RCM (Reverse Charge Mechanism) under GST — Complete Compliance Guide for FY 2025-26

RCM (Reverse Charge Mechanism) under GST
Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) under GST: Complete Guide for FY 2025-26 | ClearTax Advisors
GST Compliance · FY 2025-26

Your transporter sends you a bill. Your advocate sends you a fee note. Neither charges you any GST. Yet you are legally required to calculate, pay, and report that GST yourself. This is the Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) — and thousands of registered businesses unknowingly skip it every month, inviting penalties, interest, and ITC denial. This guide covers everything: what triggers RCM, how to handle it operationally, and how to report it correctly in your returns.

1. What is Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) under GST?

In the normal GST framework, the supplier collects tax from the buyer and deposits it with the government. Simple enough. But in certain situations — particularly where the supplier is unregistered, operating in an informal sector, or providing a service that the government wants to closely monitor — this chain breaks down.

To plug this gap, the GST law introduced the Reverse Charge Mechanism: a provision where the recipient (buyer) becomes responsible for paying the GST directly to the government, bypassing the supplier entirely.

So when you — a registered GST taxpayer — receive a GTA service, hire an advocate, or import a digital service from abroad, you must calculate the applicable GST, issue a self-invoice, pay the tax from your cash ledger, and declare it in your GSTR-3B. The supplier has zero involvement in the tax payment.

🔑 The Core Principle Under RCM, the tax liability shifts from supplier to recipient. The supplier does not charge GST. The buyer self-assesses, pays in cash, and then claims ITC on the same amount — making it revenue-neutral for most registered businesses, but still a compliance obligation that cannot be skipped.
Reverse charge mechanism GST applicability — Section 9(3) specified services vs Section 9(4) unregistered supplier RCM
Section 9(3) covers CBIC-notified supplies; Section 9(4) covers purchases from unregistered suppliers

The RCM mandate under GST derives from two separate provisions of the CGST Act, 2017, and corresponding IGST Act provisions:

Section 9(3) — Notified Goods and Services

Under Section 9(3), the government notifies specific categories of goods and services where RCM always applies, regardless of whether the supplier is registered or not. The CBIC issues these notifications from time to time. As of FY 2025-26, the primary notification governing this is Notification No. 13/2017 – Central Tax (Rate) for services and Notification No. 04/2017 – Central Tax (Rate) for goods.

Section 9(4) — Purchases from Unregistered Suppliers

Section 9(4) originally applied to all purchases from unregistered persons. However, following industry-wide difficulty, it was limited by Notification No. 38/2017 – Central Tax (Rate) and has since been applicable only to specific notified goods (like raw cotton, tobacco leaves, silk yarn, and certain other agricultural produce) when purchased by a registered taxpayer from an unregistered dealer.

📌 IGST Parallel Provisions Section 5(3) and Section 5(4) of the IGST Act, 2017 mirror the above for inter-state supplies. So if you import services (like a SaaS subscription from a foreign company), Section 5(3)/5(4) of the IGST Act governs your RCM liability, not CGST.

3. Complete List of Supplies Under RCM (FY 2025-26)

The following are the most commonly applicable RCM supplies for SMEs under Notification No. 13/2017 – CT(R) as amended:

Supply / Service Supplier Recipient (Who Pays RCM) GST Rate
GTA Services (road transport of goods) Goods Transport Agency Any factory, registered person, body corporate, partnership firm, society 5% (no ITC to GTA) or 12% (with ITC, if GTA opts forward charge)
Legal Services by an Advocate Individual advocate / firm of advocates Any business entity 18%
Services by Director to a Company Director (not as employee) Company / Body Corporate 18%
Import of Services (from abroad) Overseas supplier (unregistered in India) Indian recipient (any person) Applicable rate for that service (IGST)
Security Personnel Services Any person other than a body corporate Any registered business entity 18%
Renting of Motor Vehicle (non-body-corporate supplier) Individual / firm (non-corporate) Any body corporate 5% under RCM (no ITC) or 12% under forward charge
Sponsorship Services Any person Any body corporate or partnership firm 18%
Services of an Arbitral Tribunal Arbitral tribunal Any business entity 18%
Overseeing Committee member services (RBI) Member Reserve Bank of India 18%
Raw Cotton (Sec 9(4) goods) Agriculture cultivator (unregistered) Any registered person 5%
⚠️ Important: Composition Dealers and RCM Composition taxpayers are not exempt from RCM. They must pay GST on RCM supplies in cash (from their pocket, from their own funds) just like regular taxpayers. However, composition dealers cannot claim ITC on such RCM payments — the tax paid is a pure cost for them.

4. Time of Supply under RCM

Knowing when your RCM liability arises is critical — it determines which month’s GSTR-3B you must declare and pay the tax in. The time of supply rules for RCM differ from normal forward charge and are governed by Section 12(3) for goods and Section 13(3) for services of the CGST Act.

TypeTime of Supply under RCM
Goods (Sec 12(3)) Earlier of: (a) date of receipt of goods, or (b) date of payment, or (c) 30 days from date of supplier’s invoice
Services (Sec 13(3)) Earlier of: (a) date of payment by recipient, or (b) 60 days from date of supplier’s invoice
Import of Services Earlier of: (a) date of payment, or (b) date of debit in books of accounts by recipient, or (c) 60 days from supplier invoice
📋 Real Scenario — GTA Invoice Timing

A Pune-based garment exporter received a GTA bill dated 5 January 2026 for ₹80,000. They paid the transporter on 20 February 2026. The 60-day rule pushes the deadline to 5 March 2026. Since payment was made on 20 February, that is the earlier date — so the RCM liability arises in February 2026 and must be declared in the February GSTR-3B (due 20 March 2026).

Missing this and declaring it in March instead would attract 18% interest on the RCM amount for the delay period, plus risk of scrutiny on ITC timing mismatch.

Official GST tutorial on Reverse Charge Mechanism — CBIC/GST Council explainer

5. Self-Invoice — When and How to Issue

When you receive a supply from an unregistered supplier under RCM, the supplier cannot issue a proper tax invoice (since they’re unregistered). In this case, you as the registered recipient must issue a self-invoice on the date of receipt of goods/services.

This is mandated by Rule 47A of the CGST Rules, 2017. A self-invoice essentially means you create the invoice yourself, acting as both buyer and document issuer.

What must a Self-Invoice contain?

  • The words “Tax Invoice” (or “Self Invoice under RCM”) prominently displayed
  • Your own GSTIN as the supplier’s GSTIN (since you are generating it)
  • Name, address, and GSTIN of the recipient (your own details)
  • Supplier’s name and address (even though they are unregistered)
  • Date of self-invoice (date of receipt of supply)
  • Description of goods/services, HSN/SAC code, quantity, value
  • Applicable GST rate and amount (CGST + SGST or IGST)
  • Unique sequential invoice number (you maintain this series)
✅ Tip for Section 9(3) Supplies (Registered Suppliers like GTA, Advocate) When the supplier is registered — like a GTA or an advocate — they will issue you their own invoice (without GST). In this case, you do NOT need to issue a self-invoice. You simply use their invoice as the basis for calculating your RCM liability and declaring it in GSTR-3B.

6. How to Report RCM in GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B

RCM GST compliance process flow — self invoice, cash payment, GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d), ITC claim Table 4
4-step RCM compliance flow: Receive Supply → Self Invoice → Pay in Cash → Declare in GSTR-3B → Claim ITC

Reporting in GSTR-3B

GSTR-3B is where your RCM payment obligation gets declared and the tax gets paid. Here is the exact table-wise flow:

GSTR-3B TableWhat to ReportAction
Table 3.1(d) Inward supplies liable for reverse charge Declare taxable value + IGST/CGST/SGST on all RCM supplies received during the month
Table 4(A)(3) ITC on inward supplies under RCM Claim ITC on RCM payments made (eligible supplies only). Same period or later period allowed.
Payment (Section 6) Tax payable RCM tax declared in 3.1(d) must be paid from Electronic Cash Ledger only — ITC balance cannot be used to offset RCM liability
⚠️ Critical Rule — Cash Payment Only This trips up many taxpayers. RCM GST must be paid in cash — you cannot use your existing ITC balance (Input Tax Credit) to pay your RCM liability. You must first deposit cash into your Electronic Cash Ledger (PMT-06), then use that cash to pay RCM. After paying, you then get to claim ITC on that RCM amount in Table 4.

Reporting in GSTR-1

If you issued self-invoices for unregistered supplier purchases (Section 9(4) RCM), those self-invoices need to be reported in GSTR-1 Table 4B (B2B – supplies made to unregistered persons — but here you report your own self-invoice). For Section 9(3) supplies (GTA, advocate, etc.), the reporting is primarily through GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d) only — GSTR-1 reporting is not always required for these, but self-invoices must be maintained in records.

7. ITC on RCM — Eligibility and Restrictions

Here’s the good news: for most registered businesses, RCM is tax-neutral. You pay the GST in cash, then claim it right back as ITC. But there are several conditions and restrictions that determine whether ITC is actually available to you.

Conditions for ITC Eligibility on RCM (Section 16)

  • You must be a regular registered taxpayer (not composition dealer)
  • The supply must be used for business purposes (not personal use)
  • The supply should not be in the blocked credit list under Section 17(5) — for example, RCM paid on motor vehicle hire for personal use of directors is blocked
  • The RCM tax must have been actually paid in cash — unpaid RCM tax cannot be claimed as ITC
  • You must have the self-invoice or supplier’s invoice as supporting document

When Can ITC Be Claimed?

ITC on RCM can be claimed in the same return period in which the RCM tax is paid, or in any subsequent period before the annual return filing deadline. Many taxpayers unnecessarily delay ITC claims — there is no rule requiring you to wait until the next period. Pay in February GSTR-3B, claim ITC in February GSTR-3B itself.

💡 Blocked ITC on RCM — Section 17(5) Exceptions ITC is not available even if you pay RCM on these supplies: (1) Food and beverages, outdoor catering; (2) Health services and cosmetic surgery; (3) Motor vehicles for personal transportation (capacity ≤ 13 passengers), unless you’re in the business of transport/travel/dealership; (4) Works contract services for construction of immovable property (other than plant and machinery); (5) Club memberships, health club, fitness centre. Always verify before claiming ITC on RCM.

8. GTA (Goods Transport Agency) — Detailed RCM Rules

GTA is probably the single most common RCM scenario for Indian SMEs. Nearly every manufacturing or trading company hires transporters. Here’s how the rules actually work:

When Does GTA Attract RCM?

A Goods Transport Agency (GTA) that issues a consignment note for road transportation of goods attracts RCM when:

  • The GTA charges GST at 5% without ITC (the default rate for most GTAs)
  • The recipient is a factory, registered person, body corporate, partnership firm, AOP, or society

The Forward Charge Option for GTAs

From FY 2023-24 onwards, GTAs can opt to pay GST under forward charge — meaning they collect and deposit GST themselves. If a GTA exercises this option (by filing an annual declaration on the GST portal by 15 March of the preceding year), then RCM does not apply for that year and the GTA charges you GST directly on their invoice.

Always ask your transporter at the beginning of each financial year whether they have opted for forward charge. If they have, you do not need to pay RCM — their invoice will include GST. If they haven’t, you pay RCM at 5% on freight value.

📋 Case Study — GTA RCM Calculation

A Surat-based textile firm paid ₹1,20,000 in freight to a GTA during April 2025. The GTA is registered but has not opted for forward charge. GTA charges 5% GST under RCM.

RCM Calculation: Taxable value = ₹1,20,000. GST @ 5% = ₹6,000 (CGST ₹3,000 + SGST ₹3,000 for intra-state). The firm must pay ₹6,000 in cash via PMT-06, declare in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d), then claim ₹6,000 ITC in Table 4(A)(3). Net cost = ₹0. But the compliance obligation existed — ignoring it would have invited 18% interest + penalty.

9. Penalties for Non-Compliance

RCM non-compliance penalties — 18% interest Section 50, Section 122 penalty, ITC denial under GST
Three consequences of RCM non-compliance: 18% interest, ₹10,000+ penalty per invoice, and full ITC denial

RCM is one area where GST officers specifically look during scrutiny and audits, because non-compliance is widespread among SMEs who simply don’t know the rules. Here are the consequences if you miss RCM payments:

  • Interest under Section 50: 18% per annum on unpaid RCM tax, calculated from the day it was due until actual payment. On ₹6,000 of GTA RCM unpaid for 12 months, that’s ₹1,080 in interest alone — plus you still owe the principal.
  • Penalty under Section 122(1)(b): Failure to pay tax as a recipient under RCM attracts a penalty of ₹10,000 or 100% of tax due, whichever is higher, per default.
  • ITC Denial: Under Section 16(2), ITC cannot be claimed if the underlying tax has not been paid. So if you skipped RCM payment for a year, all the ITC you might have claimed is also invalid — this compounds the financial damage significantly.
  • GSTR-3B Mismatch: GSTN’s AI flags gaps between e-invoice data, e-way bills, and GSTR-3B declarations. If you received GTA services but Table 3.1(d) shows zero, it triggers automated scrutiny notices under Section 61.

10. Common Errors and How to Avoid Them

Common ErrorWhy It HappensHow to Fix
Not paying RCM on GTA freight every month Accounts staff unaware; transporter doesn’t mention it Set up auto-reminder for all GTA payments; verify GTA forward charge status in April every year
Trying to pay RCM liability using ITC balance Misunderstanding of GST portal offset rules RCM must always be paid via Electronic Cash Ledger; segregate in payment dashboard
Not issuing self-invoice for unregistered purchases Purchase from local/informal vendor without documentation Create a self-invoice series (e.g. SI/2025-26/001); issue on day of receipt
Claiming ITC on RCM for blocked supplies (Section 17(5)) Not checking the blocked credit list before claiming Verify against Section 17(5) list before claiming; maintain a register of blocked RCM
Wrong month declaration — RCM payment date vs invoice date confusion Not applying time-of-supply rules correctly Use earlier of payment date or 60-day rule for services; set calendar alerts
Ignoring RCM on import of software/SaaS subscriptions Overseas invoices seem unrelated to Indian GST All import of services attract IGST under RCM (Section 5(3) IGST Act); report in GSTR-3B monthly

Monthly RCM Compliance Checklist

  • Listed all GTA payments made during the month and verified forward charge status
  • Listed all advocate/legal fees, director fees, security services payments
  • Identified all purchases from unregistered vendors (if applicable under Sec 9(4))
  • Checked all foreign invoices (SaaS, software, consulting) for IGST RCM applicability
  • Issued self-invoices for all unregistered supplier purchases
  • Deposited RCM tax amount in Electronic Cash Ledger via PMT-06 before GSTR-3B due date
  • Declared correct amount in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d)
  • Claimed eligible ITC in GSTR-3B Table 4(A)(3) — same period
  • Verified no blocked credit (Section 17(5)) in ITC claim
  • Stored all self-invoices and GTA bills as records for 6 years
ITC eligibility on reverse charge mechanism GST — allowed vs blocked under Section 17(5)
ITC on RCM — always verify Section 17(5) before claiming; some categories are permanently blocked even if RCM is paid

11. Frequently Asked Questions

Q1. What is Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) under GST in simple terms?
Under RCM, instead of the seller paying GST to the government, the buyer pays GST directly. The seller charges you nothing for GST — you calculate the tax yourself, pay it in cash, and then claim it back as ITC. It applies to specific notified services (like GTA, legal fees, director services) and some purchases from unregistered sellers.
Q2. Is ITC available on RCM payments?
Yes — for regular registered taxpayers, ITC is available on RCM payments in the same return period, provided the supply is used for business and is not in the blocked credit list under Section 17(5). This makes RCM revenue-neutral for most businesses. Composition dealers cannot claim ITC on RCM.
Q3. Can I use my ITC balance to pay RCM GST?
No. This is a very common misconception. RCM tax must be paid exclusively from the Electronic Cash Ledger. Your existing ITC balance (Electronic Credit Ledger) cannot be used to offset RCM liability. You must deposit fresh cash, pay the RCM, and then claim that amount back as ITC.
Q4. My GTA transporter is registered under GST. Do I still pay RCM?
It depends. If the GTA is registered but charges at 5% (without ITC) — which is the default — then yes, you pay RCM at 5%. If the GTA has opted for forward charge (paying 12% with ITC), then they charge GST on their bill and RCM does not apply. Always ask your transporter in April each year whether they’ve opted for forward charge.
Q5. We subscribe to Zoom, Google Workspace, and AWS from abroad. Does RCM apply?
Yes. All imports of services (including SaaS, cloud services, digital tools) are subject to IGST under RCM via Section 5(3) of the IGST Act. The overseas company does not charge you Indian GST. You must self-assess and pay IGST on the invoice value, declare in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d), and claim ITC in Table 4. This is frequently missed — and GST officers are increasingly scrutinising import-of-service RCM compliance.
Q6. What if I missed paying RCM for several months? Can I correct it?
Yes, you can correct it — but you will owe 18% interest from the due date. Pay the outstanding RCM tax via DRC-03 (voluntary payment form) with interest included, then amend the relevant GSTR-3B. If discovered during a GST audit (Section 65/66), the officer may also levy penalties. It is always better to self-correct proactively than to wait for a notice — voluntary payment typically avoids the Section 122 penalty.
🔗 Official Resources GST Portal (gst.gov.in) — Verify GSTIN, file GSTR-3B, access PMT-06
GST Portal (gst.gov.in) — File GSTR-3B, pay RCM via PMT-06
CBIC Website — Notification No. 13/2017-CT(R) and all RCM amendments
GST Helpdesk Tutorials — Step-by-step guides for GSTR-3B filing and RCM payment
CGST Act 2017 — Section 9(3), 9(4), 12(3), 13(3), 16, 17(5)

Are You Missing RCM on GTA or Legal Fees?

Most SMEs unknowingly skip RCM every month — and the interest + penalties add up fast. Our team audits your past 12 months of vendor payments, identifies RCM gaps, and helps you regularise with minimum exposure.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top