Composition Scheme under GST

Composition Scheme, Composition Scheme under GST

The Goods and Services Tax Act have decided to keep the Composition-Scheme. This scheme aims to minimize the compliance burden for small taxpayers. Any dealer who falls under the prescribed category, if interested can opt to be registered under the composition scheme. Once registered under the composition scheme, the dealer is required to file lesser number of returns, shall not be eligible to take any inputs tax or raise a tax invoice.

Under the GST law following person shall not be eligible to opt for composition scheme:

  • Any Taxpayer whose turnover exceeds fifty lakhs.
  • Any Taxpayer who is involved in interstate supply or import-export of goods.

Benefits of Composition Scheme:

  • Very less compliance, fewer returns to be filled
  • Less blockage of funds in form of Input Tax Credit
  • Easy computation of Tax Liability

Benefits of Composition Scheme:

Composition Scheme, Composition Scheme under GST

Very less compliance, fewer returns to be filled

Composition Scheme, Composition Scheme under GST

Less blockage of funds in form of Input Tax Credit

Composition Scheme, Composition Scheme under GST

Easy computation of Tax Liability

Other Topics

GST RET 1 Normal Returns Explained

GST RET-1 Normal Return explained. Covers who must file, the monthly and quarterly filing structure, ANX-1 outward supply annexure, ANX-2 auto-populated inward supplies, and how to claim input tax credit under the new system.

SAHAJ GST RET 2 Explained

SAHAJ GST RET-2 return form explained. Covers who is eligible to file the simplified SAHAJ return, turnover limits, B2C only supply conditions, filing frequency, and how it differs from the normal GST return.

SUGAM GST RET 3 Form Explained

SUGAM GST RET-3 form explained. Covers who can use the SUGAM simplified return, turnover eligibility, B2B and B2C supply conditions, quarterly filing option, and key differences from SAHAJ and the normal GST return.

By |2018-12-06T15:43:19+05:30June 2nd, 2017|Blog, Manage Taxes|
Go to Top