The journey of a free
flow of credit and uploading transaction wise information starts from Form
GSTR-1. It has the details of all outward supplies made by the suppliers.
Similarly, details of all inward supplies of goods or services received during
a month have to be filed in a Form
GSTR-2.
The end
result is that all inputs and outputs for a particular dealer are kept handy in
the Electronic Cash Ledger. Although the above forms have to be verified and
accepted by the counter party, i.e. the transactions have to be approved by
both supplier and recipient. Once all transactions are approved, then electronic
cash ledger is generated, and the amount payable or available as credit is
displayed.
What Is GSTR-2?
Once the suppliers
have filled up their information of sales made during a tax month in Form GSTR-1, it is now the task
of recipients to file their receipts of goods or services in Form GSTR-2. This
form is a culmination of all the details made by all the suppliers and is
available for validation for the recipients.
It has to be filed by
the 15th of the next month, i.e. 5 days after the filing of GSTR-1.
Since the details of
the suppliers’ data are already available, this form is auto-populated from
such details. The dealers will have to approve or amend the transactions one by
one to get input tax credit eligibility.
There will be a
penalty if GSTR-2 in not filed on time.
Who needs to file GSTR-2?
GSTR-2 has
to be filed by all the dealers who are registered under the GST Act. Those who
had filed GSTR-1 shall be required to file GSTR-2 as well. Likewise, input
service distributors and dealers registered under the compounding scheme shall
not be required to file GSTR-2.
Even
E-Commerce Operators, Tax deductors, and Non-resident dealers need not file
GSTR-2. They have a separate, respective forms to file.
What needs to be filed in
GSTR-2?
This is a
much-detailed form when compared to GSTR-1. Let’s have a look at the contents
of the form.
·
Name and address of the dealer – this field shall be
auto-populated after logging in to the GSTN portal.
·
15-digit GSTIN of the dealer – this field shall be auto-populated
after logging in to the GSTN portal.
·
The return filing period – the month and the year for which the
return is being filed.
·
Details of all the incoming materials and services received by
the dealer – this field is auto-populated with the details of GSTR-1. This is a
key part of the form that displays the purchases of the dealer made during the
tax month. There can be differences in the list of invoices, which can be
corrected by the dealer filing the return. Such dealer can fill in the extra or
additional details manually. The corresponding supplier will have a
notification to that effect, and the same will be reflected in GSTR-1A, which
the supplier has to accept accordingly.
·
Changes made to details of incoming materials from previous
periods – similar to the above, where there are changes made to the details of
incoming supplies relating to previous periods. Dealers have to fill this
manually. Moreover, the suppliers have to accept such changes in the relevant
GSTR-1A.
·
Details of all imports made of capital goods or goods – since
imports are considered as an inter-state movement of goods, accordingly IGST
will be charged in this case.
·
Changes made to the details of imports made during the previous
periods – any changes thereof relating to the previous periods have to be
reported in this field.
·
Details of services received from persons resident outside India
– This field relates to import of services. GST has to be paid on a reverse
charge basis.
·
Changes made to the details of services received from persons
resident outside India of previous periods – any changes with respect to
imports of services made during a previous period has to be updated here.
·
Details of debit notes or credit notes raised during the tax
period – the details mentioned herein shall be available for validation in
respective counter party forms.
·
Details of changes made to the debit or credit notes of previous
periods – the changes made to the debit or credit notes of the previous months
are to be mentioned here. Any such change will directly impact the reverse
charge taxes.
·
Details of materials received from unregistered persons during
the tax month – this is a common field for mentioning all kinds of supplies
that have been received from unregistered persons, both intra-state and
inter-state. The supplies that are received shall include materials received
from an unregistered person, composition dealer and remaining non-GST, exempted
or zero-rated supplies.
·
Details of input tax credit received from an Input Service
Distributor – Input service distributor is required to file GSTR-5, the details
of which shall be auto populated in this heading. This type of credit arises
when head office disburses credits to its branch offices. As a result, the
branch office can claim credit related to the same.
·
Details of credits arising out of tax deducted at source – where
the dealer transacts in specified contracts, resulting in tax being deducted at
source, the details of the same has to be mentioned here. The field is
auto-populated from GSTR-7 filed by the person deducting tax.
·
Details of credits arising out of tax credited at source – under
the GST law, E-Commerce operators are required to collect tax at source while
making payment to its merchants. Further, these E-Commerce operators are
required to file GSTR-8, the details of which are auto populated in this field.
·
Details of input tax credit received against an invoice – an invoice
against which input tax credit was claimed, but the supplier, due to certain
reasons did not file the same, can be filled up in this field.
·
Details of output tax liability arising due to reverse charge,
even though no invoice was received – as per the GST provisions, even though an
invoice is not received but due to the provisions of time of supply, the GST
implication comes earlier, then such details of tax liability arising out of
such transactions have to be mentioned here.
·
Any amendments made to the above fields
·
Details of tax paid – this heading includes tax paid for the
reporting period, tax paid on account of reverse charge and tax paid for the
previous periods as well.
·
Details of input tax credit reversals – in the event of credit
being reversed due to any reasons, this field will be filled in. The reasons
are available as a drop down to choose from.
·
Amendments to the details of input tax credit reversals – any
changes made with respect to above field has to be mentioned here.
Format of GSTR-2
This is the official format of GSTR-2 announced by GSTN.
Common errors in filing
purchase transactions
Even after
carefully filing the forms, there are certain errors or omissions that might
creep up while filing the final returns. These can be inadvertently made while
filling up the form. Some common errors that can come up can result due to an
omission of invoices both by the purchaser or the receiver.
The
purchaser might record an invoice that is missing in the purchase ledger of the
recipient. As such, the supplier shall ask the recipient to accept the
additional invoice after proving its validity. The recipient has to accept the
same in GSTR-2A. Until such acceptance, provisional credit shall be granted to
the supplier.
The
supplier might mention wrong, incorrect details such as incorrect GSTIN of the
purchaser. The purchaser shall have the option to modify the invoice to such
extent or even delete the same. The supplier in GSTR-1A will then accept such
changes.
Other common
mismatch events are incorrect amounts filed by both the parties. The option to
modify or delete such mismatched invoices are available with both the supplier
and purchaser in their respective forms.
Where a
purchaser finds an invoice that is not available in accounts, i.e. goods are in
transit, and the invoice for the same has not been received, the purchaser will
have the option to keep the same pending for the tax month. There can also be a
mismatch of HSN/SAC codes for the goods or services mentioned by both
the parties. In both cases, the counter party can modify the invoice
information.
Article courtesy - Profitbooks
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