GST Litigation · Panaji, Goa
Fast correction of GST orders in Goa through rectification under Section 161 and review or revision under Section 108 — fixing errors apparent on the face of the record so an obvious mistake is set right without the cost and delay of a full appeal.
Overview
Not every wrong order needs an appeal. Where an order, notice or decision contains an error apparent on the face of the record — a wrong figure, a missed payment, a clerical or arithmetical slip, or a credit ignored despite being on record — Section 161 allows it to be rectified by the same authority that passed it.
Rectification is time-bound and limited to obvious errors, not debatable points. We assess whether your issue qualifies for a quick Section 161 rectification or revision under Section 108, file the application correctly, and where the error is contestable rather than apparent, route it instead through a proper appeal.
What's covered
Correcting clear errors without a full appeal.
Get a fixed-fee quote →Judging whether the mistake is an 'error apparent on record' or an appeal point.
Filing the rectification request to the authority that passed the order.
Fixing wrong figures, ignored payments or credits in demand orders.
Handling revisional proceedings initiated by or before the authority.
Filing within the rectification window so the right is not lost.
Moving contestable issues to appeal where rectification will not lie.
Our process
We examine the order to confirm the mistake is apparent.
We choose rectification, revision or appeal accordingly.
We submit the Section 161 application with proof.
We follow up until the order is amended or escalate.
Frequently asked questions
Section 161 allows any authority that has passed an order, notice or decision under GST to correct an error that is apparent on the face of the record. It is meant for obvious mistakes, not for re-arguing the merits. We assess and file qualifying rectifications quickly.
It is a clear, self-evident mistake — a wrong total, an arithmetical or clerical error, a payment or input tax credit ignored although it is on record, or an obvious legal slip. A point that requires argument or fresh evidence is not an apparent error and must be taken in appeal instead.
Rectification is time-bound; broadly, it must be sought within the period prescribed under Section 161 from the date of the order, and the authority too can act within a limited window. We track the deadline so your right to rectify is not lost.
No. Rectification only corrects obvious errors and cannot be used to challenge the reasoning or findings of an order. For debatable issues you need a first appeal under Section 107 or a Tribunal appeal. We advise the correct route at the outset.
Section 108 empowers the Revisional Authority to examine the record of proceedings and revise an order that is erroneous and prejudicial to revenue, subject to conditions and time limits. We represent you if revisional proceedings are initiated against an order in your favour.
If a rectification would adversely affect you, the authority must give you an opportunity of being heard first. We ensure that principle is followed and contest any attempt to enhance liability under the guise of rectification.
Book a free consultation and share the order you want corrected. We confirm whether it qualifies, file the Section 161 application and pursue the correction, on a transparent fee.
Related services
Book a free consultation with a qualified Chartered Accountant in Goa. We'll check if it qualifies and file a Section 161 rectification — no obligation.