City
Epaper

GST reform to make ITC refund easy for identified and risk-evaluated taxpayer: CBIC Chairman

By IANS | Updated: September 10, 2025 19:45 IST

New Delhi, Sep 10 The GST Council has recommended that in case of an identified and risk-evaluated taxpayer, ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 10 The GST Council has recommended that in case of an identified and risk-evaluated taxpayer, a refund can be granted within seven days and without an officer's intervention, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) Chairman, Sanjay Kumar Agarwal, has said.

In an interaction with IANS, Agarwal said that in the case of exports, the supply is zero-rated, and in the case of zero-rated supplies, a refund of the accumulated input tax credit (ITC) is claimed.

"So now, the GST Council has recommended that in case of an identified and risk-evaluated taxpayer, a refund can be granted within 7 days and without the officer's intervention," he said.

Earlier, Agarwal mentioned that in order to continue with ease of doing business reforms, the GST registration process has been further simplified, especially for small businesses and low-risk applicants.

Under the new system, registration will be granted within three working days to eligible applicants.

Small businesses that estimate they will not be availing more than Rs 2.5 lakh of input tax credit can opt for this simplified registration.

"Such registration will be granted automatically by the system within three working days. After operating this registration, if they grow and they want to transition to the normal registration, again, there is a provision and based on the risk analysis for the normal category of registration, they can be transitioned to the normal category," Agarwal added.

The Centre has rationalised the indirect tax structure, cutting the current four slabs down to two -- scrapping the 12 per cent and 28 per cent rates, while retaining the 5 per cent and 18 per cent slabs.

Meanwhile, in what comes as a relief to e-commerce exporters, the GST Council has approved DGFT’s proposal to eliminate the value threshold for GST refunds on low-value consignments.

The relevant section of the CGST Act, 2017, will be amended to allow refunds for exports made with payment of tax, regardless of value.

This long-awaited reform addresses the concerns of small exporters, particularly those shipping through courier or postal services, and is expected to greatly simplify procedures and facilitate low-value e-commerce exports, according to the Commerce Ministry.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

InternationalTwo Indian men shot dead outside gurdwara in Italy

NagpurParatwada Video Scandal: Minor Victim Comes Forward, Tightens Noose Around Main Accused in Amravati Case

BusinessGovt adopts crop-specific approach to boost high value agriculture

InternationalHouthi rebels on high alert to confront "any aggression against the Yemeni people"

CricketIPL 2026: RR win toss, choose to bat first against KKR

Business Realted Stories

Business3D Glass Solutions to invest Rs 1,943 crore in Odisha for advanced chip packaging facility; Targets 2030 production

BusinessGovernment grants licence for manufacturing key air defence cannons to Zen Technologies

BusinessMultiple states to borrow Rs 16,900 crore through RBI SGS auction on April 21

BusinessIndia targets 100 GW nuclear power capacity by 2047: CEA Chief Ghanshyam Prasad

BusinessTime to reduce dependency on China for critical minerals: G7