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Due Date
Form / Return
Department
Description
Days Left
20 May 2026
GSTR-5A
Apr, 26
GST
Summary of outward taxable supplies and tax payable by a person supplying OIDAR services
5d
20 May 2026
GSTR-3B
Apr, 26
GST
Summary of outward supplies, ITC claimed, and net tax payable for taxpayers with turnover more than...Summary of outward supplies, ITC claimed, and net tax payable for taxpayers with turnover more than Rs.5 crore in the last FY or have not chosen the QRMP scheme for the quarter of Apr - Jun, 26
5d
25 May 2026
PMT-06
Apr, 26
GST
PMT-06 is a challan used for making payment of tax, interest, late fee and penalty under the GST law...PMT-06 is a challan used for making payment of tax, interest, late fee and penalty under the GST law by taxpayers who have opted for the quarterly filing of GSTR-3B under the QRMP scheme
10d
30 May 2026
TCS Certificate
FY 25-26
Income Tax
Issue of TCS certificates for the 4th Quarter of the Financial Year 2025-26
15d
30 May 2026
ITC-03
-
GST
GST ITC 03 must be filed by taxpayers who are obligated to pay an amount which is equivalent to the...GST ITC 03 must be filed by taxpayers who are obligated to pay an amount which is equivalent to the Input Tax Credit (ITC) by means of an electronic credit or cash ledger. The payments, on the accounts of ITC, could be on the basis of:
Input held in stock.
Input contained in semi-finished goods or finished goods held in stock.
Capital goods or Plant and Machinery held in stock.
15d
30 May 2026
PAS-6
Oct 25 - Mar, 26
MCA
Form PAS-6 is a half-yearly Reconciliation of Share Capital Audit Report form. It needs to be submit...Form PAS-6 is a half-yearly Reconciliation of Share Capital Audit Report form. It needs to be submitted by the unlisted public companies to the Registrar of Companies (ROC).
15d
30 May 2026
Form LLP 11
FY 25-26
MCA
Form LLP 11 is an Annual Return of an LLP that needs to be filed within the period of 60 days from t...Form LLP 11 is an Annual Return of an LLP that needs to be filed within the period of 60 days from the end of a Financial Year.
15d
30 May 2026
Form No. 49C
FY 25-26
Income Tax
Submission of a statement (in Form No. 49C) by non-resident having a liaison office in India for the...Submission of a statement (in Form No. 49C) by non-resident having a liaison office in India for the financial year 2025-26
15d
30 May 2026
TDS Pay- 194-IA, 194-IB, 194M, 194-O
Apr, 26
Income Tax
Challan-cum-statement of deduction of tax under section 393(1) of the Income-tax Act 2025 [Table Sl....Challan-cum-statement of deduction of tax under section 393(1) of the Income-tax Act 2025 [Table Sl. No. 2(i), 3(i), 6(ii) & 8(vi) in the month of April, 2026
15d
31 May 2026
TDS Return
Jan - Mar, 26
Income Tax
Quarterly statement of TDS deposited for the quarter ending March 31, 2026
16d
31 May 2026
Form 22 - TDS on contributions by superannuation fund trustees
Income Tax
Return of tax deduction from contributions paid by the trustees of an approved superannuation fund
16d
31 May 2026
Form 10BBA
Income Tax
Furnishing of the certificate from a Chartered Accountant specifying the amount invested in each yea...Furnishing of the certificate from a Chartered Accountant specifying the amount invested in each year by the company or fund making application under Section 2(48) (Income-tax Act 1961) for notification of zero-coupon bond
16d
31 May 2026
Form No. 61A
FY 25-26
Income Tax
Due date for furnishing of statement of financial transaction (in Form No. 61A) as required to be fu...Due date for furnishing of statement of financial transaction (in Form No. 61A) as required to be furnished under sub-section (1) of section 285BA of the Act respect for financial year 2025-26
16d
31 May 2026
Form No. 61B
Calendar year 2025
Income Tax
Due date for e-filing of annual statement of reportable accounts as required to be furnished under s...Due date for e-filing of annual statement of reportable accounts as required to be furnished under section 285BA(1)(k) (in Form No. 61B) for calendar year 2025 by reporting financial institutions
16d
31 May 2026
PAN Application
FY 25-26
Income Tax
Application for allotment of PAN where a persons total income exceeds the maximum amount not chargea...Application for allotment of PAN where a persons total income exceeds the maximum amount not chargeable to income-tax during any Financial Year and no PAN has been allotted to him.
16d
Tax Update
GSTAT Benches Officially Constituted Across India
The Goods & Services Tax Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) has officially constituted benches across multiple states and cities in India.
The order also classifies GST appeals into:
* Category I
* Category II
* Category III
Bench-wise allocation of Judicial and Technical Members has been notifiedThe Goods & Services Tax Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) has officially constituted benches across multiple states and cities in India.
The order also classifies GST appeals into:
* Category I
* Category II
* Category III
Bench-wise allocation of Judicial and Technical Members has been notified for hearing GST disputes.
This is a major step towards operationalizing GST appellate proceedings and improving dispute resolution efficiency.
GST
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Tax Update
GST Appeals System Gets Structured
GSTAT has issued an official order allocating benches, members, and jurisdictions for GST appeal hearings across India.
The notification covers major benches including Mumbai, Delhi, Ahmedabad, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, and others.
The order also specifies category-wise handling of GST disputeGSTAT has issued an official order allocating benches, members, and jurisdictions for GST appeal hearings across India.
The notification covers major benches including Mumbai, Delhi, Ahmedabad, Chennai, Hyderabad, Pune, and others.
The order also specifies category-wise handling of GST disputes and hearing schedules for benches.
The move is expected to strengthen and streamline GST appellate functioning nationwide.
GST
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Tax Update
GST Update - Tax Changes on Beverages (HSN Revised)
Notification No. 01/2026-IGST (Rate) dated 30 April 2026 amends HSN codes under Schedule I (5%).
The affected codes (2202 series) broadly cover:
1. Non-alcoholic beverages
2. Fruit-based drinks and juices (not pure juice)
3. Aerated and flavoured drinks
4. Ready-to-drink beverages
Certain Notification No. 01/2026-IGST (Rate) dated 30 April 2026 amends HSN codes under Schedule I (5%).
The affected codes (2202 series) broadly cover:
1. Non-alcoholic beverages
2. Fruit-based drinks and juices (not pure juice)
3. Aerated and flavoured drinks
4. Ready-to-drink beverages
Certain entries under Schedule III (40%) are also aligned for aerated/sweetened beverages, which may attract higher GST + Compensation Cess.
GST
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Tax Update
MCA Notifies Revised Fees for DIR-3 KYC Web Filing
The Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has issued Notification G.S.R. 300(E) dated 21 April 2026, amending the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, 2014 with respect to DIR-3 KYC Web filings.
Filing within the prescribed due date will continue to attract Nil fee. However, delayed filThe Ministry of Corporate Affairs (MCA) has issued Notification G.S.R. 300(E) dated 21 April 2026, amending the Companies (Registration Offices and Fees) Rules, 2014 with respect to DIR-3 KYC Web filings.
Filing within the prescribed due date will continue to attract Nil fee. However, delayed filing or filing for reactivation of DIN will now attract a fee of Rs 5,000. Further, any subsequent filing for updating changes in director details will require a fee of Rs 500 per filing.
The amendment promotes timely compliance and ensures accuracy of director information in MCA records.
MCA Issues FAQs on Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026
The MCA has issued FAQs clarifying the Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS-2026). The FAQs explain the scheme period, eligible companies, covered forms, fee concessions, immunity provisions, dormant status option, and strike-off benefit.
They confirm that overdue annual filings cThe MCA has issued FAQs clarifying the Companies Compliance Facilitation Scheme, 2026 (CCFS-2026). The FAQs explain the scheme period, eligible companies, covered forms, fee concessions, immunity provisions, dormant status option, and strike-off benefit.
They confirm that overdue annual filings can be made at sharply reduced additional fees, subject to conditions. The clarification also explains when immunity is available and what happens if companies do not avail the scheme. This FAQ release helps professionals understand the practical scope of CCFS-2026 better.
COMPANY LAW
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Tax Update
GST Update: IMS Offline Tool Now Available for Bulk Invoice Actions
GSTN has introduced an Excel-based IMS Offline Tool on the GST portal to simplify invoice management for taxpayers. The tool allows users to download invoice data, take actions like accept, reject, or mark pending, and upload responses in bulk through JSON files.
It follows the same validations aGSTN has introduced an Excel-based IMS Offline Tool on the GST portal to simplify invoice management for taxpayers. The tool allows users to download invoice data, take actions like accept, reject, or mark pending, and upload responses in bulk through JSON files.
It follows the same validations as the online IMS dashboard and helps improve efficiency in handling large volumes of invoices. Errors can be corrected through validation features before upload.
This move enhances ease of compliance and reduces manual effort for taxpayers dealing with multiple invoices.
The CBIC has extended the due date for filing GSTR-3B for March 2026 to 21st April 2026.
1. Applicable to all regular taxpayers filing under Section 39
2. Relief due to ongoing portal issues and compliance challenges
3. Notification effective from 20th April 2026
This extension provides addiThe CBIC has extended the due date for filing GSTR-3B for March 2026 to 21st April 2026.
1. Applicable to all regular taxpayers filing under Section 39
2. Relief due to ongoing portal issues and compliance challenges
3. Notification effective from 20th April 2026
This extension provides additional time to ensure accurate filing and avoid late fees.
CBDT has issued a corrigendum (Notification No. 64/2026 dated 16 April 2026) correcting multiple drafting and reference errors in the Income-tax Rules, 2026.
The changes include corrections in section/rule references, formatting, annexures, numbering, and terminology across various forms and provCBDT has issued a corrigendum (Notification No. 64/2026 dated 16 April 2026) correcting multiple drafting and reference errors in the Income-tax Rules, 2026.
The changes include corrections in section/rule references, formatting, annexures, numbering, and terminology across various forms and provisions. Notably, several instances of PAN/Aadhaar have been replaced with PAN and structural inconsistencies have been rectified.
INCOME TAX
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Tax Update
MCA Clarifies Process to Update Registered Email ID for Companies & LLPs
The MCA has outlined the procedure for updating registered email IDs in Master Data Services.
Companies/LLPs without login must register on the MCA V3 portal as Business Users using a unique email ID. Existing users can update email via the Profile Update section.
The change requires OTP autheThe MCA has outlined the procedure for updating registered email IDs in Master Data Services.
Companies/LLPs without login must register on the MCA V3 portal as Business Users using a unique email ID. Existing users can update email via the Profile Update section.
The change requires OTP authentication by two Directors/Designated Partners. Upon successful verification, the updated email ID will reflect automatically in MCA records.
COMPANY LAW
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Tax Update
GST Portal Update: Editable Pre-Deposit Field in Appeals
GSTN has enabled editing of the pre-deposit percentage while filing appeals in Form APL-01, effective April 6, 2026. Earlier auto-fixed at 10% under Section 107(6), taxpayers faced issues where payments were already made or incorrectly classified.
This update allows accurate calculation and paymeGSTN has enabled editing of the pre-deposit percentage while filing appeals in Form APL-01, effective April 6, 2026. Earlier auto-fixed at 10% under Section 107(6), taxpayers faced issues where payments were already made or incorrectly classified.
This update allows accurate calculation and payment during filing. However, the appellate authority will verify the correctness of the pre-deposit amount and payment mode during appeal adjudication.
The MCA has issued a draft notification dated April 8, 2026 proposing amendments to Companies (Incorporation) Rules. Key change includes consolidation of multiple forms into two new e-forms - E-CHNG (for registered office/name changes) and E-CON (for conversions and approvals).
The objective is tThe MCA has issued a draft notification dated April 8, 2026 proposing amendments to Companies (Incorporation) Rules. Key change includes consolidation of multiple forms into two new e-forms - E-CHNG (for registered office/name changes) and E-CON (for conversions and approvals).
The objective is to reduce repetitive filings and improve ease of doing business. These changes are currently in draft stage and will apply only after final notification.
CBDT Introduces PAN CR-01 & CR-02 for PAN Corrections
The CBDT has introduced new standardized forms PAN CR-01 (for individuals) and PAN CR-02 (for non-individuals) for correction of PAN details, effective from 1st April 2026.
These forms replace the earlier fragmented correction process and aim to bring uniformity, accuracy, and ease in updating PAThe CBDT has introduced new standardized forms PAN CR-01 (for individuals) and PAN CR-02 (for non-individuals) for correction of PAN details, effective from 1st April 2026.
These forms replace the earlier fragmented correction process and aim to bring uniformity, accuracy, and ease in updating PAN data. Taxpayers can now use a structured format for making corrections in name, address, or other details.
This move is expected to reduce errors, improve compliance, and streamline PAN-related services under the Income-tax Act, 2025.
INCOME TAX
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Tax Update
GSTAT Implementation - Backlog Appeals
Key Update
1. 30th June 2026 proposed as cut-off date to file pending GST appeals
2. Relief for cases pending earlier due to non-operational GSTAT
What to do
1. Review eligible backlog cases
2. Prepare documents and file within timeline
Based on GST Council recommendations and implemenKey Update
1. 30th June 2026 proposed as cut-off date to file pending GST appeals
2. Relief for cases pending earlier due to non-operational GSTAT
What to do
1. Review eligible backlog cases
2. Prepare documents and file within timeline
Based on GST Council recommendations and implementation framework.
GST
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Tax Update
GSTAT Rules Notified - E-Filing of Appeals Now Mandatory
The Government has notified the Goods and Services Tax Appellate Tribunal (Procedure) Rules, 2025, establishing a complete framework for GST appeals.
Appeals before GSTAT must now be filed electronically through the official portal, with digital submission, document upload, and case tracking faciThe Government has notified the Goods and Services Tax Appellate Tribunal (Procedure) Rules, 2025, establishing a complete framework for GST appeals.
Appeals before GSTAT must now be filed electronically through the official portal, with digital submission, document upload, and case tracking facilities.
The e-filing system is being implemented in phases, marking a shift towards a fully digital GST dispute resolution process.
GST
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Tax Update
GSTN Clarification on Appeals in NIL Demand Cases
GSTN has clarified issues faced by taxpayers in filing appeals where adjudication orders show NIL demand due to prior voluntary payment during SCN stage. Such payments do not imply acceptance of liability, and taxpayers retain the right to appeal under Section 107 of CGST Act.
However, portal resGSTN has clarified issues faced by taxpayers in filing appeals where adjudication orders show NIL demand due to prior voluntary payment during SCN stage. Such payments do not imply acceptance of liability, and taxpayers retain the right to appeal under Section 107 of CGST Act.
However, portal restrictions may block appeals in NIL cases. Taxpayers are advised to seek rectification of the order to reflect correct liability before filing an appeal.
GST
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Tax Update
GAAR Clarification on Old Investments
The CBDT has amended Income-tax Rules to clarify that investments made before 1st April 2017 will not be subject to GAAR (General Anti-Avoidance Rules).
Even if gains arise after 2017, such legacy investments will continue to enjoy grandfathering protection.
This amendment brings relief to forThe CBDT has amended Income-tax Rules to clarify that investments made before 1st April 2017 will not be subject to GAAR (General Anti-Avoidance Rules).
Even if gains arise after 2017, such legacy investments will continue to enjoy grandfathering protection.
This amendment brings relief to foreign investors and ensures clarity after recent judicial concerns.
It also helps distinguish clearly between genuine legacy investments and aggressive tax arrangements.
This move is expected to improve investor confidence and reduce litigation risk.
INCOME TAX
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Tax Update
CBDT Revises DIN Requirements for Income-tax Communications (Circular 4/2026)
CBDT has updated rules for Document Identification Number (DIN) in income-tax communications. All notices, orders, and correspondence must carry DIN, including emails or attachments.
Public communications are excluded. In exceptional cases (technical issues, PAN unavailability, etc.), DIN may be CBDT has updated rules for Document Identification Number (DIN) in income-tax communications. All notices, orders, and correspondence must carry DIN, including emails or attachments.
Public communications are excluded. In exceptional cases (technical issues, PAN unavailability, etc.), DIN may be omitted but requires approval within 15 days. Such communications must later be uploaded with DIN.
Earlier Circular 19/2019 is withdrawn, strengthening transparency and accountability in departmental communications.
INCOME TAX
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Tax Update
DIR-3 KYC: When Will You Need to File- (Illustrations Explained)
MCA has clarified filing timelines through illustrations. For DIN allotted in FY 2025-26, first filing will be due in Apr-Jun 2029.
Existing directors who already filed KYC for FY 2025-26 need not file for next 2 years if no changes. Any mid-cycle update does not change the 3-year cycle.
PropeMCA has clarified filing timelines through illustrations. For DIN allotted in FY 2025-26, first filing will be due in Apr-Jun 2029.
Existing directors who already filed KYC for FY 2025-26 need not file for next 2 years if no changes. Any mid-cycle update does not change the 3-year cycle.
Proper planning is required to avoid missed compliance.
COMPANY LAW
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Tax Update
MCA Update: DIR-3 KYC Now Once in 3 Years from 31 Mar 2026
MCA has amended DIR-3 KYC compliance, effective 31st March 2026. Directors holding DIN as on 31st March are now required to file DIR-3 KYC Web once every three financial years (by 30th June).
Any change in mobile, email or address must be updated within 30 days. Existing DIR-3 KYC forms have beenMCA has amended DIR-3 KYC compliance, effective 31st March 2026. Directors holding DIN as on 31st March are now required to file DIR-3 KYC Web once every three financial years (by 30th June).
Any change in mobile, email or address must be updated within 30 days. Existing DIR-3 KYC forms have been replaced with a single DIR-3 KYC Web for simplified compliance.
COMPANY LAW
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Tax Update
CBDT Press Release dated 1st Apr 26: IT Act, 2025 comes into force from 1st Apr 26
As per CBDT Press Release dated 1st April 2026, the Income-tax Act, 2025 has come into force from 1st April 2026, replacing the Income-tax Act, 1961.
The release states that the new law is aimed at simplifying and modernising direct tax provisions through simpler language, a streamlined structureAs per CBDT Press Release dated 1st April 2026, the Income-tax Act, 2025 has come into force from 1st April 2026, replacing the Income-tax Act, 1961.
The release states that the new law is aimed at simplifying and modernising direct tax provisions through simpler language, a streamlined structure and easier compliance.
CBDT also noted that the Income-tax Rules, 2026 and corresponding forms have been notified.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Section 220 notice quashed due to non-service of demand orders and unexplained departmental delay
PartiesAps Hydro (P.) Ltd. v. Union of India
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationW.P. (C) No. 9132 of 2022
The assessee challenged a notice issued u/s 220(1), treating it as an assessee-in-default for outstanding tax demands relating to AYs 2011-12 to 2019-20.
The assessee contended that no assessment orders, rectification orders, or penalty intimations...The assessee challenged a notice issued u/s 220(1), treating it as an assessee-in-default for outstanding tax demands relating to AYs 2011-12 to 2019-20.
The assessee contended that no assessment orders, rectification orders, or penalty intimations creating such demands had ever been served upon it.
The Revenue claimed that the communications were sent through e-mail, but failed to furnish proper proof or details of such service before the Court.
Decision
The Delhi HC held that it was improbable that an assessee would remain inactive despite huge tax demands if the orders had actually been served.
The Court also found it difficult to accept that the Department would remain dormant for several years despite allegedly pending demands since 2013.
Accordingly, the impugned notice u/s 220(1) was quashed, and the assessee was granted liberty to pursue statutory remedies without limitation objection.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Retrospective GST registration cancellation quashed for absence of specific SCN and recorded reasons.
PartiesShri Ram and Sons v. Commissioner, Central Goods and Services Tax, Ludhiana
CourtHIGH COURT OF PUNJAB & HARYANA
CitationCWP No.13032 of 2026
The GST department issued an SCN alleging that another firm was functioning at the assessees declared place of business and proposed cancellation of GST registration.
Although the notice did not propose retrospective cancellation, the proper officer...The GST department issued an SCN alleging that another firm was functioning at the assessees declared place of business and proposed cancellation of GST registration.
Although the notice did not propose retrospective cancellation, the proper officer cancelled the registration retrospectively from 20.05.2019.
The assessees revocation application and statutory appeal were rejected, following which a writ petition was filed before the HC of Punjab & Haryana.
Decision
The Court held that retrospective cancellation without prior notice and recorded reasons violated statutory requirements and principles of natural justice.
Relying on Bansal Casting v. Union of India, the Court observed that retrospective cancellation requires specific reasons, supporting material, and clear notice to the assessee.
The Court set aside the SCN and all consequential orders, while granting liberty to the department to initiate fresh proceedings in accordance with law.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Successive provisional attachment of bank accounts without fresh material after expiry of earlier attachment held invalid by Delhi HC
PartiesGujral Sons v. Union of India
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationW.P. (C) No. 4374 of 2026
The GST department provisionally attached the assessees bank accounts on 13.12.2024 u/s 83 of the CGST Act, and the attachment automatically expired after one year.
After completion of assessment proceedings and passing of the Order-in-Original date...The GST department provisionally attached the assessees bank accounts on 13.12.2024 u/s 83 of the CGST Act, and the attachment automatically expired after one year.
After completion of assessment proceedings and passing of the Order-in-Original dated 28.12.2025, the department again issued fresh provisional attachment orders on 03.02.2026 on the same factual basis.
The assessee challenged the second attachment before the Delhi HC on the ground that there was no fresh material or change in circumstances justifying the re-exercise of powers u/s 83.
Decision
The Delhi HC held that the earlier provisional attachment had already lapsed by statutory operation u/s 83(2), and repeated attachment on identical facts was impermissible.
The Court observed that there was no new material or changed circumstance to justify the issuance of a fresh provisional attachment order after completion of assessment proceedings.
Relying on Kesari Nandan Mobile v. Asstt. CST, the Court quashed the impugned attachment orders and directed the defreezing of the assessees bank accounts.
GST
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Case Law
Reassessment notices for AY 2015-16 issued after 1-4-2021 quashed as time-barred under TOLA.
PartiesDimpal Hemang Desai v. Income-tax Officer
CourtHIGH COURT OF GUJARAT
CitationR/SPECIAL CIVIL APPLICATION NO. 6101 of 2026
The IT Department initiated reassessment proceedings against the assessee for AY 2015-16 by issuing notices u/s 148 and later u/s 148A(b) after the amended reassessment provisions came into force from 1-4-2021.
Pursuant to the notices, the departmen...The IT Department initiated reassessment proceedings against the assessee for AY 2015-16 by issuing notices u/s 148 and later u/s 148A(b) after the amended reassessment provisions came into force from 1-4-2021.
Pursuant to the notices, the department passed a reassessment order u/s 147, read with Sections 250 and 144B, on 25-3-2026.
The assessee challenged the notices and reassessment proceedings before the Gujarat HC on the ground that the notices issued after 1-4-2021 were barred by limitation under the amended law and TOLA.
Decision
The HC held that for AY 2015-16, notices issued on or after 1-4-2021 u/s 148 and 148A were time-barred under the amended reassessment regime read with TOLA.
The Court observed that the issue was squarely covered by the SC decision in Union of India v. Rajeev Bansal.
Accordingly, the Court quashed all reassessment notices and consequential proceedings, including the reassessment order, and allowed the writ petition in favour of the assessee.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Wife cannot seek husband’s income-tax returns under RTI for maintenance dispute
PartiesKapil Agarwal v. CPIO Income-tax Officer, Moradabad
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationW.P. (C) No. 8481 of 2021 CM APPL. No. 26235 of 2021
The wife sought disclosure of her husbands income-tax details through an RTI application during the pendency of maintenance proceedings.
The Central Information Commission (CIC) directed the Income-tax Department to disclose the husbands net taxable...The wife sought disclosure of her husbands income-tax details through an RTI application during the pendency of maintenance proceedings.
The Central Information Commission (CIC) directed the Income-tax Department to disclose the husbands net taxable income from FY 2007-08 onwards.
The husband challenged the CIC order before the HC of Delhi, contending that income-tax returns are personal information protected u/s 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act.
Decision
The Court held that income-tax returns and taxable income details are personal information and are exempt from disclosure u/s 8(1)(j) of the RTI Act.
It ruled that a private maintenance dispute does not constitute a larger public interest so as to justify disclosure of such confidential information.
The CICs directions were set aside, and the Court observed that the wife could seek financial disclosure through affidavits of assets and liabilities as mandated in Rajnesh v. Neha.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Section 153C proceedings valid against occupant of searched premises where warrant was issued in another person’s name
PartiesDeputy Commissioner of Income-tax Central Circle-1(4) v. C.R. Ram Mohan Raju
CourtHIGH COURT OF KARNATAKA
CitationWRIT APPEAL No. 382 OF 2026 (T-IT)
A search u/s 132 was conducted in the case of K. Narayan Raju, and the respondents residence was searched because the searched persons documents were suspected to be kept there.
The AO found that certain seized materials belonged to the respondent a...A search u/s 132 was conducted in the case of K. Narayan Raju, and the respondents residence was searched because the searched persons documents were suspected to be kept there.
The AO found that certain seized materials belonged to the respondent and issued notices u/s 153C for various AYs.
The respondent challenged the notices, claiming that he should have been assessed u/s 153A since his premises were searched.
Decision
The Court held that the searched person is determined by the person named in the warrant and satisfaction note, not by ownership of the premises searched.
Proceedings u/s 153C against the respondent as an other person were held valid and lawful.
The Court also ruled that a consolidated satisfaction note is valid when the same AO handles both the searched person and the other person cases.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
GST demand order set aside for failure to consider assessees reply and supporting documents properly.
PartiesHudson Insurance Brokers (P.) Ltd. v. Union Territory of Chandigarh
CourtHIGH COURT OF PUNJAB & HARYANA
CitationCWP No. 8559 OF 2026
The petitioner, a GST-registered insurance brokerage company, received a scrutiny notice for alleged discrepancies in GST returns for FY 2021-22 and submitted replies with supporting documents.
The department thereafter issued an SCN u/s 73, allegin...The petitioner, a GST-registered insurance brokerage company, received a scrutiny notice for alleged discrepancies in GST returns for FY 2021-22 and submitted replies with supporting documents.
The department thereafter issued an SCN u/s 73, alleging that the petitioners reply and documents were unsatisfactory.
Despite the petitioner filing a detailed reply in Form GST-DRC-06 with documents, the department confirmed GST demand of Rs. 13.42 lakh without discussing the submissions or evidence furnished.
Decision
The HC held that the impugned order was a non-speaking and unreasoned order as it failed to consider the petitioners reply and documents.
The Court observed that the mere assertion that the reply was unsatisfactory, without assigning reasons, amounted to a violation of principles of natural justice.
The demand order was set aside, and the matter was remanded for fresh adjudication after granting a personal hearing and passing a reasoned order.
GST
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Case Law
GST Refund Rejection on Zero-Rated Supplies Quashed for Denial of Personal Hearing Despite Adjournment Request Due to Heavy Rains
PartiesInfinx Services (P.) Ltd. v. Union of India
CourtHIGH COURT OF BOMBAY
CitationWRIT PETITION NO.11996 OF 2025
The petitioner engaged in IT/ITES exports and filed a refund claim for accumulated ITC on zero-rated supplies made without payment of IGST for January 2024 to June 2024.
The department issued an SCN alleging non-submission of export documents and di...The petitioner engaged in IT/ITES exports and filed a refund claim for accumulated ITC on zero-rated supplies made without payment of IGST for January 2024 to June 2024.
The department issued an SCN alleging non-submission of export documents and directed the petitioner to reply within seven days and attend a personal hearing.
Though the petitioner filed a reply and sought adjournment of the hearing due to heavy rains in Mumbai, the authority rejected the refund claim ex parte without granting a fresh hearing.
Decision
The HC of Bombay held that passing the refund rejection order without granting an effective personal hearing amounted to a violation of principles of natural justice and the mandatory requirement under Rule 92(3).
The Court observed that once the petitioner had specifically sought rescheduling of the hearing for genuine reasons, the authority ought to have granted a fresh opportunity before taking an adverse decision.
Accordingly, the Court quashed the SCN and refund rejection order and directed the department to undertake fresh adjudication after issuing a fresh notice, granting a personal hearing, and passing a reasoned speaking order in accordance with law.
GST
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Case Law
Filing of GSTR-9 without mandatory GSTR-9C treated as non-filing of annual return; late fee validly leviable till GSTR-9C filing
PartiesTvl. Madhu Agencies v. State Tax Officer
CourtHIGH COURT OF MADRAS
CitationW.P. (MD) No. 7794 of 2026 W.M.P. (MD) No. 6375 of 2026
The petitioner, having turnover above Rs. 5 crores, filed the GSTR-9 annual return for AY 2021-22 with a delay and later filed the GSTR-9C reconciliation statement separately, after a substantial delay.
The department treated the filing of GSTR-9 wi...The petitioner, having turnover above Rs. 5 crores, filed the GSTR-9 annual return for AY 2021-22 with a delay and later filed the GSTR-9C reconciliation statement separately, after a substantial delay.
The department treated the filing of GSTR-9 without GSTR-9C as an incomplete filing of the annual return and levied a late fee up to the date of filing of GSTR-9C.
The petitioner challenged the levy, contending that the late fee u/s 47 applied only to the delayed filing of GSTR-9, and also claimed the benefit of the amnesty notification for waiver of the late fee.
Decision
The Madras HC held that for taxpayers with turnover above Rs. 5 crores, GSTR-9C was a mandatory part of annual return filing u/s 44 read with Rule 80(3).
The Court ruled that filing GSTR-9 without GSTR-9C amounted to non-filing of the annual return, thereby justifying the levy of a late fee till both forms were filed.
The Court further held that the amnesty benefit was unavailable since GSTR-9C was filed after 31.03.2025, and accordingly dismissed the writ petition with liberty to file a statutory appeal.
GST
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Case Law
GST demand quashed due to non-consideration of replies and mechanical finding on ITC reversal dispute.
PartiesBagga Vet Pharma v. State of Punjab
CourtHIGH COURT OF PUNJAB & HARYANA
CitationCWP NO. 7816 OF 2026 (O & M)
Bagga Vet Pharma received GST notices alleging short reversal of ITC on common inputs used for taxable and exempt supplies for FY 2020-21 and 2021-22.
The petitioner replied that ITC was availed only for taxable supplies and relied upon CBIC circula...Bagga Vet Pharma received GST notices alleging short reversal of ITC on common inputs used for taxable and exempt supplies for FY 2020-21 and 2021-22.
The petitioner replied that ITC was availed only for taxable supplies and relied upon CBIC circulars and reconciliation statements to support its claim.
Despite detailed replies and supporting documents, the adjudicating authority confirmed the demand by merely stating that the matter was sub-judice and the replies were unsatisfactory.
Decision
The HC of Punjab & Haryana held that the impugned order lacked cogent reasons and failed to consider the petitioners submissions and CBIC circulars.
The Court observed that the authority passed the order mechanically without addressing the distinction between taxable and tax-free supplies, showing complete non-application of mind.
Accordingly, the Court quashed the order and directed the authorities to reconsider the matter afresh after granting a fair hearing to the petitioner.
GST
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Case Law
NRE exemption claim is contingent upon proof of RBI permission; reassessment proceedings sustained
PartiesAbhinav Jain v. Income-tax Officer
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationW.P.(C) No. 2638 of 2023
The assessee, a non-resident residing in Dubai, did not file an ITR for AY 2018-19 despite substantial transactions in his NRE and savings bank accounts being flagged on the Insight/NMS portal.
The AO issued notice u/s 148A(b) alleging escapement of...The assessee, a non-resident residing in Dubai, did not file an ITR for AY 2018-19 despite substantial transactions in his NRE and savings bank accounts being flagged on the Insight/NMS portal.
The AO issued notice u/s 148A(b) alleging escapement of income of about Rs. 9.28 crore, to which the assessee replied that the transactions represented exempt NRE deposits, inter-bank transfers, and funds received from his father.
As the original notice granted less than seven days for reply, the department issued corrigenda extending the reply period till 02-04-2022, after which reassessment proceedings u/s 148A(d) and 148 were initiated.
Decision
The Delhi HC held that the extended reply period under the corrigenda had to be excluded while computing the limitation u/s 149, making the reassessment notice valid and within time.
The Court further held that both the Jurisdictional AO and the Faceless Assessing Officer were competent to issue notices u/s 148A and 148.
Since the assessee failed to produce RBI permission and sufficient supporting documents for claiming exemption on NRE deposits and interest income, the Court upheld the reassessment proceedings.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Reduction of share capital via buy-back cannot be treated as property acquisition under Sec 56(2)(x)
PartiesPrincipal Commissioner of Income-tax v. Globe Capital Market Ltd.
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationIT Appeal No. 364 of 2024
The assessee-company undertook buy-back of its own equity shares during AY 2018-19 at a price lower than the fair market value determined under Rule 11UA, and paid tax u/s 115QA.
The AO treated the buy-back as the acquisition of property and invoked...The assessee-company undertook buy-back of its own equity shares during AY 2018-19 at a price lower than the fair market value determined under Rule 11UA, and paid tax u/s 115QA.
The AO treated the buy-back as the acquisition of property and invoked Section 56(2)(x) to tax the difference between FMV and buy-back price as deemed income.
The CIT(A) and Tribunal held that buy-back represents the reduction of share capital and extinguishment of shares, not acquisition of property, and deleted the addition.
Decision
The HC held that the buy-back of its own shares results in the extinguishment of shares and cannot be regarded as the receipt or acquisition of property.
Section 56(2)(x) is inapplicable as no property comes into existence in the hands of the company upon buy-back.
The addition made by the AO was held to be legally unsustainable, and the Departments appeal was dismissed.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Penalty u/s 270A invalid when assessed income does not exceed processed income
PartiesGM Modular (P.) ltd. v. Principal Commissioner of Income-tax
CourtHIGH COURT OF BOMBAY
CitationWRIT PETITION NO. 378 OF 2026
The assessees return was processed u/s 143(1)(a) with a disallowance u/s 36(1)(va) for delayed PF/ESI contribution.
In subsequent assessment u/s 143(3) read with section 153A, the same disallowance was merely reiterated, and penalty u/s 270A was lev...The assessees return was processed u/s 143(1)(a) with a disallowance u/s 36(1)(va) for delayed PF/ESI contribution.
In subsequent assessment u/s 143(3) read with section 153A, the same disallowance was merely reiterated, and penalty u/s 270A was levied.
The assessee filed a revision u/s 264 against the penalty, which was rejected by the PCIT without assigning reasons, leading to a writ petition.
Decision
No penalty u/s 270A was leviable as there was no under-reporting of income, since assessed income did not exceed income determined u/s 143(1)(a).
A bona fide claim based on prevailing jurisdictional precedent and full disclosure of facts cannot attract a penalty, even if the law is later reversed.
The assessee has the option to choose revision u/s 264 instead of appeal, and rejection of such revision without reasons was unsustainable; hence, a penalty was quashed.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Revenue appeal arising from the section 263 order held not maintainable where the tax effect is below the Rs 2 crore threshold
PartiesPrincipal Commissioner of Income-tax v. Nivesh Group
CourtHIGH COURT OF DELHI
CitationIT Appeal No. 420 OF 2024
The PCIT passed a revisional order u/s 263 of the IT Act, 61, pursuant to which the AO passed a consequential order giving effect and raised a tax demand of Rs. 1.03 crore.
The Revenue, being aggrieved, filed an appeal before the Delhi HC and conten...The PCIT passed a revisional order u/s 263 of the IT Act, 61, pursuant to which the AO passed a consequential order giving effect and raised a tax demand of Rs. 1.03 crore.
The Revenue, being aggrieved, filed an appeal before the Delhi HC and contended that cases arising from section 263 orders fall within the exception provided under para 3.1(f) of CBDT Circular No. 5/2024.
The assessee opposed the appeal by submitting that the tax effect in the consequential proceedings was below Rs. 2 crore, and therefore, the appeal was not maintainable in view of CBDT Circular Nos. 5/2024 and 9/2024.
Decision
The HC observed that the exception under para 3.1(f) is applicable only in situations where the tax effect is not ascertainable or cannot be quantified.
In the present case, since the tax effect had already been quantified at Rs. 1.03 crore, the prescribed monetary limit of Rs. 2 crore for filing appeals before the HC was applicable.
Accordingly, the Court held that the Revenues appeal was not maintainable.
INCOME TAX
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Case Law
Appeal delay in registration cancellation - SLP dismissed as infructuous; limitation issue open.
PartiesUnion of India v. Rana Engineering
CourtSUPREME COURT OF INDIA
CitationSLP (CIVIL) Diary No(s). 36341 OF 2024
The GST registration of the assessee was cancelled on account of continuous non-filing of GST returns for a period exceeding six months.
The assessee filed an appeal against the cancellation order after approximately seven months, but the Appellate...The GST registration of the assessee was cancelled on account of continuous non-filing of GST returns for a period exceeding six months.
The assessee filed an appeal against the cancellation order after approximately seven months, but the Appellate Authority rejected the same as being barred by limitation.
The HC held that the delay in filing the appeal could be condoned u/s 107 of the CGST Act, and further observed that the assessee could also seek revocation of cancellation u/s 30 upon compliance.
Decision
During the pendency of the SLP, the Appellate Authority had already revoked the GST registration, thereby resolving the primary grievance of the assessee.
In light of this development, the SC held that the matter had become infructuous and dismissed the SLP accordingly.
The Court clarified that the legal issue regarding limitation u/s 107 remains open, and further directed that the HCs judgment shall not be treated as a binding precedent.
GST
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Case Law
Writ not maintainable once GSTAT functional; appeal to be filed with pre-deposit within notified timeline
PartiesGhanashyama Sahoo v. Commissioner of CT & GST
CourtHIGH COURT OF ORISSA
CitationW. P. (C) No. 16823 of 2025
The petitioner challenged a GST demand order dated 30.03.2022, passed u/s 74 for the period July 2017 to March 2018, which was subsequently upheld by the First Appellate Authority on 28.11.2023.
The petitioner intended to file a second appeal before...The petitioner challenged a GST demand order dated 30.03.2022, passed u/s 74 for the period July 2017 to March 2018, which was subsequently upheld by the First Appellate Authority on 28.11.2023.
The petitioner intended to file a second appeal before the GSTAT, but at the relevant time, the Tribunal was not constituted and remained non-functional.
In the absence of an effective appellate remedy, the petitioner approached the HC by way of a writ petition; meanwhile, the Government later issued a notification and advisory prescribing timelines for filing appeals once GSTAT became functional.
Decision
The Court held that although writ jurisdiction can be invoked where the appellate forum is unavailable, such a remedy cannot continue once the GSTAT has become functional.
It was further held that the petitioner must strictly comply with statutory requirements, including the mandatory pre-deposit u/s 112(8), before filing an appeal.
Accordingly, the petitioner was directed to file the appeal within the notified timelines, and the GSTAT shall entertain the same if it is in accordance with law; the writ petition was disposed of without examining the merits.
GST
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Case Law
Liberty granted to avail Section 112 remedy where first appeal dismissed as time-barred under GST
PartiesBandhan Kumar Singh v. Union of India
CourtHIGH COURT OF PATNA
CitationCivil Writ Jurisdiction Case No.16770 of 2025
The petitioner had filed a statutory first appeal u/s 107 of the GST Act before the State Tax Additional Commissioner, which came to be dismissed on the ground of limitation, without any examination of the merits of the case.
Being aggrieved by such...The petitioner had filed a statutory first appeal u/s 107 of the GST Act before the State Tax Additional Commissioner, which came to be dismissed on the ground of limitation, without any examination of the merits of the case.
Being aggrieved by such rejection, the petitioner approached the Patna HC by filing a writ petition, challenging the legality of the appellate order.
During the course of proceedings, the petitioner sought liberty to challenge the said appellate order by availing the further statutory remedy u/s 112 of the Act.
Decision
The HC observed that the petitioners appeal had been dismissed solely on the ground of delay, without adjudicating upon the merits.
Considering the request made, the Court held that the petitioner should be permitted to avail the alternative statutory remedy u/s 112.
Accordingly, the Court granted such liberty and disposed of the writ petition, without expressing any opinion on the merits of the case.
GST
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Case Law
Belated rectification under GST cannot revive claims or sustain a merits challenge.
PartiesAhamed Usman v. Deputy Commissioner
CourtHIGH COURT OF KERALA
CitationWA NO. 627 OF 2024
The assessee filed a rectification application in January 2024 for GST returns relating to 2017–2018, despite the statutory time limit (even with extension) expiring in March 2019.
The assessee also challenged the assessment order (Ext.P1) on meri...The assessee filed a rectification application in January 2024 for GST returns relating to 2017–2018, despite the statutory time limit (even with extension) expiring in March 2019.
The assessee also challenged the assessment order (Ext.P1) on merits, while simultaneously seeking rectification after a delay of about six years.
The Single Judge dismissed the writ petition, holding that the rectification request was time-barred and beyond the permissible statutory period.
Decision
The HC held that the rectification application was hopelessly time-barred, as the statutory timeline u/s 39(9), even with extension, ended in March 2019.
Filing rectification after six years amounted to admission of error by the assessee, making the challenge to the order on merits untenable.
The Court confirmed the dismissal of the writ petition, holding that no interference was warranted.
GST
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Case Law
Liberty granted to avail Section 112 remedy where first appeal dismissed as time-barred under GST
PartiesBandhan Kumar Singh v. Union of India
CourtHIGH COURT OF PATNA
CitationCivil Writ Jurisdiction Case No.16770 of 2025
The petitioner had filed a statutory first appeal u/s 107 of the GST Act before the State Tax Additional Commissioner, which came to be dismissed on the ground of limitation, without any examination of the merits of the case.
Being aggrieved by such...The petitioner had filed a statutory first appeal u/s 107 of the GST Act before the State Tax Additional Commissioner, which came to be dismissed on the ground of limitation, without any examination of the merits of the case.
Being aggrieved by such rejection, the petitioner approached the Patna HC by filing a writ petition, challenging the legality of the appellate order.
During the course of proceedings, the petitioner sought liberty to challenge the said appellate order by availing the further statutory remedy u/s 112 of the Act.
Decision
The HC observed that the petitioners appeal had been dismissed solely on the ground of delay, without adjudicating upon the merits.
Considering the request made, the Court held that the petitioner should be permitted to avail the alternative statutory remedy u/s 112.
Accordingly, the Court granted such liberty and disposed of the writ petition, without expressing any opinion on the merits of the case.
GST
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Case Law
Premature GST writ dismissed; adjudication to be pursued, and seized goods not released for lack of documents.
PartiesAnkit Dubey v. Prinicipal Commissioner of Central Goods and Services Tax CGST
CourtHIGH COURT OF MADHYA PRADESH
CitationWRIT PETITION Nos. 33175, 32936 and 32952 of 2025
The petitioner, a GST-registered trader in ceramic tiles and sanitary fittings, was subjected to search and seizure u/s 67, where undeclared godowns and alleged unaccounted goods were found.
He challenged the action as illegal and sought the quashin...The petitioner, a GST-registered trader in ceramic tiles and sanitary fittings, was subjected to search and seizure u/s 67, where undeclared godowns and alleged unaccounted goods were found.
He challenged the action as illegal and sought the quashing of proceedings and the release of seized goods, claiming that all stock was duly recorded.
Meanwhile, the department issued an SCN u/s 74 and offered provisional release of goods, but the petitioner failed to produce valid supporting documents.
Decision
The Court held that the writ petitions were premature, as adjudication proceedings had already been initiated.
It directed the petitioner to participate in statutory adjudication and avail alternate remedies, instead of invoking writ jurisdiction.
Since the petitioner failed to furnish documents for release, no relief was granted, and the writ petitions were dismissed.
GST
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GST14 hours ago
Govt May Restrict Manual Editing In GSTR-3B
Govt May Restrict Manual Editing In GSTR-3B
As reported by Business Standard:
* Govt may restrict manual editing i...Govt May Restrict Manual Editing In GSTR-3B
As reported by Business Standard:
* Govt may restrict manual editing in GSTR-3B returns
* GSTR-3B could become fully auto-populated from GSTR-1 & GSTR-2B
* Aim is to reduce mismatches and tighten compliance checks
* Tax liability & ITC changes may still be possible through GSTR-1A & IMS
* Proposal is expected to be placed before the GST Council
Official notification/approval awaited.
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Income Tax5 days ago
Daily Backup of Digital Books May Become Mandatory
Daily Backup of Digital Books May Become Mandatory
Under Rule 46(8) of the proposed Income-tax Rules, 2026, businesse...Daily Backup of Digital Books May Become Mandatory
Under Rule 46(8) of the proposed Income-tax Rules, 2026, businesses maintaining books electronically may be required to:
* Maintain books in electronic form
* Keep data accessible within India
* Ensure regular daily backups
* Store backup servers located in India
The move aims to strengthen data accessibility, compliance monitoring, and digital record integrity under the new Income-tax framework.
Note:
Applicable from 1 April 2026 under the new Income-tax Act, 2025 framework.
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GST1 week ago
GST Appeals Rush Before 30 June 2026
GST Appeals Rush Before 30 June 2026
Content:
* GSTAT expects sharp surge in appeals (pre–1 Apr 2026 orders)
* 8,...GST Appeals Rush Before 30 June 2026
Content:
* GSTAT expects sharp surge in appeals (pre–1 Apr 2026 orders)
* 8,000 appeals filed so far — numbers likely to rise fast
* Delay mainly due to mandatory pre-deposit (10% + 10%)
* 20% tax gets blocked → working capital pressure
* Delay can be condoned only up to 3 months
* Risk: Appeals may become time-barred if delayed
Insight:
Last-minute filing can lead to errors and technical issues
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GST1 week ago
GST Refund Filing Update
GST Refund Filing Update
GST Portal Now Requires
Separate Annexure-B Upload
Annexure-B to be uploaded through Of...GST Refund Filing Update
GST Portal Now Requires
Separate Annexure-B Upload
Annexure-B to be uploaded through Offline Utility (JSON format)
-Linked with Statement-3 in refund applications
-System validation with GSTR-2B reconciliation likely
-Extra checks may include:
* GSTR-2B period
* Blocked / Ineligible ITC
* Inward supply details
- Reconcile refund data carefully before filing to avoid notices, deficiencies, or delays.
Source: GST Portal Update
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Income Tax1 week ago
TDS/TCS for different sections/codes can be deposited through a single challan
TDS/TCS for different sections/codes can be deposited through a single challan, with section-wise details shown separate...TDS/TCS for different sections/codes can be deposited through a single challan, with section-wise details shown separately under New Income Tax Act 2025 - a welcome change
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Income Tax1 week ago
Digital Arrest Scam: Senior CA Lost Rs. 1.03 Crore
“Digital Arrest” Scam: Senior CA Lost Rs 1.03 Crore
Fraudsters posed as ED/CBI officers using:
Fake video calls in uni...“Digital Arrest” Scam: Senior CA Lost Rs 1.03 Crore
Fraudsters posed as ED/CBI officers using:
Fake video calls in uniform
Fake FIRs and threats
Pressure for urgent money transfers
The victim was allegedly kept under fear for several days and made multiple transactions.
Important:
No authority does “digital arrest” on video calls
Never transfer money under pressure
Verify through official channels only
Cyber Fraud Helpline: 1930
cybercrime.gov.in
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Income Tax2 weeks ago
Doctors, Is Your Daily Record Tax-Compliant?
Doctors, Is Your Daily Record Tax-Compliant?
Form No. 25 is now mandatory under Rule 46(6) of the Income-tax Rules, 2...Doctors, Is Your Daily Record Tax-Compliant?
Form No. 25 is now mandatory under Rule 46(6) of the Income-tax Rules, 2026.
Every consultation, service, and fee must be recorded daily in a structured register.
It replaces old Form 3C and applies from Tax Year 2026–27 onwards.
Not required to be filed — but must be ready if the department asks.
Maintain properly today to avoid questions tomorrow.
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Income Tax2 weeks ago
WhatsApp Chats Alone May Not Be Enough in Tax Cases
WhatsApp Chats Alone May Not Be Enough in Tax Cases
WhatsApp messages are not conclusive evidence
Truecaller details...WhatsApp Chats Alone May Not Be Enough in Tax Cases
WhatsApp messages are not conclusive evidence
Truecaller details are not reliable proof of identity
Without proper backing, such evidence can be challenged
What makes it strong evidence?
✔️ Bank transactions
✔️ Agreements or documents
✔️ Third-party confirmations
Legal Position
Indian Evidence Act, 1872 – Section 65B
Bharatiya Sakshya Adhiniyam, 2023 – Section 63
Arjun Panditrao Khotkar v. Kailash Kushanrao Gorantyal
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Income Tax2 weeks ago
TDS on Partner Payments- Manage Cash Flow Smartly
TDS on Partner Payments – Manage Cash Flow Smartly
Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, TDS @10% applies on payments to p...TDS on Partner Payments – Manage Cash Flow Smartly
Under the Income-tax Act, 2025, TDS @10% applies on payments to partners (salary, remuneration, interest, etc.) as per Section 393 (relevant entry).
Even where the partner’s final tax liability is low or nil, TDS may still be deducted, leading to unnecessary cash blockage and reliance on refunds.
To avoid this, partners can apply for a Lower/Nil TDS Certificate under Section 395(1) by filing Form 128. Once approved, TDS can be reduced or not deducted, improving liquidity.
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Income Tax2 weeks ago
Property TDS Simplified: One Form Now
Property TDS Simplified: One Form Now
The government has streamlined TDS compliance on property and similar payments...Property TDS Simplified: One Form Now
The government has streamlined TDS compliance on property and similar payments by introducing Form 141.
* Replaces multiple forms like 26QB, 26QC, 26QD, 26QE
* Single form for reporting different TDS transactions
* Aims to reduce confusion and duplication
* Expected to improve compliance and ease filing process
A step towards simpler and more efficient tax reporting for taxpayers and professionals.
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Income Tax4 weeks ago
Stay Alert: Suspicious Activity Reported
Unverified files and messages may be used to compromise accounts.
Avoid downloading unknown attachments and always veri...Unverified files and messages may be used to compromise accounts.
Avoid downloading unknown attachments and always verify the sender before opening.
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Income Tax4 weeks ago
Income Tax Penalty Increase: Rs 1,000 to Rs 25,000
Income Tax Penalty Increase: Rs 1,000 to Rs 25,000 from April 2026 - Major change in Income Tax Act 2025 increases penal...Income Tax Penalty Increase: Rs 1,000 to Rs 25,000 from April 2026 - Major change in Income Tax Act 2025 increases penalties for failing to provide business information to tax officers. New penalty structure effective from April 2026 under Section 254.
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