
GSTN Advisory, Dated 25-09-2025
1. Introduction
The Goods and Services Tax Network (GSTN) has issued an advisory to remind taxpayers about the three-year time limit for filing GST returns. This rule, introduced by the Finance Act, 2023 and brought into effect from 1 October 2023 through Notification No. 28/2023 – Central Tax, has important implications for taxpayers who have pending or delayed returns. The advisory serves as a final reminder to comply with the new restriction within the prescribed timeline.
2. Applicability of the Three-Year Rule
As per the advisory, no GST return can be filed after three years from its original due date. This limitation applies to various types of returns under the GST law, specifically those governed by Section 37 (Outward Supply), Section 39 (Payment of Liability), Section 44 (Annual Return), and Section 52 (Tax Collected at Source). The rule is applicable across multiple forms, including GSTR-1, GSTR-1A, GSTR-3B, GSTR-4, GSTR-5, GSTR-5A, GSTR-6, GSTR-7, GSTR-8, and GSTR-9/9C.
3. Coverage of Key Returns
By extending the restriction to such a wide range of return types, the Government has ensured comprehensive coverage across the GST compliance framework. This includes outward supply returns, liability payments, annual returns, TCS-related filings, and input service distributor returns. The measure seeks to enforce timeliness, prevent indefinite delays, and bring greater discipline into the GST compliance system.
4. Advisory for October 2025 Deadline
The GSTN has further clarified that any return with a due date falling three years or earlier will be permanently blocked for filing on the GST portal if not submitted by the October 2025 tax period. Taxpayers who have outstanding returns from prior periods have thus been urged to complete their pending compliance within this window, failing which their returns will become non-submittable under the law.
5. Conclusion
With this advisory, the GSTN has reinforced the importance of timely filing of returns and the consequences of non-compliance. The three-year limitation provides certainty to both taxpayers and tax authorities while strengthening the integrity of GST data. Taxpayers are advised to review their compliance history, ensure that no returns remain pending beyond the permissible window, and meet the October 2025 deadline to avoid permanent filing restrictions.
Click Here To Read The Full Update
The post GSTN Warns Pending GST Returns Cannot Be Filed After 3 Years appeared first on Taxmann Blog.
