gst compliance calendar
  • Why GST Compliance Matters for Start-Ups

    Starting a business in India is an exciting journey, but it comes with a critical responsibility — Goods and Services Tax (GST) compliance. For start-ups, missing a GST deadline is not just a compliance lapse; it can lead to heavy penalties, blocked Input Tax Credit (ITC), disrupted cash flows, and even legal notices from the GST authorities.

    India’s GST regime, introduced on 1st July 2017, has undergone significant refinements. In 2025-26, the GST Council has further streamlined return filing, strengthened e-invoicing mandates, and introduced stricter ITC matching rules. For a start-up founder juggling product development, fundraising, and team building, keeping track of GST deadlines can be overwhelming — but it is non-negotiable.

    This blog is your ultimate GST Compliance Calendar for Start-Ups — a detailed, month-by-month guide that covers every return, every deadline, every penalty clause, and every best practice you need to run your start-up without falling foul of Indian tax law in FY 2025-26.

     

    SECTION 1: GST BASICS FOR START-UPS

    What is GST and Who Needs to Register?

    Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a comprehensive, multi-stage, destination-based indirect tax that replaced multiple Central and State taxes in India. Under GST, tax is collected at every stage of the supply chain, but credit of taxes paid at the previous stage is available, making it effectively a tax only on value addition.

    Mandatory GST Registration Thresholds (2025-26)

    Category

    Annual Turnover Threshold

    Type of Registration

    Goods Supplier (General States)

    Above ₹40 Lakhs

    Mandatory

    Goods Supplier (Special Category States)

    Above ₹20 Lakhs

    Mandatory

    Service Provider (General States)

    Above ₹20 Lakhs

    Mandatory

    Service Provider (Special Category States)

    Above ₹10 Lakhs

    Mandatory

    E-Commerce Operator / Seller

    No Threshold Limit

    Mandatory (Regardless of Turnover)

    Inter-State Supplier

    No Threshold Limit

    Mandatory (Regardless of Turnover)

    Casual Taxable Person

    No Threshold Limit

    Mandatory (Temporary Registration)

    Non-Resident Taxable Person

    No Threshold Limit

    Mandatory

    Voluntary GST Registration — Should Your Start-Up Consider It?

    Even if your start-up’s turnover is below the mandatory threshold, voluntary GST registration offers significant advantages:

    • Claim Input Tax Credit (ITC) on purchases and operational costs
    • Appear more credible to B2B clients, investors, and large corporates
    • Enable inter-state supply of goods and services
    • Participate in government tenders that require GST registration
    • Facilitate seamless onboarding on e-commerce platforms like Amazon, Flipkart, Meesho

    Types of GST Applicable to Start-Ups

    GST Type

    Full Form

    Applicable On

    Revenue Goes To

    CGST

    Central Goods and Services Tax

    Intra-State Supply

    Central Government

    SGST

    State Goods and Services Tax

    Intra-State Supply

    State Government

    IGST

    Integrated Goods and Services Tax

    Inter-State Supply / Imports

    Central Government (Shared)

    UTGST

    Union Territory GST

    Supplies in UTs without legislature

    Union Territory

    GST Rate Structure — Know Where Your Products or Services Fall

    GST Rate Slab

    Examples Relevant to Start-Ups

    0% (Exempt)

    Fresh fruits, milk, books, newspapers, educational services

    5%

    IT services (certain), branded food items, transport services

    12%

    Software on media, mobile phones, processed food

    18%

    Most IT & software services, restaurants (with AC), advertising

    28%

    Luxury goods, aerated drinks, online gaming (real money)

    💡 Start-Up Pro Tip:

    Most SaaS, IT services, consulting, and digital marketing start-ups fall under the 18% GST slab.

    Always confirm the correct HSN/SAC code for your product or service using the GST Council’s official HSN lookup tool at www.gst.gov.in to avoid misclassification penalties.

    SECTION 2: COMPLETE GST RETURN FILING GUIDE FOR START-UPS

    Understanding All GST Returns — Form by Form

    The GST return ecosystem in India consists of multiple forms, each serving a distinct compliance purpose. As a start-up, knowing which returns apply to you is the first step in building a robust compliance calendar.

    GSTR-1: Outward Supplies Statement

    GSTR-1 is the return for reporting all outward supplies (sales) made by a registered taxpayer. It includes details of B2B invoices, B2C sales, credit/debit notes, and export invoices.

    Filing Frequency

    Applicable To

    Due Date

    Key Data to Report

    Monthly

    Taxpayers with turnover > ₹5 Crore

    11th of next month

    B2B invoices, B2C large invoices, exports, CDNs

    Quarterly (QRMP)

    Taxpayers with turnover ≤ ₹5 Crore

    13th of month after quarter

    Consolidated quarterly supply details

    GSTR-3B: Monthly Summary Return

    GSTR-3B is a monthly self-declaration summary return where a taxpayer reports the summary of outward supplies, ITC claimed, and net tax payable. Tax payment must accompany this return. For QRMP filers, GSTR-3B is filed quarterly but tax must be paid monthly via PMT-06.

    Taxpayer Category

    Due Date

    Tax Payment Deadline

    Turnover > ₹5 Crore (Monthly filers)

    20th of next month

    20th of next month

    Turnover ≤ ₹5 Crore – Category A States

    22nd of next month after quarter

    Monthly via PMT-06 by 25th

    Turnover ≤ ₹5 Crore – Category B States

    24th of next month after quarter

    Monthly via PMT-06 by 25th

    📌 Category A States (22nd Due Date):

    Chhattisgarh, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Goa, Kerala, Tamil Nadu, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh, Daman & Diu, Dadra & Nagar Haveli, Pondicherry, Andaman & Nicobar Islands, Lakshadweep

    📌 Category B States (24th Due Date):

    Himachal Pradesh, Punjab, Uttarakhand, Haryana, Rajasthan, Uttar Pradesh, Bihar, Sikkim, Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Manipur, Mizoram, Tripura, Meghalaya, Assam, West Bengal, Jharkhand, Odisha, J&K, Ladakh, Chandigarh, Delhi

    GSTR-2B: Auto-Drafted ITC Statement

    GSTR-2B is an auto-generated, static statement that reflects the Input Tax Credit (ITC) available to a recipient based on the GSTR-1 filed by their suppliers. It is generated on the 14th of each month and is now the primary document for ITC reconciliation. Start-ups must diligently reconcile GSTR-2B with their purchase records before claiming ITC in GSTR-3B.

    GSTR-9: Annual Return

    GSTR-9 is the annual GST return consolidating all monthly/quarterly returns filed during the financial year. It is mandatory for taxpayers with an annual aggregate turnover exceeding ₹2 Crore. For start-ups below ₹2 Crore turnover, filing is optional but recommended for transparency.

    Form

    For Whom

    Due Date (FY 2024-25)

    Mandatory Threshold

    GSTR-9

    Regular taxpayers

    31st December 2025

    Turnover > ₹2 Crore

    GSTR-9C

    Reconciliation Statement + Self-Certification

    31st December 2025

    Turnover > ₹5 Crore

    GSTR-9A

    Composition Scheme taxpayers

    31st December 2025

    All Composition dealers

    Other Important GST Forms for Start-Ups

    Form

    Purpose

    Who Files

    Frequency

    GSTR-4

    Annual return for Composition dealers

    Composition taxpayers

    Annual (by 30th April)

    GSTR-5

    Return for Non-Resident Taxable Person

    NR taxpayers

    Monthly (13th of next month)

    GSTR-6

    Return for Input Service Distributors

    ISDs

    Monthly (13th of next month)

    GSTR-7

    TDS deducted under GST

    TDS deductors

    Monthly (10th of next month)

    GSTR-8

    TCS collected by e-commerce operators

    E-com operators

    Monthly (10th of next month)

    GSTR-10

    Final Return on cancellation of registration

    Cancelled GST registrants

    Within 3 months of cancellation

    GSTR-11

    Inward supplies for UIN holders

    UIN holders (embassies etc.)

    Monthly (28th of next month)

    CMP-08

    Quarterly challan for composition dealers

    Composition taxpayers

    Quarterly (18th of next month after quarter)

    PMT-06

    Monthly tax payment challan (QRMP)

    QRMP scheme taxpayers

    Monthly (25th of each month)

    SECTION 3: MONTH-BY-MONTH GST COMPLIANCE CALENDAR FY 2025-26

    Note: FY 2025-26 runs from 1st April 2025 to 31st March 2026. All due dates are as per current GST law and CBIC notifications. Always check the GST portal for any extensions announced by the GST Council.

    April 2025 — Year-Opening Compliance Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Apr 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File TDS/TCS returns for March 2025

    11 Apr 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers (TO > ₹5 Cr)

    Upload all March 2025 outward supply invoices

    13 Apr 2025

    GSTR-1 (QRMP)

    Quarterly filers

    Upload Jan-Mar 2025 quarterly outward supplies

    13 Apr 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File March 2025 returns

    14 Apr 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All regular taxpayers

    Auto-generated ITC statement available — reconcile immediately

    18 Apr 2025

    CMP-08

    Composition dealers

    Pay quarterly tax for Jan-Mar 2025

    20 Apr 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers (TO > ₹5 Cr)

    File summary return & pay net tax for March 2025

    22 Apr 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category A States

    File quarterly return for Jan-Mar 2025

    24 Apr 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category B States

    File quarterly return for Jan-Mar 2025

    25 Apr 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay March 2025 monthly tax installment

    30 Apr 2025

    GSTR-4

    Composition taxpayers

    File Annual Return for FY 2024-25

    30 Apr 2025

    ITC-04

    Job-work principals

    File half-yearly ITC-04 for Oct 2024 – Mar 2025

    ⚠️ April Special Note:

    April is the first month of the new financial year. Ensure your GST registration details, bank account information, authorized signatory details, and business address are updated on the GST portal if there are any changes from last year. New e-invoicing thresholds, if any announced by CBIC, take effect from April.

    May 2025 — Regular Compliance Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 May 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File April 2025 TDS/TCS returns

    11 May 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload April 2025 outward supply details

    13 May 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File April 2025 returns

    14 May 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile auto-drafted ITC for April 2025

    20 May 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File April 2025 summary & pay tax

    25 May 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay April 2025 monthly tax installment

    June 2025 — Quarter-End Preparation Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Jun 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File May 2025 TDS/TCS returns

    11 Jun 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload May 2025 outward supplies

    13 Jun 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File May 2025 returns

    14 Jun 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile May 2025 ITC

    20 Jun 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File May 2025 summary return & pay tax

    25 Jun 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay May 2025 monthly tax installment

    💡 Q1 Quarter-End Tips:

    Start reconciling your April–June 2025 data for QRMP filing in July. Identify all pending vendor GSTR-1 uploads to avoid ITC loss. Cross-verify all export invoices with ICEGATE data if claiming GST refunds on exports.

    July 2025 — Q1 Quarterly Return Filing Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Jul 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File June 2025 returns

    11 Jul 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload June 2025 invoices

    13 Jul 2025

    GSTR-1 (QRMP)

    Quarterly filers

    Upload Apr-Jun 2025 quarterly outward supplies

    13 Jul 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File June 2025 returns

    14 Jul 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile June 2025 ITC

    18 Jul 2025

    CMP-08

    Composition dealers

    Pay Q1 (Apr-Jun 2025) tax

    20 Jul 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File June 2025 summary & pay tax

    22 Jul 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category A States

    File Apr-Jun 2025 quarterly return

    24 Jul 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category B States

    File Apr-Jun 2025 quarterly return

    25 Jul 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay June 2025 monthly tax

    August 2025 — Regular Compliance Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Aug 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File July 2025 returns

    11 Aug 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload July 2025 outward supplies

    13 Aug 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File July 2025 returns

    14 Aug 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile July 2025 ITC

    20 Aug 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File July 2025 summary & pay tax

    25 Aug 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay July 2025 monthly tax

    September 2025 — Critical ITC Reconciliation Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Sep 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File August 2025 returns

    11 Sep 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload August 2025 invoices

    13 Sep 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File August 2025 returns

    14 Sep 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile August 2025 ITC

    20 Sep 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File August 2025 summary & pay tax

    25 Sep 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay August 2025 monthly tax

    ⚠️ September Critical Note:

    30th September 2025 is the LAST DATE to claim or correct ITC for FY 2024-25 in GSTR-3B. Any missed ITC or amendments to invoices of FY 2024-25 MUST be done before the September 2025 return filing. This is a strict statutory deadline under Section 16(4) of the CGST Act.

    October 2025 — Q2 Quarterly Filing & Festival Season Compliance

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Oct 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File September 2025 returns

    11 Oct 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload September 2025 invoices

    13 Oct 2025

    GSTR-1 (QRMP)

    Quarterly filers

    Upload Jul-Sep 2025 quarterly supplies

    13 Oct 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File September 2025 returns

    14 Oct 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile September 2025 ITC

    18 Oct 2025

    CMP-08

    Composition dealers

    Pay Q2 (Jul-Sep 2025) tax

    20 Oct 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File September 2025 summary & pay tax

    22 Oct 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category A States

    File Jul-Sep 2025 quarterly return

    24 Oct 2025

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category B States

    File Jul-Sep 2025 quarterly return

    25 Oct 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay September 2025 monthly tax

    🛒 Festival Season Alert:

    October-November is the peak festival season (Navratri, Dussehra, Diwali). E-commerce start-ups see massive sales spikes. Ensure GST invoices are generated correctly for all orders, especially if selling across states (IGST applicable). E-commerce operators must pay TCS @ 1% on net taxable supplies and file GSTR-8.

    November 2025 — Regular Compliance Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Nov 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File October 2025 returns

    11 Nov 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload October 2025 outward supplies

    13 Nov 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File October 2025 returns

    14 Nov 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile October 2025 ITC

    20 Nov 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File October 2025 summary & pay tax

    25 Nov 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay October 2025 monthly tax

    December 2025 — Annual Return Preparation & Year-End Compliance

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Dec 2025

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File November 2025 returns

    11 Dec 2025

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload November 2025 invoices

    13 Dec 2025

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File November 2025 returns

    14 Dec 2025

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile November 2025 ITC

    20 Dec 2025

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File November 2025 summary & pay tax

    25 Dec 2025

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay November 2025 monthly tax

    31 Dec 2025

    GSTR-9 & GSTR-9C

    Annual return filers

    File Annual Return for FY 2024-25 (Deadline — Do not miss!)

    31 Dec 2025

    GSTR-9A

    Composition taxpayers

    File Annual Return for FY 2024-25

    📅 December Critical Deadlines:

    31st December 2025 is the statutory due date for GSTR-9 and GSTR-9C for FY 2024-25. Start preparation by November 15th. Reconcile all monthly returns, ITC ledgers, and tax payment records. Penalty for late filing: ₹200/day (₹100 CGST + ₹100 SGST), capped at 0.25% of turnover.

    January 2026 — Q3 Quarterly Filing Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Jan 2026

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File December 2025 returns

    11 Jan 2026

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload December 2025 invoices

    13 Jan 2026

    GSTR-1 (QRMP)

    Quarterly filers

    Upload Oct-Dec 2025 quarterly supplies

    13 Jan 2026

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File December 2025 returns

    14 Jan 2026

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile December 2025 ITC

    18 Jan 2026

    CMP-08

    Composition dealers

    Pay Q3 (Oct-Dec 2025) tax

    20 Jan 2026

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File December 2025 summary & pay tax

    22 Jan 2026

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category A States

    File Oct-Dec 2025 quarterly return

    24 Jan 2026

    GSTR-3B

    QRMP – Category B States

    File Oct-Dec 2025 quarterly return

    25 Jan 2026

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay December 2025 monthly tax

    February 2026 — Union Budget Impact Review Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Feb 2026

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File January 2026 returns

    11 Feb 2026

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload January 2026 invoices

    13 Feb 2026

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File January 2026 returns

    14 Feb 2026

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile January 2026 ITC

    20 Feb 2026

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File January 2026 summary & pay tax

    25 Feb 2026

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay January 2026 monthly tax

    📢 Union Budget Alert:

    The Union Budget is typically presented on 1st February. Any GST rate changes, new exemptions, or amendments announced in the budget will take effect as notified by CBIC. Monitor the CBIC website and GST Council press releases for any changes affecting your product/service category.

    March 2026 — Year-End Critical Compliance Month

    Date

    Return / Activity

    Taxpayer Category

    Action Required

    10 Mar 2026

    GSTR-7 & GSTR-8

    TDS/TCS deductors & e-com operators

    File February 2026 returns

    11 Mar 2026

    GSTR-1

    Monthly filers

    Upload February 2026 invoices

    13 Mar 2026

    GSTR-5 & GSTR-6

    NR Taxpayers & ISDs

    File February 2026 returns

    14 Mar 2026

    GSTR-2B

    All taxpayers

    Reconcile February 2026 ITC

    20 Mar 2026

    GSTR-3B

    Monthly filers

    File February 2026 summary & pay tax

    25 Mar 2026

    PMT-06

    QRMP taxpayers

    Pay February 2026 monthly tax

    31 Mar 2026

    Year-End Compliance Checklist

    All taxpayers

    Complete ITC reconciliation, close books, verify all pending invoices

    🗓️ March 31, 2026 — Year-End Checklist:

    ✔ Ensure all FY 2025-26 invoices are uploaded in GSTR-1

    ✔ Reconcile GSTR-2B with purchase register — claim all eligible ITC

    ✔ Pay any pending GST dues to avoid interest @ 18% p.a.

    ✔ File pending GSTR-1 amendments for FY 2025-26

    ✔ Check for any show-cause notices and respond before year-end

    ✔ Verify GST registration details and update if any changes

    ✔ Close e-way bill data reconciliation with goods movement records

    SECTION 4: PENALTIES, INTEREST & CONSEQUENCES OF NON-COMPLIANCE

    GST Late Filing Penalties — Know What You Risk

    Violation

    Penalty / Consequence

    Rate / Amount

    Late filing of GSTR-1

    Late fee

    ₹50/day (₹25 CGST + ₹25 SGST); ₹20/day if nil return. Capped at ₹10,000 per return

    Late filing of GSTR-3B

    Late fee

    ₹50/day (₹25 CGST + ₹25 SGST); ₹20/day if nil. Capped at ₹10,000

    Late payment of tax

    Interest

    18% per annum on outstanding tax amount

    Late payment if detected by officer

    Interest (fraudulent)

    24% per annum

    Late filing of GSTR-9 (Annual)

    Late fee

    ₹200/day (₹100 CGST + ₹100 SGST); capped at 0.25% of state turnover

    Non-filing leading to registration cancellation

    Registration suspended/cancelled

    Can be cancelled by GST officer under Rule 21A

    Wrong ITC claim

    Recovery + Penalty

    100% of wrongly claimed ITC + interest @ 24%

    Non-generation of e-invoice (if applicable)

    Penalty

    ₹10,000 per invoice or 100% of tax, whichever is higher

    Non-issuance of GST invoice

    Penalty

    ₹10,000 or 100% of tax, whichever is higher

    Fraudulent GST refund claim

    Penalty

    100% of refund amount + imprisonment up to 5 years

    Interest Calculation on Late Payment — Practical Example for Start-Ups

    Scenario: A start-up has GSTR-3B tax due of ₹1,50,000 for June 2025. They file and pay on 5th August 2025 instead of 20th July 2025.

    Item

    Calculation

    Amount

    Tax Due

    As per GSTR-3B

    ₹1,50,000

    Delay

    20 Jul 2025 to 5 Aug 2025

    16 days

    Interest Rate

    18% per annum

    18% ÷ 365 = 0.0493% per day

    Interest = ₹1,50,000 × 0.0493% × 16

    Daily interest applied

    ₹1,183

    Late Fee (GSTR-3B)

    ₹50/day × 16 days

    ₹800

    Total Extra Cost

    Interest + Late Fee

    ₹1,983

    SECTION 5: E-INVOICING & E-WAY BILL COMPLIANCE

    E-Invoicing — Mandatory Requirements for Start-Ups in 2025-26

    E-Invoicing (Electronic Invoicing) under GST mandates that B2B invoices, credit notes, and debit notes be reported to the Invoice Registration Portal (IRP) in real-time. The IRP generates a unique Invoice Reference Number (IRN) and a QR code, which must be printed on the invoice.

    E-Invoicing Turnover Threshold (As of 2025-26)

    Effective Date

    Annual Turnover Threshold

    Mandatory For

    1st October 2020

    ₹500 Crore+

    Large businesses

    1st January 2021

    ₹100 Crore+

    Mid-large businesses

    1st April 2021

    ₹50 Crore+

    Medium businesses

    1st April 2022

    ₹20 Crore+

    Growing businesses

    1st October 2022

    ₹10 Crore+

    SMEs

    1st August 2023 (Current)

    ₹5 Crore+

    All businesses including start-ups with ₹5 Cr+ turnover

    ⚠️ Start-Up Alert — E-Invoicing:

    If your start-up has crossed ₹5 Crore aggregate turnover in any previous financial year, e-invoicing is MANDATORY from 1st April of the subsequent year. Failure to generate valid e-invoices means the buyer CANNOT claim ITC on those invoices — a critical deterrent in B2B relationships. Most B2B clients will reject non-e-invoiced bills.

    E-Way Bill — Key Rules for Start-Ups Moving Goods

    Rule

    Threshold / Condition

    Details

    Inter-State Movement

    Value > ₹50,000

    E-Way Bill mandatory for all inter-state movements

    Intra-State Movement

    Value > ₹50,000 (State-specific)

    Threshold may vary by state; check state GST notification

    Validity

    Up to 200 km: 1 day

    Additional 1 day for every 200 km or part thereof

    Extension

    Within 8 hours of expiry

    Can be extended on e-way bill portal by supplier, recipient, or transporter

    Penalty for Non-Compliance

    Goods detained

    ₹10,000 or 100% of tax, whichever is higher + vehicle detention

    SECTION 6: INPUT TAX CREDIT — THE LIFELINE OF GST COMPLIANCE FOR START-UPS

    Understanding Input Tax Credit (ITC) — Rules, Restrictions & Best Practices

    Input Tax Credit is the mechanism by which a business can reduce its output GST liability by the GST already paid on its purchases (inputs). For start-ups, effective ITC management can significantly reduce cash outflow.

    Conditions to Claim ITC (Section 16 of CGST Act)
    1. You must be a registered taxpayer under GST
    2. You must have received the goods or services
    3. The supplier must have filed their GSTR-1 and the invoice must appear in your GSTR-2B
    4. You must have a valid tax invoice or debit note
    5. Tax must have been paid by the supplier to the government
    6. ITC must be claimed within the earlier of: the due date for filing September return of next year OR date of filing annual return
    ITC Restrictions — What Cannot Be Claimed

    Item / Expense

    ITC Eligibility

    Exception

    Motor vehicles (< 13 seat capacity)

    ❌ Blocked

    If used for further supply, training, or transport of employees

    Food, beverages, outdoor catering

    ❌ Blocked

    If used as mandatory requirement as per statute

    Club, health, fitness centre memberships

    ❌ Blocked

    None

    Life and health insurance (employees)

    ❌ Blocked

    If obligatory under law (statutory requirement)

    Works contract for immovable property

    ❌ Blocked (if capitalized)

    If it is for further supply of works contract

    Personal consumption goods/services

    ❌ Blocked

    None

    Free samples and gifts

    ❌ Blocked

    None

    Office rent, IT services, marketing

    ✅ Eligible

    Must be used for business purposes

    Capital goods (computers, machinery)

    ✅ Eligible

    Must be used for business; ITC claimed over useful life if partly exempt

    Travel, hotel (for business)

    ✅ Eligible

    Business purpose documentation required

    Rule 36(4) — ITC Claim Restriction on GSTR-2B

    As per the current GST rules in 2025-26, ITC can be claimed ONLY to the extent it appears in GSTR-2B. Any ITC not appearing in GSTR-2B cannot be claimed, and any excess claimed is subject to reversal with interest. This makes supplier follow-up a critical monthly activity for start-ups.

    💡 ITC Management Best Practice:

    Download GSTR-2B by the 16th of every month.

    Reconcile with your purchase register / accounting software.

    For any missing ITC, immediately contact the vendor to file their GSTR-1.

    Do not claim ITC beyond GSTR-2B limits — automate this check in your accounting software.

    Reverse ITC within 180 days if payment is not made to the vendor (Rule 37).

    SECTION 7: COMPOSITION SCHEME — IS IT RIGHT FOR YOUR START-UP?

    GST Composition Scheme — Complete Overview

    The Composition Scheme is a simplified GST compliance mechanism designed for small businesses. Under this scheme, eligible taxpayers pay GST at a fixed percentage of their turnover and have fewer compliance requirements compared to regular taxpayers.

    Composition Scheme Eligibility & Tax Rates (2025-26)

    Taxpayer Category

    Turnover Limit

    Tax Rate (Total GST)

    Return to File

    Manufacturer (Goods)

    Up to ₹1.5 Crore

    1% (0.5% CGST + 0.5% SGST)

    CMP-08 (Quarterly) + GSTR-4 (Annual)

    Trader (Goods)

    Up to ₹1.5 Crore

    1% (0.5% CGST + 0.5% SGST)

    CMP-08 (Quarterly) + GSTR-4 (Annual)

    Restaurant Services (not serving alcohol)

    Up to ₹1.5 Crore

    5% (2.5% CGST + 2.5% SGST)

    CMP-08 (Quarterly) + GSTR-4 (Annual)

    Service Providers (other than restaurant)

    Up to ₹50 Lakhs

    6% (3% CGST + 3% SGST)

    CMP-08 (Quarterly) + GSTR-4 (Annual)

    Composition Scheme: Pros & Cons for Start-Ups

    Advantages

    Disadvantages

    Lower tax rate (1%-6% vs 5%-28%)

    Cannot collect GST from customers (no GST on invoice)

    Only quarterly return (CMP-08) + 1 annual return (GSTR-4)

    Cannot claim Input Tax Credit

    No e-invoicing requirement

    Cannot make inter-state supplies

    Simplified compliance — ideal for early-stage start-ups

    Not suitable for B2B businesses where clients need ITC

    Reduced accounting and compliance costs

    Cannot supply exempt goods/services under composition

    SECTION 8: GST REFUNDS FOR START-UPS — EXPORTS & INVERTED DUTY

    GST Refund Claims — Types and Procedures

    Refund on Account of Export of Goods or Services

    Exports are zero-rated under GST. Start-ups exporting goods or services can either:

    • Export under Bond/LUT (Letter of Undertaking) without paying IGST and claim refund of accumulated ITC, OR
    • Export after paying IGST and claim refund of IGST paid

    Refund Type

    Application Form

    Timeline for Processing

    Documents Required

    Refund of IGST on Exports

    Auto-transmitted from GSTR-1 / ICEGATE

    30-60 days (if no error)

    Shipping bill, GSTR-1 data, Bank Realization Certificate for services

    Refund of ITC on Zero-Rated (LUT)

    RFD-01 on GST portal

    60 days

    GSTR-2B, Purchase invoices, Export invoices, LUT copy

    Inverted Duty Structure Refund

    RFD-01 on GST portal

    60 days

    GSTR-3B, GSTR-2B, Purchase invoices showing higher tax on inputs

    Excess Tax Paid (Wrong IGST instead of CGST+SGST)

    RFD-01

    60 days

    Corrected invoices, payment challans

    📝 LUT Filing for Exporters:

    If your start-up exports services or goods (zero-rated), file an annual Letter of Undertaking (LUT) on the GST portal under User Services → Furnish LUT by 1st April of each financial year. A valid LUT allows you to export without paying IGST — significantly helping your working capital position.

    SECTION 9: GST COMPLIANCE BEST PRACTICES FOR START-UPS

    15 GST Best Practices Every Start-Up Must Follow in 2025-26

    1. Automate Invoice Generation

    Use GST-compliant accounting software (Tally Prime, Zoho Books, ClearTax, Busy, or QuickBooks India) to auto-generate GST invoices with correct HSN/SAC codes, tax rates, and GSTIN. This eliminates manual errors that lead to ITC disputes and compliance notices.

    2. Reconcile GSTR-2B Monthly — Never Skip

    Make GSTR-2B reconciliation a non-negotiable monthly process. Set a calendar reminder for the 16th of every month. Any discrepancies between your purchase register and GSTR-2B must be resolved before filing GSTR-3B to avoid excess ITC claims.

    3. File Returns on Time — Even Nil Returns

    Even if you have zero sales or purchases in a month, file a NIL return. Non-filing triggers late fees and can lead to registration suspension. Nil GSTR-3B can be filed via a simple SMS using the format: NIL 3B [GSTIN] [Tax Period] to 14409.

    4. Maintain Vendor GSTIN Database

    Maintain an updated vendor master with verified GSTINs. A supplier with an incorrect GSTIN or a cancelled GST registration means you cannot claim ITC on their invoices. Use the GST portal’s GSTIN verification tool or integrate API verification in your procurement workflow.

    5. Set Up a Digital Compliance Calendar with Alerts

    Create a shared Google Calendar or use compliance management tools like ClearTax GST, Masters India, or Taxmann to set automated reminders for all GST due dates. Include buffer days (file 3-5 days before due dates) to account for portal downtime during peak filing periods.

    6. Separate Business and Personal Accounts

    Always maintain a dedicated business bank account and business credit card for all GST-related transactions. Mixing personal and business expenses creates confusion during ITC claims and GST audits, and can lead to disallowance of legitimate business expenses.

    7. Understand Your E-Invoicing Obligation Early

    Monitor your aggregate turnover every quarter. If you are approaching ₹5 Crore, begin preparing your e-invoicing integration immediately. E-invoicing requires IRP integration, which takes time to set up with your accounting software. Proactive preparation is key.

    8. Keep Proper Records for 6 Years

    Under Section 36 of the CGST Act, GST records must be maintained for 6 years from the due date of filing the annual return of the relevant financial year. Maintain both digital and physical records of all invoices, returns, e-way bills, and correspondence with the GST department.

    9. Respond to GST Notices Promptly — Never Ignore

    The GST department issues notices via ASMT, DRC, ADT series forms on the GST portal. Monitor your GST portal regularly (ideally weekly) for any notices. Ignoring a GST notice leads to ex-parte orders, which are much harder and more expensive to contest. Always respond within the stipulated time.

    10. Choose the Right GST Return Scheme — QRMP vs Monthly

    If your annual turnover is under ₹5 Crore, opt for the QRMP (Quarterly Return with Monthly Payment) scheme to reduce compliance burden. You file GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B only quarterly, while tax payment continues monthly via PMT-06. This reduces your annual filing count significantly.

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