GST Updates March 2026: Essential Complete Guide to Advisories & Deadlines

GST updates March 2026
GST Updates March 2026: Complete Guide to GSTN Advisories, Collections & Compliance Deadlines
GST Compliance · March 2026

GST Updates March 2026: Complete Guide to GSTN Advisories, Collections & Compliance Deadlines

All major developments from CBIC, GSTN & GST Council — verified and explained for Indian businesses and CAs

March 2026 was one of the most consequential months for GST compliance in recent years. With the financial year drawing to a close, GSTN rolled out a series of portal advisories, CBIC issued key clarifications, and the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) began receiving appeals in full swing. At the same time, GST collection for March 2026 crossed ₹2 lakh crore for the first time in FY 2025-26 — a historic milestone reflecting both strong economic activity and significantly improved compliance enforcement.

For every GST-registered business in India, March 2026 brought with it a dense cluster of year-end actions: last dates for filing LUT, opting into the Composition Scheme, settling the new Tax Liability Breakup requirement in GSTR-3B, reconciling pending IMS invoices, and ensuring readiness for the April 2026 e-invoicing expansion. Missing any of these can result in ITC blocks, portal restrictions, or interest and penalty exposure.

This comprehensive guide covers every significant GST update for March 2026 — organised by theme and explained with practical action points so that your business enters FY 2026-27 on solid footing.

GST Collection March 2026 — The ₹2 Lakh Crore Historic Milestone

For the first time in FY 2025-26, gross GST collection crossed the ₹2 lakh crore mark in March 2026. The official figures released on 1 April 2026 confirmed gross GST revenue of ₹2,00,064 crore — a remarkable year-end surge driven by businesses settling pending dues and reconciling invoices before 31 March 2026.

₹2,00,064 Cr
Gross GST Collection
March 2026
₹1,77,990 Cr
Net GST Collection
March 2026
8.8%
Year-on-Year Growth
vs March 2025
₹22.27 L Cr
Full-Year FY 2025-26
Gross Collection

The breakup of March 2026 gross collection is as follows: CGST at ₹40,549 crore, SGST at ₹53,268 crore, and IGST at ₹1,06,246 crore. IGST — reflecting inter-state trade and imports — remained the dominant component, consistent with India’s robust goods movement across state borders in the year-end quarter.

For the full year FY 2025-26, gross GST collection stood at ₹22,27,096 crore, up 8.3% from ₹20,55,515 crore in FY 2024-25. This represents twice the collection recorded just five years ago — a signal of a significantly widened and better-enforced tax base. Maharashtra remained the top state for gross GST revenue, followed by Karnataka, Gujarat, Uttar Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu.

📊 Why March Is Always the Peak Month: March consistently records the highest monthly GST collection in any financial year. Businesses accelerate invoice reconciliation, clear pending vendor payments, and file overdue returns before the year-end deadline. Year-end ITC reclaims and voluntary tax settlements also push collections up. Expect April 2026 numbers to moderate before stabilising.
FY 2025-26 MONTHLY GST COLLECTION GST Collections FY 2025-26 — ₹2 Lakh Crore Milestone in March 2.20 2.00 1.80 1.60 1.40 1.20 1.00 ₹ Lakh Crore ₹2L Cr 1.73 Apr 1.71 May 1.84 Jun 2.00 Jul 1.82 Aug 1.89 Sep 1.87 Oct 1.83 Nov 1.75 Dec 1.93 Jan 1.83 Feb ₹2.00 L Cr ★ Mar ★ ★ March 2026 crosses ₹2 lakh crore — first time in FY 2025-26 | Full-year gross: ₹22.27 lakh crore (+8.3% YoY) cleartaxadvisors.in | Source: GST Council / GSTN official data
Image 1 ALT: GST updates March 2026 collection trend chart — monthly gross GST revenue FY 2025-26 showing ₹2 lakh crore milestone in March 2026. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

GSTN Advisory: GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup Change — 16 March 2026

On 16 March 2026, GSTN issued an important advisory that has changed the way GSTR-3B is filed from the February 2026 tax period onwards. This change affects every GST-registered taxpayer who has any interest liability or prior-period tax dues to discharge in the current GSTR-3B.

What Changed in GSTR-3B?

The GST portal now auto-populates the “Tax Liability Breakup, As Applicable” tab on the payment page of GSTR-3B. This tab captures any interest or tax liability belonging to a previous tax period that is being paid in the current return period. Previously, taxpayers could proceed directly to payment. Now, there is a mandatory step in between.

16 March 2026

GSTN Advisory — GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup Auto-Population

What happened: From the February 2026 tax period (filed in March 2026) onwards, the Tax Liability Breakup tab in GSTR-3B auto-populates with system-calculated interest and prior-period tax liability amounts.

Mandatory step: Taxpayers must open this tab on the payment page, verify the auto-populated amounts, and click “SAVE” within the tab. Without this SAVE action, GSTR-3B filing will be blocked.

Why this matters: This change ensures that interest for late or short payments is accurately computed and disclosed — reducing disputes during audit and assessment. It also enables the department to auto-reconcile interest liability across tax periods.

⚠️ Action Required: If you are filing GSTR-3B for February 2026 or any subsequent period, do NOT skip the Tax Liability Breakup tab. Go to Payment Page → Click “Tax Liability Breakup, As Applicable” → Verify amounts → Click SAVE → Proceed to payment and file. Failure to click SAVE will prevent submission. This is non-optional.

This advisory is part of a broader shift by GSTN towards system-driven interest computation — reducing reliance on taxpayer self-declaration and improving the accuracy of GST ledgers. CA firms and businesses using ASP/GSP software should confirm that their platforms have been updated to support this mandatory SAVE step before filing returns for February 2026 onwards.

New REG-32 Facility — CGST Rule 14A Registration Withdrawal Made Easier

GSTN introduced a significant new portal facility in March 2026 — Form REG-32 — which allows taxpayers who opted into the simplified 3-working-day GST registration route under CGST Rule 14A to apply for withdrawal online. This addresses a long-standing compliance friction for small businesses that had entered the scheme but wished to exit.

What is CGST Rule 14A?

Under CGST Rule 14A, small suppliers whose monthly output tax liability does not exceed ₹2.5 lakh can obtain GST registration within 3 working days without undergoing the standard physical verification process. The scheme was designed to encourage formal registration among micro businesses.

What Changed with REG-32?

Aspect Before REG-32 (Pre-March 2026) After REG-32 (March 2026 onwards)
Withdrawal eligibility Minimum 3 months of filed returns required Filing returns for just 1 complete tax period sufficient
Application method Manual / offline process Online via new Form REG-32 on GST portal
Effective date of withdrawal Not clearly defined First day of the month following month of approval
Applicable rule CGST Rule 14A CGST Rule 14A (amended) — now in force from 1 April 2026

The withdrawal from Rule 14A registration takes effect from the first day of the month following the month in which the withdrawal is approved. After withdrawal, the taxpayer transitions to the standard GST registration process including normal return filing obligations. This is particularly relevant for small service providers who initially registered under Rule 14A but whose business scale or nature changed.

💡 Pro Tip: If your business registered under CGST Rule 14A and you anticipate your monthly GST liability exceeding ₹2.5 lakh in FY 2026-27, file for withdrawal using the new REG-32 form before 31 March 2026. This ensures you are on the standard registration path from 1 April 2026 without any compliance gap or registration mismatch.

GSTAT Fully Operational — GST Appeal Deadline Set at 30 June 2026

After an eight-year appellate vacuum, the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) is now fully operational. The Principal Bench in New Delhi and several State Benches are actively hearing cases. March 2026 brought a critical update: the final deadline for filing appeals before GSTAT for all orders communicated before 1 April 2026 has been fixed at 30 June 2026.

The Scale of the Backlog

The absence of GSTAT for eight years meant that over 4 lakh First Appellate Authority orders had no second-appeal forum — forcing taxpayers to approach High Courts via writ petitions. With GSTAT now operational, all these taxpayers can file second appeals before the Tribunal. High Courts across India have already begun declining jurisdiction in favour of GSTAT in appropriate cases.

Pre-Deposit Requirements at GSTAT

The mandatory pre-deposit for GSTAT appeals has seen two significant changes:

ProvisionPre-Deposit Rate at GSTATApplicable Cap
Original Section 112(8) 20% of remaining disputed tax ₹50 crore each for CGST and SGST
Finance (No.2) Act, 2024 (w.e.f. 1 Nov 2024) 10% of remaining disputed tax ₹20 crore each for CGST and SGST
Finance Act, 2025 (w.e.f. 1 Apr 2025) 10% of penalty amount for penalty-only appeals
⚠️ Critical Deadline — 30 June 2026: For ALL adjudication and First Appellate Authority orders communicated BEFORE 1 April 2026, the outer deadline to file an appeal before GSTAT is 30 June 2026. The staggered filing restriction was lifted by Order No. 315/2025 dated 16 December 2025 — universal filing is now open. Do not miss this window. Pre-deposit must be paid exclusively through the Electronic Cash Ledger.

Additionally, as of March 2026, GSTAT’s Principal Bench has been designated as the National Appellate Authority for Advance Rulings (NAAAR) — meaning conflicting Advance Ruling Authority orders from different states will now be resolved at the national level, creating a more uniform GST jurisprudence. Refer to the complete guide on GST demand notices under Sections 73 and 74 for appeal preparation strategies.

For official GSTAT procedural rules and appeal filing, visit: gst.gov.in and cbic.gov.in.

GST UPDATES MARCH 2026 GSTAT Appeal Process — Deadline & Pre-Deposit Guide Adjudicating Authority Order (Demand / SCN Order) File within 3 months | Pre-deposit: 10% of disputed tax (max ₹25 Cr) First Appellate Authority (Commissioner / Joint Comm.) GSTAT: Pre-deposit = 10% of remaining disputed tax Cap: ₹20 Cr each CGST + SGST | Pay via Electronic Cash Ledger only GST APPELLATE TRIBUNAL (GSTAT — Now Fully Operational) Principal Bench: New Delhi | State Benches now active High Court (Questions of Law only) ⚠ CRITICAL DEADLINE 30 June 2026 Last date to file GSTAT appeal for all pre-April 2026 orders (4 lakh+ orders eligible) 🆕 NAAAR — March 2026 Principal Bench = National Advance Ruling Authority Resolves conflicting state-level Advance Rulings nationally Section 109(10): Disputes ≤ ₹50 lakh — Single member bench | > ₹50 lakh — Division bench Staggered filing restriction removed by Order No. 315/2025 dated 16.12.2025 | Universal filing now open cleartaxadvisors.in | Source: CBIC / GSTAT / GST Council
Image 2 ALT: GST updates March 2026 GSTAT appeal process diagram showing dispute resolution ladder, pre-deposit requirements, 30 June 2026 deadline, and NAAAR designation for advance rulings. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

IMS Updates in March 2026 — Invoice Management System Compliance

The Invoice Management System (IMS) — launched in October 2024 — has been progressively expanded and made more stringent through 2025-26. Several key developments in this area are critical for year-end compliance in March 2026.

IMS Actions Must Be Completed Before GSTR-3B Due Date

Under IMS, every B2B invoice, debit note, and credit note uploaded by your supplier appears on your IMS dashboard. You must take action — Accept, Reject, or Keep Pending — before the due date of GSTR-3B for the relevant tax period. Failing to act means the system defaults to “Deemed Acceptance,” which may include invoices on which ITC is ineligible.

For the Jan–March 2026 quarter (Q4 FY 2025-26), the last date to take IMS action on pending records is the due date of GSTR-3B for January-March 2026. This is particularly important for QRMP-scheme taxpayers who file GSTR-3B quarterly. After this deadline, the “Pending” action will be disabled for that quarter’s records.

Import of Goods Now in IMS

From the October 2025 tax period, Bills of Entry (BoE) for import of goods — including SEZ imports — are now visible in the IMS. Taxpayers can accept or reject BoE records on the IMS dashboard. This brings import-linked ITC claims under the same reconciliation framework as domestic supplier invoices.

Hard Validation — No More Warnings on ITC Mismatches

GSTN has confirmed that the portal is moving from warnings to hard validations for ITC claims. From 2026, if the ITC claimed in Table 4D(1) of GSTR-3B exceeds the closing balance in the Electronic Credit Reversal and Reclaimed Statement (ECRS), the system will block filing. Similarly, if RCM ITC claims exceed the RCM liability ledger, filing is blocked.

✅ IMS Year-End Action Checklist:
□ Log into GST portal → IMS Dashboard → Review all Pending, Rejected, or Accepted records
□ Resolve all credit notes rejected by your customers to avoid additional GSTR-3B liability
□ Accept or reject all supplier debit notes that affect your ITC
□ Verify Bills of Entry (BoE) import records in IMS for October 2025 onwards
□ Ensure ECRS closing balance is positive — negative balance will block GSTR-3B filing
□ Download the Excel-based offline IMS utility from GSTN portal for bulk action processing

Year-End GST Compliance Deadlines — Complete March 2026 Checklist

March 2026 was the last month of FY 2025-26. Businesses that failed to complete these obligations now face compounding interest, ITC blocks, and eligibility restrictions for FY 2026-27. Here is every significant deadline that fell in or around March 2026.

GST UPDATES MARCH 2026 Key GST Compliance Deadlines — March 2026 & FY Year-End 16 16 MARCH 2026 GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup SAVE step mandatory Feb period onwards 20 20 MARCH 2026 GSTR-3B Due Jan 2026 period (monthly filers turnover > ₹5 Cr) 25 25 MARCH 2026 GSTR-1 / IFF February 2026 period + GSTR-3B for turnover ≤ ₹5 Cr (QRMP scheme) 31 31 MARCH 2026 🔴 MEGA DEADLINE ✓ File LUT (FY 2026-27) ✓ Composition CMP-02 ✓ Clear IMS pending ✓ Year-end reconciliation ✓ Reset invoice series ✓ Apply REG-32 if needed Apr 30 APRIL 2026 QRMP Option Select filing frequency for FY 2026-27 (turnover ≤ ₹5 Cr) Monthly or Quarterly Jun 30 JUNE 2026 GSTAT Appeal Last date for all pre-Apr 2026 orders 4 lakh+ orders eligible cleartaxadvisors.in | GST FY 2025-26 Year-End Timeline | Source: CBIC / GSTN Advisories
Image 3 ALT: GST year-end compliance deadlines timeline March 2026 India — LUT, Composition Scheme, GSTR-3B, IMS, GSTAT appeal and QRMP milestones for FY 2025-26 closing. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in
DeadlineCompliance ActionForm / ActionWho Must Act
16 Mar 2026GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup SAVE step NewGSTR-3B portal actionAll GSTR-3B filers (Feb 2026 period)
20 Mar 2026GSTR-3B filing — January 2026 period (turnover > ₹5 Cr)GSTR-3BMonthly filers above ₹5 Cr turnover
25 Mar 2026GSTR-1 for Feb 2026 + GSTR-3B for QRMP (≤ ₹5 Cr)GSTR-1 / GSTR-3BMonthly filers & QRMP payers
31 Mar 2026 CriticalFile LUT for FY 2026-27 (exporters & SEZ suppliers)GST Portal — LUTAll exporters / SEZ suppliers
31 Mar 2026 CriticalOpt into Composition Scheme for FY 2026-27Form CMP-02Eligible small businesses
31 Mar 2026 ImportantResolve all IMS pending invoices for Q4IMS Portal ActionAll B2B taxpayers using IMS
31 Mar 2026Apply for REG-32 withdrawal (Rule 14A)Form REG-32 NewRule 14A registered taxpayers
1 Apr 2026Start new invoice document seriesInvoice resetAll GST taxpayers
1 Apr 2026E-invoicing mandatory for new entrants (AATO > ₹5 Cr)IRP RegistrationNewly covered taxpayers
30 Apr 2026QRMP filing frequency selection for FY 2026-27GST Portal preferenceTaxpayers with turnover ≤ ₹5 Cr
30 Jun 2026 FinalGSTAT appeal filing — all pre-April 2026 ordersGSTAT PortalAll taxpayers with pending second appeals

E-Invoicing Expansion from 1 April 2026 — Critical Action Points

March 2026 was the last month for businesses newly falling under the e-invoicing mandate to register on the Invoice Registration Portal (IRP) and configure their systems. From 1 April 2026, any business whose Aggregate Annual Turnover (AATO) exceeded ₹5 crore during FY 2025-26 for the first time must mandatorily generate e-invoices.

E-Invoicing: Who Must Comply from 1 April 2026?

AATO in FY 2025-26E-Invoice Mandatory from30-Day IRP Upload Rule
Above ₹10 crore (already covered)Already applicableYes — invoices > 30 days old are rejected
Above ₹5 crore but ≤ ₹10 crore (new entrants)1 April 2026Not yet applicable
₹5 crore and belowNot applicable (voluntary)Not applicable

E-invoices generated on the IRP auto-populate data into GSTR-1 and e-way bills, eliminating manual data entry errors. Failure to generate a valid e-invoice results in an invalid tax invoice — the buyer cannot claim ITC, and the seller may face scrutiny. Register on the IRP well before 1 April 2026 and test the integration with your accounting software.

💡 30-Day Upload Rule for ₹10+ Crore Businesses: If your business AATO exceeds ₹10 crore, invoices that are more than 30 days old at the time of uploading to the IRP will be automatically rejected. This means you cannot backdate or batch-upload invoices. Implement daily or weekly IRP upload routines to stay compliant. Also refer to our complete e-invoicing compliance guide for a step-by-step IRP registration walkthrough.

LUT Filing, Composition Scheme Opt-In & Other March 31 Deadlines

The 31 March 2026 deadline cluster is arguably the most consequential compliance milestone of the entire financial year for exporters, small businesses, and partnerships. Missing any of these has cascading consequences for FY 2026-27.

Letter of Undertaking (LUT) for FY 2026-27

Every exporter and supplier to SEZ units who makes zero-rated supplies without payment of IGST must file a fresh LUT for FY 2026-27 by 31 March 2026. The LUT filed for FY 2025-26 expired on 31 March 2026 and is no longer valid from 1 April 2026.

How to file LUT: GST Portal → Login → Services → User Services → Furnish Letter of Undertaking → Select FY 2026-27 → Complete declaration → Submit. The process is free of cost, takes under 5 minutes, and is available 24×7 on the portal.

⚠️ Missing LUT = Taxable Export: If you generate an export invoice after 1 April 2026 without a valid LUT for FY 2026-27, the supply will be treated as a taxable supply and IGST becomes payable. You lose the zero-rating benefit, and the refund process becomes significantly more complex. File your LUT before generating the first invoice of FY 2026-27.

GST Composition Scheme — CMP-02 Deadline

Small businesses with aggregate annual turnover up to ₹1.5 crore (₹75 lakh for pure service providers) who wish to opt into the Composition Scheme for FY 2026-27 must file Form CMP-02 by 31 March 2026. Late filing means you are ineligible for the Composition Scheme for the entire FY 2026-27 and must comply with regular GST provisions — including filing GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B every month.

If you switch to the Composition Scheme, you must also file Form ITC-03 within 90 days (by 30 May 2026) to reverse the ITC on the closing stock of inputs and input services as on 31 March 2026. Failure to reverse ITC will block future GSTR-3B submission and attract interest and penalty. For a full understanding of the Composition Scheme’s benefits and limitations, see our comprehensive GST Composition Scheme guide.

Export Refund — ₹1,000 Minimum Threshold Removed

A taxpayer-friendly change effective from 1 April 2026: the condition that export refund claims below ₹1,000 would not be processed has been removed from the law. Every valid refund claim — regardless of how small the amount — will now be processed. This directly benefits micro and small exporters who had previously abandoned small-value refund claims due to this minimum threshold.

ITC Reconciliation — Rule 42, Rule 43, and Year-End Obligations

The financial year-end triggers a series of mandatory ITC reversal computations that every GST-registered business must complete before finalising its GSTR-3B for March 2026. These are not optional — non-compliance results in interest on excess ITC claims, future GSTR-3B blocks, and exposure during GST audit.

Rule 42 — ITC on Inputs and Input Services (Mixed Use)

Where inputs or input services are used partly for taxable supplies and partly for exempt supplies, Rule 42 requires an annualised reversal computation at year-end. The provisional monthly reversal done throughout FY 2025-26 must be reconciled against the actual annual reversal figure. If excess ITC was claimed, the difference plus interest at 18% per annum must be reversed in the GSTR-3B for March 2026.

Rule 43 — ITC on Capital Goods (Mixed Use)

Similarly, Rule 43 governs ITC on capital goods used for both taxable and exempt supplies. The annual reversal must be computed based on the actual exempt-supply ratio for FY 2025-26 and adjusted in the March 2026 return.

Rule 37 — Reversal for Non-Payment to Vendors Within 180 Days

If any vendor invoice for which ITC was claimed during FY 2025-26 remains unpaid beyond 180 days from the date of supply, the ITC on that invoice must be reversed in GSTR-3B. The reversal is required by the due date of the GSTR-3B for the period in which the 180-day window expired. ITC can be re-claimed once the vendor is paid. Year-end is a critical time to identify and settle old creditor balances specifically to avoid this reversal.

📋 Practical Scenario: Rajiv Traders (manufacturer, Mumbai) purchased raw materials worth ₹10 lakh from a supplier in September 2025 and claimed ITC of ₹1.8 lakh (18% GST). The vendor invoice remains unpaid as of 31 March 2026 — more than 180 days from the invoice date (September 6, 2025 to March 5, 2026). Rajiv Traders must reverse ₹1.8 lakh ITC in the GSTR-3B for the period in which the 180-day window expired (March 2026), and also pay interest at 18% per annum from the date the ITC was originally claimed.

For a detailed understanding of ITC claim eligibility, reversal rules, and blocked credits, see our GSTR-2B and ITC reconciliation guide and the official GST tutorial portal maintained by GSTN.

GST Updates March 2026 — Key Highlights Infographic

GST UPDATES MARCH 2026 Complete Guide — Key Highlights GSTN Advisories | Collections | Deadlines | Compliance 01 · GST COLLECTION MILESTONE ₹2,00,064 Crore Gross GST collection March 2026 — First ₹2L Cr month in FY 2025-26 Net: ₹1,77,990 Cr (+8.2% YoY) | CGST: ₹40,549 Cr | SGST: ₹53,268 Cr | IGST: ₹1,06,246 Cr Full Year FY 2025-26: ₹22.27 lakh crore (+8.3% over FY 2024-25) Maharashtra → Karnataka → Gujarat → Uttar Pradesh → Tamil Nadu (Top 5 states) 02 · GSTR-3B ADVISORY — 16 MARCH 2026 Tax Liability Breakup — Mandatory SAVE Step From Feb 2026 period: portal auto-populates interest & prior-period tax in GSTR-3B Taxpayers must open tab → Verify amounts → Click SAVE before filing ⚠ Missing SAVE = GSTR-3B filing blocked Applies to all registered taxpayers | Update ASP/GSP software accordingly 03 · NEW FORM REG-32 — RULE 14A WITHDRAWAL Withdraw from Simplified Registration — Easier Now GSTN introduced REG-32 to allow online withdrawal from CGST Rule 14A scheme Old: Min 3 months returns required → New: Just 1 complete tax period Effective from 1st day of month after approval | For suppliers with output tax < ₹2.5L/month 04 · GSTAT FULLY OPERATIONAL Appeal Deadline: 30 June 2026 All orders communicated BEFORE 1 April 2026 → file GSTAT appeal by 30 June 2026 4 lakh+ First Appeal orders now eligible | Staggered restriction removed Pre-deposit: 10% of remaining disputed tax (max ₹20 Cr per CGST + SGST) GSTAT now NAAAR — resolves conflicting state advance rulings nationally from April 2026 05 · E-INVOICING EXPANSION — 1 APRIL 2026 Mandatory for AATO > ₹5 Crore (New Entrants) Businesses whose AATO first crossed ₹5 Cr in FY 2025-26 must e-invoice from 1 Apr 2026 AATO > ₹10 Cr: 30-day IRP upload window — invoices older than 30 days are REJECTED No valid e-invoice = Invalid tax invoice = Buyer loses ITC claim 06 · MARCH 31 MEGA DEADLINE CHECKLIST ☑ File LUT for FY 2026-27 (exporters & SEZ suppliers) — Portal: Services → LUT ☑ Opt into Composition Scheme via Form CMP-02 (eligible businesses ≤ ₹1.5 Cr) ☑ Resolve all IMS pending invoices for Jan-Mar 2026 quarter on GST portal ☑ Complete year-end ITC reversal — Rules 42, 43 annualised computation ☑ Reverse ITC under Rule 37 for invoices unpaid beyond 180 days ☑ Apply via REG-32 to withdraw from Rule 14A scheme (if applicable) ☑ Reset invoice / debit note / credit note document series from 1 Apr 2026 ☑ Register on IRP if newly covered by e-invoicing from 1 Apr 2026 ☑ Select QRMP scheme frequency for FY 2026-27 by 30 April 2026 07 · GSTN PORTAL CHANGES — MARCH 2026 • “Additional Notices & Orders” tab merged into “Notices and Orders” tab • GSTAT pre-deposit advisory: pre-deposit via GST DRC-03A linked to appeal filing • GSTN Advisory 655 (April 3): guidance on NIL demand + prior voluntary payment appeals • IMS Excel offline utility (V1.0) available for bulk invoice management cleartaxadvisors.in Complete GST compliance guidance for Indian businesses and CAs Source: GSTN Advisories | CBIC Notifications | GST Council | gst.gov.in Information as of April 2026 | Always verify with gst.gov.in before filing
Infographic ALT: GST updates March 2026 complete guide infographic — GST collection ₹2 lakh crore, GSTR-3B advisory, REG-32, GSTAT deadline, e-invoicing, and year-end compliance checklist. Source: cleartaxadvisors.in

📌 Key Takeaways — GST Updates March 2026

  • ₹2 lakh crore GST collection milestone: March 2026 gross GST revenue hit ₹2,00,064 crore — the first time in FY 2025-26, representing 8.8% YoY growth. Full-year FY 2025-26 gross collection was ₹22.27 lakh crore, up 8.3%.
  • GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup change (16 March 2026): From February 2026 period, taxpayers must open the Tax Liability Breakup tab and click SAVE before GSTR-3B can be filed. This step is now mandatory — not optional.
  • New Form REG-32: GSTN introduced online withdrawal from CGST Rule 14A simplified registration. From 1 April 2026, just 1 complete tax period of filed returns is sufficient to apply — down from the earlier requirement of 3 months.
  • GSTAT deadline — 30 June 2026: All taxpayers with adjudication or First Appellate Authority orders communicated before 1 April 2026 must file second appeals before GSTAT by 30 June 2026. Pre-deposit is 10% of disputed tax, capped at ₹20 crore each for CGST and SGST.
  • IMS year-end actions: Clear all pending IMS records before the GSTR-3B due date of the relevant period. ECRS balance must remain positive — negative balance blocks return filing.
  • 31 March 2026 deadline cluster: LUT for FY 2026-27, Composition Scheme CMP-02, Rule 42/43 ITC reversal, Rule 37 reversal for unpaid vendor invoices — all had to be completed by 31 March 2026.
  • E-invoicing from 1 April 2026: Businesses whose AATO first crossed ₹5 crore during FY 2025-26 must now mandatorily generate e-invoices. Failure makes invoices invalid and buyers lose ITC.
  • ₹1,000 refund threshold removed: From 1 April 2026, all export refund claims — regardless of amount — will be processed. Small exporters can now recover previously abandoned small-value refunds.

Frequently Asked Questions — GST Updates March 2026

Q1. What were the most important GST updates in March 2026?
The top GST updates in March 2026 were: (1) GST collection crossing ₹2 lakh crore for the first time in FY 2025-26, (2) The GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup mandatory SAVE step introduced via GSTN advisory dated 16 March 2026, (3) New Form REG-32 for CGST Rule 14A withdrawal, (4) GSTAT now fully operational with the 30 June 2026 appeal deadline confirmed, and (5) The cascade of 31 March 2026 year-end deadlines including LUT, CMP-02, and ITC reconciliation obligations.
Q2. What is the March 2026 GST collection figure and what does it mean?
Gross GST collection for March 2026 was ₹2,00,064 crore — the first time in FY 2025-26 that collections crossed the ₹2 lakh crore mark. Net collections were ₹1,77,990 crore, reflecting an 8.2% year-on-year growth. The March spike is typical: businesses settle pending dues and reconcile invoices before the financial year closes. The full FY 2025-26 gross collection was ₹22.27 lakh crore, up 8.3% from ₹20.56 lakh crore in FY 2024-25.
Q3. What is the Tax Liability Breakup change in GSTR-3B from March 2026?
From the February 2026 tax period (filed in March 2026), the GSTR-3B payment page has a new “Tax Liability Breakup, As Applicable” tab. This tab auto-populates system-calculated interest and prior-period tax liability amounts. Taxpayers must open this tab, verify the amounts, and click “SAVE” before proceeding to payment and filing. Skipping this step will block GSTR-3B submission. This change applies to all registered taxpayers filing GSTR-3B.
Q4. What is the last date to file a GSTAT appeal for orders issued before April 2026?
The last date to file a second appeal before the GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) for all orders communicated before 1 April 2026 is 30 June 2026. This one-time transitional window covers the backlog of over 4 lakh First Appeal orders that had no appellate forum during GSTAT’s eight-year absence. The mandatory pre-deposit is 10% of the remaining disputed tax (after deducting the 10% already paid at the first appeal stage), capped at ₹20 crore each for CGST and SGST.
Q5. What is Form REG-32 in GST?
Form REG-32 is a newly introduced online form on the GST portal through which taxpayers registered under CGST Rule 14A (the 3-working-day simplified registration route for suppliers with output tax liability below ₹2.5 lakh per month) can apply for withdrawal from the scheme. Before REG-32, withdrawal required minimum 3 months of filed returns. From 1 April 2026, filing just 1 complete tax period of returns is sufficient to apply for withdrawal. The withdrawal takes effect from the first day of the month following the month of approval.
Q6. Is e-invoicing mandatory from April 2026 for new businesses?
Yes. From 1 April 2026, e-invoicing is mandatory for all businesses whose Aggregate Annual Turnover (AATO) exceeded ₹5 crore during FY 2025-26 for the first time since the introduction of GST. These businesses must register on the Invoice Registration Portal (IRP) and generate IRN-stamped e-invoices. Businesses with AATO above ₹10 crore must also comply with the 30-day IRP upload window — invoices uploaded after 30 days from the invoice date will be rejected, making the invoice invalid.
Q7. What happens if I miss the 31 March 2026 LUT deadline?
If an exporter or SEZ supplier fails to file a new Letter of Undertaking (LUT) for FY 2026-27 by 31 March 2026, and then generates export invoices from 1 April 2026 onwards, those supplies will be treated as taxable — IGST becomes payable at the standard rate. The zero-rating benefit is lost for the period without a valid LUT. You can file the LUT at any point during the year and it applies prospectively, but invoices already issued without a valid LUT will require IGST payment and refund claims become complicated.
Q8. What are the ITC reversal obligations at financial year-end?
At year-end, three key ITC reversal obligations apply: (1) Rule 42 — annualised reversal of ITC on inputs and input services used for mixed (taxable + exempt) supplies, comparing actual annual ratio against provisional monthly reversals; (2) Rule 43 — same annualised adjustment for capital goods; (3) Rule 37 — reverse ITC on invoices unpaid to vendors beyond 180 days from supply date. All reversals must be reflected in the GSTR-3B for March 2026 or the relevant period, with 18% per annum interest on excess ITC claimed.

Conclusion — Entering FY 2026-27 on a Clean GST Footing

March 2026 was, by every measure, a landmark month for GST in India. The ₹2 lakh crore collection milestone signals a tax system operating with significantly improved enforcement and compliance culture. The series of GSTN advisories — particularly the GSTR-3B Tax Liability Breakup change, the REG-32 facility, and the IMS hard validation direction — signals that the portal is moving towards system-driven compliance where human error and deliberate manipulation are progressively reduced.

For businesses, the message is clear: passive compliance is no longer adequate. Active reconciliation of IMS invoices, prompt ITC reversal at year-end, timely LUT renewal, and readiness for e-invoicing expansion are no longer best practices — they are baseline requirements. The GSTAT operationalisation and the 30 June 2026 appeal deadline offer a final opportunity to resolve the enormous backlog of disputed demands that have accumulated over eight years.

Use the detailed checklist and infographic in this guide to review your organisation’s GST position, assign responsibilities to your accounts team, and ensure that every March 2026 obligation is either completed or actioned before the consequences cascade into FY 2026-27.

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Disclaimer: This article is published by ClearTax Advisors for general educational and informational purposes only. The GST updates covered are based on GSTN advisories, CBIC notifications, and publicly available data as of April 2026. GST law and portal procedures are subject to change through subsequent notifications and circulars. Readers are strongly advised to verify all information from official sources — gst.gov.in, cbic.gov.in — and consult a qualified Chartered Accountant or GST practitioner before making any compliance decisions. ClearTax Advisors shall not be liable for any errors, omissions, or consequences arising from reliance on this content.

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