- GSTR1 is to be filed by the seller by 10th of next month. This gets auto-populated to the buyer who corrects it and then files GSTR2 by 15th of the month. After that,
- GSTR3 contains tax liability of an assesse as the seller and input tax credit as the buyer. So, the assesse can net the two.
- For the first quarter(July-Sept, 2017), GSTR3B, the summary of input-output, is to be filed by 20th of the next month, instead of GSTR3
- After GST filing got complicated, GST Council suspended GSTR2 and GSTR3.
- It extended GSTR3B first till December 2017, then till March 2018, and then till June 2018. Now it has been extended further.
- GSTR 3B is to be filed by 20th of the next month.
- Deadline of GSTR1 was extended to 40 days from the end of the month of transactions. This timeline, however, again is being shortened in a phased manner.
- A group of ministers was constituted under Bihar deputy chief minister Sushil Modi to suggest new models based on the suggestions of Infosys chairman Nandan Nilekani and the officers’ committee.
- The seller will upload invoices and the buyer will acknowledge that.
- Input tax credit will be available to the buyer on the basis of invoices uploaded by the seller. No credit for missing invoices
- Similar to the Nilekani model but with an option for provisional credit for missing invoices.
- If the seller disputes the transactions, provisional credit will be reversed.
- The present model of GSTR1 and GSTR3B will continue for six months with the timeline for GSTR1 shortened
- The seller will upload invoices. But, provisional credit will be allowed to the buyer, based on his/her calculations, even if the seller does not upload related invoices.
- GSTNetwork will keep sending reminders to buyers about the difference between credit available to them and input tax credit they got. A buyer then can ask the seller to upload remaining invoices as well.
- Assesses will have to file one return in a month, except for those who have no transactions or those who are under the composition scheme as they will file quarterly returns.
- There will be no provisional credit. Credit will be based on invoices put up by the seller.
- The government will recover the tax from the seller and in extreme cases where the seller is not located or he/she does not have assets, the buyer will have to pay taxes.
- Other processes will be the same as in stage two.
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