Got a GST Notice? Here’s Exactly What It Means — and What You Do Next
A GST notice lands in your inbox and your stomach drops. Before you call your CA in a panic or ignore it hoping it goes away — read this. Every notice type, decoded. Every reply step, spelled out. And the new Section 74A rule that most businesses still don’t know about.
1. Why GST Notices Are More Common Than You Think
If you run a GST-registered business, a notice from the department is not a sign that something catastrophically wrong has happened. It’s often just the system doing its job — the GST portal cross-matches your GSTR-1 against GSTR-3B, compares your ITC claims against GSTR-2B, runs risk-based algorithms, and flags anything that doesn’t match.
The GST Network processes over 20 crore invoices every month. With that volume, mismatches are common — a vendor who filed late, an invoice with a wrong GSTIN, a rounding difference in tax computation, or simply a timing difference between when you claimed ITC and when your vendor filed. None of these make you a fraudster. They make you a business owner whose data triggered a flag.
What matters is what you do when you receive the notice. The department expects a response. Silence is the only answer that guarantees a bad outcome.
2. Every GST Notice Type — Decoded
The GST department doesn’t issue one type of notice — it has a structured escalation ladder, each notice type tied to a specific situation and requiring a specific response. Here is every notice your business might receive:
3. Section 73 vs Section 74 — The Critical Difference
When you receive a DRC-01 Show Cause Notice, the single most important thing to check is which section it’s issued under. This determines your penalty exposure, your time to respond, and whether you can settle with a reduced penalty.
| Aspect | Section 73 — No Fraud | Section 74 — Fraud / Suppression |
|---|---|---|
| Applicable for | Genuine errors, data entry mistakes, timing mismatches, unintentional non-payment | Fraud, deliberate misstatement, suppression of turnover, false ITC claims |
| Burden of proof | Department must show under-payment | Department must prove intent to evade — higher bar |
| Notice time limit | 3 years from annual return due date | 5 years from annual return due date |
| Minimum penalty | 10% of tax demand | 100% of tax demand (if proven) |
| Reduced penalty if paid before order | 10% penalty — pay before SCN issued under Sec 73(5) | 25% penalty if paid within 30 days of SCN under Sec 74(5) |
| Applicability from FY 2024-25 | NOT applicable for FY 2024-25 demands | NOT applicable for FY 2024-25 demands |
| Who replaces it | Section 74A — applicable from FY 2024-25 onwards (see next section) | |
4. The New Section 74A — What Changed from FY 2024-25
Section 74A: One Section Replaces Both 73 and 74
The 53rd GST Council recommended, and the Finance Act 2024 implemented, a new Section 74A that applies to all demand cases from FY 2024-25 onwards, regardless of whether fraud is involved.
Why this matters: Under the old system, the burden was on the department to first classify your case as “fraud” or “non-fraud” before choosing Section 73 or 74. This led to litigation over which section applied. Section 74A eliminates this ambiguity by using one unified procedure.
Key changes under Section 74A: Unified time limit of 42 months from the due date of the annual return (instead of 3 or 5 years). The reduced penalty window is extended from 30 to 60 days. The notice must be issued at least 6 months before the order (instead of 3 months). Sections 73 and 74 remain in force — but only for demands relating to FY 2023-24 and earlier.
5. How to Reply to a GST Notice — Step-by-Step
The reply process is the same regardless of notice type — the content and arguments differ, but the mechanics of submitting your response follow this exact sequence:
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1Read the notice completely — twice. Don’t skim. Every notice contains the specific allegation, the discrepancy amount, the relevant section and rule, and the deadline. Note the exact deadline date — missing it is catastrophic. Also identify the notice reference number (ARN) — you’ll need this to file your reply on the portal.
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2Identify the notice type and section. Is it ASMT-10 (scrutiny)? DRC-01 (demand)? REG-17 (cancellation)? Each requires a different form for reply. A DRC-01 under Section 73 has very different implications than one under Section 74A. See the notice cards above to identify yours.
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3Verify the allegation against your records. Pull your GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-2A/2B, purchase register, and relevant invoices. Quantify the exact discrepancy. Often you’ll find the “mismatch” is a vendor who filed late, a rounding difference, or a legitimately ineligible ITC you’ve already reversed. Document each item.
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4Decide your position — agree, partially agree, or disagree. If the demand is genuinely correct, pay the tax + interest and inform the officer. Reduced penalties apply for early payment. If you disagree, prepare a factual and legal rebuttal. If partially correct, separate the agreed and disputed portions clearly in your reply.
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5Log into gst.gov.in with your GSTIN credentials. Navigate to: Services → User Services → View Additional Notices and Orders. Find the notice by reference number. Click on it to open, then click “Reply.”
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6Fill in the reply form (ASMT-11, DRC-06, REG-18, etc.). Be specific and factual in the statement field — don’t write vague responses like “the ITC is correct.” Write: “The ITC of ₹X pertains to Invoice No. Y of supplier GSTIN Z, which was filed in GSTR-1 for [month] on [date] — reconciliation attached as Annexure A.” Address every point raised in the notice.
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7Attach all supporting documents — clearly named. Upload PDFs of: GSTR-2B reconciliation, relevant invoices, payment proof, ITC ledger extract, and any explanatory working sheets. Name each file clearly (e.g., “GSTR2B_Reconciliation_FY2425.pdf”). The portal allows multiple attachments.
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8Request a personal hearing if the matter is complex. For DRC-01 notices with substantial demands (above ₹5 lakh), always request a personal hearing in your reply. This gives you the opportunity to explain nuances that are hard to convey in a written response, and it creates a record of your cooperative engagement with the department.
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9Submit before the deadline and save the acknowledgment. Download the submission acknowledgment (ARN confirmation) immediately after filing. This is your proof of timely response. Store it with the original notice and all attachments. If the portal is down near the deadline, email your reply to the issuing officer with delivery confirmation.
6. Reply Template You Can Use
This is a working template for the most common notice — an ASMT-10 ITC mismatch. Adapt it for your specific facts. The structure applies to most routine notice replies.
7. Documents You Must Always Keep Ready
The businesses that handle GST notices smoothly are not the ones with the best lawyers — they’re the ones with the best documentation. Keep these in an organised digital folder, updated monthly:
| Document | Why It’s Critical | Retention Period |
|---|---|---|
| GSTR-2A/2B vs GSTR-3B reconciliation | Explains 90% of all ITC mismatch notices | Keep for 6 years |
| All purchase invoices with GSTIN of supplier | Proves ITC eligibility under Section 16 | Keep for 6 years |
| GSTR-1, GSTR-3B filed copies (download from portal) | Your primary compliance record | Keep permanently |
| Payment challans (PMT-06, DRC-03) | Proof of tax payment — defends against demand | Keep for 6 years |
| E-Way Bills for B2B supplies | Proves goods movement — critical for CGST Rule 55A notices | Keep for 3 years |
| Vendor GSTIN verification screenshots | Defends ITC claims where vendor later got cancelled | Keep for 6 years |
| ITC ledger extract (monthly) | Quick reference for any ITC-related notice | Keep for 6 years |
| Copies of all notice replies filed (with ARN) | Proves you responded — prevents best assessment | Keep permanently |
8. Seven Mistakes That Turn a Routine Notice Into a Crisis
Mistake 1 — Not Checking the GST Portal Regularly
GST notices are served electronically on the portal — there’s no registered post, no courier, no guaranteed email. Your GSTIN’s email may or may not receive a notification. The only reliable way to know a notice has arrived is to log into gst.gov.in regularly and check Services → User Services → View Additional Notices and Orders. Businesses that discover a 30-day deadline with 3 days left have created their own crisis.
Mistake 2 — Replying Generically Without Addressing Each Point
Writing “all our ITC claims are valid and we deny the demand” is not a reply — it’s an invitation for an ex-parte order. The officer has listed specific discrepancies with amounts and invoice references. Your reply must address each one, line by line, with supporting evidence. Silence on any point is legally construed as acceptance.
Mistake 3 — Ignoring a REG-17 Registration Cancellation Notice
The 7-day deadline on a REG-17 is real and unforgiving. A cancelled GST registration means you can no longer legally issue GST invoices, your ITC chain breaks for customers, and revocation is a long process. This is the one notice where you drop everything and respond immediately.
Mistake 4 — Paying the Demand Without Reading the Penalty Reduction Options
Many businesses receive a DRC-01 and immediately pay the full demand including maximum penalty out of fear. They don’t know that paying before the Show Cause Notice is issued (Section 73(5)) attracts only 10% penalty, or that Section 74A allows 25% reduced penalty within 60 days of the SCN. Always check the penalty reduction provisions before paying.
Mistake 5 — Confusing Section 73/74 with Section 74A
Receiving a notice for FY 2024-25 or later under Section 73 or 74 should immediately raise a flag — those sections don’t apply to FY 2024-25 onwards. If you receive an improperly issued notice, this procedural defect can be raised in your reply as a ground for the proceedings to be dropped.
Mistake 6 — Not Requesting a Personal Hearing
For any DRC-01 with a demand above ₹5 lakh, always request a personal hearing in your reply. Officers often issue orders based on the written reply alone without realising that a verbal explanation with context would have resolved the matter. Personal hearings let you explain business nuances — supplier relationships, timing issues, industry-specific practices — that a document can’t convey.
Mistake 7 — Filing an Appeal Without Paying 10% of Demand
If the adjudication goes against you and you want to appeal under Section 107, you must deposit 10% of the disputed demand in cash before the appeal is admitted. Many businesses file appeals without this pre-deposit and discover their appeal is invalid. Know the pre-deposit requirement before you decide to appeal rather than settle.
9. Real Business Scenarios
ASMT-10 for ₹8.5 Lakh ITC Mismatch — Resolved Without Payment
Mehta Fabrics Pvt. Ltd. received an ASMT-10 notice alleging excess ITC of ₹8.5 lakh claimed in GSTR-3B for Q2 FY 2024-25 that didn’t appear in GSTR-2B.
What actually happened: Three of their major suppliers had filed GSTR-1 for September 2024 in the second week of October — after Mehta had already filed its GSTR-3B on October 20. The ₹8.5 lakh ITC was perfectly legitimate but showed a one-month timing lag in GSTR-2B.
Reply approach: Their accountant prepared Form ASMT-11 with a month-by-month ITC reconciliation showing that the ₹8.5 lakh appeared in the October 2024 GSTR-2B. Screenshots of the suppliers’ GSTR-1 filing dates (from the GST portal’s taxpayer search) were attached. The reply was filed 12 days before the deadline.
Result: ASMT-12 issued within 3 weeks — proceedings dropped. Zero payment. The entire matter resolved through documentation.
Lesson: The majority of ITC mismatch notices are timing differences. A reconciliation sheet that explains the timeline is usually sufficient. See our GSTR-2B reconciliation guide for how to build this systematically.
DRC-01 Under Section 74A for FY 2024-25 — Partial Settlement
An IT services company received a DRC-01 under Section 74A for FY 2024-25 alleging underreporting of turnover — the GST officer noticed that the company’s GSTR-1 showed ₹2.3 crore in outward supplies but their bank deposits indicated ₹2.8 crore in credits.
Investigation revealed: ₹35 lakh was genuine advance received from a client that was later cancelled and reversed. ₹15 lakh was a capital infusion from promoters. The remaining ₹20 lakh gap was a genuine mistake — a contract addendum had been billed in FY 2024-25 but not reflected in GSTR-1.
Reply approach: Filed DRC-06 with three-part response: (1) Explanation of ₹35 lakh advance with cancellation documents; (2) Proof of ₹15 lakh being promoter capital injection (bank statement + board resolution); (3) Voluntary admission and DRC-03 payment for ₹20 lakh + 18% interest. Since Section 74A gives a 60-day reduced-penalty window, they paid 25% penalty on the ₹20 lakh = ₹5 lakh, saving ₹15 lakh compared to the 100% penalty in the demand order.
Result: The ₹50 lakh portion was accepted and dropped. The ₹20 lakh was settled with 25% penalty. Total saving over ignoring the notice: approximately ₹15 lakh in penalty plus ₹8 lakh in additional interest that would have accrued.
Watch: How to Handle GST Notices — Complete Guide
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Official References
- GST Portal (gst.gov.in) — Login, view notices, file replies
- CBIC (cbic.gov.in) — Official circulars on Section 74A and notice procedures
- GST Tutorial Portal — Official guidance on portal-based notice replies
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