Goods and Service Tax (“GST”) is
the major source of revenue for both center and state governments and any non-compliance
on part of the taxpayer may result in huge losses to the government. Government
keeps various checks to ensure that taxpayers are complying with the provisions
and all transactions are genuinely entered such as Reconciliation ITC appearing
in GSTR-2A with ITC availed in GSTR-3B, Assessment by the departmental officer,
Audit by specified professional etc.
Audit is defined under Section
2(13) of CGST Act as “examination of
records, returns and other documents maintained or furnished by the registered a person under this Act or the rules made thereunder or under any other law for
the time being in force to verify the correctness of turnover declared, taxes
paid, refund claimed and input tax credit availed, and to assess his compliance
with the provisions of this Act or the rules made thereunder”. Therefore, audit
is a verification exercise conducted by an independent professional to ensure
that all provisions of GST law have been complied with.
In the financially growing world
where everyone wants to earn big in a short period of time some of them
manipulate their books of accounts to evade tax and adopt various kinds of
malpractices such as wrong data in the books, bogus purchase or supply inward
transaction without any underlying movement of goods or not filing the proper
returns as per the CGST act 2017, thus in this scenario government need to take
the steps to stop these activities to ensure the good practices in the tax
system.
1. Who is required to get GST
audit
1.1 GST Audit by Taxpayer
As per Section 35(5) of CGST Act,
if aggregate turnover of a person exceeds INR 2 Crores* during a year then such
person shall get his accounts audited by a Chartered Accountant or Cost
Accountant.
Further, as per Section 44(2) of
CGST Act, If aggregate turnover of a person exceeds INR 2 Crores * then he
shall file following documents:
Annual Return
Copy of Audited Financial
Statement
A Reconciliation statement
reconciling values declared in Annual return and value appearing in Audited
Books of Accounts. Reconciliation statements should be submitted in Form
GSTR-9C.
* For FY 2018-19, the threshold
of INR 2 Crores has been increased to INR 5 Crores.
2. Audit by Departmental
Officer
2.1 General Audit under GST
Taxpayers whose turnover is
within the threshold limit of INR 2 crores are waived off from being audited.
However, no threshold limit is prescribed for Audit by Departmental Officer.
As per Section 65(1),
commissioner or any other officer authorised by him may undertake audit of any
registered person for any financial year or part of financial year or multiple
parts of Financial year. Audit must be completed within a period of 3 months
from date of commencement or such extended period as may be prescribed.
2.2 Special Audit under GST
During any audit, investigation
or assessment, if Assistant commissioner or officer above his rank is of the
opinion that value is not correctly declared by the taxable person or credit
availed is not correct and then considering the interest of revenue, he may
direct such registered person to get his accounts audited by Chartered
Accountant or Cost Accountant nominated by the commissioner. Prior approval of
commissioner is required for this purpose.
3. Objective of GST Audit
Efficiently manage the taxation-
the most important objective is to manage the tax system of the country more
efficiently. GST has narrowed down all the indirect taxes to one tax which made
the task easy for taxpayers as well as the tax departments.
Compliance of the taxpayer – It
is not possible for the department officer to scrutinise books of accounts of each
taxpayer. Therefore, the concept of GST Audit was envisaged. GST audit main
objective is to measure the compliance of the taxpayer with respect to GST Law.
CGST act 2017 and rules stated in the act.
GST audit checks whether all the
tax has been followed by the Taxpayer– Audit of GST not only checks the
accuracy of the accounts but also the credibility of the taxpayers and his
business. Audit actions discover the taxpayer’s under declare and manipulative
liability also stopped them to do further.
Eliminate the manipulative
trading - With introduction of GST, practise of issuance of fake invoices,
invoice issuance without underlying supply of goods or services, has increased
significantly to pass on fake ITC. Audit helps in prevention of such practises
and makes the owner stop to enter false transactions and trading
4. Due date of filing of GST
Audit Report
GST Audit report is to be filed along
with Reconciliation statement in form GSTR-9C. It should be filed by the 31
December of year following the relevant year.
However, considering the fact
that GST was a newly introduced tax, therefore, due date of filing of GSTR-9C
was extended till 31st January, 2020 for FY 2017-18. However, due to the
covid-19 pandemic, the central board of indirect taxes and customs have
postponed the reconciliation of FY 2018-19 till 31st December 2020.
5. Areas to be covered under
GST Audit
Each transaction related to the
GST has to be analysed thoroughly by the Auditor keeping in mind provisions of
GST Law.
Following are the certain key
areas to be analysed by an auditor to make the audit report authentic.
5.1 Correctness of Effective
GST Rates:
First and the basic point to be
checked is whether the rate of GST for different products or services have been
correctly plotted, i.e., GST rates are correctly allocated to goods or services
in the category to which they belong (i.e. 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%).
Whether any changes in the rate
during the financial year have been given effect or not?
Any exemption or abatement
claimed, if any, is post satisfying all the underlying conditions given for the
purpose of claiming such exemption or abatement. E.g., GST is payable on
restaurant service at a reduced rate of 5% subject to the condition that no ITC
is claimed related to such service.
5.2 Comparison of Data as per
Books of Accounts and GST Returns
For outward supply, Auditors need
to carry out the comparison between sales and output liability recorded in
books of accounts and data furnished in GSTR-3B and GSTR-1. Any difference
should be properly reconciled.
For inward supply, comparison
should be made between the ITC Claimed in Books of Account, ITC claimed in GSTR-3B
and ITC auto-populating in GSTR-2A. Any variation in the same should be
properly reconciled in order to prevent the taxpayer from claiming any excess
input tax credit. As per amendment in CGST Rules, No ITC is admissible for
invoices not appearing in GSTR-2A. Therefore, ITC against invoices not
appearing in GSTR-2A should be reversed or necessary amendments should be made
by suppliers in his GSTR-1.
Auditor should check that ITC
must be claimed within the due date given under Section 16 of CGST Act, i.e.,
due date of filing of GST return of September Month of the following year or
date of filing of annual return of concerned year, whichever is earlier.
5.3 Compliance of provisions
related to Job-Work
If a person is obtaining services
of a job-worker then the auditor should check whether the principle has
generated challan and E-way bill for movement of goods from its location to the
location of the job-worker.
Whether all inputs or capital
goods, sent to the job-worker, have been received back within 1 year or 3 years
respectively from date of removal. In case of non-compliance, whether
applicable GST has been paid on or not with applicable interest.
Whether the principal has filed
ITC-04-”Details of goods/capital goods sent to the job worker and received
back” within due dates.
In case of direct supply of goods
from a job-workers location, whether GST has been paid on such supply or not?
5.4 Reversal of ITC in case of
default in payment beyond 180 days
If the assessee has failed to
make payment of consideration for inward supply alongwith applicable GST within
180 days from date of Invoice then whether ITC corresponding to such amount has
been reversed or not in accordance with Section 16 of CGST Act read with Rule
137 of CGST Rules.
Further, whether ITC has been
reclaimed or not once such payment is made?
5.6 E-waybill
Whether, E-way bill has been
generated for all movement of goods of value exceeding INR 50,000 in case of
inter-state supply or threshold limit applicable for intra-state movement.
Necessary reconciliation should
be made between e-way bill data with the sales invoices to check if there was
any bogus entry to evade the tax.
5.7 Reversal of ITC on Exempt
Supply
In case of exempted supply, the
auditor should make sure that Input Tax Credit related to inward supplies
directly related to such exempted supply has not been taken.
In case of use of inward supply
partially toward exempted supply and partially toward taxable supply then
whether proportional ITC has been reversed in accordance with Section 17 of
CGST Act. For example Mr. A is using rented property for his two businesses
namely shirt stitching and flour trading. Supply of shirt is taxable under GST.
However, supply of flour is an exempted supply. Therefore, proportionate ITC
attributable toward exempted supply should be reversed.
5.8 Reversal of Ineligible ITC
Auditors should check that no ITC
is available on inward supply on which ITC is restricted under Section 17(5) of
CGST Act such as inward supply of motor vehicle, rent-a-cab service, Life
insurance, work contract service for construction of an immovable property etc.
5.9 Tax Invoicing under GST
Whether Tax invoice or Bill of
supply or any other document has been prepared in accordance with Chapter VII
of CGST Act, 2017 read with Chapter VI of CGST Rules, 2017. Further, whether
the invoice contains all information as mentioned in CGST Rules or not?
Whether Invoice is issued within
the time limit given under CGST Rules.
Whether self invoice is raised
for inward supply received from unregistered persons on which recipient is
liable to pay GST under Reverse Charge Mechanism.
Whether all applicable invoices
or vouchers are being prepared or not such as refund voucher, receipt voucher
etc.
5.10 Export of Goods or
Services
In case of export of goods,
whether all the underlying conditions have been duly complied with or not?
In case of export of service,
whether all underlying conditions are satisfied such as place of supply of
service falls outside India, payment for such service is received in
convertible foreign exchange etc.?
5.11 Other
Whether GST has been charged on
all supplies between distinct persons, i.e., stock transfers between units of
the same person have different GST registrations.
Whether the place of supply is
correctly determined or not?
Value of supply has been determined in accordance with Section 15 of CGST Act or not?
Original Source of the article: https://vjmglobal.com/blog/gst/checklist-for-gst-audit/?key=7e5f626a5d
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