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Govt May Grant GST Payers a Two-Month Window for Credit Note Acceptance and ITC Adjustment

GST Credit Notes: 2 Months to Accept/Reject

The government, in relief to Goods and Services Tax (GST) payers, seems to have revised the rules of Central GST (CGST), permitting the recipients of goods and services up to two months to accept or reject a credit note and adjust the Input tax credit as per that.

The taxpayers currently using the Invoice Management System (IMS) should accept or reject credit notes outright, restricting flexibility. The motive of the proposed amendment is to simplify compliance and lessen the financial stress on the businesses.

Read Also: Gen GST Software’s Invoice Management System Dashboard

Understanding the Impact of Key Changes

By a seller to a buyer, a credit note has been issued in the cases of sales return, discounts or overbilling, helping adjust the buyer’s payable amount. As per the amended rules-

  • The taxpayers could maintain a credit note pending for one tax period (one month).
  • Taxpayers can get an additional month to decide if the tax return gets delayed.
  • No action will be permitted past two months.

As per an official, it mentioned that, “The recipient will have the option to keep the credit note pending for a month. If the return filing is delayed, another month will be available. However, beyond this, no further extensions will be provided.”

Push Towards Obligatory IMS Adoption

IMS, which is said to be the automated system to monitor GST invoices and support businesses in claiming the ITC, was started in October 2024. At present, it is not obligatory, but the government is making it a significant portion of GST compliance.

The forthcoming CGST rule amends the alignment with the Finance Bill, 2025, which proposes making the suppliers obligated to ensure the ITC reversal via the receiver to reduce their tax obligation.

Analyzing Industry Response and Identifying Key Challenges

As per the tax experts, this procedure will affect 15 million GST taxpayers, including both large and small businesses, as credit notes are a key component of IMS.

The amendment, though, comes with an issue. The receiver needs to file the interest for the one-month delay if they accept the credit note in the next tax period rather than the same month.

Businesses need to adjust their cash flow management and ITC planning to avoid additional financial burdens, experts caution, as this move improves flexibility.

Since the GST framework is successively evolving, the taxpayer must stay updated on the statutory amendments and prepare for an obligatory IMS rollout in the forthcoming time.

Disclaimer:- "All the information given is from credible and authentic resources and has been published after moderation. Any change in detail or information other than fact must be considered a human error. The blog we write is to provide updated information. You can raise any query on matters related to blog content. Also, note that we don’t provide any type of consultancy so we are sorry for being unable to reply to consultancy queries. Also, we do mention that our replies are solely on a practical basis and we advise you to cross verify with professional authorities for a fact check."

Published by Arpit Kulshrestha
Arpit Kulshrestha seeks higher interests in financial services, taxation, GST, I-T, etc. Writes articles with depth knowledge and is extensive for the same. The resources provide effective articles for the products of SAG infotech which provides taxation and IT software. Writing from observations and researching makes his articles virtuous. View more posts
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