City
Epaper

Maha govt tables bill to amend GST Act to provide transparent services to taxpayers

By IANS | Updated: July 3, 2025 18:48 IST

Mumbai, July 3 Deputy Chief Minister and Finance Minister Ajit Pawar on Thursday tabled the Maharashtra Goods and ...

Open in App

Mumbai, July 3 Deputy Chief Minister and Finance Minister Ajit Pawar on Thursday tabled the Maharashtra Goods and Services Tax (Amendment) Bill, 2025 in the Assembly to amend the Maharashtra Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 with a total of 13 amendments.

The bill aims to implement the amendments in the Central GST Act at the state level as per the Finance Act, 2025, passed by the Central government in March 2025. This will create uniformity in the laws of the Centre and the state, and taxpayers will get more convenient and transparent services, he added.

The bill proposes revised provisions in the input service distributor, time of supply, distribution of deposit, ease of appeal process, track and trace mechanism, as well as provisions on the supply of specific goods.

Amendments have also been suggested in the provisions of Sections 2, 12, 13, 17, 20, 34, 38, 39, 107, 112, 122, 148 and Schedule. In particular, the new provisions will be applicable to the supply of goods in Special Economic Zones or Free Trade Warehouses. If only a penalty is demanded while appealing, only a 10 per cent advance payment will be allowed.

The bill proposes to amend the provision with regard to payment of pre-deposit at 10 per cent instead of 25 per cent for filing appeals before the Appellate Authority in cases involving only the demand of penalty without involving the demand of tax.

The bill proposes to insert a new provision to provide for payment of pre-deposit at 10 per cent for filing appeals before the Appellate Tribunal in cases involving only the demand of penalty without involving the demand of tax.

Section 122 B is being inserted to provide a penalty for contravention of provisions related to the Track and Trace Mechanism provided under section 148A. The bill proposes to amend Schedule III with retrospective effect from July 1, 2017.

Due to this amendment, the supply of goods warehoused in a Special Economic Zone or in a Free Trade Warehousing Zone to any person before clearance for exports or to the Domestic Tariff Area shall be treated neither as a supply of goods nor as a supply of services.

The Deputy Chief Minister said that these amendments are not limited to legal compliance only, but are aimed at providing easy and transparent services to taxpayers. He also clarified that this is an important step taken to make the implementation of the GST system more efficient.

--IANS

sj/dan

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

EntertainmentOTT Releases This Week (June 30 – July 06): Good Wife, Thug Life, Heads of State, Kaalidhar Laapata, Uppu Kappurambu and More

EntertainmentJames Corden reveals Rihanna was responsible for getting him on board "The Smurfs'

HealthHow Long Do Periods Last? 5 Important Facts About Menstrual Bleeding Duration

EntertainmentShweta Tiwari’s Former Husband Opens Up About Their Troubled Marriage

TechnologyIndian stock market settles in green amid hopes for potential India-US trade deal

National Realted Stories

NationalFormer Trinamool RS member moves Calcutta HC challenging suspension of medical registration

NationalTrain services resume in parts of NE after a day's disruption

NationalI urge people to visit Kashmir without fear, says Shivraj Chouhan

NationalIndian Oil using solar power at 36,000 retail outlets in push to green energy: Hardeep Puri

NationalDemand in Indian cement sector to rebound to 7-8 pc in FY26