What is GST Refund claim and who is Eligible
Timely refund mechanism is essential in tax administration, as it
facilitates trade through the release of blocked funds for working capital,
expansion and modernization of existing business.
The provisions pertaining to refund contained in the GST law aim
to streamline and standardize the refund procedures under GST regime. Thus,
under the GST regime, there will be a standardized form for making any claim
for refunds. The claim and sanctioning procedure will be completely online and
time bound, which is a marked departure from the existing time consuming and
cumbersome procedure.
Situations
Leading to Refund Claims
The
relevant date provision embodied in Section 54 of the CGST Act, 2017, provision
contained in Section 77 of the CGST Act, 2017 and the requirement of submission
of relevant documents as listed in Rule 1(2) of Refund Rules is an indicator of
the various situations that may necessitate a refund claim. A claim for refund
may arise on account of:
1.
Export of goods or services.
2.
Supplies to SEZs units and developers.
3.
Deemed exports.
4.
Refund of taxes on purchase made by UN or embassies etc.
5.
Refund arising on account of judgment, decree, order or direction of the
Appellate Authority, Appellate Tribunal or
any court.
6.
Refund of accumulated Input Tax Credit on account of inverted duty structure.
7.
Finalisation of provisional assessment.
8.
Refund of pre-deposit.
9. Excess payment due to
mistake.
10. Refunds to
International tourists of GST paid on goods in India and carried abroad at the
time of their departure from India
.
11. Refund on account of
issuance of refund vouchers for taxes paid on advances against which, goods or
services have not been supplied.
12.
Refund of CGST & SGST paid by treating the supply as intra- State supply
which is subsequently held as inter-State
supply and vice versa.
Thus,
practically every situation is covered. The GST law requires that every claim
for refund is to be filed within 2 years from the relevant date.
Credit Notes
Further, Section 34 of the CGST Act, 2017 provides for issuance of
credit notes for post supply discounts or if goods are returned back within a
stipulated time. When such credit notes are issued, obviously it would call for
reduction in output liability of the supplier. Hence, the taxes paid initially
on the supply would be higher than what is actually payable. In such a
scenario, the excess tax paid by the supplier needs to be refunded. However,
instead of refunding it outright, it is sought to be adjusted after verifying
the corresponding reduction in the input tax credit availed by the recipient.
Section 43 of the CGST Act, 2017 provides for procedure for reduction in output
liability on account of issuance of such credit notes. This is another form of
refund by adjustments in the output tax liability. Such refund is
not governed under the general refund provisions contained in Section
54 of the CGST Act, 2017.
Treatment for Zero Rated Supplies.
One of
the major categories under which, claim for refund may arise would be, on
account of exports. All exports (whether of goods or services) as well as
supplies to SEZs have been categorised as Zero Rated Supplies in the IGST Act.
“Zero rated supply” under Section 16 of the IGST Act, 2017 means any of the
following supplies of goods or services or both, namely:
(a)
export of goods or services or both; or
(b)
supply of goods or services or both to a Special Economic Zone
developer
or a Special Economic Zone unit.
On account of zero rating of supplies, the supplier will be entitled
to claim input tax credit in respect of goods or services or both used for such
supplies even though they might be non-taxable or even exempt supplies. Every
person making claim of refund on account of zero rated supplies has two
options. Either he can export under Bond/LUT and claim refund of accumulated
Input Tax Credit or he may export on payment of integrated tax and claim refund
of thereof as per the provisions of Section 54 of CGST Act, 2017. Thus, the GST
law allows the flexibility to the exporter (which, will include the supplier
making supplies to SEZ) to claim refund upfront as integrated tax (by making
supplies on payment of tax using ITC) or export without payment of tax by
executing a Bond/LUT and claim refund of related ITC of taxes paid on inputs
and input services used in making zero rated supplies.
Grant of Provisional Refund in Case of Zero Rated
Supplies
GST law also provides for grant of provisional refund of 90%
of the total refund claim, in case the claim relates for refund arising on
account of zero rated supplies. The provisional refund would be paid within 7
days after giving the acknowledgement. The acknowledgement of refund
application is normally issued within a period of 14 days but in case of refund
of integrated tax paid on zero rated supplies, the acknowedgement would be
issued within a period of three days. The provisional refund would not be
granted to such supplier who was, during any period of five years immediately
preceding the refund period, was prosecuted.
Payment of Wrong Tax
Under GST it might happen that the taxable person may pay
integrated tax instead of central tax plus state tax and vice versa because of
incorrect application of the place of supply provisions. In such cases, while
making the appropriate payment of tax, interest will not be charged and the
refund claim of the wrong tax paid earlier will be entertained without
subjecting it to the provision of unjust enrichment.
Claim by a Person who has Borne the Incidence of
Tax
Any tax collected by the taxable person more than the tax due on
such supplies must be credited to the Government account. The law makes
explicit provision for the person who has borne the incidence of tax to file
refund claim in accordance with the provisions of Section 54 of the CGST Act,
2017.
Refunds to Casual/Non-Resident Taxable Persons
Casual/Non-resident taxable person has to pay tax in advance at
the time of registration. Refund may become due to such persons at the end of
the registration period because the tax paid in advance may be more than the
actual tax liability on the supplies made by them during the period of validity
of registration period. The law envisages refund to such categories of taxable
persons also. But the amount of excess advance tax shall not be refunded unless
such person has filed all the returns due during the time their registration
was effective. It is only after such compliance that refund will be granted.
Refund to UN Bodies and Other Notified Agencies
Supplies made to UN bodies and embassies may be exempted
from payment of GST as per international obligations. However, this exemption
is being operationalized by way of a refund mechanism. So, a taxable person
making supplies to such bodies would charge the tax due and remit the same to
government account. However, the UN bodies and other entities notified under
Section 55 of the CGST Act, 2017 can claim refund of the taxes paid by them on
their purchases. The claim has to be made before the expiry of six months from
the last day of the quarter in which such supply was received.
Refund to International Tourist
An enabling mechanism has been introduced in Section 15 of
the IGST Act, 2017 whereby an international tourist procuring goods in India,
may while leaving the country seek refund of integrated tax paid by them. The
term, “tourist” has been defined and refers to any person who is not normally a
resident of India and who enters India for a stay of not more than 6 months for
legitimate non-immigrant purposes.
Unjust Enrichment
Talking about unjust enrichment, a presumption is always
drawn that the businessman will shift the incidence of tax to the final
consumer. This is because GST is an indirect tax whose incidence is to be borne
by the consumer. It is for this reason that every claim of refund (barring
specified exceptions) needs to pass the test of unjust enrichment. And every
such claim if sanctioned is first transferred to the Consumer Welfare Fund. The
GST law makes this test inapplicable in case of refund of accumulated ITC,
refund on account of exports, refund of payment of wrong tax (integrated taxinstead of central tax plus state tax and vice versa), refund of tax
paid on a supply, which is not provided or when refund voucher is issued or if
the applicant shows that he has not passed on the incidence of tax to any other
person. In all other cases, the test of unjust enrichment needs to be satisfied
for the claim to be paid to the applicant. For crossing the bar of unjust
enrichment, if the
refund claim is less than Rs.2 Lakhs, then a self-declaration of the
applicant to the effect that the incidence of tax has not been passed to any
other person will suffice to process the refund claim. For refund claims
exceeding Rs. 2 Lakhs, a certificate from a Chartered Accountant/Cost
Accountant will have to be given.
Standardisation of Procedure
The GST laws makes standardised provisions for making a
refund claim. Every claim has to be filed online in a standardised form which
will be acknowledged (if complete in all aspects) in 14 days. The claim for
refund of amount lying in the credit balance of the cash ledger can be made in
the monthly returns also. The Proper Officer has to convey deficiencies if any
in the refund claim within 14 days and in such cases the claim will be sent
back to the applicant along with the notified deficiencies, and the applicant
can file the refund claim again after making goods the deficiencies. No
deficiency memos can be raised after the mandatory 14 day period. The claim, if
in order, has to be sanctioned within a period of 60 days from the date of
receipt of the claim. If this mandatory period is exceeded, interest will
become payable along with refund from the expiry of 60 days till the date of payment
of refund (rate of interest has been recommended as 6% and 9% under the
provisions of Section 56 of the CGST Act, 2017 by the GST Council in its
meeting held on 18th and 19th May, 2017). However, if the refund
claim is on account of pre-deposit made before any appellate authority, the
interest becomes payable from the date of making such payment.
Documentation
The applicant needs to file elaborate documents along with
the refund claim. Standardised and easy to understand documents have been
prescribed. Thus, for every claim, the main document prescribed is a statement
of relevant invoices (NOT THE INVOICES ITSELF) pertaining to the claim. In case
refund is on account of export of services, apart from the statement of
invoices, the relevant bank realisation certificates evidencing receipt of
payment in foreign currency is also required to be submitted. If it is a claim
made by the supplier to the SEZ unit, an endorsement from the Proper Officer
evidencing receipt of such goods/services in the SEZ also needs
to be submitted. Further, a declaration is also required from the SEZ unit to
the effect that they have not availed ITC of the taxpaid by the supplier. If
the claim is for refund of accumulated ITC, only a statement containing invoice
details as prescribed in the Refund. rules need to
be given. In case of claim of refund on account of any order or judgment of
appellate authority or court, the reference number of the order giving rise to
refund should also be given. For crossing the bar of unjust enrichment, if the
refund claim is less than Rs.2 Lakhs, then a self-declaration by the applicant
to the effect that the incidence of tax has not been passed to any other person
will suffice to process the refund claim. For refund claims exceeding Rs. 2 Lakhs,
a certificate from a Chartered Accountant/Cost Accountant will have to be
given. It is to be noted that such document need not be given if it is a claim
arising on account of zero rated supplies or claim of accumulated ITC or
payment of wrong tax (integrated tax instead of central tax and state tax and
vice versa) or a claim where supply is not done or a refund voucher has been
issued.
Compliance with Natural Justice
In case the claim is sought to be rejected by the Proper Officer,
a notice has to be given online to the applicant stating the ground on which
the refund is sought to be rejected. The applicant needs to respond online
within 15 days from the receipt of such notice. Thus no claim can be rejected
without putting the applicant to notice.
Payment to be Credited Online
The refund claim, wherever due, will be directly credited to the
bank account of the applicant. The applicant need not come to the authorities
to collect the cheques or for any other issues relating to the refund claim.
Power with the Commissioner to Withhold Refund in
Certain Cases
GST law provides that where an order giving rise to a
refund is the subject matter of an appeal or further proceedings or where any
other proceedings under this Act is pending and the Commissioner is of the
opinion that grant of such refund is likely to adversely affect the revenue in
the said appeal or other proceedings on account of malfeasance or fraud
committed, he may, after giving the taxable person an opportunity of being
heard, withhold the refund till such time as he may determine. But it has been
adequately safeguarded by provision for payment of interest @ 9% if, as a
result of appeal,
or further proceedings, the applicant becomes eligible for
refund.
What is GST Refund claim and who is Eligable
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