GSTR-2B Reconciliation · Panaji, Goa
GSTR-2B reconciliation and ITC optimisation in Goa — static monthly ITC statement matching, Rule 36(4) compliance, blocked credit identification under Section 17(5), and maximum legitimate ITC by qualified CAs in Panaji.
Overview
GSTR-2B is the static monthly Input Tax Credit statement auto-generated by the GST portal on the 14th of each month, based on supplier filings received by that date. Under Rule 36(4) of the CGST Rules, a registered taxpayer can claim ITC in GSTR-3B only to the extent reflected in GSTR-2B — making monthly GSTR-2B reconciliation with the purchase register a mandatory compliance exercise, not optional housekeeping.
GSTR-2B reconciliation has two dimensions: supplier-side (identifying missing credits due to non-filing) and buyer-side (identifying ineligible ITC such as blocked credits under Section 17(5) — personal use, motor vehicles, food and beverages, club memberships, etc.). Claiming blocked credits in error is a common audit trigger. Our GSTR-2A reconciliation and CA-managed filing services deliver both dimensions every month.
What we cover
Purchase register vs GSTR-2B matching, blocked credit screening, Rule 36(4) compliance, and ITC optimisation.
Talk to our CA →Matching every purchase invoice in the books against GSTR-2B — categorising as: (a) in both (claimable); (b) in books but not GSTR-2B (follow up with supplier); (c) in GSTR-2B but not books (verify duplicate or phantom credit).
Ensuring GSTR-3B ITC claims do not exceed GSTR-2B eligible credit — the strict 100% restriction means excess claims trigger automatic reversal demands with 24% interest.
Identifying invoices where ITC is blocked under Section 17(5): motor vehicles (for non-eligible businesses), food and beverages, outdoor catering, club memberships, health services, works contracts for immovable property, and personal-use items — and ensuring these are excluded from ITC claims.
Confirming that GST paid under reverse charge (RCM) on inward supplies from unregistered persons and notified categories has been correctly self-assessed, paid in cash, and then claimed as ITC in the same period.
Tracking invoices in the purchase register that are not yet in GSTR-2B (supplier filed after 14th) — carrying these forward to the next month's GSTR-2B and ensuring they are claimed within the annual ITC window.
Compiling the full-year GSTR-2B reconciliation as input for GSTR-9 — identifying all ITC claimed correctly, ITC missed (declarable in GSTR-9), and ITC reversed — with documentary support for each category.
GSTR-2B — key rule
ITC in GSTR-3B is strictly limited to what appears in GSTR-2B. Excess claims are automatically reversed with 24% interest.
GSTR-2B is auto-generated on the 14th of each month — fixed snapshot of supplier-filed GSTR-1 data through the previous month.
ITC on motor vehicles, food, outdoor catering, club memberships, and personal-use items is blocked — claiming these attracts penalty.
ITC for a financial year can be claimed up to the GSTR-3B for November 30 of the following year — mismatches must be resolved before this date.
Frequently asked questions
GSTR-2B is the static monthly auto-populated ITC statement generated on the 14th of each month, showing ITC available from supplier-filed GSTR-1, GSTR-5, and GSTR-6 for the previous tax period. Rule 36(4) restricts ITC claims in GSTR-3B to the amount in GSTR-2B — making it the official and legally enforceable basis for ITC. Unlike GSTR-2A (which updates dynamically), GSTR-2B is locked and does not change after the 14th.
Under Rule 36(4), ITC claimed in GSTR-3B in excess of GSTR-2B is deemed inadmissible. The department can issue a DRC-01 demand for the excess ITC with interest at 24% per annum from the date of claim and a penalty of up to 100% of the tax under Section 122. The GST portal's auto-comparison of GSTR-3B ITC against GSTR-2B is increasingly used to generate automated notices for Rule 36(4) violations.
Section 17(5) provides a specific list of goods and services on which ITC is not available: motor vehicles and conveyances (unless used for specified purposes such as transportation of passengers, goods, or driving training); food and beverages, outdoor catering, beauty treatment, health services, cosmetic/plastic surgery; club memberships; travel benefits to employees (leave travel, home travel concession); works contracts for construction of immovable property; and goods or services for personal consumption. Claiming ITC on these categories triggers audit findings and demands.
If a purchase invoice in your books is absent from GSTR-2B, do not claim ITC for it in the current month's GSTR-3B — it would violate Rule 36(4). Investigate the reason: (a) supplier has not filed GSTR-1 — contact the supplier; (b) supplier used wrong GSTIN — request correction; (c) invoice date falls in next month's GSTR-2B cut-off — claim in next month. Track the invoice and claim ITC in the GSTR-3B of the month it appears in GSTR-2B, within the annual window.
ITC for supplies received in a financial year can be availed in GSTR-3B returns filed up to the earlier of: (a) 30 November of the following financial year; or (b) the due date of GSTR-9 for that year. ITC not claimed within this window is permanently lost — it cannot be claimed in subsequent years. This makes it essential to resolve all GSTR-2B mismatches before the window closes each November.
GSTR-9 Tables 6, 7, and 8 require a detailed breakdown of: ITC availed in GSTR-3B during the year; ITC reversals made; ITC available as per GSTR-2B for the year; and ITC eligible but not availed (declarable in Table 13 of GSTR-9). A complete 12-month GSTR-2B reconciliation provides all the data needed for these tables. Without it, GSTR-9 preparation is guesswork — leading to errors and potential notices.
Related services
Unreconciled GSTR-2B mismatches create annual return problems and blocked ITC. Our qualified CAs in Panaji, Goa deliver a monthly GSTR-2B reconciliation report — protecting every rupee of legitimate ITC.