Just One Out of 4 Assessees Submitted GST Audit
Conciliation Report So Far for FY18
·
Last Date for Filing FY Annual Return is
January 31
Three out of four Goods & Services Tax (GST) assessees have yet to submit audit conciliation statement
for fiscal year 2027-18 (FY 18). The due date for submitting it is January 31.
It is mandatory to file an annual return. There are three
annual return forms, GSTR 9, GSTR 9A and GSTR 9C. Every GST assessee
(those who submitted all the monthly return forms of GSTR 3B and GSTR 1) has to
file an annual return in GSTR 9.
Among these assessees, every
registered taxable person whose turnover during a financial year
exceeds ₹2 crore, will also be required to get his accounts audited
by a chartered accountant or a cost accountant and then submit a reconciliation
statement in GSTR 9C along with GSTR 9. The assessees
under the composition scheme (businesses with turnover up to ₹1.5
crore) will be required to file the GSTR 9A form.
According to data made available with the GSTN as on
January 27, the IT backbone of indirect tax system, out of the 67.64 lakhs
eligible to GSTR 9, little over 31 lakh, or nearly 46 per cent of assessees, have filed.
For GSTR 9A, the number of eligible assessees
is around 19 lakh, but around only 7.38 lakh assessees,
or 39 per cent, have filed the returns so far.
However, the bigger problem is with big assessees who have to submit an audit report. Out of 12.42
lakhs eligible assessees, only around 3 lakh have
filed, which is around 24 per cent.
Assessees and experts on one side and tax officials on the other
have their own set of arguments to explain the current impasse.
One of the common grouse from assessees
is network problem. It was alleged that the GSTN portal was not responsive last
week (during January 20-22) and hence the number of filings was abysmally low.
The tool was showing “Error Occurred” or “Processed but pending” as the status
and was not generating the report. Also, the 9C utility was not accepting copy
paste, so taxpayers had to manually punch in the data, resulting in delay in
uploading
According to tax consultants, dealers are trying to
upload the financials without checking the file size and that resulted in
delays. The utility has prescribed 5 MB as the size limit. Where annual return
in Form GSTR 9 is filed, the GSTR 9C utility should get auto populated with the
details available in GSTR 9.
However, there were instances where taxpayers were unable
to download the JSON file of GSTR 9C with auto populated data.
However, GSTN officials said that there is general
tendency to wait for the last date in the anticipation that it will be extended
and that is why the pace of filing return has been slow so far. Some officials
said that there are also connectivity issues at the assessees’
end which is also creating problems.