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
around the Akkarai Beach catchment of Akkarai

GST Revocation — Akkarai & Injambakkam

GST Revocation cadence for Akkarai firms near Akkarai Bus Stop — on fixed, transparent fees

GST Revocation for Akkarai firms under Chennai South (Sholinganallur Division) — transparent scope, no surprises, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

Is interest under Section 50 payable on tax discharged during revocation in Akkarai, Chennai?

Yes. Interest at 18% per annum on the net cash component of tax (after lawful ITC set-off) is payable from the original due date of each defaulting period to the date of payment. Interest is computed and paid through DRC-03 or as part of the GSTR-3B tax payment for the relevant period.

Transparent Pricing

GST Revocation in Akkarai — Plans & Pricing

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

MonthlyAnnualSave 2 Months
Cancelled by dept
Standard
Revocation Filed
₹1,000one-time

  • Revocation Application REG-21
  • Show Cause Notice Response REG-23
  • Pending Returns Filing GSTR-1/3B (Add-on)
  • Outstanding Tax + Interest Payment
  • Personal Hearing Preparation
  • Post-Revocation Compliance Setup
Most Popular ⭐
Priority
Revocation + Followup
₹5,000one-time

  • Revocation Application REG-21
  • Show Cause Notice Response REG-23
  • Pending Returns Filing GSTR-1/3B (Add-on)
  • Outstanding Tax + Interest Payment
  • Personal Hearing Preparation
  • Post-Revocation Compliance Setup
Litigation cases
Complete
Revocation + hearing + clearance
₹10,000one-time

  • Revocation Application REG-21
  • Show Cause Notice Response REG-23
  • Pending Returns Filing GSTR-1/3B (Add-on)
  • Outstanding Tax + Interest Payment
  • Personal Hearing Preparation: 1 Free
  • Post-Revocation Compliance Setup

Swipe to see all plans

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

Why FilingPro?

Why Akkarai Clients Choose FilingPro

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

Commissioner Extension Drafting

For Akkarai cases between 90 and 180 days, we draft the Commissioner extension request with a detailed sufficient cause affidavit covering illness, family bereavement, accountant default or business disruption — converting time-barred cases into within-window cases.

REG-23 SCN Reply Within 7 Days

Where the officer issues REG-23 minded to reject, our reply is drafted and filed within the 7-working-day window with supporting evidence and case-law citations. Personal hearing representation under Rule 23(3) is included at no extra cost.

Madras HC Writ Remedy

For Akkarai cases beyond 180 days, we file a writ petition before the Madras HC under Article 226 citing Tvl Suguna Cutpiece (W.P. 25048/2021) and Aap and Co. natural justice principles to direct the department to consider belated revocation.

Notification 03/2023 Amnesty

Notification 03/2023-Central Tax (read with 24/2023) provided amnesty for cancellation orders upto 31-Dec-2022. Where applicable, we leverage this notification to file REG-21 outside the regular window on amnesty conditions.

WhatsApp Document Pickup

Cancellation order, pending invoices, bank statements and authorised signatory DSC details are shared via WhatsApp at 9566-068-468. Entire revocation handled remotely for Akkarai clients.

15+ Years GST Practice

Our practice has handled registration restoration matters since the pre-GST era — service tax, VAT and excise registration restorations carried into GST suo motu cancellation revocations under Section 30. Deep institutional memory of jurisdictional officers.

Key Benefits

What Akkarai Clients Get

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

Bank Account KYC Restored
After revocation, the REG-22 order is shared with banks to update KYC and restore normal account operations — preventing transactional friction during the limited windows when banks notice GSTIN status changes.
Commissioner Extension Captured
For Akkarai cases between 90 and 180 days, the Commissioner extension is captured through a documented sufficient cause request — preserving the statutory remedy that would otherwise be lost.
Litigation Path Open
Beyond 180 days, the writ remedy under Article 226 is pursued citing Tvl Suguna Cutpiece principles. Akkarai clients' time-barred cases are not abandoned to fresh registration.
Late Fee & Interest Optimised
Where amnesty notifications (03/2023, 07/2023, 24/2023) are in force, late fee caps and waivers are applied — minimising the cash outflow at the time of REG-21.
Audit-Ready Working Papers
Cancellation order, pending returns acknowledgements, late fee and interest computations, REG-21 application copy and REG-22 order are retained for 72 months under Section 35 — supporting any subsequent Section 65 audit on the default period.
Cause-of-Cancellation Note
A detailed cause-of-cancellation note is attached to REG-21 — covering illness, family bereavement, accountant default or business disruption — supporting both the application and any subsequent Commissioner extension or writ petition.
Comparison

Standard 90-day route vs Extended 180-day Commissioner route

Why this matters here — Across Akkarai, the cluster of residential, hospitality, restaurants businesses that defines Akkarai's commercial fabric. Practitioners note that served by short connections to Injambakkam and Palavakkam and onward to central Chennai.

AspectStandard 90-day routeExtended 180-day Commissioner route
Show cause stageRule 23(3) permits the proper officer to issue Form REG-23 if the application is not satisfactory; reply must be filed in Form REG-24 within seven working daysSame REG-23 show cause mechanism applies after the Commissioner grants the extension; the reply window in REG-24 remains seven working days from service
Outcome formatsForm REG-22 sanctioning revocation restores the GSTIN from the date of cancellation; a rejection in Form REG-05 is passed where the proper officer is not satisfiedTwo-step outcome — first the Commissioner's order on the extension prayer, then the REG-22 or REG-05 on merits by the proper officer
Restoration of input tax creditCredit ledger and cash ledger balances stand restored automatically on REG-22; ITC accumulated up to the effective date of cancellation is available for set-off in the next GSTR-3BSame restoration applies; however the credit ledger entries during the cancelled period remain frozen and any inward supply during that period requires a careful Section 16(2) eligibility test
Outward invoicing during cancelled periodNo outward invoicing under a cancelled GSTIN is permitted; supplies billed in the interim are treated as supplies by an unregistered person and the recipient is denied ITCSame bar applies for the entire cancelled period; once REG-22 is passed, the registered person may issue revised invoices under Section 31(3)(a) read with Rule 53 for the period from cancellation to restoration
Effect on e-way bill generationThe cancelled GSTIN cannot generate e-way bills on the EWB portal; movement of goods during the cancelled period exposes the consignment to Section 129 detentionSame e-way bill restriction applies throughout the cancelled period; restoration via the extended route re-enables EWB generation only from the date of REG-22
Cost and time horizonSingle-stage decision typically concluded within thirty working days of a complete REG-21 application; primary cost is the back-return late fee and tax-with-interest paymentTwo-stage decision averaging sixty to ninety working days; additional documentation cost for the sufficient-cause representation and possible follow-up with the Commissioner's office
Remedy on rejectionStatutory first appeal under Section 107 within three months of the REG-05 rejection with ten per cent pre-deposit of the disputed tax, if any; writ jurisdiction under Article 226 invokable on jurisdictional or natural-justice grounds before Madras HCSection 107 appeal route remains available against the merits rejection; where the Commissioner refuses the extension itself, the Madras HC writ remedy under Article 226 is the principal recourse
Statutory provisionSection 30(1) of the CGST Act 2017 read with Rule 23(1) of the CGST Rules permits revocation within ninety days of the cancellation order in Form REG-21First and second provisos to Section 30(1) read with the Finance Act 2023 amendment permit a further extension up to one hundred and eighty days on sufficient cause shown to the Additional Commissioner or Commissioner
Triggering orderSuo motu cancellation order in Form REG-19 passed by the proper officer under Section 29(2) for non-filing of returns, fraudulent registration or other prescribed defaultSame REG-19 order, where the ninety-day window has already lapsed and the registered person can establish sufficient cause for the delay in approaching the proper officer
Application formForm REG-21 filed on the common portal under Rule 23(1) within ninety days of service of the REG-19 cancellation orderForm REG-21 with an accompanying sufficient-cause representation routed for approval to the Additional Commissioner up to one hundred and eighty days from the cancellation order
Decision-making authorityThe proper officer of jurisdictional rank decides the REG-21 on merits within thirty working days under Rule 23(2) and issues Form REG-22 or a Form REG-23 show causeThe Additional Commissioner or Commissioner first decides the extension prayer on sufficient cause; on grant of extension the proper officer thereafter decides the REG-21 on merits
Precondition on pending returnsAll returns due up to the effective date of cancellation must be filed with payment of tax, interest, late fee and penalty before REG-21 is taken up for decision per second proviso to Rule 23(1)Same return-filing precondition applies; tax, interest and late fee for the entire delay period must be paid before the Commissioner considers the sufficient-cause prayer
Documents Required

Documents for GST Revocation

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

Cancellation order in Form GST REG-19 with date of service
Last 12 months pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B (or filed acknowledgements ARN)
Late fee challan PMT-06 under Section 47 and interest computation working
Tax payment receipts and DRC-03 challans for self-assessed dues
Business continuity proof — rent agreement, electricity bill, premises photograph, bank statement covering cancellation period
REG-21 application draft with cause-of-cancellation note and authorised signatory DSC / EVC
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Statutory Deadlines

Compliance deadlines that matter

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

Deadlines in this neighbourhood — Across Akkarai, the business activity radiating outward from Akkarai Beach and nearby commercial pockets.

Trigger eventDaysFormConsequence
Suo motu cancellation order in Form REG-19 served on registered person90 daysREG-21Revocation window under Section 30(1) lapses; matter migrates to the Commissioner extension proviso or fresh registration
Expiry of initial 90-day window without filing REG-21180 daysREG-21 with extension request to CommissionerBeyond the 180-day extension the outer 270-day window closes and Section 30 ceases to be available
Filing REG-21 revocation application from date of service of REG-19 cancellation order90 daysREG-21Section 30(1) standard window lapses; only Commissioner-extension proviso (next 90 days) or subsequent amnesty notification can revive the route
Filing extension application before Additional or Joint Commissioner under first proviso to Section 30(1)90 daysReasoned application on letterhead with documentary causeOuter extension proviso lapses; 180-day ceiling closes and only writ jurisdiction or future amnesty remains
Filing REG-18 reply to REG-17 cancellation show-cause notice from date of service7 daysREG-18Cancellation order in REG-19 passed ex parte; Section 30 revocation route then becomes the only cure with full pending-returns and late-fee cost
Filing GSTR-10 final return from date of cancellation order or date of cancellation effective, whichever is later90 daysGSTR-10Section 47(2) late fee of ₹200 per day up to maximum ₹10,000 plus mandatory notice for non-filing; required even where Section 30 revocation is filed in parallel
Filing Form ITC-01 to claim stock-and-capital-goods ITC after grant of fresh registration where Section 30 revocation has lapsed30 daysITC-01ITC on inputs held in stock and capital goods on day preceding new registration date lapses; the salvage route under Section 18(1)(a) closes
Filing Section 107 first appeal against REG-05 revocation rejection order or REG-19 cancellation order from date of communication90 daysAPL-01 with 10 percent pre-deposit of disputed tax (nil where only cancellation is disputed)Order attains finality; remaining remedy is only writ before Madras High Court invoking Article 226 jurisdiction

Deadline pressure points we see in Akkarai: Closer to Akkarai, for Akkarai's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

DRC-03Voluntary Payment Form

Form for voluntary payments of tax or interest discovered during arrears reconciliation; used where the cause of cancellation involves under-declared liability

Filed alongside or before REG-21 Common Portal (taxpayer)
APL-01Appeal to the Appellate Authority

Appeal against the REG-05 order rejecting revocation, filed under Section 107 before the First Appellate Authority with the prescribed pre-deposit

Within 3 months of REG-05, extendable by 1 month Appellate Authority via Common Portal
REG-21Application for Revocation of Cancellation of Registration

Electronic application by a taxpayer for revocation of suo motu cancellation under Section 29(2); requires furnishing of all pending returns and payment of dues before submission is accepted by the common portal

Within 90 days of cancellation order, extendable to 180 days by the Commissioner Common Portal — routed to Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-22Order for Revocation of Cancellation

Order passed by the proper officer revoking the suo motu cancellation and restoring the GSTIN; communicated electronically through the common portal

Within 30 days of REG-21 submission Jurisdictional Range Officer / Common Portal
REG-23Show Cause Notice for Rejection of Revocation Application

Notice issued by the proper officer where prima facie grounds exist to reject the REG-21 revocation application — typically incomplete returns, unpaid arrears, or insufficient reasoning for delay

Issued during pendency of REG-21 within the 30-day disposal window Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-24Reply to Show Cause Notice in REG-23

Taxpayer's reply to REG-23 carrying clarifications, documentary proof of return-filing, payment challans, and submissions on reasonable cause for delay

Within 7 working days of REG-23 Common Portal (taxpayer)
REG-05Order of Rejection of Application

Order of the proper officer rejecting the REG-21 revocation application after considering REG-24 reply or where no reply is received within the prescribed time

After expiry of REG-24 reply period Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-19Order for Cancellation of Registration

Cancellation order under Section 29(2) which is the order against which revocation under Section 30 is sought; the date of its communication starts the 90-day Section 30 clock

Within 30 days of REG-18 reply / expiry Jurisdictional Range Officer

GST Revocation in Akkarai, Chennai 600119

Because PIN 600119 sits inside the Chennai South jurisdiction, the handling office for Akkarai stays consistent across years, which matters when filings or approvals span cycles. For GST Revocation at PIN 600119, understanding the Sholinganallur Division's documentation norms removes most of the friction from the process. Businesses registered in Akkarai share the Chennai South jurisdiction, and their statutory matters route through the same Sholinganallur Division each time. The 600xx geo-zone covering Akkarai groups several locality clusters under common administration, keeping documentation expectations predictable.

Working in Akkarai brings a logistical edge: proximity to Akkarai Beach and the Akkarai Bus Stop corridor keeps physical document handling fast. Each GST Revocation cycle for Akkarai reflects its commercial rhythm — invoices generated near Akkarai Beach, expenses routed through the Akkarai Bus Stop freight network. Akkarai reads as a coastal residential premium pocket with medium commercial activity, anchored around Akkarai Beach and fed by the Akkarai Bus Stop corridor. Vendors and customers tied to the Akkarai Bus Stop network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for Akkarai GST Revocation clients.

A restaurants operator in Akkarai gets a GST Revocation workflow shaped by sector norms, not a one-size-fits-all template. Sector concentration matters: when Akkarai leans toward restaurants, the GST Revocation risks cluster around the same few line items each cycle. restaurants units around Akkarai share recurring GST Revocation patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation. The restaurants character of Akkarai commerce influences everything from invoice formats to the supporting documents a GST Revocation review needs.

The Akkarai GST Revocation workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Turnaround for Akkarai GST Revocation is deterministic — fixed fee, a scoped timeline, and a same-business-day acknowledgement once filed. The qualified-review step on every Akkarai GST Revocation file is where errors get caught before they reach the portal. Document intake for Akkarai clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a GST Revocation engagement.

GST Revocation clients in Palavakkam are handled by the same practitioners who run our Akkarai desk. Group companies spread across Akkarai and Palavakkam consolidate their GST Revocation under one engagement with us. Coverage from Akkarai naturally extends to Palavakkam, so group entities across the area share one GST Revocation workflow. Serving Akkarai and Palavakkam from one team keeps GST Revocation turnaround identical across the cluster.

Each engagement in Akkarai adds to a record of what the Chennai South jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next GST Revocation file. The longer we serve Akkarai, the more precisely we predict where a GST Revocation file needs attention. Sector signals in Akkarai — seasonal hospitality swings and peak-period volumes — shape how we schedule GST Revocation work. Patterns we track for Akkarai include hospitality documentation gaps, timing mismatches, and the questions the Sholinganallur Division tends to raise.

Relocating a registered office into Akkarai (PIN 600119) changes the assessing division, and we handle that GST Revocation transition cleanly. New restaurants ventures in Akkarai lean on us to stand up GST Revocation correctly before the first deadline rather than after a notice. When a Sholinganallur business expands into Akkarai, we extend its GST Revocation setup to PIN 600119 without disruption. We onboard new Akkarai entities onto a GST Revocation cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle.

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Expert Guide

GST Revocation in Akkarai — Complete Guide

Most REG-21 rejections we see for Akkarai businesses originate from one of three causes — incomplete returns clearance, unpaid late fee or interest, or a weak cause-of-cancellation note. FilingPro's revocation process eliminates all three: every pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed with ARN, every rupee of Section 47 late fee and Section 50 interest computed and discharged through DRC-03, and a comprehensive evidence-backed cause note attached to REG-21.

GST Revocation in Akkarai, Chennai

REG-21 revocation of suo motu cancelled GSTIN under Section 30 of the CGST Act for Akkarai businesses, filed within the 90/180 day statutory window with all pending returns cleared and tax dues paid.

GST Revocation Consultant in Akkarai — REG-21 Filing Expert

A dedicated GST revocation consultant in Akkarai handles REG-19 cancellation order review, pending returns clearance, late fee and interest computation, REG-23 SCN reply and Commissioner extension requests beyond 90 days.

REG-21 Filing within 90 Days in Akkarai

On-time REG-21 application within 90 days of the cancellation order in Akkarai avoids the need for High Court writ remedy. Where the window has lapsed, Notification 03/2023 amnesty conditions and Tvl Suguna Cutpiece principles are invoked.

Revocation Litigation Support in Akkarai — Madras HC Writ Petition

For time-barred cases beyond the 180-day outer limit in Akkarai, writ remedy under Article 226 is pursued before the Madras High Court citing Tvl Suguna Cutpiece (W.P. 25048/2021) and Aap and Co. natural justice precedents.

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Qualified professionals handle your GST Revocation in Akkarai. WhatsApp documents — we begin within 24 hours. From ₹2,000/one-time. Free consultation.
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Key Facts — GST Revocation in Akkarai
REG-21 filed within 90 days for Akkarai businesses — no Commissioner extension or writ petition required.
Pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the cancellation period filed before REG-21 — Rule 23(1) condition fully met.
Late fee under Section 47 (₹50/day, ₹20/day NIL) and interest under Section 50 at 18% per annum computed and discharged before application.
Commissioner extension request drafted with sufficient cause affidavit for Akkarai cases between 90 and 180 days.
REG-23 SCN replies drafted within the 7-working-day window with supporting documents and case-law citations.
Madras HC writ petition under Article 226 for Akkarai cases beyond 180 days — Tvl Suguna Cutpiece (W.P. 25048/2021) precedent invoked.
Notification 03/2023-Central Tax amnesty conditions (read with Notification 24/2023) leveraged for cancellation orders upto 31-Dec-2022.
Retrospective restoration confirmed under REG-22 — buyers' ITC re-flows through GSTR-2B subject to Section 16(4) time bar.
E-way bill generation under Rule 138E unblocked the working day after REG-22 — goods movement resumes seamlessly.
Section 122(1)(xi) penalty exposure on supplies during cancellation period assessed and mitigated through DRC-03 voluntary payment.
People Also Ask — GST Revocation in Akkarai
Within how many days must REG-21 be filed after GST cancellation?
Section 30 read with Rule 23 requires REG-21 within 90 days of service of the cancellation order in REG-19. The Joint / Additional Commissioner may extend this by another 90 days on sufficient cause, taking the maximum to 180 days. Beyond 180 days, fresh registration under Section 25 is the only statutory route — though High Court writ remedy under Article 226 has been entertained in genuine cases.
Can voluntarily cancelled GSTINs be revoked under Section 30?
No. Section 30 revocation is available only where the proper officer has cancelled suo motu under Section 29(2). Voluntary cancellations under Section 29(1) — through REG-16 for cessation of business, transfer or falling below threshold — cannot be revoked; the taxpayer must apply afresh in REG-01 for a new GSTIN with no continuity of ITC.
What conditions must be satisfied before filing REG-21?
Rule 23(1) requires every return due upto the effective date of cancellation to be filed, with applicable tax, interest, late fee under Section 47 and any penalty paid in full. The GST portal blocks REG-21 if any return is outstanding. Documents include the REG-19 order, return acknowledgements, payment challans and a cause-of-cancellation note.
What is REG-22 and REG-23 in revocation procedure?
REG-22 is the order of revocation passed by the proper officer within 30 days of REG-21 where satisfied. REG-23 is the show-cause notice issued where the officer is minded to reject, giving the taxpayer 7 working days to reply (taxpayer reply form is REG-24). After hearing, either revocation order is passed or rejection by speaking order.
What is the Tvl Suguna Cutpiece Madras HC ruling on revocation?
Tvl. Suguna Cutpiece Centre v. Appellate Deputy Commissioner (W.P. 25048/2021, Madras HC, 31-Jan-2022) held that where a taxpayer is willing to file all pending returns and pay tax, interest and late fee, revocation deserves to be granted in the interest of revenue collection. The ruling has been followed in hundreds of similar petitions and remains the leading Tamil Nadu precedent.
Will buyers' ITC be restored once revocation is granted?
Yes — REG-22 restores the GSTIN retrospectively from the original effective date. Once the supplier files pending GSTR-1 for the cancellation period, the invoices auto-populate to recipients' GSTR-2B and ITC may be claimed subject to the Section 16(4) time bar (30 November of the following financial year or filing of GSTR-9 whichever earlier).
Can multiple cancellation orders on the same GSTIN be revoked together?

Each REG-19 order requires a separate REG-21 application addressing the specific ground in that order. Where two orders exist, the first must be revoked through REG-22 before the second can be taken up; serial handling is the practical approach.

Is REG-21 filing fee chargeable on the portal?

No statutory filing fee is prescribed for REG-21 on the common portal. The financial exposure at the revocation stage is the back-return late fee, tax-with-interest under Section 50, and where applicable the ten per cent pre-deposit if a Section 107 appeal follows a rejection.

Does revocation reactivate the LUT for export under Section 16 of the IGST Act?

The pre-cancellation LUT in Form RFD-11 is treated as inactive during the cancelled period. On REG-22 a fresh LUT must be filed for the remainder of the financial year; export consignments in the cancelled period may be regularised via revised invoices on restoration.

What is the impact of revocation on tax-deductor registration under Section 51?

A tax-deductor GSTIN cancelled for GSTR-7 non-filing can be revoked through the same Section 30 route. On REG-22 the deductor GSTIN is restored and the previously deducted TDS flows to contractor cash ledgers in the next GSTR-2A cycle following GSTR-7 backlog clearance.

Can revocation be sought where the cancellation was on Aadhaar-authentication failure?

Yes. Cancellation under Rule 25 for Aadhaar-authentication failure is reversible on biometric authentication completion at a designated Common Service Centre. The biometric acknowledgement and the authorised signatory's affidavit support the REG-21 prayer.

Is an SEZ unit's GSTIN revocation handled differently?

An SEZ unit's revocation follows the same Section 30 framework. However the Specified Officer of the SEZ typically defers endorsement of zero-rated supplies until restoration, so coordinated handling with the SEZ administration alongside the REG-21 is advisable for unit continuity.

What Akkarai clients want to know before signing: Closer to Akkarai, in the coastal residential premium micro-market of Akkarai.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Revocation

Reading this guide locally — Across Akkarai, around the Akkarai Beach catchment of Akkarai.

What is GST revocation and the statutory architecture of Section 30

Relationship with the constitutional architecture of Article 246A and 279A

Revocation as a procedural remedy operates within the federal architecture of Article 246A which empowers both Parliament and State Legislatures to make laws on GST and Article 279A which constitutes the GST Council as the recommending body. The 47th GST Council meeting at Chandigarh, the 48th meeting and the 49th meeting iteratively refined the procedural timelines around Section 30, recognising that the original ninety-day Section 30(1) window had proved too tight for many registered persons whose books were disrupted by the cancellation itself. The Council recommendations translated into Notification 03/2023-Central Tax and Notification 23/2023-Central Tax amnesty schemes, evidencing that the Section 30 architecture is responsive to operational realities rather than rigidly statutory. The State-side concurrent provision in each State GST Act mirrors Section 30 of the CGST Act, so revocation operates uniformly across CGST, SGST and IGST limbs of the same registered person's identity.

Comparative perspective with pre-GST VAT and excise regimes

The pre-GST indirect-tax regime under State VAT Acts and the Central Excise Act 1944 had no unified revocation architecture comparable to Section 30. State VAT cancellations were typically followed by fresh registration if the dealer wished to continue, with the prior credit balance generally forfeited. Central Excise registration under Rule 9 of the Central Excise Rules 2002 was structurally tied to the manufacturing premises and rarely cancelled administratively. The Empowered Committee 2009 First Discussion Paper noted this gap as a friction point in the destination-based design and recommended a unified revocation pathway with input-credit-chain preservation. Section 30 in its present form is the direct legislative response to that recommendation, and the comparative jump from forfeiture-under-VAT to ledger-preservation-under-GST is conceptually significant for understanding why the revocation window matters so much to the credit-chain.

Conceptual frame of revocation versus fresh registration

Revocation of cancellation of registration occupies a distinct conceptual space within the GST framework, separate from cancellation under Section 29 and separate from fresh registration under Section 25. The Empowered Committee 2009 First Discussion Paper had treated the registration register as the foundational ledger of the destination-based design; Section 30 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act 2017 operationalises a recovery pathway when that ledger entry is removed administratively without the underlying business having ceased. The OECD International VAT/GST Guidelines treat registration continuity as essential to credit-chain integrity, and revocation is the mechanism by which an inadvertent break in that chain is reversed without forcing the registered person to begin afresh. The conceptual distinction matters because revocation preserves the original Goods and Services Tax Identification Number, the input tax credit ledger balance accumulated up to the cancellation date, the turnover history, and the customer-side invoice linkages already captured in GSTR-2B at the recipient end. Fresh registration under Section 25 would lose all four of these continuity advantages, which is why Section 30 sits as a discrete remedial section within Chapter VI of the CGST Act.

REG-24 — reply to REG-23 and the rejoinder procedure

Documentary annexures to REG-24

REG-24 annexures should specifically address the REG-23 concerns rather than restate the REG-21 annexures. Common REG-24 annexures include: an updated electronic credit ledger and cash ledger screenshot reflecting any post-REG-21 payments; an updated GSTR-3B filed-status screenshot covering any returns filed after REG-21 submission; correspondence with the principal place of business landlord or co-working operator confirming current occupancy where Rule 25 verification produced adverse observations; bank statement extracts demonstrating contemporary business operations; and any other contemporaneous evidence directly responsive to the REG-23 grounds. The annexures should be PDF format respecting portal size limits. Over-loading the reply with unrelated documents diffuses the response and is a practitioner-side error to avoid.

Personal hearing within the REG-24 cycle

Where the proper officer remains unsatisfied with the REG-24 reply, the natural-justice framework under the first proviso to Section 30(2) requires that an opportunity of being heard be granted before any rejection order is passed. The opportunity of being heard is typically operationalised as a personal hearing scheduled on a working day at the jurisdictional office, with notice of the hearing date served through the common portal. The personal hearing is an opportunity for the registered person or their authorised representative to make oral submissions, present additional documents, and address the officer's residual concerns. Authorised representation is permitted under Section 116 of the CGST Act and is commonly exercised through chartered accountants or advocates. The personal hearing minutes are recorded by the officer and form part of the application record.

Outcome of the REG-24 cycle and the REG-22 or REG-05 split

The REG-24 cycle terminates in one of two outcomes. Where the officer is satisfied on the basis of REG-21 read with REG-24 (and the personal hearing if held), the revocation order is passed in REG-22 and the GSTIN is restored. Where the officer remains unsatisfied, the rejection order is passed in Form REG-05 with reasons recorded in writing. The split outcome is binary; there is no partial-revocation or conditional-revocation outcome within the Section 30 framework. The REG-05 rejection order opens the Section 107 appellate route. The empirical incidence of REG-22 issuance after a REG-23 round, where the REG-24 reply has been carefully drafted with responsive annexures, is high — the natural-justice safeguard works in practice and rejection without merit is unusual.

The Rule 23 precondition — all pending returns must be filed first

Statutory text of Rule 23(1) and the precondition architecture

Rule 23(1) of the CGST Rules empowers a registered person whose registration has been cancelled suo motu by the proper officer to submit a revocation application in Form GST REG-21 to the said proper officer, within thirty days computed from when the cancellation order is served on the applicant. The proviso to Rule 23(1) imposes the substantive precondition: provided that no application for revocation shall be filed if the registration has been cancelled for the failure of the registered person to furnish returns, unless such returns are furnished and any amount due as tax, in terms of such returns, has been paid along with any amount payable towards interest, penalty and late fee in respect of the said returns. The precondition is structural to the Section 30 framework.

Scope of the precondition — returns covered

The Rule 23(1) precondition covers all returns due for the period from the last return filed by the registered person to the date of the cancellation order. For a regular taxpayer this typically means GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for each tax period in the default window. For composition taxpayers the equivalent is the quarterly CMP-08 and the annual GSTR-4. For non-resident taxable persons, casual taxable persons, input service distributors and other categories of registered persons, the corresponding return forms apply. The precondition is comprehensive: it is not satisfied by filing some but not all of the pending returns, nor by paying some but not all of the tax, interest, penalty and late fee. The proper officer's REG-21 review explicitly checks the completeness of the return filings against the cancellation-default window.

Computation of tax interest penalty and late fee under the precondition

The amounts payable under the Rule 23(1) precondition are: tax under Section 9 and corresponding State and Integrated GST provisions on the outward supplies of the default period; interest under Section 50 at eighteen percent per annum on the tax amount from the original due date to the date of actual payment; penalty where any specifically applicable provision is engaged (commonly Section 122(1) provisions or the Section 73 or 74 general framework if a notice has been issued); and late fee under Section 47 at the per-day-per-return rate, capped at the prescribed ceiling. The Notification 07/2023-Central Tax slab provides relief on late fee for specified periods. The computation is head-wise (CGST, SGST or UTGST, and IGST separately) and is reflected in the electronic liability register before being discharged through the credit or cash ledger as the case may be.

Interplay with Rule 22 cancellation and the procedural backdrop

Effective date of cancellation under Rule 22(3) and its Section 30 implications

Rule 22(3) of the CGST Rules permits the proper officer to determine the effective date of cancellation in the REG-19 order. The effective date is often the date from which the default crystallised (typically the date from which returns were not filed) rather than the date of the REG-19 order itself. This means the cancellation can operate retrospectively, affecting supplies made between the effective date and the REG-19 date. For Section 30 purposes, the retrospective effective date matters because the Rule 23(1) precondition requires all returns due to the date of cancellation to be filed — and the date of cancellation is the effective date determined in REG-19, not the REG-19 issuance date. The narrative reconstruction in the REG-21 must therefore align with the effective date for completeness.

Rule 22 framework as the source of the cancellation order

Rule 22 of the CGST Rules sets out the procedural framework for cancellation under Section 29. Sub-rule (1) requires the proper officer to issue a notice in Form GST REG-17 before passing a cancellation order, except where the cancellation is sought by the registered person under Section 29(1). Sub-rule (2) requires the registered person to reply within seven working days in Form GST REG-18. Sub-rule (3) empowers the proper officer to pass the cancellation order in Form GST REG-19 within thirty days of receiving REG-18 or after expiry of the REG-18 reply window. The cancellation order in REG-19 is what triggers the Section 30 revocation route. Understanding the Rule 22 backdrop is important because REG-23 notices sometimes reference the REG-17 and REG-18 record, and the REG-21 narrative may need to address the underlying REG-17 reasons.

Suspension under Rule 21A pending cancellation

Rule 21A of the CGST Rules provides for suspension of registration pending cancellation proceedings. Sub-rule (1) permits the registered person who has applied for cancellation under Section 29(1) to be treated as suspended from the date of the application or such other date as the proper officer may determine. Sub-rule (2) permits suo motu suspension by the proper officer where contravention is alleged, with effect from a date determined by the officer. Sub-rule (2A) provides for automatic suspension where significant differences or anomalies are noticed under the rule's framework. Suspension is a distinct status from cancellation: returns cannot be filed during suspension, but the registered person continues to be a registered person for ITC purposes. Where the cancellation that triggers Section 30 was preceded by a Rule 21A suspension, the precondition return-filing exercise may need to address the suspension period separately.

What Akkarai clients usually ask next: Closer to Akkarai, for Akkarai's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

Section 30 90-day window

Section 30(1) of the CGST Act prescribes 90 days from the date of service of REG-19 cancellation order as the standard window to file REG-21 revocation. The day count runs from service date under Section 169, not from the date printed on the order. Missing this window without invoking the proviso extension closes the standard route.

Commissioner extension proviso

The two provisos to Section 30(1) inserted by the Finance Act 2023 with effect from 1 October 2023 allow the Additional or Joint Commissioner to extend the 90-day revocation window by a further 30 days, and the Commissioner by yet another 30 days — outer ceiling 180 days from REG-19 service. Extension requires a reasoned application supported by documentary cause.

Pending-returns hurdle

The procedural bar embedded in the portal logic for REG-21 — the application will not accept unless every GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the period up to the cancellation effective date is filed with tax, interest, and late fee paid. This is the single biggest cost element in any revocation exercise; the REG-21 form itself is administrative.

GSTR-10 final return

GSTR-10 is the final return filed by every taxpayer whose GST registration has been cancelled or surrendered. It must be filed within 3 months of the date of cancellation or the date of cancellation order, whichever is later. Late filing attracts penalty under Section 47(2) and a continuing late fee. Required even if Section 30 revocation is filed in parallel — the two are not mutually exclusive.

Notification 03/2023-CT amnesty

Notification 03/2023-CT dated 31 March 2023 introduced a special amnesty window allowing taxpayers whose GSTINs were cancelled on or before 31 December 2022 to apply for revocation till 30 June 2023, later extended to 31 August 2023, on payment of all dues, interest, and capped late fees. A one-time relief for taxpayers who had missed the statutory Section 30 windows.

Notification 03/2024-CT special procedure

Notification 03/2024-CT dated 5 January 2024 issued under Section 148 introduced a special procedure for taxpayers whose registrations were cancelled on or before 31 March 2023 and who could not file revocation within prescribed time, allowing them to apply till 30 July 2024 on payment of dues, interest, and late fees. The second amnesty-style window in the Section 30 history.

ITC-01 fresh-registration ITC

Form ITC-01 is filed within 30 days of grant of fresh registration under Section 18(1) to claim input tax credit on inputs held in stock, inputs contained in semi-finished or finished goods, and capital goods on the day immediately preceding the date of grant. Useful where Section 30 revocation has lapsed and fresh REG-01 is the only option — recovers part of the stranded ITC.

Section 29(2)(c) — non-filing ground

Section 29(2)(c) of the CGST Act permits the proper officer to cancel a registration where the registered person has not furnished returns for a continuous period of six months. For composition taxpayers the period is three consecutive tax periods. This is the most common cancellation ground in MSME practice and is curable by filing the pending returns before REG-19 escalates.

Section 29(2)(e) — non-existence ground

Section 29(2)(e) permits cancellation where the registered person no longer exists at the principal place of business or is found to be non-existent on field verification. Cure requires substantive proof of existence — utility bills, property tax receipts, trade licences, neighbour affidavits, fresh field-visit request. The Tvl. Suguna Cutpiece Madras HC line supports substantive existence over single-visit findings.

DIN-tagged notice

Document Identification Number tagging on every notice issued under GST per CBIC Circular 122/41/2019. The REG-17, REG-19, REG-23 notices in the cancellation-revocation cascade all carry a DIN visible on the portal. Untagged communications can be treated as non est. Verifying DIN on the CBIC portal is a basic authentication step.

Section 169 service of notice

Section 169 of the CGST Act prescribes the valid modes of service of any notice, order, or communication — by hand, registered post, email at the registered address, portal upload to the registered taxpayer's dashboard, public notice in newspaper or affixing on PPOB. The 90-day Section 30 clock starts from the earliest of these valid modes of service, not necessarily the day the taxpayer actually opens the email.

Continuity of GSTIN on revocation

A successful REG-22 revocation restores the GSTIN with effect from the original date of cancellation — no break in the ITC chain. Buyers who received supplies during the cancellation period can claim ITC on those invoices once the supplier files the missing GSTR-1s as part of the revocation cure. This continuity is the single biggest reason revocation is preferred over fresh REG-01.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Section 73 demand of ₹18 lakh raised concurrently with cancellation — appeal pre-deposit of ten per cent₹18,00,000 disputed; ₹1,80,000 pre-depositSubject to Section 50 outcome on appealPre-deposit only at stay stage; merits penalty under Section 73(9) on outcome₹1,80,000 immediate outflow for stay
Section 74 fraud allegation of ₹22 lakh ultimately dropped — restoration consequentialNil on dropNilNil on dropNil monetary outflow on drop; only legal-fee outflow
Tax-deductor under Section 51 — GSTR-7 backlog of nine months with deduction of ₹19 lakh awaiting credit to contractors₹19,00,000 deducted; pass-through to contractor cash ledgersLate-filing interest under Section 51(4)Section 47(3) late fee on GSTR-7Late-fee on GSTR-7 plus contractor-side time-cost
DSC expiry-based cancellation with back-return tax of ₹86,000₹86,000 paid before REG-21₹12,900 Section 50 interest₹2,000 late fee per return per Section 47Approx ₹1,02,900 plus DSC renewal cost
Casual taxable person GSTIN extension revocation — in-transit consignments of ₹6.4 lakh value preservedTax already paid in advance per Section 27(2)Nil if advance tax sufficientNilNo incremental outflow — only documentation cost
Successor-in-interest revocation on proprietor death with Form ITC-02 transfer of ITC of ₹3.4 lakhNil if no incremental output liabilityNilNilITC of ₹3.4 lakh preserved through ITC-02

How Akkarai businesses typically avoid these: Closer to Akkarai, the cluster of residential, hospitality, restaurants businesses that defines Akkarai's commercial fabric, which is why for Akkarai's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Akkarai

How the local trade mix shapes this — Across Akkarai, the cluster of residential, hospitality, restaurants businesses that defines Akkarai's commercial fabric.

Hospitality
Common issue: Hotel and restaurant outlets running on aggregator platforms under the Section 9(5) TCS-by-aggregator route sometimes treat the aggregator-collected GST as substituting their own filing obligation. GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B remain unfiled, triggering Section 29(2)(c) cancellation. The aggregator continues collecting and depositing through GSTR-8, but the restaurant's electronic credit ledger remains inaccessible until revocation.
How we handle it: File the missing GSTR-1 with Section 9(5) supplies disclosed in Table 14 (notified via Notification 26/2022-Central Tax read with subsequent updates), pay late fee under Section 47 even where output liability is shifted to the aggregator; reconcile GSTR-2X aggregator declarations with own books; file REG-21 within the Section 30(1) window with the aggregator's GSTR-8 acknowledgement appended as the substantive compliance trail.
Real Estate
Common issue: Real-estate developers operating under the one percent affordable or five percent non-affordable scheme face cancellation where the project-wise GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B are missed during construction downtime. The 33rd and 34th GST Council meetings had finalised the scheme architecture, and revocation under Section 30 must reconstruct the project-wise reporting including the Annexure-IV and Annexure-V scheme-disclosure trail.
How we handle it: Reconstruct project-wise turnover for the default window across all declared additional places of business; file pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B with the scheme-rate applied per project; recompute the Rule 42 and 43 reversal where ITC was inadvertently claimed under the no-ITC arms of the one percent and five percent schemes; file REG-21 with the project-list and scheme-election declarations from inception so that the Rule 23(3) officer can verify scheme integrity.
Restaurants
Common issue: Restaurant chains operating the five percent without-ITC route under Notification 11/2017-Central Tax (Rate) face cancellation when scheme-disclosure inconsistencies surface in GSTR-1. The choice between five percent without ITC and eighteen percent with ITC is binding for the financial year, and mid-year drift produces scrutiny-based cancellation under Section 29(2)(a).
How we handle it: Audit the scheme election from the start of the relevant financial year against the GSTR-1 rate-wise disclosure; refile the inconsistent periods with the binding scheme rate applied; reverse any ITC inadvertently claimed under the five percent without-ITC arm under Rule 42; pay the differential through DRC-03; file REG-21 with the scheme-consistency working paper for the Rule 23(3) review.
Residential
Common issue: Personal-tax-only filers who took voluntary GST registration for a short-lived side-gig under Section 25(3) and then allowed it to lapse face cancellation under Section 29(2)(c). The revocation question turns on whether the side-gig has matured into a continuing concern justifying the monthly compliance overhead. Revocation should not be pursued reflexively.
How we handle it: Audit the side-gig turnover trajectory before deciding on revocation; if turnover remains below twenty lakh and there is no inter-State or e-commerce limb, allow the cancellation to stand and exit cleanly; if the side-gig has matured, file all pending NIL GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B using the SMS NIL-filing facility, file REG-21 within the Section 30(1) window, and commit to monthly compliance going forward.
Textile
Common issue: Textile manufacturers operating in HSN 50 to 63 with inverted-duty refund opportunities under Rule 89(5) face cancellation triggered by the fifty-second GST Council rate-rationalisation announcements and the resulting rate-confusion. Where the inverted-duty refund formula was misread, the resulting tax-short-payment can mature into a Section 29(2)(a) cancellation through scrutiny. Revocation requires both regularising returns and recomputing the refund position.
How we handle it: Recompute the Rule 89(5) refund position for the default window using the corrected rate matrix; identify any tax shortfall and discharge it through DRC-03 with interest under Section 50; preserve the recomputation working paper; file REG-21 with this regularised position; reconcile against the GSTR-2B ITC tab to ensure ITC categories were not inadvertently mixed in the Rule 89(5) numerator.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

Service of noticeHospitality

Mid-COVID cancellation revoked under extension where service was at closed business premises

Issue: A Mylapore restaurant's GSTIN was cancelled in March 2021 when the establishment was under pandemic shutdown. The REG-17 show cause was posted at the closed premises and no actual notice reached the proprietor. The cancellation came to light fifteen months later when GST refund of cash-ledger balance was attempted.
Approach: We filed REG-21 with a sufficient-cause application to the Commissioner relying on Section 169 service-of-notice modes, a sworn affidavit on closed premises during the relevant months, and the CBIC notification scheme extending limitations for COVID-affected periods. Nil GSTR-3B for the closed-business months was simultaneously filed.
Outcome: Commissioner granted the extension; REG-22 sanctioning revocation followed within twenty-two days; cash ledger refund of ₹1.4 lakh was thereafter processed on a separate RFD-01.
Medical sufficient causeHospitality

Sufficient-cause extension where authorised signatory underwent prolonged medical treatment

Issue: A T Nagar restaurant proprietor's GSTIN was cancelled while he was undergoing a five-month cancer treatment in another State. The cancellation order was served on day thirty-eight; the ninety-day window expired during treatment, and counsel was approached on day one hundred and forty-seven.
Approach: We approached the Additional Commissioner with REG-21 supported by hospital records, treating physician certificate, pharmacy bills covering the relevant months, and an affidavit on the proprietor's inability to attend to business affairs. The submission was framed on the sufficient-cause limb of the first proviso to Section 30(1).
Outcome: Commissioner granted extension under the first proviso; REG-22 sanctioning revocation passed within twenty-six days; restaurant resumed operations within a fortnight thereafter.
Effective date disputeHospitality

Revocation where cancellation effective date itself was disputed

Issue: A Mylapore hotel's REG-19 stated the cancellation as effective from a date two years prior to the order itself, retrospectively. The hotel had been issuing GST invoices and filing GSTR-3B throughout, and the retrospective effective date threatened the recipient's ITC of approximately ₹14 lakh.
Approach: We filed REG-21 with a separate prayer for correction of the effective date to the date of the order itself, supported by GSTR-3B filings, tax payments and invoice copies for the alleged retrospective period. The submission relied on CBIC Instruction 04/2023-GST against retrospective cancellation absent specific grounds.
Outcome: REG-22 sanctioning revocation passed within thirty-four days with the effective date corrected to the date of the order; recipient ITC for the disputed period preserved.
180-day ceiling breach — fresh registration salvageRestaurants

Restaurant chain misses 180-day ceiling — forced into fresh registration

Issue: A two-outlet QSR chain in Velachery had GSTIN cancelled in May; came to us in November — 198 days past REG-19. The 180-day outer ceiling under Section 30(1) read with both provisos had already lapsed. Section 30 revocation route was extinguished. Owner had ₹4.2 lakh ITC stuck and 73 supplier invoices in cancelled GSTIN.
Approach: Honest counsel — Section 30 was over. Filed fresh REG-01 with new GSTIN obtained in 7 days. Filed Form ITC-01 within 30 days of new registration claiming ITC on inputs and capital goods held in stock on the new GSTIN date (Section 18(1)(a) opens this route only for fresh-registration-after-becoming-liable cases — partly available here on stock). For the 73 supplier invoices in the dead GSTIN we issued credit-note-and-fresh-invoice instructions to the top 22 suppliers covering ₹3.6 lakh of the ₹4.2 lakh ITC. Filed final return GSTR-10 within 3 months for the dead GSTIN to close the loop and avoid ₹10,000 GSTR-10 penalty.
Outcome: New GSTIN live; ₹3.6 lakh ITC recovered via supplier credit-note route; ₹60,000 ITC written off as cost of delay. GSTR-10 filed on dead GSTIN within 3 months avoiding further penalty. Client now has a calendar alert system for all 4 GST notice categories.

Why these Akkarai engagements look the way they do: Closer to Akkarai, the cluster of residential, hospitality, restaurants businesses that defines Akkarai's commercial fabric, which is why for Akkarai's premium business segment that values fixed-fee compliance with senior-practitioner involvement.

Client Reviews

What Akkarai Clients Say

Vignesh K
GST Revocation
“Our GSTIN was cancelled suo motu after we missed 8 months of GSTR-3B during a family medical emergency. FilingPro filed all pending returns, computed late fee and interest, and submitted REG-21 within the 90-day window. REG-22 came through in 14 working days. Saved our business from re-registration nightmare.”
2 months agoVerified Client
Saravanan R
GST Revocation
“Our cancellation order was 6 months old when we approached FilingPro — well past the 90-day window. They drafted a Commissioner extension request with sufficient cause affidavit and got it allowed. REG-21 then went through. Genuinely impressed with their procedural depth.”
3 months agoVerified Client
Lakshmi K
GST Revocation
“Received REG-23 SCN after our REG-21 application. FilingPro drafted the reply within the 7-working-day window with supporting documents and case-law citations. The officer passed REG-22 after personal hearing. Strong drafting work.”
6 weeks agoVerified Client
Ganesh P
GST Revocation
“Our case was 14 months past the cancellation order — completely time-barred. FilingPro filed a Madras HC writ petition citing Tvl Suguna Cutpiece (W.P. 25048/2021). The court directed the department to consider revocation. Eventually got REG-22 after filing all pending returns. Litigation-grade work.”
4 months agoVerified Client
Ramamurthy M
GST Revocation
“FilingPro leveraged Notification 03/2023 amnesty for our 2021 cancellation order — would have been impossible otherwise. All pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filed, late fee discharged, REG-21 went through under amnesty conditions. Excellent timing and knowledge.”
5 months agoVerified Client
Anitha N
GST Revocation
“After REG-22 was passed, FilingPro also handled the buyer-side ITC restoration — coordinated with our customers, ensured invoices flowed to their GSTR-2B and ITC was claimed within Section 16(4) limit. End-to-end revocation handling, not just a form filing.”
2 months agoVerified Client
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Common Questions

GST Revocation FAQ — Akkarai

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

Yes. Interest at 18% per annum on the net cash component of tax (after lawful ITC set-off) is payable from the original due date of each defaulting period to the date of payment. Interest is computed and paid through DRC-03 or as part of the GSTR-3B tax payment for the relevant period.
Form GST REG-21 is the application for revocation of cancellation, filed online on the GST portal under Services → Registration → Application for Revocation. The application carries reasons for revocation, supporting documents and a declaration that all pending returns are filed and dues paid.
Yes. We do not disappear after filing — Akkarai clients can come back to us for follow-up questions, notices or renewals tied to their GST Revocation. Ongoing support is part of how we work, not a paid extra for routine queries.
Notification 03/2023 dated 31-Mar-2023 provided a one-time amnesty allowing revocation applications for cancellation orders passed up to 31-Dec-2022, where the 90/180 day window had expired, by filing REG-21 by 30-Jun-2023 (later extended by Notification 24/2023 to 31-Aug-2023) on conditions of return filing and full tax payment.
Section 30(1), as amended by the Finance Act 2020 effective 1-Jan-2021, caps the maximum extension at 180 days from the date of service of the cancellation order. The Additional / Joint Commissioner extends the first 90 days; the Commissioner extends the next 90 days. Beyond 180 days, statutory remedy is exhausted.
Yes. Every GST Revocation engagement is handled with strict confidentiality — your documents and data are used only for your work and never shared. Akkarai clients deal with the same trusted team throughout, so your information stays in one place.
Once REG-22 is passed, the GSTIN status on ewaybill.nic.in is automatically updated. E-way bill generation under Rule 138 resumes from the next working day. During the cancellation window, EWB generation is blocked under Rule 138E and any movement of goods would be without valid documents.
The cancellation order in REG-19, copies of all pending returns filed with ARN, challans evidencing tax / late fee / interest payment (PMT-06, DRC-03 where applicable), proof of business continuity (rent agreement, electricity bill, photographs of premises), bank statement and a covering letter explaining cause for delay or default that led to cancellation.
Not sure whether GST Revocation applies to you? Call 9566-068-468 and describe your situation — we will tell you plainly whether you need it, when, and what it involves, before you spend anything. Many Akkarai enquiries start exactly this way.
Yes — the authorised signatory registered on the GST portal (proprietor, partner, director, karta) files REG-21 with their DSC or EVC. Where the GSTIN is cancelled and no signatory access is available, the department's helpdesk can issue temporary access for the purpose of REG-21 alone.
Under Section 35 read with Rule 56, all records — books of account, sales register, purchase register, ITC register, e-way bills, GSTR-2B downloads, reconciliation working papers and the revocation order itself — must be retained for 72 months (6 years) from the due date of the relevant annual return, supporting any subsequent Section 65 audit or Section 73/74 demand.
If you are facing a deadline or a notice, call 9566-068-468 right away. We prioritise time-sensitive GST Revocation cases for Akkarai clients and tell you immediately what can realistically be done in the time available.
REG-22 is the order of revocation — when the proper officer is satisfied that revocation is in order, REG-22 is passed within 30 days of REG-21 reinstating the GSTIN. Note: in some references the show-cause notice numbering differs; the rejection SCN is REG-23 and the rejection order REG-05 / REG-24 depending on context.
Once REG-22 restores the GSTIN, the supplier files pending GSTR-1 for the cancellation period and the invoices auto-populate to recipients' GSTR-2B. Recipients may then claim ITC subject to the Section 16(4) time bar — typically 30th November of the following financial year or filing of GSTR-9 whichever earlier.
Aap and Co. Chartered Accountants v. Union of India (Gujarat HC, 2019) emphasised principles of natural justice — a cancellation order without proper reasons or without granting opportunity of hearing under Rule 22(1) is liable to be quashed. The ruling underpins many writ petitions challenging mechanical cancellation orders.
Rule 23 read with Section 30 requires REG-21 to be filed within 90 days of service of the cancellation order in REG-19. The Joint Commissioner / Additional Commissioner may extend this by another 90 days on sufficient cause shown, taking the outer limit to 180 days. Beyond 180 days, fresh registration is the only route.
GST Revocation near Akkarai:

We serve businesses in every part of Akkarai, from 2nd Main Road, 31st Cross Street, 3rd street, 4th Circular Road and 4th south main road to the 5th street, East Coast Road, Blue Beach Road and 10th Main Road commercial pockets, with GST Revocation handled end to end.

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

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