Introduction
Revocation of cancellation
In case where registration is cancelled suo-motu by the Proper Officer, the taxable person can apply within 30 days of service of cancellation order, requesting the officer for revoking the cancellation ordered by him. However, before applying, the person has to make good the defaults (by filing all pending returns, making payment of all dues and so) for which the registration was cancelled by the officer. If satisfied, the proper officer will revoke the cancellation earlier ordered by him. However, if the officer concludes to reject the request for revocation of cancellation, he will first observe the principle of natural justice by way of issuing notice to the person and hearing him on the issue.
Physical verification for registration
Physical verification is to be resorted to only where it is found necessary in the subjective satisfaction of the proper officer.
If at all, it is felt necessary, it will be undertaken only after granting the registration, and the verification report along with the supporting documents and photographs, shall have to be uploaded on the common portal within fifteen working days.
In any
tax system, registration is the most fundamental requirement for identification
of tax payers ensuring tax compliance in the economy. Registration of any
business entity under the GST Law implies obtaining a unique number from the
concerned tax authorities for the purpose of collecting tax on behalf of the
government and to avail Input Tax Credit for the taxes on his inward supplies.
Without registration, a person can neither collect tax from his customers nor
claim any input Tax Credit of tax paid by him.
Need and advantages of
registration
Registration
will confer the following advantages to a taxpayer:
He is
legally recognized as supplier of goods or services.
He is
legally authorized to collect taxes from his customers and pass on the credit
of the taxes paid on the goods or services supplied to the
purchasers/recipients.
He can
claim Input Tax Credit of taxes paid and can utilize the same for payment of
taxes due on supply of goods or services.
Seamless
flow of Input Tax Credit from suppliers to recipients at the national level.
Liability to register
GST
being a tax on the event of “supply”, every supplier needs to get registered.
However, small businesses having all India aggregate turnover below Rupees 20
lakh (10 lakh if business is in Assam, Arunachal Pradesh, J&K, Himachal
Pradesh, Uttarakhand, Manipur, Mizoram, Sikkim, Meghalaya, Nagaland or Tripura)
need not register. The small businesses, having turnover below the threshold
limit can, however, voluntarily opt to register.
The
aggregate turnover includes supplies made by him on behalf of his principals,
but excludes the value of job-worked goods if he is a job worker. But persons
who are engaged exclusively in the business of supplying goods or services or
both that are not liable to tax or wholly exempt from tax or an agriculturist,
to the extent of supply of produce out of cultivation of land are not liable to
register under GST.
Nature of registration
The
registration in GST is PAN based and State specific.
Supplier
has to register in each of such State or Union territory from where he effects
supply. In GST registration, the supplier is allotted a 15-digit GST
identification number called “GSTIN”, and a certificate of registration
incorporating therein this GSTIN is made available to the applicant on the GSTN
common portal. The first 2 digits of the GSTIN is the State code, next 10
digits are the PAN of the legal entity, the next two digits are for entity
code, and the last digit is check sum number. Registration under GST is not tax
specific, which means that there is single registration for all the taxes i.e.
CGST, SGST/UTGST, IGST and cesses.
A
given PAN based legal entity would have one GSTIN per State, that means a business
entity having its branches in multiple States will have to take separate State
wise registration for the branches in different States. But within a State, an
entity with different branches would have single registration wherein it can
declare one place as principal place of business and other branches as
additional place of business. However, a business entity having separate
business verticals (as defined in section 2 (18) of the CGST Act, 2017) in a
state may obtain separate registration for each of its business verticals. Generally,
the liability to register under GST arises when you are a supplier within the
meaning of the term, and also your aggregate turn over in the financial year is
above the exemption threshold of 20 lakh rupees. However, the GST law enlists
certain categories of suppliers who are required to get compulsory registration
irrespective of their turnover that is to say, the threshold exemption of 20
lakh is not available to them. Some of such suppliers who need to register
compulsorily irrespective of the size of their turnover are:
Inter-state
suppliers
A
person receiving supplies on which tax is payable by recipient on reverse
charge basis
Casual
taxable person who is not having fixed place of business in the State or Union
Territory from where he wants to make supply
Non-resident
taxable persons who are not having fixed place of business in India
A
person who supplies on behalf of some other taxable person (i.e. an Agent of
some Principal)
E-commerce
operators, who provide platform to the suppliers to supply through it
Suppliers
who supply through an e-commerce operator
Those
ecommerce operators who are notified as liable for
GST
payment under Section 9(5)
TDS
Deductor
Those
supplying online information and data base access or retrieval services from
outside India to a non-registered person in India.
A
Casual taxable person is one who has a registered business in some State in
India, but wants to effect supplies from some other State in which he is not
having any fixed place of business. Such person needs to register in the State
from where he seeks to supply as a Casual taxable person. A Non-Resident
taxable person is one who is a foreigner and occasionally wants to effect
taxable supplies from any State in India, and for that he needs GST
registration. GST law prescribes special procedure for registration, as also
for extension of the operation period of such Casual or Non-Resident taxable
persons. They have to apply for registration at least five days in advance
before making any supply. Also, registration is granted to them or period of
operation is extended only after they make advance deposit of the estimated tax
liability.
In
respect of supplies to some notified agencies of United Nations organisation,
multinational financial institutions and other organisations, a unique
identification number (UIN) is issued.
Standardisation of procedures
A
total of 30 forms/formats have been prescribed in the GST registration rules.
For every process in the registration chain such as application for
registration, acknowledgment, query, rejection, registration certificate, show
cause notice for cancellation, reply, cancellation, amendment, field visit
report etc, there are standard formats. This will make the process uniform all
over the country. The decision making process will also be fast. Strict time
lines have been stipulated for completion of different stages of registration
process.
An application has to be submitted online through the
common portal (GSTN) within thirty days from the date when liability to
register arose. The Casual and Non-Resident taxable persons need to apply at
least five days prior to the commencement of the business. For transferee of a
business as going concern, the liability to register arises on the date of
transfer.
The
Proper Officer has to either raise a query or approve the grant of registration
within three working days failing which, registration would be considered as
deemed to have been approved. The applicant would have to respond within seven
working days starting from the fourth day of filing the original application.
The Proper Officer would have to grant or reject the application for
registration within seven working days thereafter.
Amendment of registration
Except
for the changes in some core information in the registration application, a
taxable person shall be able to make amendments without requiring any specific
approval from the tax authority. In case the change is for legal name of the
business, or the State of place of business or additional place of business,
the taxable person will apply for amendment within 15 days of the event
necessitating the change. The Proper
Officer, then, will approve the amendment within the next 15 days. For other
changes like the name of day-to-day functionaries, e-mail IDs, mobile numbers
etc. no approval of the Proper Officer is required, and the amendment can be
affected by the taxable person on his own on the common portal.
Cancellation of registration
The
GST law provides for two scenarios where cancellation of registration can take
place; the one when the taxable person no more requires it (voluntary
cancellation), and another when the Proper Officer considers the registration liable
for cancellation in view of certain specified defaults (Suo-motu cancellation)
like when the registrant is not doing business from the registered place of
business or if he issues tax invoice without making the supply of goods or
services. The taxable person desirous of cancellation of registration will
apply on the common portal within 30 days of the event warranting cancellation.
He will also declare in the application, the stock held on the date with effect
from which he seeks cancellation. He will also work out and declare the quantum
of dues of payments and credit reversal, and the particulars of payments made
towards discharge of such liabilities. In case of voluntary registration (taken
despite not being liable for), no cancellation is allowed until expiry of one
year from the effective date of registration. If satisfied, the Proper Officer
has to cancel the registration within 30 days from the date of application or
the date of reply to notice (if issued, when rejection is concluded by the officer).Revocation of cancellation
In case where registration is cancelled suo-motu by the Proper Officer, the taxable person can apply within 30 days of service of cancellation order, requesting the officer for revoking the cancellation ordered by him. However, before applying, the person has to make good the defaults (by filing all pending returns, making payment of all dues and so) for which the registration was cancelled by the officer. If satisfied, the proper officer will revoke the cancellation earlier ordered by him. However, if the officer concludes to reject the request for revocation of cancellation, he will first observe the principle of natural justice by way of issuing notice to the person and hearing him on the issue.
Physical verification for registration
Physical verification is to be resorted to only where it is found necessary in the subjective satisfaction of the proper officer.
If at all, it is felt necessary, it will be undertaken only after granting the registration, and the verification report along with the supporting documents and photographs, shall have to be uploaded on the common portal within fifteen working days.
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