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Besant Nagar Bus Terminus catchment · Besant Nagar GST Revocation

GST Revocation — Besant Nagar & Adyar

GST Revocation delivery for it consultancies and hospitality firms across Besant Nagar — with WhatsApp-first document intake

Professional GST Revocation in Besant Nagar (PIN 600090), Chennai — transparent scope, no surprises, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Call 9566-068-468.

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Quick Answer

What is the prescribed form for revocation application in Besant Nagar, Chennai?

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.

Transparent Pricing

GST Revocation in Besant Nagar — 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 Besant Nagar Clients Choose FilingPro

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

Madras HC Writ Remedy

For Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar 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.

Buyer-Side ITC Restoration

Once REG-22 restores the GSTIN, we coordinate with your customers to ensure invoices for the cancellation period flow into their GSTR-2B and ITC is claimed within the Section 16(4) time bar — preserving customer relationships.

E-Way Bill Restoration

E-way bill generation on ewaybill.nic.in is automatically restored the working day after REG-22. We confirm the unblock and assist with the first post-revocation EWB to ensure goods movement resumes seamlessly.

Key Benefits

What Besant Nagar Clients Get

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

Customers' ITC Saved
Once REG-22 is passed and pending GSTR-1 filed, your customers' invoices flow back into GSTR-2B and ITC can be claimed within the Section 16(4) time bar — saving customer relationships and preventing commercial disputes.
Section 122 Penalty Mitigation
Section 122(1)(xi) penalty exposure for supplies during the cancellation window is identified and mitigated through DRC-03 voluntary tax payment — pre-empting Section 73/74 demand notices.
E-Way Bill Block Lifted
Once REG-22 is passed, the Rule 138E block on EWB generation is lifted automatically the next working day. Besant Nagar businesses resume goods movement without parallel transport documentation issues.
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 Besant Nagar 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. Besant Nagar clients' time-barred cases are not abandoned to fresh registration.
Comparison

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

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

AspectStandard 90-day routeExtended 180-day Commissioner route
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
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
Documents Required

Documents for GST Revocation

Share documents via WhatsApp to 9566-068-468. No office visit required for Besant Nagar 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 — In Besant Nagar, the business activity radiating outward from Elliot's 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 Besant Nagar: Where Besant Nagar differs: for Besant Nagar IT-services firms managing export-LUT cycles alongside payroll and TDS.

Forms Library

Forms used in this engagement

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
REG-17Show Cause Notice for Cancellation

Show-cause notice preceding suo motu cancellation — addressing this at the REG-18 stage pre-empts the need for later revocation under Section 30

Issued before cancellation Jurisdictional Range Officer
REG-18Reply to SCN for Cancellation

Taxpayer's reply to the REG-17 show-cause; filing of all defaulted returns during this window can lead to REG-20 dropping of proceedings

Within 7 working days of REG-17 Common Portal (taxpayer)
REG-20Order for Dropping of Cancellation Proceedings

Order dropping cancellation proceedings where the REG-18 reply is satisfactory — typically because all pending returns have been filed with dues paid

Within 30 days of REG-18 Jurisdictional Range Officer
GSTR-3BSummary Monthly Return

Summary monthly return capturing output tax, ITC availed, and net tax paid; every defaulted GSTR-3B for the period up to cancellation must be filed before REG-21 can be entertained

20th / 22nd / 24th of next month per QRMP slab Common Portal (taxpayer)
GSTR-1Statement of Outward Supplies

Monthly or quarterly statement of outward supplies; defaulted GSTR-1 filings up to date of cancellation are a precondition for REG-21

11th of next month (monthly) or 13th of quarter-end (QRMP) Common Portal (taxpayer)

GST Revocation in Besant Nagar, Chennai 600090

For GST Revocation at PIN 600090, understanding the Mylapore Division's documentation norms removes most of the friction from the process. Besant Nagar (PIN 600090) falls under the Mylapore Division of the Chennai South, the jurisdiction that handles statutory matters for businesses at this PIN. The 600xx geo-zone covering Besant Nagar groups several locality clusters under common administration, keeping documentation expectations predictable. We keep a cycle-by-cycle record of how the Mylapore Division of the Chennai South handles Besant Nagar filings and approvals.

Vendors and customers tied to the Besant Nagar Bus Terminus network show up across the invoice trail we reconcile for Besant Nagar GST Revocation clients. The businesses clustered around Elliot's Beach in Besant Nagar drive the bulk of the GST Revocation workload we see each cycle. Besant Nagar reads as a coastal residential with cafes and consultancies pocket with high commercial activity, anchored around Elliot's Beach and fed by the Besant Nagar Bus Terminus corridor. Commercial activity in Besant Nagar runs high, so GST Revocation volumes scale through peak months and we staff the Besant Nagar desk accordingly.

cafes units around Besant Nagar share recurring GST Revocation patterns — input-credit timing, vendor reconciliation, and sector-specific documentation. Because Besant Nagar hosts a cluster of cafes businesses, we benchmark each new GST Revocation engagement against patterns we already track for the locality. The cafes firms we serve in Besant Nagar value a GST Revocation partner who already understands their sector's compliance rhythm. The business mix in Besant Nagar centres on cafes, and that sector carries its own GST Revocation quirks we plan for in advance.

Every GST Revocation file we open for Besant Nagar is reconciled, reviewed by a qualified practitioner, and archived for seven years. We keep a repeatable GST Revocation checklist for Besant Nagar so nothing in the cycle is improvised or missed. The Besant Nagar GST Revocation workflow is documented end-to-end: WhatsApp document intake, a working file, qualified review, and a filed acknowledgement back to you. Document intake for Besant Nagar clients runs over WhatsApp, so there is no office visit and no paper shuffle for a GST Revocation engagement.

GST Revocation clients in Thiruvanmiyur are handled by the same practitioners who run our Besant Nagar desk. Proximity to Thiruvanmiyur means a Besant Nagar engagement can extend across the locality cluster with no change in cadence. Businesses straddling Besant Nagar and Thiruvanmiyur get a single GST Revocation point of contact rather than two. A client relocating between Besant Nagar and Thiruvanmiyur keeps the same GST Revocation file and the same team.

Each engagement in Besant Nagar adds to a record of what the Chennai South jurisdiction expects, sharpening the next GST Revocation file. The longer we serve Besant Nagar, the more precisely we predict where a GST Revocation file needs attention. Over several cycles in Besant Nagar, the recurring GST Revocation issues cluster around a predictable short list we screen for early. Recurring gaps in Besant Nagar residential records are the first thing our GST Revocation review closes out.

Incorporating in Besant Nagar comes with jurisdiction, registration and GST Revocation steps that we sequence so nothing stalls the launch. For a new business incorporating in Besant Nagar or shifting its principal place of business here, GST Revocation setup is one of the first things to get right. First-time GST Revocation for a Besant Nagar business is where getting the basics right saves years of cleanup later. We onboard new Besant Nagar entities onto a GST Revocation cadence that is audit-ready from the very first cycle.

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Expert Guide

GST Revocation in Besant Nagar — Complete Guide

GST Revocation in Besant Nagar (600090) is handled end-to-end by qualified professionals at FilingPro under Section 30 of the CGST Act read with Rule 23. The cancellation order in REG-19 is reviewed, pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B for the entire default window are cleared, late fee under Section 47 and interest under Section 50 are computed and discharged, and REG-21 is filed within the 90-day statutory window.

GST Revocation in Besant Nagar, Chennai

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

GST Revocation Consultant in Besant Nagar — REG-21 Filing Expert

A dedicated GST revocation consultant in Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar

On-time REG-21 application within 90 days of the cancellation order in Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar — Madras HC Writ Petition

For time-barred cases beyond the 180-day outer limit in Besant Nagar, 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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Key Facts — GST Revocation in Besant Nagar
REG-21 filed within 90 days for Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar 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 Besant Nagar
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).
Does revocation require a fresh physical verification of premises?

Where the cancellation ground was Section 29(2)(b) non-conduct of business at the principal place, a fresh physical verification is typically directed. The applicant should keep the premises ready with signboard, lease deed, electricity bill and operating staff for the verification visit.

How is composition-scheme cancellation revoked?

Composition-scheme cancellation under Rule 6 is distinct from GSTIN cancellation under Section 29. Where the composition option lapses and the GSTIN itself is cancelled for migration default, REG-21 must be combined with the regular-scheme tax-back computation and CMP-04 filing.

Is interest payable on tax cleared at the REG-21 stage?

Yes. Section 50 of the CGST Act prescribes interest at eighteen per cent per annum on tax not paid by the due date. The interest accrues from the original due date until actual payment, even where the payment is contemporaneous with REG-21 filing.

What is the late fee on pending GSTR-3B during cancelled period?

Section 47 of the CGST Act prescribes late fee of fifty rupees per day for non-nil returns and twenty rupees per day for nil returns, subject to a notified ceiling per return. CBIC amnesty notifications periodically cap the cumulative late fee.

Can revocation be sought on legal heir succession after proprietor's death?

Yes. The legal heir files REG-14 to update proprietor particulars, files REG-21 with the death certificate and legal heir certificate, and files ITC-02 to transfer accumulated input tax credit. Section 18(3) of the CGST Act read with Rule 41 governs the credit transfer.

What happens to refund claims pending during the cancelled period?

Refund claims filed before cancellation continue on file but disbursement is typically held until GSTIN is restored. Fresh refund claims for excess cash ledger balance can be filed even during cancellation under the dedicated cash-ledger refund category which has no time limit.

What Besant Nagar clients want to know before signing: Where Besant Nagar differs: around the Elliot's Beach catchment of Besant Nagar.

Expert Guide

A complete walkthrough — Gst Revocation

Reading this guide locally — In Besant Nagar, in the coastal residential with cafes and consultancies micro-market of Besant Nagar.

What is GST revocation and the statutory architecture of Section 30

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.

Triggering grounds within Section 29(2) that allow Section 30 recourse

Section 30(1) of the CGST Act opens with the phrase any registered person whose registration is cancelled by the proper officer on his own motion, which narrows the section's coverage to suo motu cancellations under Section 29(2). The grounds enumerated in Section 29(2) are: contravention of provisions of the Act or rules made thereunder under clause (a); non-furnishing of returns for a continuous period of six months under clause (c) for regular taxpayers and three consecutive tax periods under clause (b) for composition taxpayers; non-commencement of business within six months of voluntary registration under clause (d); and registration obtained by means of fraud, wilful misstatement or suppression of facts under clause (e). Section 30 covers all five clauses but the practical incidence is heavily concentrated in clause (c) non-filing cancellations. Where the cancellation is recorded under Section 29(1) at the registered person's own request through Form REG-16, Section 30 is not the appropriate route; fresh registration under Section 25 would apply.

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.

First proviso to Section 30 and the Joint Commissioner extension

Documentation discipline for the extension application

The documentation discipline for a first-proviso extension application has four elements that consistently survive review. First, a chronological narrative tying the cancellation date in REG-19 to the sufficient-cause event with specific dates. Second, supporting documents directly evidencing the cause: medical records for hospitalisation, FIR for theft of records, notification or government advisory for force-majeure. Third, an estimated timeline for completion of the residual tasks. Fourth, an undertaking to file REG-21 within the extended window. Where these four elements are present, the extension order is typically issued within fifteen working days. Where any element is missing, the application is more likely to receive a deficiency query under Rule 90(3) read with the procedural framework, extending the timeline materially. Documentation discipline at the application stage is therefore the highest-leverage practitioner contribution.

Procedural sequence for seeking the first-proviso extension

The first-proviso extension under Section 30(1) is sought through a formal application to the Additional Commissioner or Joint Commissioner having jurisdiction, accompanied by documentary evidence of the sufficient cause being relied on. The application is filed on the common portal in the prescribed format read with the jurisdictional commissionerate's standing instructions. The application must be filed within the original ninety-day window; an application filed after the ninetieth day generally does not meet the statutory requirement of being within the said period. The Additional Commissioner or Joint Commissioner records reasons in writing while granting or refusing the extension, and the order is uploaded to the registered person's dashboard. The Section 30(1) extension architecture sits within the broader CGST procedural framework, and the recorded reasons facilitate downstream review if the extension is refused.

Sufficient-cause threshold and illustrative grounds

The sufficient-cause threshold under the first proviso is examined case by case but appellate guidance has crystallised illustrative grounds. Documented hospitalisation of the proprietor or authorised signatory during a substantial part of the ninety-day window is consistently treated as sufficient cause. Genuine inability to access books of account due to office relocation, vacating of leased premises, or theft of records supported by First Information Report is similarly accepted. Force-majeure events including natural disasters affecting the principal place of business, civil disturbances and pandemic-related restrictions have been recognised, with the Notification 25/2020-Central Tax and subsequent pandemic-period notifications serving as the procedural framework during the relevant periods. The threshold is liberal where the cause is documented and contemporaneous, and conservative where the cause is asserted without supporting evidence.

Second proviso to Section 30 and the Commissioner further extension

Boundaries between the proviso route and the appellate route

Where even the second-proviso extension is refused or where the cumulative one-fifty-day cap is exceeded, the boundary with the Section 107 appellate route becomes operationally relevant. The proviso route is exhausted at one hundred and fifty days; thereafter the only statutory remedy is appeal under Section 107(1) within three months of the original cancellation order (or rejection order if applicable). The boundary is conceptually clean: provisos enlarge the Section 30 window, appeal opens a separate merits-review track. Practitioner judgement on when to switch tracks turns on the strength of the merits review: where the underlying cancellation is contestable on speaking-order grounds or on misapplication of Section 29(2), Section 107 is the better track even at the proviso-extension stage rather than after exhaustion.

Strategic perspective on cumulative window utilisation

Strategically the cumulative one-fifty-day window should be planned at the cancellation stage rather than utilised reactively. Practitioners assessing the REG-19 cancellation order against the registered person's books make an early determination on whether the ninety-day base window is sufficient. Where the books are clean and the default period is short, the base window suffices and the provisos are unused. Where the books are disrupted or the default period is long, both proviso extensions are budgeted from day one and the application sequence is initiated proactively. The strategic approach reduces last-minute rushes and aligns documentation discipline with the relevant proviso threshold. Where neither proviso is needed, the registered person is in a stronger procedural posture for the actual REG-21 review.

When the second proviso is operationally needed

The second proviso to Section 30(1) is operationally needed in the narrow band of cases where the cumulative one-twenty-day window under the first proviso is insufficient. Such cases typically involve a sufficient-cause event that persists beyond the first thirty-day extension, for example a prolonged hospitalisation, a multi-State office disruption requiring sequential records reconstruction, or a complex inter-jurisdictional records access issue. The second-proviso extension is not granted as a matter of course; the Commissioner-level review applies a stricter sufficient-cause scrutiny than the first-proviso level review at the Joint Commissioner. The practical incidence is low but the route is statutorily available and should be invoked where the underlying cause genuinely persists.

Filing the REG-21 application — form architecture and content

Drafting the grounds-for-revocation narrative

The grounds-for-revocation narrative within REG-21 is the most substantive practitioner contribution. The narrative should be concise but complete, covering: the original cancellation reason as recorded in REG-19, the curative actions taken (returns filed, dues paid, late fee discharged), the underlying business continuity (with reference to MSME Udyam certificate, MCA filings, contracts in force, or other operational indicia), and the explicit assurance of forward compliance. The narrative should avoid argumentative tone, contest of the original cancellation, or extensive legal citation; the application is a curative submission, not a merits-review submission. Where the underlying cancellation is contestable on merits, the Section 107 appellate route is the appropriate forum; REG-21 narrative should not blur the two routes.

Documentary annexures to be uploaded with REG-21

The documentary annexures to REG-21 typically include: a screenshot of the GSTR-3B filed status for the cancellation default period demonstrating that all pending returns are filed; the late fee and interest computation working paper; the DRC-03 receipt of any voluntary payments made; the FORM PMT-09 if cash-ledger consolidation was needed; the principal place of business address proof if a REG-14 amendment is filed in parallel; any MSME Udyam certificate or other institutional-context document; and any sufficient-cause supporting documents if a proviso extension was utilised. The annexures are uploaded as PDF attachments through the portal upload facility. File size limits and format requirements set by the portal must be observed; over-sized attachments are a common practitioner-side error that triggers REG-23 deficiency queries.

Verification and authentication of REG-21

REG-21 is verified through the registered person's Digital Signature Certificate where the entity is a private limited company, limited liability partnership, or other entity for which DSC is mandated under the CGST Rules. For proprietorships, partnerships and Hindu Undivided Families, Electronic Verification Code through Aadhaar OTP is permitted as an alternative. The authentication sequence follows the same architecture as REG-01 verification. Once verified and submitted, the Application Reference Number is generated and displayed on the portal. The ARN is the tracking credential for the application; all subsequent REG-23, REG-24 and REG-22 communications reference the ARN. The verification step is sometimes overlooked when the DSC token expires or the Aadhaar-mobile linkage is broken, producing a non-submission error; pre-checking the verification credential before filing prevents this delay.

What Besant Nagar clients usually ask next: Where Besant Nagar differs: for Besant Nagar IT-services firms managing export-LUT cycles alongside payroll and TDS.

Glossary

Plain-English glossary for this service

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.

Revocation

Revocation is the statutory remedy under Section 30 of the CGST Act by which a registered person whose GSTIN was cancelled suo motu by the proper officer under Section 29(2) seeks restoration of the registration. It is procedurally distinct from withdrawal of a voluntary cancellation and from appeal under Section 107.

Suo motu cancellation

Suo motu cancellation is cancellation initiated by the proper officer on his own motion under Section 29(2) of the CGST Act, as distinguished from voluntary cancellation initiated by the taxpayer under Section 29(1). Only suo motu cancellation is amenable to revocation under Section 30.

REG-21

REG-21 is the electronic form prescribed under Rule 23(1) for application for revocation of cancellation of registration. It is filed on the common portal after all pending returns are furnished and dues are paid, and is routed to the jurisdictional proper officer for disposal.

REG-22

REG-22 is the order passed by the proper officer revoking a suo motu cancellation, restoring the GSTIN with effect from the date specified in the order. The order is communicated electronically and is the formal end-point of a successful revocation proceeding.

REG-23

REG-23 is the show-cause notice issued by the proper officer proposing to reject a REG-21 revocation application — typically on grounds of unfiled returns, unpaid dues, or insufficient explanation for delay beyond the 90-day window. Reply lies in REG-24 within seven working days.

REG-24

REG-24 is the taxpayer's reply to a REG-23 show-cause, carrying clarifications, documentary proof of return-filing, payment challans, and submissions on reasonable cause. It must be filed within seven working days of REG-23 to avoid REG-05 rejection.

Cost of Non-Compliance

Real-world penalty exposure

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

ScenarioBase taxInterestPenaltyTotal
Sufficient-cause extension refused by Commissioner — writ remedy with Article 226 court feeNil — pure procedural challengeNilCourt-fee and legal-cost on writ petitionApprox ₹15,000 to ₹25,000 court-fee plus legal cost
Section 129 detention during cancelled period — consignment value ₹8.6 lakh, tax ₹1.55 lakh₹1,55,000 tax on consignmentNil at detention stage₹1,55,000 equal to tax under Section 129(1)(a)₹3,10,000 immediate outflow
Books-3B mismatch self-disclosure of ₹38 lakh turnover with tax-with-interest of ₹7.5 lakh₹6,84,000 tax at eighteen per cent on disclosed turnover₹1,02,600 Section 50 interestNil under Section 73(8) where tax-with-interest paid before show causeApprox ₹7,86,600
Late fee on nil GSTR-3B for twelve months of cancelled period before revocationNil — nil turnoverNil₹20 per day per return per Section 47 capped at the notified ceiling for nil filersApprox ₹6,000 to ₹12,000 across twelve nil returns
Section 122(1)(i) penalty exposure for invoicing under cancelled GSTIN — invoice value ₹9.8 lakh, tax ₹1.76 lakh₹1,76,000 tax position on the supplySubject to discharge timeline₹10,000 or equal to tax evaded, whichever is higher under Section 122(1)(i)Penalty of ₹1,76,000 on the higher-of test
Effective date of cancellation corrected — recipient ITC of ₹14 lakh preserved without monetary outflowNil on correctionNilNil₹14,00,000 recipient ITC preserved

How Besant Nagar businesses typically avoid these: Where Besant Nagar differs: the cluster of it consultancies, hospitality, retail businesses that defines Besant Nagar's commercial fabric. We see for Besant Nagar IT-services firms managing export-LUT cycles alongside payroll and TDS.

By Industry

Industry-specific patterns in Besant Nagar

How the local trade mix shapes this — In Besant Nagar, the cluster of it consultancies, hospitality, retail businesses that defines Besant Nagar's commercial fabric.

Retail
Common issue: Family-run retail clusters running multiple outlets on a single GSTIN face cancellation when the principal place of business changes due to family-arrangement reshuffles and the REG-14 amendment is overlooked. Section 29(2)(e) provides for cancellation where the place declared no longer corresponds to operations; revocation under Section 30 then requires both regularising returns and aligning the address record.
How we handle it: Audit each declared additional place of business against current operations; file REG-14 amendments in parallel with the revocation route; ensure all pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B are filed for the cancellation default window with late fee discharged under Notification 07/2023-Central Tax; file REG-21 with the REG-14 amendment acknowledgement appended; align tenancy documentation with the revised address record.
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.
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.
Packaging
Common issue: Packaging units operating across HSN 39 (plastic) and HSN 48 (paper-board) face inverted-duty refund opportunities that can be lost when GSTIN cancellation interrupts the refund-claim window. The two-year Section 54(1) limitation continues to run during the cancellation period, so revocation under Section 30 is operationally urgent to preserve refund eligibility.
How we handle it: File REG-21 within the Section 30(1) window without delay; on REG-22 restoration, immediately file the Rule 89(5) inverted-duty refund application for the eligible tax periods within the residual limitation window; preserve the HSN-wise classification trail and the GSTR-2B ITC reconciliation as supporting evidence; coordinate the refund filing with the post-revocation regular compliance cycle.
Coaching
Common issue: Coaching institutes paying visiting faculty above thirty thousand rupees a month under Section 194J TDS face an unrelated GST cancellation where GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filings lapse on the coaching turnover. The combined exposure includes the TAN-based faculty TDS continuing while the GST identity is suspended, producing an asymmetric compliance posture.
How we handle it: Treat the GST cancellation and the income-tax TDS compliance as independent obligations; continue 26Q quarterly faculty TDS filings during the cancellation period; reconstruct the coaching turnover for the GST default window; file all pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B with the eighteen percent rate applied on commercial coaching; file REG-21 within the Section 30(1) window with the TAN-based TDS compliance evidenced separately as proof of operational continuity.
Case Studies

Anonymised engagements we have handled

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

REG-21 90-day window scrambleTextiles

Sowcarpet textile trader catches REG-21 on day 88 of 90-day window

Issue: A wholesale fabric trader at Sowcarpet had his GSTIN cancelled suo motu by the proper officer on a Saturday afternoon for non-filing of six consecutive GSTR-3Bs. The REG-19 cancellation order landed in the registered email which was the previous accountant's address; the owner never saw it. He walked into our office on day 86 after his Tirupur supplier refused to honour the next consignment because the GSTIN was showing 'Cancelled Suo Motu' on the portal.
Approach: We ran the day-count from REG-19 service date — day 88 of the 90-day Section 30(1) window. Pulled the last 14 months of bank statements overnight, reconstructed outward supplies from buyer ledgers (the books had stopped at month 4), filed all six pending GSTR-3Bs with the right late fee head paid through DRC-03 from the cash ledger, cleared the ₹3.8 lakh GSTR-3B liability with interest under Section 50, and filed REG-21 on day 89 with a tabular reply attaching return-filing acknowledgments and a one-page proprietor affidavit explaining the email-address mix-up.
Outcome: REG-22 revocation order passed in 21 days; GSTIN reinstated effective the cancellation date so no break in ITC chain for buyers; ₹3.8 lakh tax plus ₹62,000 interest plus ₹40,000 late fees absorbed; no Section 29(2)(c) re-cancellation triggered.
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.
Section 29(2)(e) — non-existence at PPOBRetail

Perambur kirana store fights non-existence-at-PPOB cancellation

Issue: A kirana store at Perambur had GSTIN cancelled under Section 29(2)(e) after a field visit by the proper officer recorded the premises as 'non-existent' on a Sunday afternoon when the shop was shut. The owner had been operating from the same address for 19 years. REG-19 cited a single field-visit panchanama.
Approach: Filed REG-21 within 38 days with a 14-page rebuttal bundle: 19 years of electricity bills in the proprietor's name at the address, EB tariff card, property tax receipts, trade licence from Greater Chennai Corporation, neighbour-witness affidavits from three adjacent shopkeepers, photographs of the shop with date-stamped CCTV stills showing operating hours, last 12 months of bank deposits at the SBI Perambur branch (the BSR code triangulates to the PPOB pin code), and a request for a fresh field visit on a weekday. Quoted the principle from Tvl. Suguna Cutpiece (2022 Madras HC) on substantive existence over single-visit findings.
Outcome: Proper officer conducted second visit on a Tuesday; REG-22 revocation passed in 34 days from REG-21 filing. No tax demand survived since the cancellation ground was non-existence, not non-payment.
Re-cancellation under Section 29(2)(c)Jewellery

T Nagar jeweller faces second cancellation after revocation — Section 29(2)(c) trap

Issue: A T Nagar jewellery showroom had GSTIN revoked successfully in March 2024 after a six-month non-filing cancellation. We told the proprietor that Section 29(2)(c) treats fresh non-filing of six months as an independent ground for re-cancellation and the second time around the amnesty route is rarely available. By August 2024 — five months in — the new accountant had again missed three months of GSTR-3B. We were called in when the proper officer issued REG-17 show-cause for proposed cancellation.
Approach: Acted on the REG-17 show-cause stage — much faster and cheaper than letting it progress to REG-19. Filed all three pending GSTR-3Bs within 4 days with tax of ₹2.1 lakh and interest of ₹22,000. Filed REG-18 reply to the show-cause within 7 days attaching ARNs of all returns now showing 'Filed' and an undertaking under proprietor signature with monthly compliance calendar. Engaged a junior staff member at the showroom as accountable filing custodian with our office as second-line review.
Outcome: Proper officer dropped the show-cause; no REG-19 issued; GSTIN remained continuously active. Total cost ₹2.4 lakh against a re-revocation cost of approximately ₹5 lakh plus business disruption. The REG-17 stage is the cheapest stop in the cancellation cascade — every business should track DIN-tagged emails from the portal.

Why these Besant Nagar engagements look the way they do: Where Besant Nagar differs: the business activity radiating outward from Elliot's Beach and nearby commercial pockets. We see for Besant Nagar IT-services firms managing export-LUT cycles alongside payroll and TDS.

Client Reviews

What Besant Nagar 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 — Besant Nagar

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

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.
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.
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 Revocation recommendation on current law and your actual facts — not generic templates — and we are happy to explain the reasoning.
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.
Rule 23(2) requires the proper officer to dispose REG-21 within 30 days of receipt. In practice, revocation orders in REG-22 are issued within 7-21 working days where pending returns have been filed and dues paid. SCN cases under REG-23 take longer due to the reply window and personal hearing.
Yes. Along with Besant Nagar, we serve Indra Nagar and the wider Chennai South belt for GST Revocation. Wherever you are in this part of Chennai, the process and our 9566-068-468 line stay the same.
The GSTIN stands cancelled from the effective date in REG-19. The taxpayer cannot raise tax invoices, collect GST or pass on ITC. Any taxable supply made during this window is technically without registration — exposing the supplier to demand under Section 73/74 plus penalty under Section 122(1)(xi) for collecting tax without authority or supplying without registration.
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.
Our GST Revocation fees are fixed and shared in writing before any work starts — no hourly billing and no surprises. Pricing depends on the complexity of your case, not your location, so Besant Nagar clients pay the same transparent rates as everyone else. See the pricing section above or call 9566-068-468 for an exact figure.
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.
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.
Delays in statutory work can mean penalties, interest or blocked services that usually cost far more than acting on time. For Besant Nagar clients we track the relevant due dates and remind you in advance so GST Revocation stays on schedule. Call 9566-068-468 if you suspect you have already missed a deadline.
No — voluntary cancellation under Section 29(1) (cessation of business, transfer, change in constitution, falling below threshold) cannot be revoked. The only remedy is fresh registration under Section 25 by filing REG-01, which results in a new GSTIN with no continuity of ITC or turnover history.
Yes — once the GSTIN is restored retrospectively under REG-22, the taxpayer can claim ITC on inward supplies for the cancellation period subject to Section 16(2) (invoice, receipt of goods, tax paid by supplier, return filed) and the Section 16(4) time bar. ITC is reflected via the next GSTR-3B after revocation.
The late fee under Section 47 must be computed and paid in full unless a specific notification (e.g., Notification 25/2023 amnesty for non-filers) provides relief. The proper officer has no inherent power to waive late fee at the time of revocation; relief flows only from a published Council recommendation.
Rule 23(3) requires the proper officer to issue a show-cause notice in REG-23 if minded to reject the revocation, giving the taxpayer 7 working days to reply in REG-24. After hearing, the officer either passes REG-22 (revocation) or rejects through a speaking order.
GST Revocation near Besant Nagar:

We serve businesses in every part of Besant Nagar, from Besant Avenue Road, Besant Nagar 2nd Avenue, Mahatma Gandhi Road, 5th Avenue and Annai Velankanni Road to the Besant Nagar 1st Avenue, Besant Nagar 1st Main Road, Besant Nagar 4th Main Road and Blue Cross Street commercial pockets, with GST Revocation handled end to end.

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

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