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
Indira Nagar MRTS Station catchment · Indira Nagar GST Notice Reply

GST Notice Reply — Indira Nagar & Adyar

End-to-end GST Notice Reply for Indira Nagar premium residential adjacent to adyar establishments — backed by a 15+ year track record

Handling GST Notice Reply for Indira Nagar and Adyar clients — fixed fee, deterministic turnaround and archived working papers. Call 9566-068-468.

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

What documents are essential for an ASMT-11 reply on ITC mismatch in Indira Nagar, Chennai?

Notice copy with DIN, GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the relevant tax periods, GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B downloads (period-locked PDFs), purchase register with invoice-wise GSTIN/HSN/tax break-up, sales register, bank statement evidencing payment to suppliers within 180 days under Section 16(2) proviso, and a reconciliation statement tying every line. A voluntary DRC-03 for any ineligible portion should accompany the reply.

Transparent Pricing

GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar — Plans & Pricing

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

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Single notice
Standard
Written reply + reconciliation
₹5,000/per notice

  • Notice Review ASMT-10 DRC-01 SCN etc.
  • GSTR-2B vs GSTR-3B Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Legal Sections
  • Portal Submission of Reply
  • DRC-01A Pre-SCN Voluntary Payment
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Demand Order Analysis Sec 73 / 74
  • Appeal to Appellate Authority APL-01
  • Bank Attachment Recovery Stay
  • Provisional Attachment Sec 83 Response
Most Popular ⭐
Professional
Reply + hearing + demand review
₹15,000/per notice

  • Notice Review ASMT-10 DRC-01 SCN etc.
  • GSTR-2B vs GSTR-3B Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Legal Sections
  • Portal Submission of Reply
  • DRC-01A Pre-SCN Voluntary Payment
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Demand Order Analysis Sec 73 / 74
  • Appeal to Appellate Authority APL-01
  • Bank Attachment Recovery Stay
  • Provisional Attachment Sec 83 Response
Demand / appeals
Litigation
Full litigation support
₹30,000/per notice

  • Notice Review ASMT-10 DRC-01 SCN etc.
  • GSTR-2B vs GSTR-3B Reconciliation
  • Written Reply with Legal Sections
  • Portal Submission of Reply
  • DRC-01A Pre-SCN Voluntary Payment
  • Personal Hearing Attendance
  • Demand Order Analysis Sec 73 / 74
  • Appeal to Appellate Authority APL-01
  • Bank Attachment Recovery Stay
  • Provisional Attachment Sec 83 Response

Swipe to see all plans

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

Why FilingPro?

Why Indira Nagar Clients Choose FilingPro

Expert GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar — qualified professionals, 15+ years experience, zero-penalty track record.

Reconciliation tied to the rupee, not the lakh

The reconciliation we put on the file is invoice-level — supplier GSTIN, invoice number, invoice date, taxable value, IGST or CGST plus SGST, and the period of GSTR-2B reflection. Round-figure summaries do not survive a hearing. When the officer asks why a particular line is claimed as eligible, we are able to point to the specific row of the working and the specific page of the supporting evidence. That precision wins files.

Books rebuilt before the reply is drafted

On older engagements we have found that the disputed period itself was poorly maintained — RCM not booked, blocked credits reversed in the wrong period, opening ITC carried wrongly from the earlier year. Where we find this, we rebuild the books for the disputed period before drafting the reply. The reply is only as defensible as the books behind it, and a few weekends of bookkeeping work often save many lakhs of demand.

Hearing attendance is a partner-level activity, not delegated

Personal hearings under Section 75(4) at our firm are attended by a partner or a senior associate who has signed the reply. The proper officer expects the person who can answer factual questions on the spot and take a position on close calls, not a junior carrying papers. This single discipline has avoided several adjournments and has, in three matters last year, led to the officer dropping a ground at the table itself.

Section 128A waiver actively pursued for old-year files

When a client comes to us with a fresh DRC-01 for financial year 2017-18, 2018-19, or 2019-20 under Section 73, we examine the Section 128A waiver scheme as the first option. Where the admitted tax is payable, we move it through DRC-03 within the prescribed cut-off and file SPL-01 or SPL-02 for the interest and penalty waiver. On a typical two-lakh demand of that vintage the waiver alone is worth seventy to eighty thousand.

Section 107 appeal pipeline ready before the order arrives

On any file where we sense the order may go against us — typically when the hearing officer is non-committal or where a fact is disputed beyond reconciliation — we begin computing the ten per cent pre-deposit and assembling the appeal bundle even before the DRC-07 is issued. This compresses the post-order action to days rather than weeks and keeps the three-month appeal window from becoming a panic.

Single fee per notice with no surprises

Our engagement fee is two thousand five hundred rupees per notice and that covers the intake, the legal mapping, the reconciliation, the reply drafting, the portal filing, and one personal hearing. Where the matter escalates to Section 107 appeal or beyond, the fee is renegotiated separately and disclosed up front before any appeal-stage work is started. There is no per-page billing, no annexure surcharge, no hearing add-on.

Key Benefits

What Indira Nagar Clients Get

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

Jurisdictional Audit of Every Notice
Before drafting on the merits, the notice is tested for DIN, designation of the issuing officer, monetary jurisdiction under the relevant CBIC notifications, and territorial competence. A notice that fails any of these tests is challenged on that ground first — and where the breach is fatal, the merits argument never has to be reached.
Section 75(7) Travel-Beyond-SCN Bar Enforced
Section 75(7) bars the adjudicating authority from confirming a demand on grounds not specified in the show-cause. Replies are drafted to lock the proceeding to the four corners of the SCN, so that any later expansion in the order itself becomes a clean ground in Section 107 appeal.
Suncraft Energy Defence on Supplier Default
Where ITC is sought to be reversed because a supplier has not discharged tax, the reply pleads Suncraft Energy v. Assistant Commissioner of the Calcutta High Court and the consequential SLP order. The department is required to first move against the defaulting supplier; a recipient who has discharged the consideration including tax, holds a tax invoice in form, and has received the supply, cannot be made the first port of recovery.
Speaking Order Compelled Under Section 75(6)
An order that does not deal with each ground urged in the reply is not a speaking order within Section 75(6). I draft replies in numbered, issue-wise paragraphs precisely so that any non-speaking order can be challenged on that footing — the appellate authority and the High Court are both quick to set aside orders that recite submissions and then fail to engage with them.
Section 107(6) Pre-Deposit Optimised
Where appeal is necessary, the pre-deposit is computed strictly on the disputed tax — not on interest, not on penalty, and not on amounts already accepted. The August 2024 amendments allowing partial discharge from the credit ledger are leveraged where the cash position is tight. The objective is to keep the appeal admitted without sterilising working capital.
Article 226 Writ Where Statutory Remedy Fails
Adverse orders that are jurisdictionally infirm, ex parte without recorded reasons, passed in defiance of personal hearing, or issued without DIN are taken to the Madras High Court under Article 226. The alternate remedy bar yields where the breach is of natural justice or jurisdiction — this is the line the Court itself has drawn repeatedly.
Comparison

Section 73 (Non-Fraud) vs Section 74 (Fraud)

Why this matters here — In Indira Nagar, the cluster of residential, it services, retail businesses that defines Indira Nagar's commercial fabric; served by short connections to Adyar and Besant Nagar and onward to central Chennai.

AspectSection 73 (Non-Fraud)Section 74 (Fraud)
Penalty after SCN but before orderReduced penalty of ten per cent or ten thousand rupees, whichever higher, under the proviso to Section 73(8)Reduced penalty of twenty-five per cent of tax under Section 74(8) within thirty days of SCN
Penalty on adjudication orderTen per cent of tax or ten thousand rupees, whichever is higher, under Section 73(9)Hundred per cent of tax under Section 74(9), in addition to tax and interest
Burden of proving fraudNot applicable; the section operates on objective short paymentLies squarely on the revenue; recorded reasons are essential and reviewable on Kranti Associates standards
Permissible defence themesBona fide interpretation, supplier-side default per Suncraft Energy, contemporaneous reconciliationAbsence of mens rea; downgrade to Section 73 where mental element is not proved on record
Section 107 appeal pre-depositTen per cent of disputed tax leg only, per the ratio in Tvl Sri Murugan Trading and connected ordersTen per cent of disputed tax leg; interest and penalty components are not pre-deposited
Onward escalation riskDemand confined to civil consequences; no prosecution under Section 132 absent independent groundsParallel prosecution exposure under Section 132 where the threshold quantum and ingredient elements stand
Operative provisionSub-section (1) of Section 73 of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 142 of the CGST RulesSub-section (1) of Section 74 of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 142 and the proviso framework
Mental element requiredShort payment without fraud, wilful misstatement or suppression of factsFraud, wilful misstatement or suppression of facts to evade tax must be alleged and proved by the revenue
Limitation for issue of SCNTwo years and nine months from the due date of the relevant annual returnFour years and six months from the due date of the relevant annual return
Limitation for passing orderThree years from the due date of the relevant annual returnFive years from the due date of the relevant annual return
Pre-show-cause intimationDRC-01A under Rule 142(1A); reply through Part B within the noted windowDRC-01A precedes the SCN in Section 74 cases equally; the recipient retains the right to respond before formal SCN
Pre-SCN payment reliefPayment of tax with interest under Section 73(5) before SCN closes proceedings with no penaltyPayment of tax, interest and a reduced penalty of fifteen per cent under Section 74(5) before SCN closes proceedings
Documents Required

Documents for GST Notice Reply

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

Notice copy with DIN (ASMT-10 / DRC-01A / DRC-01 / ADT-01)
GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed acknowledgements for the period under notice
GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B period-locked PDF downloads from the GST portal
Purchase register with invoice-wise GSTIN HSN tax break-up
Sales register tying to GSTR-1 and e-invoice IRN logs
Bank statement evidencing supplier payments within 180 days (Section 16(2) proviso)
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 — In Indira Nagar, the business activity radiating outward from Indira Nagar MRTS and nearby commercial pockets.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
ASMT-10 scrutiny notice served under Section 61 read with Rule 9930 daysASMT-11Scrutiny escalates upward — to departmental audit under Section 65, to special audit by a CA / CMA under Section 66, or directly to Section 73 / 74 demand proceedings
DRC-01 show-cause notice issued under Section 73(1)30 daysDRC-06Adjudication proceeds ex-parte under Section 75(4) proviso; demand confirmed without substantive defence on record
DRC-07 demand order communicated under Rule 142(5)90 daysAPL-01 first appeal to Appellate AuthorityOrder attains finality; recovery proceedings under Section 79 read with Rules 143-160 commence
ASMT-10 scrutiny notice served on the registered person30 daysASMT-11Officer may escalate directly to a DRC-01 show-cause notice under Section 73 with proposed demand of tax plus ten per cent penalty
DRC-01A pre-show-cause intimation issued under Rule 142(1A)15 daysDRC-03 (voluntary payment) and DRC-01A Part B (reply)Loss of the Section 73(5) zero-penalty closure window; a full DRC-01 SCN will follow with tax plus ten per cent penalty exposure
DRC-01 show-cause notice issued under Section 74 (fraud or suppression)30 daysDRC-06 with reclassification ground raisedHundred per cent penalty exposure under Section 74; ex parte order if no reply filed; prosecution risk under Section 132 where the tax demand crosses the threshold
Order in original passed under Section 73 or Section 7490 daysAPL-01 with ten per cent pre-deposit of disputed taxOrder attains finality; recovery proceedings under Section 79 commence including bank attachment under DRC-13 and property attachment under DRC-16
DRC-01A pre-show-cause intimation communicated under Rule 142(1A)15 daysDRC-03 (payment) or Part B of DRC-01A (representation)Proper officer proceeds to issue formal show-cause notice in DRC-01 with full penalty exposure

Deadline pressure points we see in Indira Nagar: Where Indira Nagar differs: for Indira Nagar's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

DRC-06Reply to the Show Cause Notice

Substantive reply to the DRC-01 show-cause notice carrying the defence, reconciliations, case-law support, denial or admission of demand and request for personal hearing under Section 75(4)

Within 30 days of service of DRC-01 Common Portal (taxpayer)
DRC-07Summary of the Order

Summary of the adjudication order passed under sub-section (9) of Section 73 or sub-section (9) of Section 74; records the confirmed demand of tax, interest and penalty and triggers the recovery clock

Issued post-adjudication Jurisdictional Range Officer
APL-01Appeal to Appellate Authority

First appeal against an adjudication order under Section 107; requires pre-deposit of 10 percent of the disputed tax and statement of facts and grounds of appeal

Within 3 months of communication of the order (extendable by 1 month) Office of Appellate Authority (Joint / Additional Commissioner)
GSTR-3BSummary Return of Outward and Inward Supplies

Self-assessed summary return of outward supplies, inward supplies on reverse charge, eligible ITC and net tax payable; the foundational document reconciled against GSTR-1, GSTR-2A / 2B and books in every scrutiny

20th / 22nd / 24th of the next month per turnover slab Common Portal (taxpayer)
ASMT-10Notice for Intimating Discrepancies in the Return after Scrutiny

Issued by the proper officer where discrepancies are noticed during scrutiny of returns; specifies the discrepancy and seeks explanation within thirty days

Communicated post-scrutiny; reply due in 30 days Jurisdictional Range Officer
ASMT-11Reply to the Notice Issued under ASMT-10

Registered person's reply explaining each discrepancy with reconciliations, supporting documents and admission or contest of the variance line by line

Within 30 days of service of ASMT-10 Common Portal (registered person)
ASMT-12Order of Acceptance of Reply against the Notice Issued under ASMT-10

Closure order passed by the proper officer where the ASMT-11 reply is found acceptable; concludes the scrutiny without further proceedings

Issued after consideration of ASMT-11 Jurisdictional Range Officer
ASMT-13Assessment Order under Section 62

Best-judgment assessment order passed against a non-filer of GSTR-3B; deemed withdrawn if the pending return is filed within thirty days of service

Within five years from due date of annual return Jurisdictional Range Officer

GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar, Chennai 600020

Indira Nagar is a premium residential pocket adjacent to Adyar with strong concentration of IT professionals and supporting upscale retail. Statutory correspondence for Indira Nagar businesses routes through the Mylapore Division, so we align every GST Notice Reply engagement to that jurisdiction from the start. Indira Nagar (PIN 600020) falls under the Mylapore Division of the Chennai South, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. Businesses registered in Indira Nagar share the Chennai South jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Mylapore Division each time.

Indira Nagar reads as a premium residential adjacent to adyar pocket with high commercial activity, anchored around Indira Nagar MRTS and fed by the Indira Nagar MRTS Station corridor. Working in Indira Nagar brings a logistical edge: proximity to Indira Nagar MRTS and the Indira Nagar MRTS Station corridor keeps physical document handling fast. The businesses clustered around Indira Nagar MRTS in Indira Nagar drive the bulk of the GST Notice Reply workload we see each cycle. Each GST Notice Reply cycle for Indira Nagar reflects its commercial rhythm — invoices generated near Indira Nagar MRTS, expenses routed through the Indira Nagar MRTS Station freight network.

retail units around Indira Nagar share recurring GST Notice Reply patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation. A retail operator in Indira Nagar gets a GST Notice Reply workflow shaped by sector norms, not a one-size-fits-all template. For a retail business in Indira Nagar, the GST Notice Reply scope is rarely generic; we tailor the checklist to how that sector actually transacts. The retail character of Indira Nagar commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a GST Notice Reply review needs.

We keep a repeatable GST Notice Reply checklist for Indira Nagar so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed. From the first GST Notice Reply cycle, a Indira Nagar engagement is set up to be audit-ready rather than reconstructed under pressure later. The Indira Nagar GST Notice Reply workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. A Indira Nagar client sees the same GST Notice Reply cadence each cycle: intake, reconciliation, review, filing, acknowledgement.

GST Notice Reply clients in Besant Nagar are handled by the same practitioners who run our Indira Nagar desk. A client relocating between Indira Nagar and Besant Nagar keeps the same GST Notice Reply file and the same team. Coverage from Indira Nagar naturally extends to Besant Nagar, so group entities across the area share one GST Notice Reply workflow. Serving Indira Nagar and Besant Nagar from one team keeps GST Notice Reply turnaround identical across the cluster.

Over several cycles in Indira Nagar, the recurring GST Notice Reply issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early. Each engagement in Indira Nagar adds to a record of what the Chennai South jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next GST Notice Reply file. Common patterns in the Mylapore Division give Indira Nagar businesses an early-warning map we use to pre-empt GST Notice Reply issues. Sector signals in Indira Nagar — seasonal it services swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule GST Notice Reply work.

When a Kotturpuram business expands into Indira Nagar, we extend its GST Notice Reply setup to PIN 600020 without disruption. Incorporating in Indira Nagar comes with jurisdiction, registration and GST Notice Reply steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch. For a new business incorporating in Indira Nagar or shifting its principal place of business here, GST Notice Reply setup is one of the first things to get right. First-time GST Notice Reply for a Indira Nagar business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later.

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

GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar — Complete Guide

Of the 220-odd replies my team has filed in the last three years, 165 closed at the ASMT-12 closure stage without escalation to a Section 73 or 74 demand. Of the remaining, the larger share settled through a DRC-03 voluntary payment with reduced penalty under Section 73(8), and a smaller residue went into adjudication and onward appeal. The single biggest determinant of which path a file takes is the quality of the books — not the cleverness of the reply.

GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar, Chennai

ASMT-10 scrutiny notices, DRC-01A intimations and Section 73/74 show-cause notices for Indira Nagar businesses are replied within the 30-day statutory window with full reconciliation working and supporting documents.

GST SCN Defence Consultant in Indira Nagar

A dedicated SCN defence consultant in Indira Nagar drafts the ASMT-11/DRC-06 reply, computes any Section 50 interest, files DRC-03 voluntary payment where strategic, and represents at personal hearings under Section 75(4).

Section 73 vs Section 74 Notice Reply in Indira Nagar

Section 73 demands (no fraud, 3-year limit, 10% penalty) and Section 74 demands (fraud, 5-year limit, 100% penalty) for Indira Nagar taxpayers are defended on facts and law to either drop the demand, reclassify Section 74 to Section 73, or limit liability to admitted tax.

Section 107 Appeal & Section 128A Waiver in Indira Nagar

For Indira Nagar clients facing adverse DRC-07 orders, Section 107 appeal is filed with 10% pre-deposit; for FY 2017-18 to 2019-20 demands, Section 128A waiver of interest and penalty is applied through SPL-01/SPL-02.

Get Expert Help Today
Qualified professionals handle your GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹2,500/per-notice. Free consultation.
WhatsApp for Free Consultation Call @ 9566-068-468
From ₹2,500/per-notice
15+ years experience
Zero penalties guaranteed
Offices at Maduravoyal, Nerkundram & Nolambur (upcoming)
Key Facts — GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar
ASMT-11 reply filed within the 30-day Section 61 window — no escalation to Section 73/74 SCN for Indira Nagar clients.
DRC-01A intimation reviewed and DRC-03 voluntary payment filed where the case is weak — 100% penalty avoided under Section 73(5).
Section 73 SCN reply in DRC-06 with line-by-line GSTR-2B reconciliation — demands dropped or reduced through DRC-06 closure orders.
Section 74 fraud SCN defended on Diya Agencies and Suncraft Energy precedents — reclassified to Section 73 to escape 100% penalty.
Section 50 interest at 18% per annum computed on the net cash portion only — interest demands on gross tax challenged successfully.
Section 128A waiver application through SPL-01/SPL-02 for FY 2017-18 to 2019-20 demands of Indira Nagar clients — interest and penalty fully waived.
Section 107 appeal filed with 10% pre-deposit (capped at ₹25 crore CGST) — recovery under Section 79 stayed during appeal.
DIN-less notices challenged citing Circular 122/41/2019-GST and Pradeep Goyal SC ruling — invalid notices set aside.
Personal hearing under Section 75(4) attended by senior consultant for Indira Nagar clients — three opportunities exhausted before adverse order.
REG-17 cancellation SCN replied in REG-18 within 7 working days — registration restored, suo motu cancellation under REG-19 prevented.
People Also Ask — GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar
How long do I have to reply to an ASMT-10 GST notice?
Under Section 61 of the CGST Act read with Rule 99, the taxpayer must file ASMT-11 reply within 30 days from the date the ASMT-10 is communicated, or such longer period as the proper officer may permit. Failure to reply leads to escalation under Section 65 audit, Section 66 special audit or Section 73/74 SCN.
What is the difference between a Section 73 and Section 74 GST notice?
Section 73 covers short payment or wrong ITC without fraud — limitation 3 years, penalty 10% of tax or ₹10,000. Section 74 covers fraud, wilful misstatement or suppression of facts — limitation 5 years, penalty 100% of tax. The department must specifically plead and prove fraud to invoke Section 74; mere ITC mismatch is not enough.
Can I avoid penalty by paying tax voluntarily through DRC-03?
Yes. Under Section 73(5), payment of tax with interest before issuance of SCN closes the proceedings with no penalty. Under Section 74(5), pre-SCN payment with interest plus 15% penalty closes proceedings. DRC-03 is the form used; DRC-04 is the officer's acknowledgement closing the demand line.
What is the pre-deposit for filing a Section 107 appeal?
Section 107(6) requires deposit of the admitted tax in full plus 10% of the disputed tax (capped at ₹25 crore CGST plus ₹25 crore SGST). Without the pre-deposit the appeal is not maintainable. Recovery under Section 79 is stayed once the pre-deposit is made and the appeal is admitted.
Is the Section 128A waiver still available?
Section 128A (operative from 1 November 2024 via Finance Act 2024) provides waiver of interest and penalty on Section 73 demands for FY 2017-18, 2018-19 and 2019-20 — provided the entire tax is paid by 31 March 2025. Application is filed in SPL-01 (pre-order) or SPL-02 (post-order) per Circular 238/32/2024-GST.
Can ITC denied due to GSTR-2A/2B mismatch be defended?
Yes. The Madras HC ruling in Diya Agencies (2023) and the SC dismissal of SLP in Suncraft Energy (2023) hold that ITC cannot be denied solely on GSTR-2A/2B mismatch. The recipient must produce a valid invoice, evidence of payment to the supplier (within 180 days under Section 16(2) proviso) and proof of receipt of goods or services. The burden then shifts to the department.
How is the Supreme Court ruling in Mohit Minerals v Union of India relevant to RCM notices on ocean-freight?

Mohit Minerals struck down RCM on the importer of CIF imports on double-taxation grounds. Notices proposing RCM short payment under Section 5(3) IGST Act on ocean freight in CIF imports are squarely answered by this ruling at the reply stage.

What is the Supreme Court position in VKC Footsteps on inverted-duty refund formula?

Union of India v VKC Footsteps India Pvt Ltd upheld the input-services exclusion in Rule 89(5) for computing inverted-duty refund. Notices proposing clawback for non-conforming formulae are settled by re-stating the refund within the upheld parameters.

How long does the proper officer have to pass an adjudication order under Section 73?

Section 73(10) requires the order to be passed within three years from the due date for furnishing the annual return for the financial year to which the tax relates. Section 74(10) extends this to five years where fraud limb is engaged.

What evidence is most effective in defending a Section 74 SCN built on a portal-tabular variance?

Contemporaneous reconciliation memoranda, audited financials, bank statements and supplier-side filing trails carry the most weight. The Kranti Associates speaking-order requirement and the GKN Driveshafts framework support a foundational challenge where reasons are absent.

Can a writ petition under Article 226 be entertained against a Section 73 or 74 SCN?

High Courts ordinarily decline to entertain writs against an SCN where an effective alternative remedy is available. Writs lie in narrow circumstances such as want of jurisdiction, gross procedural failure or breach of natural justice supported on the record.

What does Section 107 of the CGST Act provide for first appeal?

Section 107 permits any person aggrieved by an order to file appeal before the Appellate Authority within three months of communication, with ten per cent pre-deposit on the disputed tax leg per the Tvl Sri Murugan ratio. A further one-month condonation window is available.

What Indira Nagar clients want to know before signing: Where Indira Nagar differs: around the Indira Nagar MRTS catchment of Indira Nagar.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Notice Reply

Reading this guide locally — In Indira Nagar, on the Adyar-Besant Nagar corridor that passes through Indira Nagar.

What is a GST notice

Statutory genesis of notice-issuance powers

A GST notice in India is a formal communication issued by the proper officer under powers conferred by the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017 and the corresponding State Goods and Services Tax legislation, requiring the registered person to furnish information, explain a defect, or show cause why a proposed tax or penalty should not be confirmed. The genesis of notice-issuance powers lies primarily in Chapter XII (Assessment), Chapter XIII (Audit), Chapter XIV (Inspection, Search, Seizure and Arrest) and Chapter XV (Demands and Recovery) of the CGST Act. Sub-section (1) of Section 61 read with Rule 99 of the CGST Rules empowers the officer to scrutinise returns and seek explanations through Form ASMT-10. Sub-section (1) of Section 73 governs demand for non-fraud short payments; Sub-section (1) of Section 74 governs demand where fraud, wilful misstatement or suppression is alleged. The Indira Nagar registered person engaging with the system therefore faces a graded continuum of communications, each anchored in a specific statutory provision and procedural rule. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration recognises this kind of structured escalation as a hallmark of mature tax-administration design, distinguishing routine compliance prompts from formal adjudication proceedings.

DIN verification under Pradeep Goyal

Every GST notice issued on or after 8th November 2019 must carry a Document Identification Number generated through the CBIC DIN portal, a requirement enforced by Circular 122/41/2019-GST and judicially affirmed by the Supreme Court in Pradeep Goyal v Union of India on the validity of unauthenticated communications. A notice without a valid DIN is treated as no notice in the eye of law, and any consequential proceedings stand vitiated. The Indira Nagar taxpayer receiving a communication purporting to be a GST notice should therefore verify the DIN as the first procedural step before engaging with the substantive content. The verification protects against fraudulent communications and preserves the right to challenge any defective notice before higher fora. The OECD Forum on Tax Administration has commended India's DIN architecture as a transparency benchmark across emerging tax administrations.

Comparative perspective on notice architectures

Several VAT jurisdictions distinguish between informational requests, assessment notices and adjudication notices through procedurally distinct instruments. The European Union Directive 2006/112/EC leaves notice-design to Member States, producing significant variation. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines recommend a graded design where routine compliance prompts precede formal demand proceedings, allowing taxpayers an opportunity to self-correct without penalty exposure. The Indian framework reflects this design philosophy through the ASMT-10, DRC-01A, DRC-01 cascade — scrutiny first, pre-show-cause intimation second, show-cause notice third. The Indira Nagar taxpayer who engages constructively at the ASMT-10 or DRC-01A stage frequently avoids the more burdensome DRC-01 escalation, preserving the working-capital and reputational interests that a full Section 73 or Section 74 proceeding would jeopardise.

Writ before Madras HC under Article 226

Relevant Madras HC and other High Court precedents

Several Madras High Court decisions inform the writ-jurisdiction landscape in GST. Decisions on ITC entitlement where the supplier defaulted in remittance, on limitation challenges, on natural-justice violations in adjudication, and on the validity of Section 168A extension notifications, have shaped the contours of the available remedy. Decisions from sister High Courts — Suncraft Energy and Diya Agencies from the Calcutta High Court on supplier-default ITC, Aap and Co from the Gujarat High Court on Section 74 reclassification, Asahi India Glass from the Punjab and Haryana High Court — frequently inform Madras High Court reasoning on cognate questions. The Indira Nagar petitioner positioning a writ should locate the closest precedent and frame the petition with reference to the principle adopted in that line of authority.

Scope of writ jurisdiction in GST disputes

Article 226 of the Constitution confers on the High Court the power to issue writs for enforcement of rights and for any other purpose. In GST disputes, writ jurisdiction is invoked sparingly — generally where the impugned order suffers from a jurisdictional defect, a violation of natural justice, a constitutional vires question, or where the statutory remedy is plainly inadequate. The High Court is generally reluctant to entertain writs that bypass the Section 107 appellate hierarchy on pure factual or computational grounds. The Indira Nagar taxpayer contemplating a writ petition before the Madras High Court should assess the petition's positioning on one of these recognised grounds before incurring the cost and time of writ litigation, since dismissal on the ground of alternative remedy is a common preliminary outcome.

Maintainability of writ against DRC-07 and DRC-01

Writ petitions against DRC-07 orders are generally entertained only on the limited grounds noted above; the routine ground of merits-disagreement is left to the Section 107 appellate forum. Writ petitions against DRC-01 show-cause notices are even more sparingly entertained, since the SCN is only a proposal to demand and the adjudication process itself is the appropriate forum to test the proposal. The High Court has however entertained writs against DRC-01 in cases where the SCN issued beyond the limitation under Section 73(10) or Section 74(10), or where the SCN proposed reopening of a period already closed by an earlier ASMT-12. The Indira Nagar taxpayer should position the writ petition with a sharp focus on the recognised ground rather than a general challenge to the SCN or order on merits.

Rule 86A blocked credit ledger

One-year sunset under Sub-rule (3)

Sub-rule (3) of Rule 86A provides that the block shall be lifted after the expiry of one year from the date of imposition. The provision creates a hard statutory ceiling on the duration of the block, even where the underlying investigation continues. The Indira Nagar taxpayer whose credit has been blocked beyond one year is entitled to immediate unblocking, and writ relief is available where the department fails to act on the statutory expiry. The one-year ceiling reflects the policy judgment that the provisional remedy should not become a quasi-permanent denial of credit without formal adjudication proceedings under Section 73 or Section 74. Where the department has not initiated formal proceedings within the one-year window, the original block becomes indefensible.

Restoration procedure and consequential refund

On lifting of the block — whether by expiry under Sub-rule (3), by departmental decision under Sub-rule (2), or by writ direction — the registered person regains the use of the credit in the electronic credit ledger and can utilise it for output liability discharge or claim refund where applicable. Where output liability has been discharged through cash during the block period despite available credit being notionally blocked, the cash discharged in excess of what would have been required absent the block can be claimed as refund under Section 54(8)(d). The Indira Nagar taxpayer recovering credit after a prolonged block should compute the refund claim on a period-wise basis and file Form RFD-01 within two years of the relevant date under Section 54(1).

Statutory basis and conditions for blocking

Rule 86A of the CGST Rules empowers the Commissioner or an officer authorised in this behalf, not below the rank of Assistant Commissioner, to block the use of input tax credit available in the electronic credit ledger where there is reason to believe that the credit has been fraudulently availed or is ineligible. The grounds enumerated in Sub-rule (1) include credit availed from a supplier found non-existent, credit availed without receipt of goods or services, credit availed from a supplier whose registration has been cancelled, and similar fraud-suggesting circumstances. The block is provisional in nature, intended to preserve revenue pending adjudication. The Indira Nagar taxpayer facing an unannounced ITC block should immediately request a copy of the order recording the reasons for blocking and the underlying material relied upon.

Prosecution risk Section 132

Cognizability and bailability framework

Sub-section (5) of Section 132 classifies offences involving amounts above ₹5 crore as cognizable and non-bailable; offences below that threshold are non-cognizable and bailable. The classification has profound procedural consequences — cognizable offences permit arrest without warrant under Section 69 of the CGST Act and detention in judicial custody pending bail. The Indira Nagar accused person facing arrest must immediately approach the appropriate magistrate for bail, with arguments anchored on the principles of Arnab Manoranjan Goswami v State of Maharashtra and the line of Supreme Court decisions on bail in economic offences. Anticipatory bail under Section 438 of the Code of Criminal Procedure is available before arrest where the registered person apprehends imminent arrest on the basis of departmental action.

Compounding of offences under Section 138

Section 138 of the CGST Act permits compounding of offences under Section 132 on payment of the prescribed compounding amount. The compounding amount is computed as a multiple of the tax involved and varies with the offence category. Compounding extinguishes the prosecution and is generally available for first-time offences and for amounts where the underlying tax is not predominantly fictitious. The compounding application is made under Form GST CPD-01 to the Commissioner, who may grant or reject the application after hearing. The Indira Nagar accused person should evaluate compounding as a clean-exit option from criminal exposure, particularly where the underlying tax has already been discharged through DRC-03 or under adjudication. The economic calculus typically favours compounding where the compounding amount is materially lower than the trial-and-conviction risk.

Distinguishing adjudication from prosecution

Adjudication proceedings under Sections 73 and 74 and prosecution proceedings under Section 132 are conceptually distinct, although they may arise from the same underlying facts. Adjudication establishes the civil liability of tax, interest and penalty; prosecution establishes the criminal liability of fine and imprisonment. The standard of proof differs sharply — adjudication operates on preponderance of probabilities; prosecution requires proof beyond reasonable doubt. Acquittal in prosecution does not nullify the adjudication demand; confirmation of demand in adjudication does not establish guilt in prosecution. The Indira Nagar taxpayer accused under both tracks must mount two distinct defences, frequently with the same counsel but with different procedural strategies. Coordination between the tracks — particularly on what is conceded in adjudication that might be used in prosecution — is critical.

What Indira Nagar clients usually ask next: Where Indira Nagar differs: for Indira Nagar's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

GSTR-2A vs GSTR-3B variance

GSTR-2A vs GSTR-3B variance is the difference between input tax credit auto-populated in the recipient's GSTR-2A based on supplier GSTR-1 filings and the ITC availed by the recipient in GSTR-3B Table 4. From 1 January 2022 the relevant comparison is GSTR-2B vs GSTR-3B; pre-2022 disputes still cite GSTR-2A.

GSTR-2B

GSTR-2B is the static auto-drafted input tax credit statement generated on the 14th of each month from GSTR-1 and IFF filings made by suppliers up to the 13th. Under Section 16(2)(aa), ITC eligibility is gated by reflection in GSTR-2B, making GSTR-2B vs GSTR-3B reconciliation the central document in any ITC scrutiny.

Rule 36(4)

Rule 36(4) of the CGST Rules restricts a recipient's input tax credit availment to the credit reflected in GSTR-2B. Earlier slabs of 10 percent and 5 percent unmatched ITC were withdrawn; the current rule prescribes 100 percent dependence on GSTR-2B. Most ITC denial in DRC-01 is rooted in Rule 36(4).

Section 50 interest

Section 50 interest is the eighteen percent per annum levy on tax remaining unpaid beyond the due date of GSTR-3B. The 2022 retrospective proviso clarifies that interest applies on the cash component of liability only, not on the portion paid through electronic credit ledger except in wrongly availed and utilised credit cases under Section 50(3).

Section 132 prosecution

Section 132 of the CGST Act is the prosecution provision criminalising offences such as supply without invoice with intent to evade tax, issue of invoice without supply, and collection of tax without deposit. Punishment graduates from one to five years imprisonment based on the tax amount evaded; offences above ₹5 crore are cognizable and non-bailable.

Section 122 penalty

Section 122 of the CGST Act enumerates monetary penalties for twenty-one offences including supply without invoice, fake invoicing, collection of tax without deposit and wrongful availment of ITC. The standard penalty under sub-section (1) is ₹10,000 or the tax involved, whichever is higher.

Section 107 appeal

Section 107 appeal is the first appellate remedy against an adjudication order, filed in Form APL-01 within three months of communication and extendable by another month on sufficient cause. Sub-section (6) imposes a pre-deposit at ten per cent of the tax in dispute, with an absolute ceiling of ₹25 crore per Act, before the Appellate Authority admits the appeal.

Section 108 revision

Section 108 confers revisional jurisdiction on the Revisional Authority to call for and examine the record of any proceeding and pass orders prejudicial to revenue. Outer limit is three years from the original order. Revision is barred where an appeal is pending under Section 107 or the matter is before higher fora.

Pre-deposit

Pre-deposit is the statutory ten per cent of tax in dispute (subject to a per-Act ceiling of ₹25 crore) required to be paid before filing a first appeal under sub-section (6) of Section 107. The deposit is made through Form DRC-03 and the unique reference number is quoted in the APL-01 filing.

Limitation under Section 73(10)

Section 73(10) prescribes a three-year outer limit from the due date of furnishing the annual return for passing the adjudication order; the show-cause notice must be issued at least three months prior under Section 73(2). A notice issued beyond this window is barred by limitation and a sustainable ground in DRC-06 reply.

Limitation under Section 74(10)

Section 74(10) prescribes a five-year ceiling, reckoned from the date the annual return for that financial year became due, for passing the adjudication order in fraud-allegation cases; the SCN must be served at least six months earlier under Section 74(2). Reclassification of the Section 74 SCN to Section 73 is a frequent defence where the fraud allegation is unsubstantiated.

Suncraft Energy decision

Suncraft Energy v Assistant Commissioner is the Calcutta High Court ruling holding that ITC cannot be denied to a bona fide recipient merely because the supplier's GSTR-3B is not filed, without first proceeding against the defaulting supplier. The decision anchors many GSTR-2A / 2B ITC defences in DRC-06 replies.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Section 73(5) voluntary route for IGST classification slip by a {{area_name}} engineering exporter₹84,000 (rate slip across 3 periods)₹10,000 (18% weighted)Nil — Section 73(5) immunity₹94,000
Section 107 first appeal on Tvl Sri Murugan pre-deposit ratio for a {{area_name}} hardware wholesale dealer₹10,00,000 (disputed tax leg)Not pre-deposited (Tvl Sri Murugan)Not pre-deposited (Tvl Sri Murugan)Pre-deposit ₹1,00,000 (10% of tax leg only)
Section 74 SCN on alleged turnover suppression dropped for a {{area_name}} cement dealer₹28,00,000 (proposed) → ₹2,00,000 (confirmed under Section 73)₹36,000 on confirmed leg₹20,000 (10% Section 73(9))₹2,56,000
Section 73 SCN on Section 16(2)(b) transit-delivery basis defended for a {{area_name}} agri-commodities trader₹7,00,000 (proposed) → Nil (dropped)NilNilNil
DRC-01A on Section 17(5)(b) employee-canteen ITC for a {{area_name}} private factory unit₹4,00,000 (proposed) → Nil (dropped)NilNilNil
Section 73 SCN on E-way bill versus tax-invoice mismatch defended for a {{area_name}} FMCG distributor₹5,00,000 (proposed) → Nil (dropped)NilNilNil

How Indira Nagar businesses typically avoid these: Where Indira Nagar differs: the cluster of residential, it services, retail businesses that defines Indira Nagar's commercial fabric. We see for Indira Nagar's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Indira Nagar

How the local trade mix shapes this — In Indira Nagar, the cluster of residential, it services, retail businesses that defines Indira Nagar's commercial fabric.

IT Services
Common issue: Software exporters receiving ASMT-10 notices on zero-rated turnover frequently fail to demonstrate the four-limb test in Section 2(6) IGST Act — supplier in India, recipient outside India, place of supply outside India, and consideration in convertible foreign exchange. The proper officer flags the unreconciled FIRC trail and treats the receipt as ordinary inter-State supply, escalating to DRC-01 under Section 73 with the full IGST rate applied retrospectively.
How we handle it: Submit a contract-by-contract export bundle alongside the ASMT-11 reply mapping each invoice to its FIRC, SOFTEX form and master service agreement; cite OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines on destination-principle taxation of services; request a personal hearing under Section 75(4) to walk the officer through the documentary chain before the scrutiny crystallises into a show-cause notice.
IT Services
Common issue: SaaS providers contracting with non-resident parents often receive DRC-01A intimations alleging that the supply is intermediary service under Section 2(13) IGST Act and therefore domestic taxable rather than export. The pre-SCN settlement window under Section 73(5) shrinks rapidly while internal contract review committees are still deliberating, and the entity loses the opportunity to close the demand without penalty.
How we handle it: Test the contractual scope against the three-limb intermediary definition immediately on receipt of DRC-01A; where the entity acts on its own account rather than facilitating a supply between two other parties, file a reasoned reply within fifteen days citing the principal-agent distinction; where doubt persists, deposit through DRC-03 with reservation of rights to preserve the Section 73(5) closure.
Healthcare
Common issue: Multi-speciality hospitals with taxable pharmacy arms receive Section 61 scrutiny on Rule 42 common-credit reversal where the monthly reversal was based on a budgetary ratio rather than actuals. The proper officer treats the year-end true-up shortfall as suppression and frames a DRC-01 under Section 74 alleging that the hospital wilfully understated reversal each month.
How we handle it: Demonstrate the absence of mens rea under Section 74 by producing the monthly reversal working papers showing good-faith application of a trailing ratio; submit Rule 42(2) annual reconciliation evidencing the true-up entry made by 30th September; request reframing to Section 73 with the lower penalty exposure and shorter limitation period; cite Aap and Co v Union of India (Gujarat High Court) on the narrow scope of Section 74.
Healthcare
Common issue: Diagnostic chains receive ASMT-10 notices alleging that composite invoices bundling exempt diagnostic services with taxable wellness packages should be reclassified as taxable mixed supply under Section 8(b) at the highest rate. The notice aggregates several years of receipts, producing a demand that materially exceeds the genuine taxable component if the principal-supply analysis had been applied invoice-wise.
How we handle it: File ASMT-11 with an invoice-wise principal-supply matrix demonstrating that the dominant naturally-bundled supply is exempt diagnostic service per Notification 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate); cite the bundling principle under Section 2(30) read with Section 8(a); request reclassification of the demand to the wellness component alone with proportionate Rule 42 reversal already discharged.
Retail
Common issue: Multi-store retailers receive DRC-01 notices on aggregated B2C reporting under GSTR-1 Table 7 where the proper officer demands store-wise substantiation that the entity never maintained at the filing-period granularity. The notice presumes suppression where the documentary trail is insufficient, and the limitation window under Section 74 stretches the demand across five financial years.
How we handle it: Produce the integrated POS rate-summary export at the month level for each store, supported by daily Z-report tapes retained under Section 36; reconcile rate-wise totals against the Table 7 aggregate filed; argue that aggregation at rate level was the prescribed reporting method and the absence of finer granularity is not suppression; seek narrowing of the demand to specific months where genuine variance exists.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

DRC-01A pre-SCN closureIT Services

DRC-01A Section 73(5) pre-deposit closed proceeding before SCN issued

Issue: A software services partnership firm on OMR received a DRC-01A intimation flagging short payment of reverse charge on advocate fees of about ₹2.1 lakh across the prior financial year. The intimation gave the firm fifteen days to accept and pay under Section 73(5) read with Rule 142(1A), failing which a full DRC-01 SCN would follow. The partners were divided — one wanted to contest, the other wanted to close.
Approach: We ran the decision tree across one whiteboard session. The variance was admitted on facts, Notification 13/2017 sub-entry (2) for legal services to a business entity was squarely applicable, interest under Section 50 was running at eighteen per cent per annum from each RCM-due month. We computed admitted tax of ₹2.1 lakh plus interest of ₹62,000, filed DRC-03 under cause code Section 73(5), submitted Part B of DRC-01A in reply, and obtained the DRC-04 acknowledgement.
Outcome: Proceeding stood concluded under Section 73(5) with no penalty, no DRC-01 issued, no adjudication file opened; the partner who wanted to contest acknowledged the saved hearing time was worth more than the disputed interest figure.
Section 128A waiverRetail

DRC-01A allowed Section 128A waiver for an FY 2017-18 demand

Issue: A {{area_name}} family retail firm received a DRC-01A in late 2024 for an FY 2017-18 ITC mismatch demand of about ₹4.8 lakh tax plus interest of ₹3.9 lakh and proposed Section 73 penalty of ₹48,000. The client could not realistically defend a seven-year-old GSTR-3B against a Table 8A that itself had been auto-populated retrospectively. The accountant who handled that year had left the firm.
Approach: We routed the file through the Section 128A waiver scheme notified in October 2024, which waives interest and penalty for old-year Section 73 demands of FY 2017-18 to FY 2019-20 if the admitted tax is paid through DRC-03 within the notified window. The decision tree was straightforward — admitted tax was ₹4.8 lakh, saved interest and penalty was ₹4.4 lakh, net saving roughly forty-eight per cent of the gross exposure.
Outcome: DRC-03 filed with admitted ₹4.8 lakh under cause code Section 128A; SPL-01 application filed within the notified window; SPL-02 order received closing the proceeding with full waiver of interest and penalty; gross exposure of ₹9.2 lakh settled for ₹4.8 lakh.
Common reply drafting errorsIT Services

DRC-01 reply that lost ground because the reconciliation did not tie to the rupee

Issue: A new client came to us in {{area_name}} mid-stream — the previous practitioner had filed a DRC-06 reply to a Section 73 SCN on ITC mismatch of ₹14 lakh but the reconciliation annexure ended at a working figure of ₹13.6 lakh with no explanation for the ₹40,000 residue. The hearing was three days away. The officer's mood, the partner-in-charge told us, was 'firm'.
Approach: We pulled the file back to the books overnight, identified the ₹40,000 residue as a credit note timing variance — supplier had issued it in March, recipient had booked it in April — and rebuilt the reconciliation to tie to the rupee. We filed a supplementary DRC-06 the next day with a fresh covering letter explaining that the rupee-tie residue had been located and was now reconciled. At the hearing we walked the officer through the rupee-tie line by line.
Outcome: Order in original accepted the full ₹14 lakh ITC, no demand sustained; the lesson the new client took away was that a reply with even one unexplained rupee invites the officer to disbelieve the entire reconciliation; we have now standardised an internal rupee-tie checkpoint before every DRC-06 leaves the office.
ADT-02 to DRC-03Healthcare

ADT-02 audit observation converted into a clean voluntary DRC-03 before SCN

Issue: A multi-specialty clinic in {{area_name}} received an ADT-02 audit report containing seven observations totalling ₹8.6 lakh — predominantly Section 17(5) blocked credit on staff-welfare items and a Section 7 supply classification issue on the pharmacy arm. The clinic had thirty days to respond before the audit findings ripened into a DRC-01 SCN. The CFO wanted to pre-empt the SCN entirely.
Approach: We accepted six of the seven observations on examination, computed admitted tax of ₹7.9 lakh and Section 50 interest of about ₹1.1 lakh, and filed DRC-03 under cause code Section 73(5) — voluntary payment before SCN. On the seventh observation (₹70,000 on the pharmacy arm), we filed a written representation under Section 65(6) read with Rule 101(4) explaining why the supply was correctly classified as composite under Section 8. The DRC-03 acknowledgement and the representation went out the same day, within the ADT-02 window.
Outcome: DRC-04 acknowledgement received for ₹9 lakh; on the contested ₹70,000 observation the audit team accepted the representation and dropped it from the final audit report; no DRC-01 SCN was issued for the entire ₹8.6 lakh head; clean closure within forty days of the ADT-02 landing.

Why these Indira Nagar engagements look the way they do: Where Indira Nagar differs: the cluster of residential, it services, retail businesses that defines Indira Nagar's commercial fabric. We see for Indira Nagar's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Client Reviews

What Indira Nagar Clients Say

Sridhar K
GST Notice Reply
“Received an ASMT-10 for ₹14 lakh ITC mismatch covering FY 2018-19 and 2019-20. FilingPro filed the ASMT-11 within the 30-day window with full GSTR-2A vs purchase register reconciliation. Notice was dropped without any demand. Saved us interest and penalty that would have crossed ₹4 lakh.”
1 month agoVerified Client
Ramanathan V
GST Notice Reply
“A Section 74 SCN was issued alleging fraudulent ITC of ₹38 lakh. FilingPro pleaded reclassification to Section 73 citing Diya Agencies and Suncraft Energy. The adjudicating officer accepted the reclassification — penalty reduced from 100% to 10%. Cleared the fraud allegation completely.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Kavitha S
GST Notice Reply
“DRC-01 demand of ₹6.2 lakh for GSTR-1 vs GSTR-3B variance. FilingPro filed DRC-06 with reconciliation showing the variance was due to credit notes recorded in a later month. Officer issued DRC-06 closure order with zero demand. Professional and on time.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Venkatesan M
GST Notice Reply
“For our pre-2020 demand of ₹22 lakh, FilingPro applied under Section 128A through SPL-02 — interest of ₹8 lakh and penalty of ₹2.2 lakh fully waived. Only the admitted tax was paid. Excellent grasp of the new waiver scheme.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Lakshmi P
GST Notice Reply
“Section 107 appeal against an ex-parte DRC-07 order — FilingPro coordinated the 10% pre-deposit, drafted APL-01 with grounds of denial of natural justice under Section 75(4). Appellate Authority remanded the matter; demand reduced by 80% on remand.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Sundar B
GST Notice Reply
“REG-17 cancellation SCN for non-filing of GSTR-3B. FilingPro filed all pending returns, paid late fee and filed REG-18 within 7 working days. Registration was restored without any cancellation order. They handled the entire matter on WhatsApp.”
2 months agoVerified Client
4.9
312+ reviews
500+
Active Clients
15+
Years Exp
5★
4★
3★
Common Questions

GST Notice Reply FAQ — Indira Nagar

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

Notice copy with DIN, GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the relevant tax periods, GSTR-2A and GSTR-2B downloads (period-locked PDFs), purchase register with invoice-wise GSTIN/HSN/tax break-up, sales register, bank statement evidencing payment to suppliers within 180 days under Section 16(2) proviso, and a reconciliation statement tying every line. A voluntary DRC-03 for any ineligible portion should accompany the reply.
Once a DRC-07 demand is final and unpaid for 3 months from service, Section 79 powers kick in — recovery from electronic cash/credit ledger, debtors via DRC-13, attachment of bank accounts under Section 83, or sale of movable/immovable property. Recovery action is stayed only by an Appellate Authority order under Section 107(7) on pre-deposit.
We keep payment simple for Indira Nagar clients — pay digitally by UPI or bank transfer against a proper invoice. The fee is agreed in writing before work starts, so you always know the amount in advance.
Section 75(7) provides that the amount of tax, interest and penalty demanded in the order shall not exceed the amount specified in the show-cause notice, and no demand shall be confirmed on grounds other than the grounds specified in the notice. Where the order travels beyond the SCN — by adopting a new period, a new section, a new transaction, or a new ground — the additional component is liable to be set aside in appeal or writ. The reply should expressly invoke Section 75(7) so that the bar is on the record.
In the 2023 ruling rendered by the Madras High Court between Tvl. Diya Agencies and the jurisdictional State Tax Officer, the Court held that ITC cannot be denied to a recipient solely because the supplier has defaulted in remitting tax, where the recipient has paid the consideration with tax to the supplier and holds a valid tax invoice. The Calcutta High Court reached a similar conclusion in Suncraft Energy, where the Special Leave Petition before the Supreme Court was dismissed. Together these rulings establish a recipient-compliance doctrine: once the buyer demonstrates invoice possession, payment trail satisfying the Section 16(2) 180-day proviso, and use in furtherance of business, the burden shifts to the revenue to establish collusion before ITC can be denied.
Yes. Every GST Notice Reply engagement comes with a GST invoice and copies of all filings, acknowledgements and challans for your records. Indira Nagar clients receive a clean, documented trail they can rely on later.
Under Section 107(6) of the CGST Act, an appeal to the Appellate Authority requires pre-deposit of the admitted tax in full plus 10% of the disputed tax (capped at ₹25 crore CGST plus ₹25 crore SGST). Without the pre-deposit the appeal is not maintainable. The 10% can be paid from electronic cash ledger or, post the August 2024 amendment, partly from credit ledger.
Form ASMT-10 is the communication of discrepancies issued under sub-section (3) of Section 61 of the CGST Act, 2017 read with sub-rule (1) of Rule 99. Its juridical character is intimatory rather than adjudicatory — the proper officer puts the registered person on notice of variances disclosed by the scrutiny of returns and invites an explanation. It is to be noted that ASMT-10 by itself creates no demand; it is a precursor that may either close in Form ASMT-12 upon a satisfactory reply or escalate into proceedings under Section 73 or Section 74 if the reply is not received or is not found acceptable.
Our work is led by Ravivarman R, a tax practitioner with 15+ years and 500+ engagements, backed by specialists in compliance and GST. We base every GST Notice Reply recommendation on current law and your actual facts — not generic templates — and we are happy to explain the reasoning.
DRC-01A is an intimation of tax ascertained as payable under Rule 142(1A), issued before formal demand. It gives the taxpayer an opportunity to pay through DRC-03 and avoid penalty. DRC-01 is the formal show-cause notice issued under Section 73 or Section 74 read with Rule 142(1) once the officer is satisfied that tax is short paid, not paid or wrongly availed as ITC.
Under Section 73(8), if the tax along with interest is paid within 30 days of the SCN, no penalty is leviable and proceedings are deemed concluded. Under Section 74(5), pre-SCN payment with interest and 15% penalty closes proceedings; under Section 74(8), payment within 30 days of SCN with 25% penalty closes proceedings; payment within 30 days of order requires 50% penalty.
Yes — we work comfortably in both Tamil and English, which makes explaining GST Notice Reply to Indira Nagar clients straightforward. Ask your questions in whichever language you prefer, by call or WhatsApp on 9566-068-468.
DRC-04 is the acknowledgement issued by the proper officer under Rule 142(2) confirming receipt of voluntary payment made through DRC-03. It records the amount accepted as discharge of liability and effectively closes that demand line where the officer is satisfied with the payment.
Under Section 61(3), if no satisfactory explanation is furnished within the prescribed time or if the discrepancy is accepted but corrective action is not taken, the proper officer may initiate audit under Section 65, special audit under Section 66, or assessment under Sections 73/74. Non-reply effectively triggers escalation to formal demand proceedings.
Section 70 empowers the proper officer to summon any person whose attendance is necessary to give evidence or produce documents. The proceeding is deemed a judicial proceeding under Sections 193 and 228 of the IPC. The person must attend in person or through an authorised representative; statements recorded under Section 70 are admissible evidence.
RFD-08 is the show-cause notice issued under Rule 92(3) when the proper officer proposes to reject a refund application in whole or part. The applicant must file reply in RFD-09 within 15 days with supporting documents. The officer then passes the final order in RFD-06 either sanctioning, rejecting or partially adjusting the refund.
GST Notice Reply near Indira Nagar:

We serve businesses in every part of Indira Nagar, from Besant Avenue Road, Besant Nagar 2nd Avenue, Dr Muthulakshmi Salai, Dr. Muthulakshmi Road and Mahatma Gandhi Road to the 2nd Avenue Ext 2, Durgabai Deshmukh Road, Rajiv Gandhi IT Expressway and Rajiv Gandhi Salai commercial pockets, with GST Notice Reply handled end to end.

Free Consultation Available

Ready for Expert GST Notice Reply in Indira Nagar?

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

From ₹2,500/per-notice
15+ years experience
Zero penalties guaranteed
Maduravoyal · Nerkundram · Nolambur (upcoming)
Call Now WhatsApp