fee and Section 47 GSTR-10 late fee minimised for Pattabiram clients.
GSTR-10 Within Statutory Window
Final return filed within 3 months of cancellation — no ₹200/day late fee, no 0.50% of turnover cap exposure, no Section 62 best-judgement assessment trigger.
ITC Reversal Optimised
For each capital goods item, Rule 44(1)(b) computed under both methods — ITC less 5% per quarter and GST on transaction value — and the higher (statutory) amount documented. No under-reversal demand exposure.
Comparison

Voluntary (Section 29(1)) vs Suo Motu (Section 29(2))

Why this matters here — In Pattabiram, the business activity radiating outward from Pattabiram Railway Station and nearby commercial pockets; with quick access via Pattabiram Railway Station and feeder routes connecting Pattabiram to the rest of Chennai.

AspectVoluntary (Section 29(1))Suo Motu (Section 29(2))
Revocation pathwaySection 30 revocation does not apply to a voluntary cancellation; relief lies in filing fresh registration under Section 25Section 30 read with Rule 23 allows revocation within thirty days of the REG-19 order, extendable on reasoned application before the Joint Commissioner under the proviso
Appellate remedy on adverse outcomeRejection of REG-16 through REG-05 may be carried in first appeal under Section 107 of the CGST Act before the Appellate AuthorityREG-19 order is appealable under Section 107; in parallel, Article 226 writ before the Madras High Court is available where natural justice has been denied
Working-capital and onward exposureLimited to the Section 29(5) reversal and Section 45 final-return obligations; no penalty exposure where compliance is timelyOnward exposure includes late fee under Section 47 on pending returns, interest under Section 50 on unpaid tax, and recipient-side ITC consequences for the cancelled period
Operative provisionSub-section (1) of Section 29 of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 20 of the CGST RulesSub-section (2) of Section 29 of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 21 and Rule 22 of the CGST Rules
Initiating partyRegistered person files Form REG-16 of his own motion on the common portalProper officer initiates of his own motion through a show-cause notice in Form REG-17
Permissible groundsClosure of business, transfer on amalgamation or sale, change in constitution, turnover falling below threshold, or death of proprietorContravention of Rule 21 grounds — non-filing of GSTR-3B for six months, non-commencement, registration by fraud or violation of Section 25
Lock-in periodProviso to Rule 20 imposes a one-year lock-in for those registered under Section 25(3) before voluntary cancellation can be soughtNo lock-in applies; the proper officer may proceed once Rule 21 grounds are made out
Pre-cancellation procedural stepFiling of Form REG-16 with reasons, effective date, stock declaration and ITC reversal workingIssuance of Form REG-17 show-cause notice with seven working days for the assessee to reply in Form REG-18
Effective date treatmentDate sought by the assessee in Form REG-16, ordinarily the date of cessation of business and prospective in characterDate determined by the proper officer in Form REG-19, which may be retrospective from the date of contravention under the proviso to Section 29(2)
Pre-condition of pending returnsAll pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B up to the date sought as cancellation date must be furnished before REG-16 is processedPending returns must be furnished as part of the REG-18 reply to defeat the show-cause and obtain REG-20 dropping
ITC reversal at cancellationSub-section (5) of Section 29 read with Rule 44 requires reversal on inputs in stock, semi-finished and finished goods, and capital goods on the cancellation dateSame Section 29(5) and Rule 44 framework applies; the reversal is computed as on the effective date fixed in REG-19, which may be retrospective
Final return obligationSection 45 read with Rule 81 requires filing of Form GSTR-10 within three months of the cancellation date or the order date, whichever is laterIdentical Section 45 obligation attaches; the three-month clock runs from the REG-19 order date irrespective of any retrospective effective date
Documents Required

Documents for GST Cancellation

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

REG-01 GSTIN registration certificate copy
Last 3 months GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed acknowledgements
Stock statement (inputs and finished goods) as on cancellation date
GSTR-2B downloads supporting ITC originally claimed on stock and capital goods
Bank statement covering the last 3 months and dues clearance proof
Business closure proof — board resolution / partnership dissolution deed / sale-merger agreement / death certificate
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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 Pattabiram, the cluster of defence, residential, logistics businesses that defines Pattabiram's commercial fabric.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Business discontinued, transferred, amalgamated, demerged or sold30 daysREG-16Continued GSTIN exposure to Section 47 late fee on nil returns and progression to Rule 21A suspension and Rule 22 suo motu cancellation
Effective date of cancellation falls due — final return obligation90 daysGSTR-10Section 47(2) late fee accrues per day; non-filer notice under Section 46 escalates to Section 62 best-judgment assessment
Service of cancellation order by the proper officer under Rule 2290 daysREG-21Window closes; only first extension by Joint or Additional Commissioner is available, then a final extension by the Commissioner
Filing voluntary cancellation application in REG-16 after a triggering event30 daysREG-16Continued compliance liability (filing of regular returns, payment of tax) accrues for the period of delay; risk of suo motu cancellation overtaking voluntary route
Filing final return GSTR-10 after cancellation order or effective date, whichever is later90 daysGSTR-10Section 47(2) late fee of ₹200 per day capped at 0.25% of State turnover plus REG-24 notice and PAN-level risk marking
Filing reply to REG-17 show-cause notice for suo motu cancellation7 daysREG-18Proceedings advance ex parte; cancellation order in REG-19 passes without the dealer's defence on record
Filing revocation application after service of REG-19 cancellation order30 daysREG-21GSTIN restoration window lapses; the dealer must seek extension up to 60 days more from JC/Commissioner under amended Rule 23 or face fresh registration with PAN-risk-profile baggage
Filing ITC-02 to transfer unutilised credit on succession or change in constitution30 daysITC-02If filed after cancellation effective date, the predecessor's electronic credit ledger is locked and unutilised ITC lapses irrecoverably

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

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

REG-16Application for Cancellation of Registration

Voluntary cancellation application capturing the reason for cancellation, the requested effective date, and the closing stock and capital-goods particulars with the consequent input tax credit reversal liability

Within thirty days of the event triggering cancellation Common Portal — routed to the jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-17Show Cause Notice for Cancellation

Notice issued by the proper officer setting out the reasons for proposed suo motu cancellation and requiring the registered person to show cause why the registration should not be cancelled

Issued before any suo motu cancellation order Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-18Reply to Show Cause Notice for Cancellation

Registered person's reply to the REG-17 show cause notice, carrying the defence on each ground cited, supporting documents, and the request to drop proceedings

Within seven working days of REG-17 Common Portal — by the registered person
REG-19Order for Cancellation of Registration

Cancellation order passed by the proper officer specifying the effective date of cancellation, any retrospective date adopted, and the outstanding tax, interest and penalty liabilities

Within thirty days of receipt of REG-18 or expiry of the reply window Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-20Order for Dropping of Cancellation Proceedings

Order dropping the suo motu cancellation proceedings where the REG-18 reply is found satisfactory by the proper officer

Within thirty days of REG-18 Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-21Application for Revocation of Cancellation

Application by a registered person whose registration has been cancelled on the proper officer's own motion, seeking revocation after furnishing all pending returns up to the effective date of cancellation

Within ninety days of the cancellation order, extendable by thirty plus thirty days Common Portal — by the registered person
REG-22Order for Revocation of Cancellation

Order passed by the proper officer approving the revocation application after considering the merits and the compliance of returns precondition under Rule 23

Within thirty days of REG-21 Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-23Show Cause Notice for Rejection of Revocation

Show cause notice issued where the proper officer is not satisfied with the REG-21 application; requires the applicant to demonstrate why revocation should not be refused

Issued before any rejection of the revocation application Jurisdictional Range Officer

GST Cancellation in Pattabiram, Chennai 600072

Because PIN 600072 sits inside the Chennai West jurisdiction, the handling office for Pattabiram stays consistent across years, which matters when filings or approvals span cycles. We keep a cycle-by-cycle record of how the Avadi Division of the Chennai West handles Pattabiram filings and approvals. Pattabiram (PIN 600072) falls under the Avadi Division of the Chennai West, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. Every Pattabiram engagement we open begins with the basics: PIN 600072, the Avadi Division, and the coordinates 13.1147, 80.1117 that anchor the locality.

Most commerce in Pattabiram — invoices, expenses, purchases and statutory records — eventually surfaces in the GST Cancellation working file we maintain for clients here. Document pickup near Avadi Cantonment is a same-hour errand for our Pattabiram engagements rather than the half-day a typical Chennai client expects. Vendors and customers tied to the Pattabiram Railway Station network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for Pattabiram GST Cancellation clients. The defence and residential mixed mix of Pattabiram shapes what lands in our workpapers — a blend of engineering activity and the commercial pulse around Avadi Cantonment.

For a retail business in Pattabiram, the GST Cancellation scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts. The retail firms we serve in Pattabiram value a GST Cancellation partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm. The retail character of Pattabiram commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a GST Cancellation review needs. Mixed retail activity across Pattabiram means our GST Cancellation team keeps sector playbooks ready rather than improvising per client.

From the first GST Cancellation cycle, a Pattabiram engagement is set up to be audit-ready rather than reconstructed under pressure later. Turnaround for Pattabiram GST Cancellation is deterministic — fixed fee, a scoped timeline, and a same-business-day acknowledgement once filed. Working papers for Pattabiram GST Cancellation engagements stay archived and retrievable, which makes any later notice or query straightforward to answer. Our Pattabiram GST Cancellation process is built to be predictable, documented, and on time, cycle after cycle.

From the same Pattabiram team we also serve Avadi and other nearby localities without re-onboarding clients. Serving Pattabiram and Avadi from one team keeps GST Cancellation turnaround identical across the cluster. A client relocating between Pattabiram and Avadi keeps the same GST Cancellation file and the same team. We treat Pattabiram and Avadi as one catchment for GST Cancellation, which keeps documentation and turnaround consistent.

The GST Cancellation mistakes we see most in Pattabiram are avoidable with disciplined intake, which our checklist enforces. Because we work repeatedly across Pattabiram, we can benchmark a new client's GST Cancellation position against the locality norm. Patterns we track for Pattabiram include engineering documentation gaps, timing mismatches, and the questions the Avadi Division tends to raise. Recurring gaps in Pattabiram engineering records are the first thing our GST Cancellation review closes out.

For a new business incorporating in Pattabiram or shifting its principal place of business here, GST Cancellation setup is one of the first things to get right. Shifting principal place of business to Pattabiram means updating jurisdiction to the Chennai West, and we manage the paperwork end-to-end. First-time GST Cancellation for a Pattabiram business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. We onboard new Pattabiram entities onto a GST Cancellation cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle.

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Expert Guide

GST Cancellation in Pattabiram — Complete Guide

Where a Pattabiram business has received a REG-17 show-cause notice under Section 29(2) for non-filing of GSTR-3B or other defaults, FilingPro responds in the 7-working-day window with a complete REG-18 reply — pending returns filed under Notification 03/2023 amnesty, dues cleared with Section 50 interest and Section 47 late fee, and grounds explained — securing REG-20 dropping of cancellation proceedings rather than a REG-19 cancellation order.

GST Cancellation in Pattabiram, Chennai

Voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) for Pattabiram businesses is filed in Form REG-16 with a complete stock statement, Section 29(5) ITC reversal computation under Rule 44 and GSTR-10 final return prepared within the 3-month statutory window.

GST Cancellation Consultant in Pattabiram — REG-16 to GSTR-10

A dedicated GST cancellation consultant in Pattabiram handles every stage — pending return clean-up, REG-16 application drafting, ITC reversal on stock and capital goods, GSTR-10 final return and post-cancellation record retention under Section 35.

REG-18 Reply to Suo Motu Cancellation SCN in Pattabiram

For Pattabiram businesses served REG-17 show-cause notice under Section 29(2), REG-18 reply with pending returns, dues clearance and grounds explanation is drafted within the 7-working-day window to secure REG-20 dropping of proceedings.

GST Revocation REG-21 in Pattabiram — Cancellation Reversal

Where suo motu cancellation has already occurred, REG-21 revocation application is filed within 90 days (extendable to 180 days under Section 30) with all pending GSTR-3B and dues — restoring the GSTIN from the original cancellation date.

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Qualified professionals handle your GST Cancellation in Pattabiram. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹2,000/one-time. Free consultation.
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Key Facts — GST Cancellation in Pattabiram
REG-16 voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) — drafted with correct grounds, effective date and stock statement for Pattabiram businesses.
GSTR-10 final return filed within 3 months of REG-19 order — Section 47(2) ₹200/day late fee never applies.
Section 29(5) ITC reversal computed under Rule 44 — both Rule 44(1)(a) inputs and Rule 44(1)(b) capital goods (higher of two methods).
Pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed under Notification 03/2023 amnesty where applicable — capped late fee, smooth REG-19 issuance.
REG-17 show-cause notice replied via REG-18 within the 7-working-day window — REG-20 dropping of cancellation secured for Pattabiram clients.
REG-21 revocation application filed within Section 30 timelines for suo motu cancellation orders — registration restored from original date.
Stock statement at cancellation date prepared from purchase register, GSTR-2B history and physical count — invoice-wise ITC reversal documented.
Capital goods reversal under Rule 44(1)(b) — higher of (i) ITC reduced by 5% per quarter or (ii) GST on transaction value — computed and reported in GSTR-10.
Section 50 interest at 18% per annum and Section 47 late fee on pending periods computed and discharged through electronic cash ledger before REG-19 issuance.
Books, registers and records retained per Section 35(1) and Rule 56 for 6 years post-cancellation — audit-ready for any Section 65 or Section 73/74 proceedings.
People Also Ask — GST Cancellation in Pattabiram
How long does GST cancellation take after filing REG-16?
Under Rule 22(3), the proper officer must pass the cancellation order in REG-19 within 30 days of receipt of REG-16 application or REG-18 reply, whichever is applicable. In practice, where pending returns are filed and dues cleared, REG-19 is issued in 15-30 days. Suo motu cancellation orders post REG-17 are typically issued within 30-45 days.
Is GSTR-10 mandatory after every GST cancellation?
Yes. Section 45 read with Rule 81 mandates GSTR-10 final return within 3 months of cancellation date or REG-19 order date, whichever is later. Non-filing attracts Section 47(2) late fee of ₹200 per day capped at 0.50% of state turnover, and the proper officer can issue best-judgement assessment under Section 62 with full demand.
What is the difference between REG-16 and REG-21?
REG-16 is the application for voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) filed by the taxpayer. REG-21 is the application for revocation of suo motu cancellation under Section 30 filed within 90 days of the REG-19 order. REG-16 ends the registration; REG-21 restores a registration that was cancelled by the officer. They are not interchangeable.
Can ITC be claimed at cancellation or only reversed?
Only reversed. Section 29(5) requires ITC on inputs in stock and capital goods on hand at cancellation date to be reversed under Rule 44 and paid through the electronic cash ledger. No fresh ITC claim is permitted at cancellation. Refund of unutilised credit balance under Section 54 is, however, permissible where eligible.
What happens if I don't file GSTR-10 within 3 months?
Section 47(2) levies late fee of ₹200 per day (₹100 CGST + ₹100 SGST) capped at 0.50% of turnover in the State. Notification 03/2023 capped this at ₹1,000 for amnesty filing windows. Beyond late fee, the proper officer can issue a Section 62 best-judgement assessment with full ITC reversal at maximum applicable rates and Section 73/74 demand.
Is fresh GST registration possible after cancellation?
Yes. After voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) and GSTR-10 filing, fresh registration in REG-01 can be applied immediately if business resumes — a new GSTIN is issued with independent compliance. Where cancellation was suo motu under Section 29(2) for fraud, fresh registration is subject to Rule 25 physical verification and officer scrutiny.
What is the role of a chartered accountant certificate in Section 29(5) computation?

Rule 44(3) of the CGST Rules requires a chartered accountant certificate where stock-reversal is computed on market-price methodology in the absence of invoice-wise data. The certificate substantiates the methodology, quantum and underlying records, and is filed alongside the GSTR-10 return.

How does Section 9(5) e-commerce-operator obligation interact with restaurant GST cancellation?

Sub-section (5) of Section 9 read with Notification 17/2017-Central Tax as amended places the tax payment obligation on the e-commerce operator for restaurant supplies. A restaurant choosing to operate solely through aggregators after cancellation may not require fresh GSTIN if turnover stays below the Section 22 threshold on direct supplies.

What is the Section 22 threshold relevant for cancellation on turnover drop?

Section 22 of the CGST Act read with applicable threshold notifications prescribes the aggregate-turnover threshold below which registration is not mandatory — currently forty lakh rupees for goods in most states and twenty lakh rupees for services, with special-category states at lower thresholds.

Can a non-resident taxable person seek cancellation under Section 29?

A non-resident taxable person's registration under Section 27 ordinarily expires on the period specified in the certificate. Cancellation through REG-16 on event or project completion is advisable to formally close the GSTIN, recover unutilised advance tax under Section 54(13) and shut down the compliance window.

What is the consequence of issuing tax invoices after the cancellation date?

Issuing tax invoices and collecting GST after the cancellation date is impermissible. Any amount so collected attracts Section 76 of the CGST Act read with the special framework for tax collected but not deposited, with full recovery and penalty exposure under Section 76(3) read with Rule 142.

How does cancellation affect the e-invoice IRN system access?

On cancellation, the GSTN portal disables IRN generation prospectively from the effective date. Invoices issued post-cancellation will not receive a valid IRN. Recipients placing such purported invoices into their GSTR-2B universe will face ITC denial on the absence of supplier-side IRN authentication.

What Pattabiram clients want to know before signing: Closer to Pattabiram, around the Pattabiram Railway Station catchment of Pattabiram.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Cancellation

Reading this guide locally — In Pattabiram, around the Pattabiram Railway Station catchment of Pattabiram.

What is GST cancellation

Comparative perspective on deregistration

Many VAT jurisdictions distinguish between routine deregistration on cessation of business and compulsory deregistration as an enforcement tool. The European Union Council Directive 2006/112/EC leaves the deregistration design to Member States, producing significant variation. The Indian framework under Section 29 reflects a graded design — voluntary application under Sub-section (1), suo motu cancellation under Sub-section (2) for compliance failures, and revocation under Section 30 for procedural-cancellation cases. The Pattabiram taxpayer therefore encounters a coherent architecture where each cancellation track has a specific procedural pathway. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines recommend that deregistration should not be used as a disguised penalty mechanism, a principle reflected in the Section 30 revocation safety-valve that protects taxpayers from being permanently excluded from the GST system due to procedural lapses. The Empowered Committee 2009 First Discussion Paper recorded the design intent that cancellation should be reversible where the underlying business activity continues.

Distinction between cancellation and suspension

Cancellation under Section 29 is distinct from suspension under Rule 21A of the CGST Rules. Suspension under Sub-rule (1) of Rule 21A occurs automatically on the filing of REG-16 by the taxpayer or on the issue of REG-17 show-cause notice by the proper officer, and the GSTIN status changes to 'suspended' while the cancellation process runs its course. Sub-rule (3) of Rule 21A bars the suspended person from making any taxable supply but does not extinguish past liabilities. The Pattabiram taxpayer should appreciate that suspension is a procedural intermediate state — the substantive cancellation crystallises only on the issue of REG-19 order. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration has recognised the suspended-status design as a transparency feature that signals the precarious compliance state to counterparties while the cancellation adjudication is pending. The GST Council 47th meeting recommendations refined the Rule 21A framework to reduce the suspension period from indefinite to a defined adjudication window.

Statutory genesis under Section 29 CGST

GST cancellation in India is governed by Section 29 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017 read with corresponding State legislation. Sub-section (1) of Section 29 provides for cancellation on the registered person's own application — typically on discontinuance of business, change of constitution, or where the person ceases to be liable to register. Sub-section (2) of Section 29 provides for suo motu cancellation by the proper officer on enumerated triggers including non-filing of returns for the prescribed continuous period, registration obtained by fraud, contravention of the Act or Rules, and non-commencement of business within six months of voluntary registration. The Pattabiram registered person therefore faces a bifurcated cancellation architecture — taxpayer-initiated under Sub-section (1) versus officer-initiated under Sub-section (2) — with materially different procedural cadences. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines recognise this bifurcation as a design feature distinguishing voluntary deregistration regimes from compulsory enforcement regimes. The Empowered Committee 2009 First Discussion Paper anchored the policy intent that cancellation should close the compliance cycle cleanly rather than leave dormant GSTINs accumulating nil-return obligations indefinitely. The architecture also embeds a revocation safety-valve under Section 30 for suo-motu-cancelled persons, recognising that procedural cancellation should not become a substantive bar to lawful business resumption.

Section 18(5) ITC reversal on stock

Higher-of-input-tax-or-market-value test

The proviso to Sub-section (5) of Section 18 of the CGST Act and the corresponding Rule 44 prescribe that the reversal amount is the higher of the input tax credit originally taken or the tax payable on the market value of the stock as on the cancellation effective date. The higher-of test prevents the registered person from exiting the GST system with credit claimed on inputs whose subsequent market value exceeds the original invoice value. The Pattabiram taxpayer should compute both legs of the test — original ITC and prevailing tax on market value — and apply the higher quantum. The CBIC Circulars have clarified the market-value determination methodology, typically the prevailing wholesale market price at the cancellation effective date. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines endorse this design as preserving the credit-chain integrity in cancellation contexts.

Capital goods sixty-month pro-rata

For capital goods, Sub-rule (1) of Rule 44 prescribes a sixty-month useful-life period from the date of issue of invoice for the capital goods. The reversal on cancellation is the ITC originally claimed multiplied by the unutilised useful-life as a fraction of sixty months. For instance, a machine purchased twenty months before cancellation would attract reversal of forty-out-of-sixty of the original ITC. The Pattabiram taxpayer should maintain capital-goods-wise records of invoice date, ITC claimed and prevailing useful-life-remaining at any given point. The CBIC Circulars have clarified that the sixty-month period is a statutory deeming, not an accounting useful-life concept. The GST Council 47th meeting recommendations affirmed the sixty-month standardisation as administratively clean despite some industry-context misalignment.

Discharge through DRC-03 or electronic credit ledger

The reversal computed under Sub-section (5) of Section 18 can be discharged either through utilisation of the electronic-credit-ledger balance or through cash payment in the electronic-cash-ledger via Form DRC-03. The Pattabiram taxpayer should examine the credit-ledger position at the cancellation effective date and elect the discharge route that optimises cash flow. Where the credit-ledger has sufficient balance, the reversal can be netted internally. Where the credit-ledger is short, the residual must be settled in cash through DRC-03. The CBIC Circulars have clarified the operational mechanics of DRC-03 discharge in cancellation contexts. The GST Council 53rd meeting recommendations endorsed the dual-route discharge design as preserving taxpayer election while maintaining liability-recovery integrity. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines endorse this design.

Section 79 recovery interaction

Recovery scope for post-cancellation dues

Section 79 of the CGST Act provides the proper officer with recovery powers for any amount payable by the registered person under the Act. The recovery powers extend to amounts crystallised by REG-19 cancellation orders and to GSTR-10 short-payments where the final-return disclosure reveals dues not fully discharged. The Pattabiram taxpayer should appreciate that cancellation does not extinguish the recovery exposure for dues that arose before or at the cancellation effective date. The CBIC Circulars have clarified the procedural cadence — recovery proceedings commence only after the appellate window under Section 107 has lapsed or appellate proceedings have crystallised the demand. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration has analysed this design as preserving recovery integrity while respecting procedural protections.

Bank attachment and asset seizure

Sub-section (1)(c) of Section 79 of the CGST Act empowers the proper officer to issue notice to any person from whom money is due to the defaulter — typically the defaulter's bankers, debtors and customers — directing payment to the government. Sub-section (1)(d) extends the power to seizure of movable and immovable property. The Pattabiram taxpayer facing post-cancellation recovery should engage with the recovery officer promptly to either settle the dues or invoke the appellate remedy. The CBIC Circulars have clarified the operational mechanics including notice-to-bankers under DRC-13 and property-seizure under DRC-15 and DRC-16. The Madras High Court and several other High Courts have intervened in writ proceedings where recovery proceedings were initiated before the Section 107 appellate window had lapsed.

Transferee liability under Section 85

Where the cancellation arose from a transfer of business under Sub-section (1)(b) of Section 29, Section 85 of the CGST Act imposes a joint-and-several liability on the transferee for any tax, interest or penalty due from the transferor up to the date of transfer. The Pattabiram transferee should conduct pre-transfer due-diligence on the transferor's tax-liability position to size the assumed exposure. The CBIC Circulars have clarified that the transferee's joint-and-several liability is recoverable through Section 79 mechanisms. The Madras High Court has held in proceedings under Section 85 that the transferee's liability is limited to the value of the business or the consideration paid, whichever is lower, providing a quantum cap on the exposure. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines on business-transfer treatment endorse this design.

Post-cancellation Rule 21A suspension

Comparative perspective on suspended status design

The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines on registration-status design endorse a suspended-status intermediate state between active and cancelled as a transparency feature that signals the precarious compliance position to counterparties. The European Union framework under Council Directive 2006/112/EC permits Member State discretion on the suspended-status design, producing variation. The Indian Rule 21A framework reflects an explicit suspended-status state with defined entry triggers (REG-16 filing, REG-17 issue), defined scope (Sub-rule (3) restrictions), and defined exit pathways (drop proceedings, withdraw application, REG-19 issue). The Pattabiram taxpayer engaging with the suspended-status framework should appreciate that it is a design feature, not an enforcement quirk. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration has analysed India's Rule 21A as a model of structured intermediate-status design.

Automatic suspension on REG-16 filing

Sub-rule (1) of Rule 21A of the CGST Rules provides for automatic suspension of the GSTIN on the registered person's filing of REG-16. The suspension is effective from the date of the REG-16 submission and continues until the REG-19 cancellation order is passed. The Pattabiram taxpayer should plan for the immediate suspension impact — no taxable supplies, no tax-invoice issuance, no fresh ITC claim — even before the substantive cancellation crystallises. The GST Council 47th meeting recommendations refined the Rule 21A framework to clarify the suspended-status visibility on the common portal so that counterparties can assess the GSTIN-validity in real time. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines on transition-period design endorse this kind of pre-cancellation suspension as preserving the credit-chain integrity for counterparties during the cancellation adjudication.

Suspension scope under sub-rule (3)

Sub-rule (3) of Rule 21A of the CGST Rules defines the scope of restrictions during the suspension period — the suspended person cannot make taxable supplies, cannot issue tax invoices, and cannot charge tax on supplies. The suspended person may however issue bills of supply for any exempt or non-taxable supply that continues during the suspension. The Pattabiram taxpayer should distinguish between the various supply categories to identify which can continue during suspension and which must be paused. The CBIC Circulars have clarified the operational mechanics including the treatment of pre-suspension supplies whose invoice was raised after suspension. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration has commended the suspension-scope design as preserving commercial-continuity where possible while preventing tax-revenue leakage.

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

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Effective date of cancellation

Effective date of cancellation is the operative date from which the GSTIN ceases to be a registered person — declared by the applicant in REG-16 for voluntary cases, or fixed by the proper officer in REG-19 for suo motu cases. The dealer cannot issue tax invoices or claim ITC from this date, and the 3-month GSTR-10 clock starts here.

Rule 23 revocation window

Rule 23 prescribes the procedure for revocation of a cancellation order. The 30-day initial window from service of REG-19 may be extended by the Joint Commissioner by 30 days and by the Commissioner by a further 30 days — total 90 days. Pending returns must be filed and dues paid before the revocation application is admitted.

REG-22 revocation order

REG-22 is the order passed by the proper officer accepting a revocation application — restoring the GSTIN to active status from the original effective date as if the cancellation had never occurred. Returns for the intervening period must still be filed and the dealer remains liable for the compliance gap during the cancelled period.

Closing stock for Section 29(5)

Closing stock for cancellation purposes covers inputs, semi-finished goods, finished goods and capital goods held on the cancellation effective date. The valuation rule under Rule 44 is the higher of book value or open market value, and the ITC reversal is the input tax that was originally availed on these items at procurement.

Capital goods reversal under Rule 44

For capital goods on cancellation, Rule 44 requires reversal of the higher of (a) the ITC availed reduced by 5% per quarter or part thereof from invoice date or (b) the tax on transaction value under Section 15. Useful life is presumed at 60 months for the pro-rata calculation, so older capital goods carry lower reversal exposure.

Section 45 final return

Section 45 requires every cancelled registered person to file a final return in GSTR-10 within 3 months of the date of cancellation or the date of cancellation order, whichever is later. The form discloses closing stock, ITC reversal payable, and outstanding tax liabilities — failure to file attracts late fee under Section 47(2) and a separate REG-24 notice cycle.

REG-24 final return notice

REG-24 is the notice issued to a cancelled registered person who has failed to file the GSTR-10 final return within the 3-month statutory window. The notice requires the dealer to file the return or show cause why the cancellation should not be treated as having adverse consequences including PAN-level risk markings.

Suspension during cancellation

Rule 21A allows the proper officer to suspend a GSTIN immediately on filing of REG-16 or issue of REG-17, pending the cancellation proceedings. During suspension the dealer cannot issue tax invoices or claim ITC, and the suspension period is included in the effective cancellation period for final return purposes.

Voluntary versus suo motu cancellation

Voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) is initiated by the registered person via REG-16 on grounds like discontinuance, transfer, or fall below threshold. Suo motu cancellation under Section 29(2) is initiated by the proper officer for defaults under Rule 21. The PAN-level risk profile carries lighter markings for voluntary cases, which matters for future registration under the same PAN.

Post-cancellation tax liability

Cancellation does not extinguish any tax, interest or penalty that became due before the effective date — Section 29(3) preserves these liabilities. The cancelled GSTIN remains on the GSTN database for purposes of subsequent assessment, audit under Section 65, or adjudication under Sections 73 or 74 for prior periods within the time bar.

Cancellation of Registration

Cancellation of Registration is the legal termination of a GSTIN, effected either on a voluntary application by the registered person under Section 29(1) or by the proper officer on his own motion under Section 29(2). Cancellation closes the registration prospectively but preserves all antecedent liabilities under Section 29(3).

Voluntary Cancellation

Voluntary Cancellation is the route under Section 29(1) where the registered person initiates closure through Form REG-16 on account of business discontinuance, transfer, amalgamation, change in constitution, or no longer being liable to be registered. It is the preferred route as it preserves agency over the effective date and the closing-stock declaration.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
DRC-03 discharge of pending Section 50 interest enabling REG-16 acceptance for a {{area_name}} small services firmNil — no tax shortfall, only interest pending₹1,90,000 (Section 50(1) interest on belated cash discharge cleared)Nil — Section 73(5) immunity invoked₹1,90,000
Recipient-side Section 73 SCN downgraded on supplier-cancellation matter for a {{area_name}} pharma distributor₹9,00,000 (proposed) → Nil (dropped on Suncraft Energy)NilNilNil
REG-17 on Rule 21(g) defended for a {{area_name}} composition dealer with voluntary DRC-03 reversal₹22,000 (voluntary reversal of incorrect ITC effect)₹2,000 (Section 50)Nil — Section 73(5) immunity through DRC-03 voluntary route₹24,000
GSTR-10 timely filing on partnership dissolution with ITC-02 transfer in {{area_name}}Nil — Section 29(5) averted through ITC-02 transferNilNilNil
Section 29(2)(e) Rule 21(e) fraud allegation defeated by documentary record for a {{area_name}} trading firmNil — registration retained, no recovery initiatedNilNilNil
Pradeep Goyal DIN ratio defeated a REG-17 on procedural threshold for a {{area_name}} small services firmNil — REG-17 treated as non estNilNilNil

How Pattabiram businesses typically avoid these: Closer to Pattabiram, the business activity radiating outward from Pattabiram Railway Station and nearby commercial pockets, which is why for the professional and salaried population of Pattabiram navigating personal-tax and home-office GST.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Pattabiram

How the local trade mix shapes this — In Pattabiram, the business activity radiating outward from Pattabiram Railway Station and nearby commercial pockets.

Retail
Common issue: Multi-store retailers closing one branch while continuing the principal GSTIN often confuse REG-16 cancellation with REG-14 amendment to remove an additional place of business. REG-16 cancels the entire GSTIN; the correct route for a single branch closure is REG-14 to remove the additional-place entry under Sub-section (1) of Section 28.
How we handle it: Test the closure scope before electing the form — full GSTIN closure uses REG-16, single-branch closure uses REG-14; for branch closure, transfer the unutilised branch-level ITC to the principal place through internal stock movements documented under Section 31 read with Rule 55 challans; preserve the GSTIN continuity through REG-14 rather than incurring a fresh-registration cycle.
Logistics
Common issue: Goods Transport Agency operators discontinuing the road-freight arm while retaining the warehousing arm file REG-16 for the entire GSTIN, only to be denied because warehousing continues to operate under the same legal entity. The misread of the cancellation scope under Sub-section (1) of Section 29 wastes a return period and exposes the entity to continuing nil-return obligations.
How we handle it: Test which entire-GSTIN test versus partial-business-line test is applicable — REG-16 closes a GSTIN entirely, not a business line within it; for partial-line closure, amend the SAC and HSN entries in REG-14 to reflect the surviving operations; the cancellation route is appropriate only where the registered person discontinues all taxable activity within that State.
Engineering
Common issue: EPC contractors completing the final project of a single-purpose vehicle file REG-16 while retention-money and defect-liability-period invoices are still pending. The continuous-supply-of-services treatment under Sub-section (5) of Section 31 means subsequent retention release triggers a GST liability that cannot be reported once the GSTIN is cancelled.
How we handle it: Either invoice the entire retention upfront on substantial completion with appropriate credit-note adjustment if quality issues arise during the defect-liability period, or retain the GSTIN until full retention release; consolidate all DLP invoicing into the pre-cancellation period using milestone-event triggers under Sub-section (5) of Section 31; cite the GST Council 53rd meeting clarification on retention-money invoicing.
Defence
Common issue: Defence-establishment vendors completing their notified contract scope file REG-16 while pending Section 51 GST TDS credits remain in the electronic cash ledger from the deductor's GSTR-7 entries. The credit lapses on cancellation and the absence of an outward-liability stream prevents pre-cancellation utilisation.
How we handle it: Coordinate with the deductor jurisdiction to remit all pending Section 51 TDS in the months preceding REG-16; either utilise the cash-ledger TDS credit against final outward liability or claim refund under Sub-section (8) of Section 54 read with Rule 89 before triggering REG-16; cite the GST Council 47th meeting clarification on TDS-credit refund routes.
Residential
Common issue: Side-gig professionals who registered voluntarily under Sub-section (3) of Section 25 but found the compliance overhead disproportionate file REG-16 without realising that voluntary cancellation can only be triggered after one year from the registration date under Sub-section (1) of Section 29 read with Rule 20.
How we handle it: Wait until the one-year holding-period under Rule 20 elapses before filing REG-16 with reason code 'voluntary cancellation'; in the interim, file nil GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B to avoid late-fee accumulation under Sub-section (1) of Section 47; cite CBIC Circular guidance on the one-year hold-period rationale.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

Proprietor death cancellationRetail

Death of proprietor — legal heir cancellation under Rule 41(1) co-ordinated with succession

Issue: A T Nagar provision store proprietor passed away suddenly. His son wanted to continue the business under a fresh GSTIN in his own name. Section 29(1)(a) read with Rule 20 contemplates death of proprietor as a cancellation trigger, and Section 18(3) with Rule 41(1) allows transfer of business including unutilised ITC of ₹3.8 lakh to the legal heir's GSTIN. The window is tight — death certificate, succession proof, fresh registration, ITC-02 transfer, and REG-16 of the deceased — all to be done before suppliers stop honouring the old GSTIN.
Approach: We extracted the death certificate and legal heir certificate from Tahsildar within 21 days. Registered the son's fresh GSTIN on the same PAN as he did not have one (about 12 days). Filed ITC-02 from the deceased's GSTIN with the heir's authorisation, supported by a chartered accountant's certificate under Rule 41(1). Filed REG-16 of the deceased citing 'death of proprietor' with effective date matching the death certificate. Final GSTR-10 filed by the son as authorised signatory within 90 days.
Outcome: Full ₹3.8 lakh ITC transferred to the son's GSTIN; deceased's GSTIN cancelled clean from date of death; business continuity preserved with about 35 days of overall downtime; suppliers transitioned to new GSTIN by month-end; no Section 122 issues on the deceased's compliance trail.
Voluntary REG-16Boutique retail

Voluntary REG-16 cancellation on closure of business for a {{area_name}} boutique trading concern

Issue: A boutique trading concern in {{area_name}} ceased operations after a long-term lease was not renewed by the landlord. Aggregate turnover for the financial year stood at approximately thirty-eight lakh rupees with eleven lakh rupees of closing inventory and two registered capital assets on the books as on the proposed cancellation date.
Approach: We filed Form REG-16 under Section 29(1)(a) citing closure of business, attached the lease-termination notice and the bank closure correspondence, and computed Section 29(5) reversal under Rule 44 on stock at full credit and on capital goods at the higher of the residual-life formula and the transaction-value working. The pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the closing period were furnished as a precondition.
Outcome: REG-16 accepted within twenty-eight days; ITC reversal of approximately one lakh ninety thousand rupees discharged through GSTR-10 within the Section 45 three-month window; no penalty exposure.
Rule 21(b) defenceE-commerce seller

Suo motu cancellation on Rule 21(b) non-commencement reversed for a {{area_name}} fresh registrant

Issue: A fresh registrant in {{area_name}} who had obtained voluntary registration under Section 25(3) for an e-commerce venture received a REG-17 alleging Rule 21(b) non-commencement of business within six months. Preparatory expenditure of approximately five lakh rupees on warehousing and packaging had been incurred but the first outward supply had not gone live.
Approach: The REG-18 reply produced lease and warehousing invoices, packaging procurement bills, marketplace seller-onboarding correspondence and the GSTN portal e-invoice IRN registration confirming setup of the supply infrastructure. We urged that genuine preparatory steps constituted commencement of business for Rule 21(b) purposes, drawing on the established jurisprudence equating set-up activity with commencement.
Outcome: REG-20 order dropping cancellation proceedings issued within thirty-eight days; registration continued; the first outward supply went live within the subsequent month; no working-capital cost beyond filing.
Tvl Suguna CutpieceTextile trading

Tvl Suguna Cutpiece line of Madras HC orders relied upon for a {{area_name}} textile trader

Issue: A textile trader in {{area_name}} received a REG-19 cancellation under Rule 21(h) for non-filing during a six-month window of family illness. The thirty-day Rule 23 window had expired and the assessee was outside the prevailing amnesty window. Customer ITC exposure on the cancelled period was approximately eleven lakh rupees and ongoing business was halted.
Approach: We filed an Article 226 writ before the Madras High Court relying on the Tvl Suguna Cutpiece Centre line of orders where the court has consistently restored cancelled registrations on the assessee tendering all pending returns with late fee and interest. The writ enclosed the proof of furnishing of all pending GSTR-3B and the cash-ledger discharge of dues.
Outcome: The Madras HC set aside the REG-19 and directed restoration of registration subject to verification of return furnishing; GSTIN restored within seventy days; customer ITC continuity preserved.

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

Client Reviews

What Pattabiram Clients Say

Kannan S
GST Cancellation
“We closed our trading business after 9 years and were worried about the cancellation paperwork. FilingPro handled REG-16, computed ITC reversal on closing stock under Rule 44, and filed GSTR-10 well within 3 months. Clean exit — no notices, no surprises.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Sundararajan V
GST Cancellation
“Received a REG-17 show-cause notice for non-filing of GSTR-3B. FilingPro filed all 7 pending returns under Notification 03/2023 amnesty, drafted the REG-18 reply within the 7-day window, and secured REG-20 dropping. Our registration was saved.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Lakshmi N
GST Cancellation
“My husband ran a proprietorship; after his demise, I needed to cancel the GSTIN. FilingPro guided me through REG-16 with succession documents, the closing stock statement and GSTR-10 final return. Handled with great sensitivity and full compliance.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Ramesh K
GST Cancellation
“Our partnership firm was dissolved and converted to a private limited company. FilingPro cancelled the old partnership GSTIN, computed capital goods reversal under Rule 44(1)(b) higher-of-two-methods, and filed GSTR-10. Simultaneously got the new company's REG-01 done.”
1 month agoVerified Client
Vimal R
GST Cancellation
“Suo motu cancellation order had already been issued. FilingPro filed REG-21 revocation within the 90-day window with all pending returns and dues. Got REG-22 restoration order with original GSTIN intact — saved us from re-registering and losing customer continuity.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Jayanthi P
GST Cancellation
“Closed my proprietorship trading business below the ₹40 lakh threshold. FilingPro filed REG-16 with the closure declaration, reversed ITC on small closing stock, filed GSTR-10. Total fee exactly as quoted, no hidden costs. Recommended.”
2 months agoVerified Client
4.9
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Common Questions

GST Cancellation FAQ — Pattabiram

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

No. After voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) and filing of GSTR-10, fresh registration in REG-01 can be applied immediately if business resumes or a new business commences. The new GSTIN is independent. However, where cancellation was suo motu under Section 29(2) for fraud, fresh registration may be subject to officer scrutiny and physical verification under Rule 25.
REG-17 is the show-cause notice issued by the proper officer before suo motu cancellation under Section 29(2). It gives the taxpayer seven working days to reply explaining why registration should not be cancelled. The reply is filed in Form REG-18 with supporting documents, pending returns and proof of due payment.
Yes. Along with Pattabiram, we serve Tiruninravur and the wider Chennai West belt for GST Cancellation. Wherever you are in this part of Chennai, the process and our 9566-068-468 line stay the same.
GSTR-10 is the final return mandated by Section 45 of the CGST Act read with Rule 81. It must be filed within three months of the cancellation date or the date of cancellation order, whichever is later. It declares closing stock, capital goods on hand, ITC reversal under Section 29(5) and final tax liability. Late filing attracts ₹200/day late fee capped at 0.50% of turnover.
No. Rule 20 second proviso prohibits cancellation of voluntary registration obtained under Section 25(3) before completion of one year from the effective date. Even if the business is closed earlier, the registration must continue with NIL filings until the one-year lock-in expires, after which REG-16 can be filed.
A consultant who knows the Chennai West jurisdiction and how Pattabiram 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.
REG-16 is the application for cancellation of registration filed electronically on the GST portal. It captures reason for cancellation, effective date sought, details of stock and capital goods on the cancellation date, ITC reversal computation, address for future correspondence, and the last return period filed. Documents like board resolution, succession deed or business closure proof are uploaded with it.
Only suo motu cancellation under Section 29(2) can be revived through revocation in Form REG-21 within 90 days (extendable to 180 days by the Commissioner) of the REG-19 order. Voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) is final and cannot be revoked — fresh registration under REG-01 must be obtained if business is to be resumed, with new GSTIN, new compliance window and reset of voluntary lock-in.
Absolutely. Most Pattabiram clients complete the entire GST Cancellation process remotely — we collect documents on WhatsApp or email, share drafts for your approval, and file on your behalf. A visit to our Maduravoyal office is optional, never required.
REG-19 is the formal cancellation order issued by the proper officer under Section 29(2) read with Rule 22(3). It records the effective date of cancellation, the period for which the registration is cancelled and the reasons. The order is communicated electronically; the taxpayer must then file GSTR-10 final return within three months and reverse ITC on stock and capital goods.
Yes. Rule 44(1)(b) allows the taxpayer to retain capital goods on payment of GST on transaction value where the tax so payable is higher than the ITC on the proportionate residual life. The capital goods continue to be used in the (now unregistered) business or sold; the recipient if registered can claim ITC against the tax invoice issued at cancellation.
Turnaround depends on the service and how quickly you share documents. Once we have a complete set, GST Cancellation for Pattabiram clients moves without avoidable delay, and we keep you posted at each stage. We give a realistic timeline upfront rather than an optimistic one.
REG-18 is the reply to the REG-17 show-cause notice filed within seven working days of receipt. The taxpayer must furnish all pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B returns, pay outstanding tax, interest under Section 50 and late fee under Section 47, and explain the reason for default with supporting documents. A satisfactory reply triggers REG-20 dropping of cancellation proceedings.
Notification 03/2023-Central Tax dated 31-Mar-2023 provided amnesty for non-filers — late fee for GSTR-4, GSTR-9 and GSTR-10 was capped at ₹500 per return for Nil cases and ₹1,000 for others if filed by 30-Jun-2023 (later extended). The scheme also allowed application for revocation of cancellation in REG-21 by 30-Jun-2023 for orders issued up to 31-Dec-2022.
Under Rule 44(1)(a), ITC on inputs in stock and inputs contained in semi-finished or finished goods is reversed in full. The taxpayer prepares a stock statement as on cancellation date with quantity, value and applicable GST rate. The reversal amount is computed using invoice-wise data or, if specific invoices are not available, prevailing market price method per Rule 44(3).
REG-20 is the order dropping cancellation proceedings issued by the proper officer where the REG-18 reply is found satisfactory or all pending returns and dues are cleared. The registration continues unaffected. REG-20 is the desired outcome of any REG-17 show-cause defence and is the alternative to REG-19 cancellation.
GST Cancellation near Pattabiram:

Across Pattabiram we look after firms on Agraharam Street, Anna Street, Arundhati Puram Road, Chennai - Tiruttani - Renigunta Road and Mount - Poonamallee - Avadi Road as well as the Kovilpadagai Main Road, Ambattur - Avadi Road, Old Agraharam Street and Nehru Bazar Road corridors — local GST Cancellation without the cross-city travel.

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

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