Where the Input Service Distributor distributes credit in contravention of Section 20
- Input Service Distributor (ISD):
- Defined in Section 2(61), ISD is an office of the supplier which receives invoices for input services and distributes eligible ITC to other GST-registered units of the same PAN (state-wise registrations).
- Example: Head office receives HR consultancy bills → distributes credit to branches proportionate to turnover.
- Section 20 lays down distribution rules:
- Credit can be distributed only against valid documents (tax invoice).
- Distribution must be done only to units having the same PAN.
- The amount should be distributed in proportion to turnover of each unit during the relevant period.
- Credit related to specific unit → must be distributed only to that unit.
- Contravention occurs when:
- ISD distributes ITC to an ineligible unit (wrong recipient).
- ISD distributes ITC which is not available under law(blocked credits under Section 17(5)).
- Distribution is excessiveor not in proportion to turnover.
- ISD takes ITC on invoices other than input services (illegal).
✅ Meaning: Any incorrect allocation in breach of Section 20 triggers Section 21.
Consequence: “Excess distribution of credit to one or more recipients”
- Recipient of credit = any branch, state office, or unit to which the ISD passes ITC.
- Excess ITC = when a unit receives more than its due share:
- Example: ISD had ₹1 lakh consultancy service ITC; correct distribution was ₹40,000 to Unit A and ₹60,000 to Unit B. Instead, ISD passed ₹70,000 to A, only ₹30,000 to B.
→ Unit A has ₹30,000 excess ITC (benefit not allowed by law).
- Example: ISD had ₹1 lakh consultancy service ITC; correct distribution was ₹40,000 to Unit A and ₹60,000 to Unit B. Instead, ISD passed ₹70,000 to A, only ₹30,000 to B.
✅ This excess creates a liability because ITC is a concession/privilege and can only be availed as per the prescribed formula.
Liability: “Such excess credit shall be recovered from such recipients”
- Liability falls not on ISD office, but on the recipient branch/unit which wrongly availed it.
- Rationale: That unit has actually used/utilized the ITC against its GST liabilities.
- Unit benefiting from excess enjoys wrong credit → must undo the benefit.
✅ Compliance Tip: Each branch/unit must reconcile ITC received from ISD on a monthly basis with actual eligibility.
Interest: “Along with interest”
- Recovery is not only of wrong ITC but also interest under Section 50.
- Interest @ 18% per annum (general cases) is payable from date of availment till the date of reversal/payment.
- If “fraudulent availment,” interest can be higher (24%). [Depends on whether case falls under Sec. 74].
✅ Reason: To disallow unjust financial advantage (using wrong ITC instead of paying cash).
Recovery Provisions: “The provisions of Section 73, Section 74 or Section 74A, as the case may be, shall apply mutatis mutandis”
- Mutatis mutandis = with necessary changes applied contextually.
- Recovery procedure is not separately prescribed here — instead, it borrows the machinery of tax recovery provisions.
Let’s decode the 3 recovery routes:
(a) Section 73 – Recovery without fraud
- Used when excess ITC is due to error, oversight, or bona fide mistake.
- Period of limitation: 3 years from due date of return or from erroneous refund.
- Penalty: 10% of tax or ₹10,000, whichever is higher.
(b) Section 74 – Recovery with fraud/suppression
- Invoked when excess ITC is due to fraud, willful misstatement, suppression of facts.
- Period of limitation: 5 years.
- Penalty: 100% of tax amount.
- Interest rate may be higher (24%).
(c) Section 74A – Recovery in case of excess availment/utilisation without intent (inserted by Finance Act 2024, effective 1‑11‑2024)
- Middle path between Sec. 73 and 74.
- Applicable when ITC is wrongly availed/utilised but not due to fraud.
- Provides reduced penalty and faster dispute settlement.
- More taxpayer-friendly especially in ISD cases, since excess distribution is often technical rather than fraudulent.
✅ Thus, post‑Nov 2024, all ISD disputes can be fairly classified under correct recovery sections.
Procedural Flow for Recovery
- Detection → Audit, Scrutiny, or Self-reporting by taxpayer.
- Show-Cause Notice (SCN) → Issued under Section 73/74/74A (mutatis mutandis).
- Reply & Hearing → Recipient can submit reconciliations, turnover data, etc.
- Adjudication → Authority quantifies excess ITC + interest.
- Recovery → Adjustment from Electronic Credit Ledger or enforced payment.
Illustration with Example
- Company ABC Ltd. has ISD (head office in Delhi).
- ITC of ₹12,00,000 (advertising service to promote all branches).
- Correct distribution based on turnover:
- Maharashtra Branch (60%) → ₹7,20,000
- Karnataka Branch (40%) → ₹4,80,000
Mistakenly ISD distributes:
- Maharashtra = ₹8,00,000 (excess ₹80,000)
- Karnataka = ₹4,00,000 (shortfall ₹80,000).
Impact:
- Recovery of ₹80,000 + interest from Maharashtra Branch (recipient of excess).
- Karnataka cannot “claim” shortfall legally unless ISD files correction.
- If error was intentional → Sec. 74 applies.
- If error was genuine → Sec. 73 / Sec. 74A after Nov 2024 applies.
Practical Compliance Aspects
- Monthly Reconciliation: Branches must reconcile GSTR-2B vs ISD distribution (GSTR-6).
- Audit Check: GST Department scrutinizes ISD distributions closely as many disputes arise in MNCs with shared services.
- Internal Controls: ISD desk must verify correct turnover ratios before distributing ITC.
- Risk Factor: Wrong ISD distribution has cascading effect → wrongful refunds, wrongful ITC utilization, and penalties.
Effect of 2024 Amendment
- Prior to Nov 2024, only Section 73 & 74 applied → taxpayers often faced harsh proceedings even for minor ISD mistakes.
- From 1‑11‑2024, Section 74A inclusion provides a relief channel → classifies procedural/technical errors separately, avoids penal treatments.
This change was notified via Finance Act, 2024 (Act 15 of 2024, s.120).
