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GST Show-Cause Notice: Section 73 vs Section 74 — Know the Difference Before You Reply
The section cited in your notice determines whether your penalty is 10% or 100% of the tax demand. Read this before you respond to anything.
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TaxTip Editorial — Reviewed by a Senior CA, FCA (23+ years in practice, GST & litigation)

This article is based on the enacted provisions of the CGST Act 2017, Finance (No. 2) Act 2024, and judicial precedents from the Allahabad, Madras, and Madhya Pradesh High Courts up to May 2026. It is written for business owners, finance teams, and their advisers.

Why the Section Number in Your Notice Matters Enormously

When the GST department issues a show-cause notice (SCN) demanding unpaid tax, the most important line in that notice is not the amount demanded — it is the section under which the notice is issued.

Section 73 and Section 74 of the CGST Act 2017 both deal with the same types of situations: non-payment or short-payment of GST, erroneous refunds, and wrongful input tax credit (ITC) claims. But they carry fundamentally different legal consequences.

10%Maximum penalty under Section 73 (non-fraud)
100%Penalty under Section 74 (fraud) — equal to tax amount
3 yrsLimitation period under Sec 73
5 yrsLimitation period under Sec 74

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The same tax shortfall — 10x different penalty

If your business has an ITC mismatch of ₹10 lakh and the department raises a demand, your penalty exposure is ₹1 lakh under Section 73 or ₹10 lakh under Section 74. The factual situation is identical. Only the section invoked is different. This is why GST litigation practitioners have consistently observed that the section cited by the officer is often the most consequential decision in the entire proceeding — and why you must evaluate it the moment you receive a notice.

The situation has become more nuanced since the Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024 introduced a new Section 74A, which applies to all demands arising from FY 2024-25 onwards and replaces the old Sections 73 and 74 for those years. All three provisions — and which one applies to your notice — are covered in full below.

Section 73 — The Non-Fraud Show-Cause Notice

Section 73 of the CGST Act covers cases where tax has not been paid, has been short-paid, has been erroneously refunded, or where ITC has been wrongly availed or utilised — for reasons other than fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts.

In plain terms: Section 73 is for genuine errors, clerical mistakes, classification disputes, and bona fide differences of interpretation. The law recognises that these situations deserve proportionate treatment — lower penalties and a shorter limitation window — compared to deliberate evasion.

When Section 73 is triggered

The most common triggers for a Section 73 notice include:

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Common reasons for a Section 73 notice

  • GSTR-1 vs GSTR-3B mismatch — outward supply figures differ between the two returns
  • ITC claimed in GSTR-3B exceeds ITC available in GSTR-2B (mismatch with supplier filings)
  • ITC claimed on ineligible items — blocked credits under Section 17(5)
  • Short payment of GST due to incorrect tax rate applied
  • Erroneous refund sanctioned and later identified as excess
  • Non-reversal of ITC on exempt supplies in the applicable ratio
  • Return discrepancies identified through GSTN data analytics

Time limits under Section 73

The show-cause notice must be issued at least 3 months before the expiry of the time limit for passing the order. The order must be passed within 3 years from the due date of filing the annual return for the relevant financial year (or from the date of erroneous refund, as the case may be).

Penalty under Section 73

Penalties are calibrated to encourage voluntary compliance. The earlier you act, the lower the penalty:

Stage at which tax + interest is paid Penalty
Before issuance of show-cause notice (voluntary) NIL — no penalty at all
Within 30 days of SCN issuance NIL — no penalty if tax + interest paid
After SCN but before adjudication orderReduced penalty window 10% of tax or ₹10,000 — whichever is higher
After adjudication order 10% of tax or ₹10,000 — whichever is higher

💡 The most important takeaway for Section 73: If you receive a Section 73 notice and you agree with the demand, paying the full tax + interest before the show-cause notice is issued (through voluntary DRC-03 payment) results in zero penalty. If you pay within 30 days of the SCN, penalty is still nil. These windows are your most cost-effective options.

Section 74 — The Fraud Show-Cause Notice

Section 74 applies when the department alleges that the non-payment, short-payment, erroneous refund, or wrongful ITC has occurred by reason of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts with intent to evade tax.

This is a significantly more serious proceeding. The penalty is far higher, the limitation period is longer, and the legal burden on the department — to actually prove the allegation of fraud — is also higher. Unfortunately, in practice, Section 74 is frequently invoked without adequate justification, and this creates a major litigation risk for businesses that do not challenge the invocation early.

What “fraud”, “wilful misstatement” and “suppression of facts” mean

Legal meanings

  • Fraud: Intentional deception to gain a financial advantage — deliberate misrepresentation, fabrication of invoices, or creating false transactions.
  • Wilful misstatement: A deliberate, conscious act of stating something incorrectly, knowing it to be false — not a bona fide error or difference in interpretation.
  • Suppression of facts: Deliberate concealment of material facts with the specific intent to evade tax. Mere omission is not suppression — there must be intentionality. (Supreme Court in Khurja Scrap Trading: suppression means failure to disclose with intent to evade.)

What does NOT qualify as fraud

  • Clerical errors in GSTR-1 or GSTR-3B entries
  • ITC claimed on invoices where the supplier later turns out to be non-compliant
  • Bona fide difference in interpretation of HSN classification or tax rate
  • ITC mismatch arising purely from timing differences in supplier filing
  • Failure to reverse ITC on exempt supplies due to incorrect understanding
  • Return discrepancies without evidence of deliberate concealment
Time limits under Section 74

The SCN must be issued at least 6 months before expiry of the order-passing deadline. The order must be passed within 5 years from the due date of the annual return for the relevant financial year. This extended window — two years longer than Section 73 — is one reason officers prefer invoking Section 74, even in borderline cases.

Penalty under Section 74
Stage at which tax + interest is paid Penalty
Before issuance of show-cause notice (voluntary) 15% of tax
Within 30 days of SCN issuance 25% of tax
Within 30 days of adjudication order 50% of tax
After the above window — post-order 100% of tax (equal to full tax amount)
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Section 74 also carries prosecution risk

Unlike Section 73, matters adjudicated under Section 74 can be referred for prosecution under Section 132 of the CGST Act. Section 132 provides for imprisonment of up to 5 years in cases of tax evasion above ₹5 crore. Even where prosecution does not ultimately proceed, the risk of it materially affects settlement negotiations and the urgency of professional response.

Section 74A — The New Unified Section From FY 2024-25

The Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024, on the recommendation of the 53rd GST Council Meeting (June 2024), inserted a new Section 74A into the CGST Act, effective from FY 2024-25 onwards. This section consolidates the earlier Sections 73 and 74 into a single provision for all demands arising from FY 2024-25 onwards.

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Which section applies when — the definitive rule

  • FY 2023-24 and earlier: Section 73 (non-fraud) and Section 74 (fraud) continue to apply. Expect active proceedings under these for the next 2-4 years as limitation periods play out.
  • FY 2024-25 onwards: Section 74A is the only applicable section for all demands — whether fraud or non-fraud. Sections 73 and 74 do not apply.
  • Mixed periods: If a demand spans both old and new financial years, the appropriate section applies to each period separately.

What Section 74A changes

Old Sec 73 (non-fraud)

  • 3-year limitation for SCN
  • Penalty: 10% of tax (max)
  • NIL penalty if paid before/within 30 days of SCN
  • No prosecution risk

Old Sec 74 (fraud)

  • 5-year limitation for SCN
  • Penalty: up to 100% of tax
  • 15% penalty even if paid before SCN
  • Prosecution possible

New Sec 74A (unified)

  • 42-month limitation — all cases
  • Non-fraud: 10% penalty (or ₹10k)
  • Fraud: 100% penalty
  • 60-day window (doubled from 30 days)
  • No SCN if tax involved < ₹1,000
  • Fraud classification at adjudication, not SCN stage

The most significant practical change in Section 74A

Under the old framework, the officer had to decide at the notice stage itself whether a case was fraud (Section 74) or non-fraud (Section 73). This binary created perverse incentives — officers would mechanically invoke Section 74 even in borderline cases, partly to avail the 5-year limitation period and partly to inflate penalty exposure. Section 74A removes this problem by deferring the fraud vs non-fraud classification to the adjudication stage. Both types proceed under one notice. The nature of the case is crystallised when the order is passed, not when the notice is issued.

Additionally, the reduced-penalty window has been doubled from 30 to 60 days — giving businesses more time to evaluate whether early settlement is the better commercial decision.

Complete Side-by-Side Comparison

Parameter Section 73 Section 74 Section 74A
Applicable for FY 2023-24 and earlier (non-fraud) FY 2023-24 and earlier (fraud) FY 2024-25 onwards (all cases)
Trigger / allegation Non-payment / short-payment without fraud Non-payment due to fraud / wilful misstatement / suppression Any non-payment / short-payment / wrong ITC — fraud classification at adjudication
SCN limitation period 3 months before 3-year order deadline 6 months before 5-year order deadline Within 42 months of annual return due date
Order passing deadline 3 years from annual return due date 5 years from annual return due date 12 months from SCN date (max 54 months total)
Penalty — before SCN (voluntary) NIL 15% of tax Non-fraud: NIL; Fraud: 15%
Penalty — within reduced-penalty window after SCN NIL (if paid within 30 days) 25% of tax (within 30 days) Non-fraud: NIL; Fraud: 25% — within 60 days
Penalty — after adjudication order window 10% of tax (or ₹10,000) 50% within 30 days of order; 100% thereafter Non-fraud: 10%; Fraud: 50% within 60 days; 100% thereafter
Maximum penalty 10% of tax 100% of tax Non-fraud: 10%; Fraud: 100%
Prosecution risk None Yes — Section 132 Yes (if fraud found at adjudication)
Minimum SCN threshold None specified None specified ₹1,000 minimum — no SCN below this

Penalty Reduction Windows — Use Them Strategically

Both the old and new provisions build in time-limited windows where prompt payment significantly reduces your penalty exposure. These are not just administrative concessions — they are strategic options that should be evaluated with your CA before any response is filed.

1

Voluntary payment before any notice (DRC-03)

If you identify a tax shortfall yourself — through internal reconciliation, an audit, or CA review — you can make a voluntary payment through Form DRC-03 before any notice is issued. Under Section 73, this results in zero penalty. Under Section 74 / 74A fraud cases, the penalty is 15%. This is the single best outcome available in a GST demand situation and is only possible if you act before the department issues a notice.

2

Payment within 30 days of SCN (old Sections 73 / 74) or 60 days (Section 74A)

Once a notice is received, the reduced-penalty window runs for 30 days under old provisions (60 days under the new Section 74A). Paying the full tax + interest within this window eliminates the penalty under Section 73, and reduces it to 25% under Section 74 / 74A fraud cases. This window is often the best commercial option when the tax demand is substantially correct and the dispute is only about penalty.

3

Contest the section invoked — not just the amount

If you believe Section 74 has been invoked incorrectly and the matter should be Section 73, the right response is to challenge the jurisdictional foundation of the notice — not just the demand amount. Courts have consistently held that Section 74 cannot be invoked without specific, articulable allegations of fraud in the notice itself. A notice that merely states figures without explaining the fraud/suppression basis is jurisdictionally infirm. This is a viable and often successful strategy.

4

Personal hearing — always request one

Under Section 75(4) of the CGST Act, if the officer proposes to pass an order adverse to you, a personal hearing must be offered. Always request and attend the personal hearing — it is an opportunity to present your position orally and place additional documents on record. Courts have set aside orders where the hearing requirement was violated as a breach of natural justice.

DRC Forms — Which Form Does What

GST demand proceedings have their own set of prescribed forms. Using the wrong form, or filing at the wrong stage, can have procedural consequences. Here is a clean reference:

Form Purpose Issued by / Filed by Stage
DRC-01A Pre-notice consultation — intimation of probable demand Department issues; taxpayer responds Before SCN is issued (under Rule 142(1A))
DRC-01 Show-cause notice (SCN) — the formal demand Department issues Formal initiation of proceedings
DRC-03 Voluntary payment of tax / payment in response to SCN Taxpayer files Any time — before SCN, during proceedings, or in response to SCN
DRC-06 Reply to show-cause notice — taxpayer’s written defence Taxpayer files In response to DRC-01 (within notice period)
DRC-07 Final demand order — adjudication order confirming demand Department issues after hearing After adjudication is complete
DRC-08 Rectification of DRC-07 demand order Department issues If error in order
APL-01 Appeal to GST Appellate Authority against DRC-07 order Taxpayer files Within 3 months of DRC-07 order date
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DRC-06 is your most important document

The DRC-06 reply to the show-cause notice is the foundation of your entire case. Everything you want the adjudicating officer — and any appellate authority — to consider must be in the DRC-06. Arguments not raised in the DRC-06 are far harder to raise at appeal stage. It should be drafted with full legal rigour, supported by documentary evidence, and — if fraud is alleged — must specifically challenge the jurisdictional basis of the Section 74 invocation.

First Step When You Receive a GST Show-Cause Notice

The 30 minutes immediately after receiving a notice are the most important. Here is exactly what to do:

1

Note the section — 73, 74, or 74A

Read the first paragraph of the notice. Identify which section has been cited. This single piece of information determines your maximum penalty exposure, the limitation timeline, and your legal strategy. Everything flows from this.

2

Note the response deadline and the period under dispute

The notice will specify a response deadline — usually 15 to 30 days. Note it immediately and set a calendar reminder for 7 days before that date. Also check which financial years are covered. This determines whether the 3-year or 5-year limitation applies and whether Section 74A is applicable.

3

Assess whether Section 74 is correctly invoked

If the notice is under Section 74, ask: does the notice actually allege fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts — with specifics? Or does it simply list figures and numbers? If the latter, this is a strong basis to challenge the invocation. Do not reply to a Section 74 notice as if it were a Section 73 matter — you may inadvertently concede the fraud characterisation.

4

Evaluate the voluntary payment option

If the demand is largely correct and you are facing a Section 73 notice, paying via DRC-03 within 30 days of the SCN eliminates the penalty entirely. Calculate whether this is cheaper than contesting. For Section 74, even voluntary payment carries a 25% penalty — here the decision is more nuanced and legal advice is essential.

5

Contact a CA or GST advocate immediately

Do not draft and file the DRC-06 reply without professional guidance. The reply creates the evidentiary record for all subsequent proceedings including appeal. A poorly drafted reply — or one that concedes points unnecessarily — can foreclose viable defences at the appellate stage.

What the Courts Have Said — Key Judicial Precedents

Courts across India have, with growing consistency, held that Section 74 cannot be invoked casually. If your notice under Section 74 lacks specific fraud allegations, you have a viable legal challenge. Here are the key precedents to be aware of:

Neeyamo Enterprise Solutions v. Commercial Tax Officer
Madras High Court — November 2025

For invoking Section 74, the show-cause notice must clearly articulate which of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression is alleged — supported by material in the notice itself. Mere discrepancies do not suffice.

Raghuvansh Agro Farms Ltd. v. State of U.P.
Allahabad High Court — December 2025

Absence of the foundational ingredients of Section 74 renders proceedings without jurisdiction. Section 74 cannot be used as a general recovery tool. The court directed refund of amounts deposited.

GR Infra Projects Ltd. v. State of Madhya Pradesh
Supreme Court (SLP, interim stay) — 2025

The Supreme Court prima facie agreed that a Section 74 SCN bereft of material particulars — listing only figures without explaining fraud or suppression — was deficient on its face, and stayed proceedings.

HCL Infotech Ltd. v. Commissioner, Commercial Tax
Allahabad High Court — September 2024

Section 74 SCN quashed as it lacked reason explaining fraud/wilful misstatement/suppression to evade tax. Proceedings held to be without jurisdiction when reasons are absent. Liberty given to issue fresh SCN under Section 73.

Khurja Scrap Trading v. Additional Commissioner
Allahabad High Court / Supreme Court — 2025

The Supreme Court affirmed: “suppression” means failure to disclose with intent to evade — not mere omission. A plain reporting error or clerical omission cannot be characterised as suppression of facts.

Bharat Mint & Allied Chemicals v. State of U.P.
Allahabad High Court — 2025

Failure to decide under Section 73 due to time or administrative burden is no ground to invoke Section 74. Escalation from 73 to 74 without factual basis is impermissible. Courts will scrutinise and strike down arbitrary escalation.

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The legal standard in plain terms

Based on the consistent judicial view across multiple High Courts and the Supreme Court’s prima facie observations, the standard is clear: Section 74 requires affirmative, specific allegations of mens rea (intent) — not merely arithmetical discrepancies. If your notice does not contain explicit findings of fraudulent intent with supporting material, the invocation of Section 74 is open to legal challenge. A well-drafted DRC-06 reply should raise this jurisdictional objection prominently as the first ground of defence.

How to Approach Your Reply — Strategy by Situation

Situation 1: Notice under Section 73, demand is largely correct

Evaluate whether paying the tax + interest within the 30-day window (to eliminate penalty entirely) is more cost-effective than contesting. If the dispute is genuine, file a DRC-06 with supporting documentation addressing each point raised. Be factual and precise. Concede legitimate demands; contest inaccurate ones. Do not volunteer admissions beyond what is necessary.

Situation 2: Notice under Section 74, but no fraud was involved

This is the most common and most dangerous situation. Your DRC-06 reply must do two things simultaneously: (a) challenge the invocation of Section 74 by pointing out that the notice does not contain specific allegations of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression — and that the matter should be proceeded under Section 73; and (b) address the factual merits of the demand with complete documentary support.

Cite the judicial precedents above. File the reply as a formal legal document, not just a factual narration. If the officer ignores the jurisdictional objection and passes an adverse order under Section 74, this becomes ground 1 of your appeal before the GST Appellate Authority.

Situation 3: Notice under Section 74A (FY 2024-25 demand)

Under Section 74A, the fraud/non-fraud classification is made at adjudication, not at the notice stage. However, your DRC-06 reply should still clearly establish the non-fraudulent nature of the shortfall — with complete documentation — to ensure the officer classifies the matter as non-fraud (10% penalty ceiling) rather than fraud (100% penalty) at the adjudication stage. Do not assume the outcome; build the record.

What must always be in your DRC-06 reply

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Essential elements of a strong DRC-06

  • Jurisdictional objection — if Section 74 is invoked without specific fraud allegations, state this clearly as the first ground
  • Point-by-point response to every allegation in the notice — do not leave any point unanswered
  • Documentary evidence — GSTR-1, GSTR-3B, GSTR-2B, purchase invoices, e-way bills, bank statements, supplier payment records
  • Legal and judicial support — cite relevant High Court decisions supporting your position
  • ITC eligibility basis — if ITC is in dispute, cite the specific provision under which it was claimed and the documentation supporting it
  • Request for personal hearing — always include a formal request under Section 75(4)
  • Without prejudice language where appropriate — especially when making any partial concession

Frequently Asked Questions

Strictly speaking, this is not permissible if the original notice was under Section 73 and no fresh facts pointing to fraud have emerged. Courts have consistently held that the nature of proceedings is determined by the SCN — an officer cannot substitute a Section 73 notice with Section 74 consequences at the adjudication stage without issuing a fresh notice with the fraud allegations explicitly stated. If this happens, it is a strong ground to challenge the adjudication order in appeal.
A DRC-01A is a pre-notice consultation form issued under Rule 142(1A). It is the department’s intimation that it is considering issuing a formal show-cause notice and gives you an opportunity to pay the disputed amount before the notice is issued. If you pay via DRC-03 at this stage, you avoid the SCN entirely and pay zero penalty under Section 73 (or only 15% under Section 74 cases). Treat a DRC-01A seriously — it is an important early-settlement opportunity. Do not ignore it.
Courts generally follow the principle of “alternative remedy” and are reluctant to entertain writ petitions when the taxpayer has not first exhausted the statutory remedy of filing a reply and contesting at the adjudicating authority level. However, there are exceptions: where the SCN is clearly without jurisdiction (no fraud allegations), where there is a violation of fundamental rights, or where the entire proceeding is void. The Supreme Court’s stay in the GR Infra case is an example of the court intervening at SCN stage where the notice was prima facie deficient. Whether to approach the High Court directly is a tactical decision that requires legal advice specific to your facts.
This is one of the most litigated areas in GST. The legal position has evolved: under the current law (post January 2022, when Section 16(2)(aa) was inserted), ITC eligibility requires the credit to appear in your GSTR-2B — which depends on your supplier filing their GSTR-1. If the supplier has not filed, the ITC does not appear in your 2B and is technically ineligible. However, in cases where you have made genuine purchases — with invoices, e-way bills, and actual payment — courts have often protected ITC rights, especially for periods before the Section 16(2)(aa) amendment. For pre-January 2022 periods, the department cannot deny ITC solely on the ground of GSTR-2A mismatch. This is a complex area — get specific advice.
Under Section 107 of the CGST Act, an appeal against the adjudication order (DRC-07) must be filed before the GST Appellate Authority within 3 months of the date of the order (with a provision for condonation of delay by a further 1 month in limited circumstances). The appeal must be filed in Form APL-01. Pre-deposit of 25% of disputed tax amount is mandatory for the appeal to be admitted. Do not miss the 3-month deadline — unlike income tax appeals, GST condonation powers are narrow.
No — the sections are mutually exclusive and cannot be clubbed. Section 74A applies only to FY 2024-25 onwards; Sections 73 and 74 govern FY 2023-24 and earlier. Each period must be adjudicated under the applicable section with its own limitation timeline, penalty structure, and reduced-payment window. They will typically be separate notices and require separate replies and separate DRC-07 orders. However, in practice, if a single audit or investigation covers multiple years, the department may issue a bundled notice — in which case each year’s demand must be specifically identified and responded to separately.

Received a GST Notice? Act Before the Deadline

The penalty gap between Section 73 and Section 74 can be ten times the tax amount. Our senior CAs with 23+ years of GST and litigation experience will review your notice, assess whether Section 74 is correctly invoked, and draft a legally sound DRC-06 reply.

📄 Sources: CGST Act, 2017 (as amended by Finance (No. 2) Act, 2024); CBDT and GST Council Notifications; 53rd GST Council Meeting recommendations (June 2024); Neeyamo Enterprise Solutions v. Commercial Tax Officer (Madras HC, November 2025); Raghuvansh Agro Farms v. State of U.P. (Allahabad HC, December 2025); GR Infra Projects v. State of MP (Supreme Court SLP, 2025); HCL Infotech v. Commissioner (Allahabad HC, September 2024); Bharat Mint v. State of U.P. (Allahabad HC, 2025); Khurja Scrap Trading v. Additional Commissioner (2025 AHC 151783).

Disclaimer: This article is for general informational and educational purposes only. GST law is subject to frequent amendment through notifications, circulars, and judicial decisions. The case law referenced represents judicial observations up to May 2026 and is not exhaustive. This article does not constitute legal or professional advice. Every matter has specific facts that may alter the applicable law and strategy. Always consult a qualified CA or GST advocate before responding to a GST show-cause notice.

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