GSTPAM News Bulletin February 2026
GIST OF TRIBUNAL JUDGEMENTS (VAT)
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Compiled by CA Rupa Gami |
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M/s Moonlight Electrical Contractors and Engineers Pvt. Ltd. in M.A. No. 76 and 78 of 2024 dated 06/01/2025
Delay in filing second appeal by 170 days. After the order was received, the appellant had directed its accountant to handover the order to its Chartered accountant to take necessary action. During that time, the Chartered Accountant was on leave and thereafter the accountant was on leave. Later it skipped the attention of the accountant. On perusing the pending matters, it came to the notice of the accountant and immediate steps were taken to file the second appeal. The mistake was not deliberate or intentional. The Hon’ble Tribunal observed that in a plethora of judgements the Supreme Court has considered that the delay condonation should be considered liberally so as to serve the cause of justice. Delay was condoned after imposing cost of Rs.25000/- per appeal.
(Petitioner represented by Adv. C.B.Thakar)
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M/s Dattatray Enterprises in Vat S.A. No. 445 of 2019 dated 17/01/2025
The appellant is in the business of undertaking works contracts. The first appellate authority had not allowed the credit of TDS on works contract which was erroneously deducted by M/s Hindustan Petroleum Corporation Ltd. on labour charges and the same was admitted by the company by way of clarification in the letter. Copies of TDS Certificates were produced during the hearing. Some of the Certificates for 2012-13 were issued by the party in the subsequent year 2013-14. The Hon’ble Tribunal directed the first appellate authority to verify if the TDS was considered in 2013-14 and if not the same be allowed in 2012-13. The matter was remanded for verification and the appellant was to submit the proof of submission of original certificates to the first appellate authority and if not to submit fresh certificates obtained from the party.
(Petitioner represented by CA H.N.Swamy)
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M/s Silent Enterprises in M.A. No. 24 of 2025 dated 29/01/2025
Delay of 230 days in filing of second appeal. Delay caused due to the accountant of the appellant having
filed the order in wrong file of completed file and on receipt of recovery reminder, filed the second appeal immediately. The Hon’ble Tribunal observed that the delay was caused due to negligence of the accountant and therefore the dealer should not suffer. Delay was condoned after imposing costs of Rs.5000/-.
(petitioner represented by accountant of the applicant)
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M/s Engineering Equipment Corporation in Vat S.A. No. 503 of 2019 dated 11/02/2026
Against the Assessment Order passed under the CST Act demand was raised due to want of declaration forms. Thereafter, Rectification Application was filed and the original Forms were submitted. However, no Rectification Order was passed. The appellant had carried the matter in appeal. During the rectification proceedings all the original Forms were submitted. However, the file was lost by the Assessing authority. The first appellate authority confirmed the assessment order. After receipt of the appeal order, the file with original declaration forms was found. The matter was remanded to the first appellate authority to verify the forms and pass the order.
(Petitioner represented by STP Dhaval Talati)
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M/s Pehal Enterprises in Vat S.A. No. 206 of 2024 dated 11/02/2025
The appellant was assessed and demand was raised on various grounds. In appeal, no one appeared and the order was passed ex parte. It was informed that the earlier consultant did not appear in the matter and when the documents were called for, the same were not produced. Only on receiving the appeal dismissal order. The appellant came to know that the notices were not attended to by the consultant. The Hon’ble Tribunal observed that the appellant was diligent in pursuing the matter but his consultant was not attending the matter. Now a new consultant was appointed and therefore one more opportunity should be given to the appellant to produce valid documents. Matter was remanded to first appellate authority.
(Petitioner represented by Adv. A.B.Shah)
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M/s Pinaki Projects in M.A. No. 65 of 2005 dated 24/02/2005
Delay of 554 days in filing of second appeal. In first appeal nobody attended and dismissal order was passed. The applicant did not receive the dismissal appeal order as the appeal order was served upon the advocate of the appellant. The appellant obtained certified copy of the order and filed the second appeal. After getting the certified copy, the appeal was filed in time. The Hon’ble Tribunal observed that the applicant should not be a sufferer due to lapses on the part of the Advocate. However, as the applicant himself was not diligent, one more chance was to be given after imposing costs of Rs. 25000/-. (Petitioner represented by Adv C.B.Thakar)
INCOME TAX UPDATES
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Compiled by By. Adv. Ajay Talreja |
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What to do When NRI recieved Income Tax Notice in India
An Income Tax notice in India creates stress for many NRIs, but it does not mean guilt. A notice means the Income Tax Department needs data, documents, or an explanation. If you act fast and present records in a structured way, you can close most matters at the assessment stage.
1) Why NRIs Are Receiving More Income Tax Notices
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Data matching through AIS, TIS, Form 26AS, SFT reports
The Department matches your return with third-party reports from banks, mutual funds, registrars, property registries, and brokers. If AIS shows a transaction but your return does not reflect it, the system flags the gap. This leads to emails, intimations, and then statutory notices in many cases.
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High-value transactions in India without a return
Property sale or purchase, large NRO credits, big mutual fund redemptions, and large bank deposits can trigger scrutiny when the return is missing or the income disclosure does not align with data feeds.
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TDS form errors and mismatch for NRIs
NRIs face TDS mismatch issues when the buyer or payer uses an incorrect TDS section or form. The mismatch blocks credit in Form 26AS/AIS and creates tax demand risk.
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Cross-border reporting under CRS and FATCA
Financial institutions report certain account and investor details under CRS and FATCA frameworks. This increases visibility of cross-border holdings and flows, and it raises compliance checks.
2) What Each Notice Means and What It Requires
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Section 142(1): Inquiry and document call
Section 142(1) notice asks you to file a return (if missing) or submit information and documents to support the return and income position. It can ask for bank statements, rent agreements, sale deeds, capital gain working, foreign tax proof, and source details.
What you must do:
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Submit a point-by-point response with uploads through the e-filing portal.
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Provide a clean reconciliation between AIS/26AS and your return.
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Provide a written note on your residential status and income scope.
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Section 133(6): Information call to you or a third party
Section 133(6) gives power to seek information from a person, bank, employer, payer, or other third party. In NRI matters, banks receive such notices for NRO credits, interest, or remittance details. Taxpayers can also receive a 133(6) notice for transaction confirmation.
Key point: Non-response creates risk of adverse inference, but additions cannot rest on non-response alone when records exist and get filed at appeal stage.
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Section 143(2): Scrutiny selection
Section 143(2) means the Department has selected the return for scrutiny to verify correctness of income, loss or tax. This is the gateway to a detailed assessment.
What you must do:
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Treat this as a structured audit.
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Submit evidence for each issue: capital gains, rent, interest, TDS, DTAA claims, foreign tax credit, and source trails.
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Section 144: Best judgment assessment
Section 144 applies when you do not file a return, do not furnish required details, or do not attend when required. The Assessing Officer (AO) can complete assessment on available material and make additions. This leads to high demands and penalties.
Courts set aside Section 144 outcomes where the taxpayer later offers records and the case needs a fair hearing. In S. S. Traders 2025 (HC) 1651, Madras High Court set aside an order passed under Sections 147 read with 144/144B, gave another chance to submit documents and required a 15% deposit within 30 days.
3) Step-by-Step Action Plan for NRIs After a Notice
Step 1: Verify notice authenticity and timeline
Log in to the Income Tax e-filing portal and check the notice in the e-Proceedings or “e-File” section. Note the DIN, section, assessment year, and due date.
Step 2: Identify the trigger issue
Common triggers for NRIs:
- Property sale: capital gains, TDS credit gap, section 195 or 194-IA mismatch
- NRO interest and TDS rate
- Mutual fund redemptions and capital gains
- Rent income with missing TDS certificates
- Cash deposit or large credits with source questions
Step 3: Build a document pack
Include:
- Passport pages and travel chart for the year (residential status)
- Bank statements for NRO/NRE for the relevant period
- Sale deed, purchase deed, cost proofs, improvement bills
- Rent agreement, rent ledger, municipal tax receipts
- Form 26AS, AIS/TIS download, reconciliation note
- TDS certificates (Form 16A), challans if any
- DTAA documents (see next section)
Step 4: File a structured response
Use a table format inside your submission note: “Notice point your response documents attached.” Keep each response tied to evidence.
Step 5: Use representation power if needed
If you cannot manage uploads and hearings from abroad, appoint an authorised representative in India and keep a signed authority letter ready.
4) Important DTAAs to Consider: Issues, Solutions, and Examples
India has DTAAs with many countries where NRIs live: USA, UK, UAE, Canada, Australia, Singapore, and others. DTAA relief works under Section 90 when you meet treaty conditions and provide documents.
A) Core DTAA documents NRIs must keep ready
- Tax Residency Certificate (TRC) from the country of residence
- Form 10F (for details not covered in TRC)
- Tax Identification Number of that country
- Proof of foreign tax paid or foreign tax return extract (when credit is claimed)
Tax authorities challenge treaty benefits when TRC or tax proof is missing.
B) Common DTAA issues and solutions
Issue 1: Bank deducts high TDS on NRO interest
Solution: Submit TRC and Form 10F to the bank and claim treaty rate where the DTAA allows a lower rate. If excess TDS has happened, claim refund through return with DTAA schedule support.
Example: NRI in UAE earns NRO interest. Bank cuts TDS at domestic rate. DTAA route can reduce the rate when documents are on file, and refund claim can recover excess deduction.
Issue 2: Salary earned outside India but credited to an Indian account Credit location does not control taxability. Service location and residential status control the outcome, subject to DTAA.
In Gautam Arora v DCIT, ITAT Kolkata held that an NRI who worked in Morocco and stayed outside India for over 182 days qualified for DTAA benefit under Article 15(1) of India–Morocco DTAA, even when salary came to India, subject to proof of tax in Morocco.
Issue 3: Capital gains disputes and treaty claimsCapital gains taxation depends on asset type and DTAA article. Real estate gains often remain taxable in India under many treaties. Some securities gains have treaty protection in some treaty versions, subject to limitation clauses and amendments.
5) Practical Safeguards and Case Law Support
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Jurisdiction and service defects can void proceedings
ITAT Chandigarh held reassessment invalid where the wrong officer issued notice to an NRI and proper service proof was absent. In Raman Pillai Sivasankara Pillai v DCIT, ITAT treated the notice as void and held that case transfer did not cure lack of jurisdiction without a fresh valid notice.
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Mandatory procedure in scrutiny and reassessment
In Shaily Juneja v ACIT, Delhi High Court quashed reassessment where notice under Section 143(2) was not issued, and it treated 143(2) compliance as mandatory in that context.
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Best judgment exposure under Section 144
Non-submission leads to Section 144 risk. Courts grant relief when records exist and the taxpayer seeks a fair hearing, as seen in S. S. Traders.
Conclusion: The NRI Notice Response Checklist
When you receive a notice under Sections 142(1), 133(6), 143(2), or face Section 144 risk, follow this checklist:
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Download notice from the portal and record the due date.
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Map the notice section to the action required.
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Reconcile AIS/26AS with your return and transactions.
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Prepare a single evidence set with clear labels.
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Submit a point-wise response with document links.
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For DTAA claims, submit TRC, Form 10F and foreign tax proof.
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Raise jurisdiction and service issues where facts support it.
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Avoid non-response, since Section 144 follows non-cooperation.
Only Final Stamp Valuation Determined by Collector Applies u/s 50C: ITAT allows Full Section 54F Exemption
n a recent ruling, Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT), Raipur, held that only the final stamp valuation fixed by the Collector applies under Section 50C of the Income Tax Act, 1961. It deleted a 74.5 lakh capital gains addition and held that Section 54F exemption must be based on actual sale proceeds reinvested, not deemed values.
The appeal arises from an assessment order dated 29.03.2016, passed under section 147 read with section 143(3) for the assessment year 2008-09. The order had adopted the stamp duty valuation of 5.75 crore instead of the actual sale consideration of 1.30 crore for land situated at Labhandi, Raipur, resulting in the disputed addition.
The petitioner, Mahesh Shrivastava, argued that his th share of 21.75 lakh was fully reinvested in a residential house, entitling him to complete exemption under Section 54F.
Also, the Collector of Stamps, Raipur, after prolonged litigation and pursuant to directions of the Chhattisgarh High Court, had finally determined the property’s value at 1.60 crore on 30 September 2021. This valuation, the petitioner submitted, had attained finality and was already accepted in the identical case of his brother, where ITAT Raipur had granted relief 2024.
The revenue, argued the case vehemently and prayed for dismissal of the appeal.
The tribunal, after hearing both sides, noted that the deeming fiction under Section 50C could not be stretched to deny exemption under Section 54F. It alsoobserved that law cannot compel a taxpayer to invest more than the actual consideration received, citing the maxim “lex non cogit ad impossibilia” which means that the law cannot possibly compel a person to do something which is impossible to perform.
The tribunal also held that where the assessee claims exemption under section 54F of the Act, the net consideration when deployed in the acquisition or construction of a residential house, it should be eligible for exemption, and the provisions of section 50C should not be imported for such computation.
The Tribunal ruled that the stamp duty value adopted under Section 50C can only be used for computing capital gains, and cannot be treated as the actual net consideration of the property for purposes like Section 54F exemption.
The bench of Partha Sarathi Chaudhury ( judicial member), Avdhesh Kumar ( account member) directed the Assessing Officer to grant full exemption under Section 54F since the cost of the new residential asset was not less than the net sale consideration.
Accordingly, the assessee’s appeal was allowed in full.
Six Months Only Golden Opportunity Delay Today Means Zero Tension Tomorrow
FAST DS 2026 Introduction
FAST DS is a one time six month voluntary disclosure scheme announced in Budget 2026. It offers a second chance to resident individual taxpayers who hold small foreign income or assets but failed to report them correctly in earlier Income Tax Returns. This initiative has been introduced by the Ministry of Finance, Government of India. The core purpose is to legally correct foreign disclosure mistakes that happened due to lack of awareness.
Core Objective of the Scheme
FAST DS is not a punishment mechanism it is a correction opportunity. When taxpayers voluntarily disclose foreign income and foreign assets and pay the prescribed tax or fee they receive protection from harsh Black Money actions. This scheme has been designed to help genuine small taxpayers achieve peaceful compliance.
Who Can Use This Scheme
The scheme is meant exclusively for resident individual taxpayers. It applies to those who worked abroad those holding overseas investments foreign bank accounts ESOPs or foreign shares. Anyone who made genuine mistakes without intentional tax evasion can benefit from this relief.
Two Main Eligibility Categories
The first category includes taxpayers who failed to disclose both foreign income and foreign assets in earlier returns.
The second category includes taxpayers who already paid tax on foreign income but forgot to disclose the related foreign assets in Schedule FA.
FAST DS offers a practical solution for both groups.
Foreign Income That Can Be Disclosed
Foreign salary foreign interest foreign dividends and foreign capital gains can all be disclosed under this scheme. These incomes must be reported through Schedule FSI in the Income Tax Return.
Foreign Assets That Can Be Disclosed
Foreign bank accounts overseas properties foreign shares foreign mutual funds and ESOP holdings can be disclosed using Schedule FA. Even small assets that were previously missed can now be legally regularized through this scheme.
Monetary Limits Under the Scheme
Taxpayers who failed to disclose both foreign income and assets can generally regularize holdings up to one crore rupees through FAST DS.
Taxpayers who already disclosed foreign income and paid tax but missed asset reporting can regularize foreign assets up to five crore rupees by paying only a small flat fee.
This is why FAST DS is specifically called a small taxpayers scheme.
Tax or Fee Payable
If both foreign income and assets were fully undisclosed thirty percent tax on the asset value or income plus an
additional thirty percent levy must be paid. Once paid there will be no penalty or prosecution.
If foreign income was already taxed and only asset disclosure was missed a flat fee of about one lakh rupees is sufficient. This offers significant financial relief.
How to Avail This Opportunity
First collect complete details of foreign income and foreign assets. Then file the correct Income Tax Return by reporting foreign income in Schedule FSI and foreign assets in Schedule FA. Next calculate the applicable tax or fee under FAST DS and pay online. After payment an acknowledgement is generated which serves as legal protection proof. The declaration must be accurate. Once submitted and paid the amount is non refundable.
Who Is Excluded
Assets linked to crime are not eligible under this scheme. Cases already under prosecution are excluded. Taxpayers holding large scale undisclosed foreign wealth are also not covered. FAST DS is strictly meant for genuine small taxpayers.
Last Date for Declaration
The scheme is open only for six months from the date of notification. After this window FAST DS will no longer be available. Eligible taxpayers are strongly advised not to delay.
Key Benefits of FAST DS
Penalty and prosecution free closure is possible. Complex foreign disclosure issues receive a simple legal solution. Black Money risks are eliminated. Future assessments become stress free. Small overseas holdings can be regularized at low cost.
Final Summary
FAST DS is not a punishment scheme it is a correction opportunity. Budget 2026 has provided this practical relief for foreign disclosure mistakes caused by lack of awareness. For anyone holding undisclosed foreign assets this is truly a golden window to regularize and move forward with confidence.
BUDGET HIGHLIGHTS
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Compiled by By Mr. Tushar P. Joshi |
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The Union Budget 2026-27, presented by Finance Minister Ms. Nirmala Sitharaman, focuses on tax simplification, infrastructure growth, and self-reliance.
Taxation & Personal Finance.
New Income Tax Act: A completely redrafted tax law to replace the 1961 Act, effective April 1, 2026.
Zero Tax up to 12 Lakh: No income tax for earners up to 12 lakh under the New Tax Regime (effectively 12.75 lakh with standard deduction).
Standard Deduction Hiked: Increased from 50,000 to 75,000 for salaried individuals.
Tax Slabs Rationalized: The 30% tax rate now applies only to income above 24 lakh (up from 15 lakh).
Senior Citizen Relief: Tax deduction limit for medical insurance/expenses doubled to 1 lakh.
Stock Market Taxes: STT on Futures Raised to 0.05% and on Options to 0.15%.
Buyback Taxation: Share buyback proceeds will now be taxed as Capital Gains for shareholders.
Infrastructure & Industry.
Capex Outlay: Increased by 9% to a record 12.2 lakh Crore for FY27.
High-Speed Rail: Seven new high-speed passenger rail corridors announced.
Semiconductor Mission 2.0: Launched to build domestic chip equipment and supply chain ecosystem.
BioPharma Shakti: New scheme with 10,000 Crore to set up three biopharmaceutical institutes.
Rare Earth Corridors: Dedicated mining and processing zones in Odisha, Kerala, Andhra Pradesh, and Tamil Nadu.
Nuclear Energy: Amendments to the Atomic Energy Act to allow private sector partnership in nuclear power.
Agriculture, MSMEs & Social Sector.
Kisan Credit Card (KCC): Short-term loan limit for farmers, fishermen, and dairy farmers raised to 5 lakh.
PM Dhan-Dhaanya Krishi Yojana: Launched to uplift 1.7 Crore farmers in 100 low-productivity districts. MSME Growth Fund: A new 10,000 Crore fund established to help small businesses scale.
Education & Health: 75,000 new medical seats over 5 years and “IIT Creator Labs” for technical education.
Urban Challenge Fund: 1 lakh Crore allocated to transform cities into regional economic growth hubs. Macroeconomic Outlook.
Fiscal Deficit: Target set at 4.3% of GDP for 2026-27.
GDP Growth: Projected between 6.8% and 7.2% for the upcoming fiscal year.
Total Budget Size: Pegged at 53.5 lakh Crore.
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CIRCULAR FOR RENEWAL OF MEMBERSHIP/SUBSCRIPTION CHARGES FOR THE F.Y. 2025-26
Dear Members,
RENEWAL OF MEMBERSHIP FOR F.Y. 2025-26
The Membership Fees for the year 2025-26 are due for renewal on 01.04.2025. We appreciate your Continuing support and participation in the activities of our Association.
The timely Renewal of Membership will enable the members to continuously receive the updates on various activities of GSTPAM along with the GSTReview, News Bulletin, Circulars, Messages, Webinars and online access to the website www.gstpam.org. The Life Members only need to renew the subscription charges for the GST Review. The members can also avail the benefit of discount by paying advance for subsequent two years membership fees /subscriptioncharges.
The Membership Renewal Fees received after 30thApril, 2025 will be subject to approval of the Managing Committee. If the Renewal fees for a particular year are not paid, then the member is liable to pay Admission Fees again for Renewal in the subsequent year.
Delayed Renewal Members will be provided Pre Renewal GST Review subject to availability upon payment of such additional courier charges.
The details of Membership/Subscription Fees are given below for your ready reference
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Type of Membership |
Membership Fees incl. GST |
Admission Fees Incl.GST |
Subscription Charges for GST Review |
Total |
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New Membership Application |
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Donor Member |
2,36,000.00 |
800.00 |
2,36,800.00 |
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Patron Member |
1,77000.00 |
800.00 |
1,77,800.00 |
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Life Member |
11,800.00 |
1180.00 |
800.00 |
13,780.00 |
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Life Member (Conversion from Ordinary) |
11,800.00 |
590.00 |
800.00 |
13,190.00 |
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Ordinary Local Member |
2,006.00 |
590.00 |
2,596.00 |
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Ordinary Outstation Member |
1,711.00 |
590.00 |
2,301.00 |
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Student Member |
590.00 |
590.00 |
1,180.00 |
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New Membership Application (Firm/LLP)
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Ordinary Local Member |
2,006.00 |
944.00 |
0 |
2,950.00 |
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Ordinary Outstation Member |
1,711.00 |
944.00 |
0 |
2,655.00 |
Advance Membership/ Subscription charges for subsequent Three years 2026-27 & 2028-29 (Non-Refundable)
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Ordinary Local Member |
5,428.00 |
5,428.00 |
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Ordinary Outstation Member |
4,602.00 |
4,602.00 |
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Life Member (Individual/Firm/LLP) |
0 |
2,400.00 |
2,400.00 |
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Patron Member |
0 |
2,400.00 |
2,400.00 |
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Donor Member |
0 |
2,400.00 |
2,400.00 |
Advance Membership/ Subscription charges for subsequent Five years (Non-Refundable)
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Ordinary Local Member |
8,968.00 |
8,968.00 |
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Ordinary Outstation Member |
7,670.00 |
7,670.00 |
Subscription for GST Review for F.Y. 2025-26 by Non-Members (Non-Refundable)
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Subscription fees for GSTR |
1,200.00 |
1,200.00 |
Advance subscription charges for GST Review by non-members for subsequent two years (Non-Refundable)
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Subscription Fees -GSTR |
0 |
2,400.00 2,400.00 |
Advance subscription charges for GST Review by non-members for subsequent Three years (Non-Refundable)
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Subscription Fees -GSTR |
0 |
3,600.00 3,600.00 |
Notes: –
- Membership Fees are inclusive of GST.
- The Subscription Charges are payable by only those life members, who wish to subscribe to the “GST Review”.
- No subscription charges are payable by Ordinary Local/Outstation Member
Modes of Payment:-
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Cheque |
A/c Payee Cheque drawn in favor of “The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra”payable at Mumbai. |
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NEFT Details |
The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra Bank of India, Mazgaon Branch Current Account No. 007020100001816, IFSC Code – BKID0000070.Online generated transaction Acknowledgement should be sent by email on [email protected] along with membership and payment details Members are requested to send their physical form to the association for Approval, Issuance and Office record. |
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Cash |
Renewal form along with requisite amount will be accepted between 10.30 a.m. and 5.30 p.m. on all working days except Saturday at our Office at Mazgaon Library – Mazgaon: 1stFloor, 104, GST Bhavan, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400 010 Or Bandra Library – GST Bhavan, Ground Floor, A Wing, Bandra Kurla Complex, Bandra (East), Mumbai – 400 051. Or Mazgaon Tower-8 & 9, Mazgaon Tower, 21, Mhatar Pakhadi Road, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400 010. |
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Identity (New Members) |
New Members should provide the following as Identity Proof : PAN, Aadhar Card, Constitution Document. Address Proof(any one) : Electricity Bill / Passport/ Aadhar Card / Driving License/ Voter id/ Ration Card along with Membership Form |
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Identity Card (For Renewals) |
Ordinary Local/Outstation Members should provide Two Photographs along with the Renewal Form for issue of I- cards. |
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Online Payment Link |
Members can make online payment on our website www.gstpam.org. Members are requested to download Members Renewal form from website. Update the latest details in the form, scan it and mail at email [email protected] Payment Link: https://www.gstpam.org/online/renew-membership.php If you are login first time? Click here for create your password |
We value your continuation of the membership and look forward to your renewal to this effect.
Dated:- 18.07.2025
Rahul Thakar
Sunil Joshi
Hon. Jt.Secretary
Guidance Cell Email ID for queries
Members can send their queries at [email protected]
ORDER FORM FOR GSTPAM REFERENCER 2025-26
(Members are requested to take out the photocopy of the Order Form for booking)
Scan with QR Scanner
For Office use only
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Date |
Receipt No. |
Coupon No. |
Amount |
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To
The Convenor,
GSTPAM Referencer Committee
The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra Room No. 8 & 9, Mazgaon Tower, Mhatar Pakhadi Road, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400 010
Dear Sir,
Please book my/our order of GSTPAM Referencer for the year 2025-26 as given below.
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Sr. |
Particulars |
Price per copy if booked prior to 05th August 2025 |
Price per copy if booked after to 05th August 2025 |
Qty |
Total RS. |
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1 |
GSTPAM Referencer 2025-26 Part I & II (GST, VAT & Allied Law Referencer & Updated GST Rate schedules). |
700 |
750 |
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2 |
Courier Charges (For Outstation members only) (per set) |
130 |
130 |
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3 |
Courier Charges (For Local members only) (per set) |
110 |
110 |
Note:
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Referencer will be published in Part I & II (for GST, VAT & Allied Laws Referencer & Updated GST rate schedules).
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Applicants requiring more than 5 copies of the Referencer are required to give a request on their letter head along with the order form. Tax Practitioner’s Associations can place order in bulk quantity by making request on their letterhead signed by the Association’s President and Secretary.
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Applicants will be issued receipt at the time of placing of their order. Applicants are requested to bring receipt at the time of taking the delivery of the Referencer. No delivery of the Referencer shall be given, unless the receipt for payment is submitted at the counter. If the receipt for payment is lost, than no delivery of the Referencer shall be given.
The payment for the above order of………………………………………………………………………………
……………………………………………………………………………………………… (Rupees in words) is made
herewith by Cash /Card /Cheque /Demand Draft No. ………….…………… dated ……….………………
drawn on……………………………………………… Bank Branch, Mumbai.
Signature …………………………….
Membership Number………………………….. Address.………………………………………………………
Name ……………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………..
Office Tel No…………………………………… Residence Tel No……………………………………………
E-mail: …………………………………………. Mobile No.…………………………………………………
PROVISIONAL RECEIPT
Received with thanks payment of. ………………… from vide
Cash /Card /Cheque /NEFT/Demand Draft No. …………………………. Date drawn
on………………………………………………… Bank …………………………………… Branch, Mumbai.
Signature ……………………………
Date…………………………………. Name of staff of GSTPAM……………………
Note:
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Please fill in all the details in the above form and send the same to the GSTPAM’s office at Tower or at Mazgaon library along with requisite payment.
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For Direct Deposit / NEFT payment – Bank of India, Mazgaon – Account No. 007020100001817, IFSC Code – BKID0000070. Acknowledgement of the same should be sent by email: [email protected] along with duly filled form.
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Online Payment Link : https://www.gstpam.org/online/purchase-publication.php
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Please mention your name and membership number on the reverse side of the Cheque / Demand Draft.
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The counter timings are from 10.30 a.m. to 5.30 p.m. on Monday to Friday.
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The Cheque / DD should be drawn in the name of “THE GOODS AND SERVICES TAX PRACTITIONERS’ ASSOCIATION OF MAHARASHTRA
THE GOODS & SERVICES TAX PRACTITIONERS’ ASSOCIATION OF MAHARASHTRA
INTENSIVE STUDY COURSE CIRCULAR FOR THE YEAR 2025-26
Dear Professional Colleagues,
In GST, change is the only constant. With frequent amendments, evolving jurisprudence, and continuous clarifications through Circulars and Notifications, professionals are constantly expected to update, relearn, and adapt. The rapid pace of legislative and procedural changes, coupled with practical implementation challenges, underscores the importance of staying updated and well-informed.
Recognising this need, our Association has been regularly organising Intensive Study Circle (ISC) meetings as a platform for members to engage in in-depth discussions on complex and evolving issues under GST. These sessions aim not only to keep members abreast of the latest legal developments but also to provide a space for sharing practical experiences and resolving interpretational challenges.
Each ISC session is led by a Group Leader – a member who initiates and steers the discussion on the chosen topic. The deliberation is further enriched under the guidance of a Senior Professional, who moderates the discussion and offers insights drawn from years of experience.
Sessions are held virtually, usually on Fridays between 4:30 p.m. to 7:00 p.m., making it accessible to members across locations. Around 12 ISC sessions are planned for the academic year 2025-26.
* Key Highlights of ISC:
Focused, issue-based discussions
Peer learning from real-world GST challenges
Platform for voicing and resolving practical dilemmas
Held virtually, enabling participation from members across India
The inaugural session of Intensive Study Circle will be held on Saturday, 23-08-2025 between 10:00 a.m. & 01.00 p.m. via virtual mode on the subject “RCM on Government Services – Interpretations, Issues & Insights”. The discussion will be led by CA. Umang Talati and monitored by CA. Deepak Thakkar.
The Annual Fee for subscription to the ISC 2025-26 is as follows:
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Members: Rs. 1,650/- + Rs. 297 (GST) = Rs. 1,947/-
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Non-members: Rs. 2,100/- + Rs. 378 (GST) = Rs. 2,478/-
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Payment link: https://www.gstpam.org/online/event-registration.php
We invite all of you to subscribe to the ISC sessions and take full advantage of this initiative aimed at true knowledge sharing. Let’s build a community where thoughtful dialogue drives professionalgrowth!
Any member interested in leading any group discussion is requested to inform us through the Enrolment Form and
contact the Convenor’s on Cell No. 9833892635 /9821121433/ 9860231333.
Notes:
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Every attempt will be made to share the case studies / study material with the participants in advance.
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Participants are requested to study the case studies / study material / relevant provisions to be discussed on the day of the meeting, which will be helpful in better participation and a fruitful discussion.
|
Deepali Mehta/ Dilip Nathani/ Anvesh Vakharia Co-Convenors |
Aditya Surte Chairman |
Enrollment Form for Intensive Study Circle Meetings for the Year 2025-26
To, Convener,
Intensive Study Course The GSTPAM, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400 010.
Dear Sir,
Please enroll me as a participant for the Intensive Study Course for the year 2025-26. The Registration fees of Rs.1,947/- (for members) / and Rs.2,478/- (for non-members) 18% Including GST is enclosed herewith by Cash /DD / Cheque No. dated drawn on
Particulars of Member/Participant :
Name:
Educational Qualification:
Address for Communication:
Telephone No. Office : Res.
Email ID : Mob. No,
GSTPAM Membership No:
GSTIN (if Applicable):
Which is your preferred mode of attending the ISC Meeting?
- In-Person
- Virtual Mode
- Hybrid Mode
Which is your preferred day and time for attending the Meeting?
- Friday, 4.30 pm to 7.00 pm
- Saturday, 10.30 am to 1.00 pm
I also wish to be a group leader for the subject of and
suitable available date will be :
Signature
Note :-
-
Please issue the Cheque in favour of ”The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra” (FULL NAME IS REQUIRED TO BE STATED ON THE CHEQUE AS PER RBI DIRECTION).
-
For NEFT payment – Bank of India, Mazgaon- Account No. 007020100001816, IFSC – BKID0000070. Acknowledgement generated through online transaction should be emailed on [email protected] along with Enrolment Form and payment details.
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Online Payment Link: https://www.gstpam.org/online/event-registration.php
-
Outstation members are requested to make payment online payment.
-
The enrollment form along with payment proof should be submitted at Room No. 104, Vikrikar Bhavan, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400010.
-
Kindly carry the receipt of payment to attend the Lecture.
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The Association reserves the right to change and alter the schedule if required.
|
The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra
jointly with
The Malad Chamber of Tax Consultants All India Federation of Tax Practitioner’s (AIFTP)
ENROLMENT FORM FOR 3rd BATCH OF GST BEGINNERS CERTIFICATE COURSE IN
ગુજરાતી FOR THE YEAR 2025-26
Virtual : – Zoom Platform
Enrolment Fee :– Rs.1,540/-(Inclusive 18%GST) for all participants.
Date :– Monday, 23rd February, 2026 onward
Name of the participant
…………………………………………………………………………………………………..
GSTPAM Membership Number……………………..
GSTTIN of Member……………………………………
Professional/Student……………………….
Address
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………………
Telephone:(O)………………..……………..®………………………..
E-mail ……………………………………………Mobile No. ……………………….…………………
Amount: Rs. …………………………………….Cheque No. …………………………
Bank……………………………………………… Branch……..…………………..
Dated………………………
Participant Details:
E-mail ……………………………………………Mobile No.…………………………
WhatsApp No. …………………………………….
Signature…………………….
Note:
-
Deserving Interested Candidate will get a chance to participate in a Mega Moot Court Competition organised by GSTPAM
-
Please issue the Cheque in favour of ‘‘The Goods & Services Tax Practitioners’ Association of Maharashtra’’ (FULL NAME IS REQUIRED TO BE STATED ON THE CHEQUE AS PER RBI DIRECTION).
-
For NEFT payment – Bank of India, Mazgaon- Account No. 007020100001816, IFSC – BKID0000070.
Acknowledgement generated through online transaction should be emailed on [email protected] along with Enrolment Form and payment details.
-
Online Payment Link: https://www.gstpam.org/online/event-registration.php
-
Outstation members are requested to make payment online payment.
-
The enrollment form along with payment proof should be submitted at Room No. 104, GST Bhavan, Mazgaon, Mumbai – 400010.
-
The Association reserves the right to change and alter the schedule if required.
Our members have an option to subscribe to our monthly academic magazine, “GST Review”, which is one of the oldest monthly publications on indirect tax laws in the Country. You get access to indepth articles, analysis and updates on all aspects of indirect tax laws by veteran experts. Latest notifications and circulars are also printed in the same for the benefit of the subscribers.
For the benefit of our readers we are reproducing the index of the topics covered in the last month. Subscription form is available in this News bulletin. Please take this opportunity and become our member and subscribe to the GST Review.
Contents Vol. 8 No. 5 | Mumbai | January, 2026 | GST REVIEW JOIN GSTPAM A MEMBER
| Topic | Writer | Page No. |
| Part – I | ||
| Editorial | Mayur R. Parekh | 05 |
| From the President | Parth Badheka | 08 |
| Roving Eye | D. H. Joshi | 10 |
| GST Updates | Deepali Mehta | 18 |
| Ink that outlived its Era: Specially curated legacy articles | 23 | |
| Celebrating 75th Year | ||
| My Journey with STPAM: A Grateful Reflection | Nitin Shah | 41 |
| The Xiaomi Customs Case: Unpacking IP Royalties in Valuation | Abhishek Mitishkumar Modi |
43 |
| Classification of Jelly Products under GST | Ratan Samal & Manohar Samal |
49 |
| Fresh recovery proceedings on same grounds for refund granted and affirmed in appeal on merits is unsustainable and without jurisdiction |
Pranav Mehta | 53 |
| फिक्स डिपॉझिट वरील व्याज – जीएसटी | Amit Lulla | 60 |
| जीएसटी – तांत्रिक चुकांमुळे वाहन अडवणूक | Kishor Lulla | 62 |
| देशी-विदेशी सहलींवर जीएसटी कायदेशीर वास्तव | Kishor Lulla | 65 |
| जीएसटी पोस्ट सेल डिस्काऊंट बाबत शासनाकडून स्पष्टीकरण | Vinayak Agashe | 69 |
| Updates on Real Estate (Regulations & Development) Act, 2016 | Ashwin Shah & Maitri Shah | 71 |
|
Service Tax Updates |
Vasudev Mehta |
78 |
|
Income Tax Update – Highlights on Recent Amendments |
SonakshiJhunjhunwala & Sunil Jhunjhunwala |
81 |
|
Do You Know? |
Moti B. Totlani |
86 |
|
Replies to Queries |
C. B. Thakar |
88 |
|
Speaker’s Forum |
D. J. Ruparelia Ashish Ruparelia |
90 |
|
Representation & Response |
99 |
|
|
Important Judgments |
106 |
|
|
Association News |
Rahul Thakar & Sunil Joshi |
111 |
|
Part – II |
||
|
From the Courts |
Dhaval Talati |
116 |
|
Gist of Advance Rulings |
Ashit Shah |
120 |
|
Part – II |
||
|
Recent Amendments – Notifications/Trade Circulars |
||
|
Notification No. 19/2025- Central Tax (Rate) New Delhi, the 31st December,2025 |
128 |
|
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Notification No. 20/2025–Central Tax New Delhi, the 31st day of December,2025 |
129 |
|
|
CORRIGENDUM No. MGST-2025/C.R.-36/Taxation-1. dated the 19th December, 2025. |
130 |
|
|
CORRIGENDUM No. MGST-2025/C.R.-36(1)/Taxation-1. dated the 19th December, 2025. |
130 |
|
|
Advisory on Filing Opt-In Declaration for Specified Premises, 2025 |
130 |
|
|
Advisory & FAQ on Electronic Credit Reversal and Re-claimed Statement & RCM Liability/ITC Statement |
132 |
|
|
Announcements |
||
|
Announcement For New Membership, Renewal of Membership & Subscription For Year 2025-26 |
Page 115 |
“Wishing our members a very HAPPY BIRTHDAY!!”
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Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
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Visharia Pankaj Goshar |
11- February |
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Joshi Tushar Praful |
11- February |
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Chavanke Sandeep Chandrakant |
11- February |
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Jadhav Mahesh Bhagwan |
11- February |
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Kokane Mahesh Eknath |
11- February |
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Soni Mahendrakumar Murarilal |
11- February |
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Dedhia Hasmukh K. |
12- February |
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Hindivali Prakash Shivappa |
12- February |
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Shah Hemal Pravinchandra |
12- February |
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Hussain Mazhar Musharraf |
12- February |
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Dedaniya Jigar Ratilal |
12- February |
|
Shah Rajesh Chimanlal |
13- February |
|
Bhatt Rameshkumar Shashivadan |
13- February |
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Kulkarni Atul Vasant |
13- February |
|
Ruparelia Ashish Damodardas |
13- February |
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Doshi Praful J. |
14- February |
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Menon Subhash |
14- February |
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Mundada Pravinkumar S. |
14- February |
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Parihar Jayant Bastimal |
14- February |
|
Tripathy Satyabrata S |
14- February |
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Surte Pramod Prabhakar |
15- February |
|
Shaikh Shakeel Ahmed |
15- February |
|
Vaishampayan Mukund Manohar |
15- February |
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Gangaramani Mukesh Vasdev |
15- February |
|
Bajaj Harsh Nandlal |
15- February |
|
Chandak Piyush Premsukh |
15- February |
|
Savani A G |
16- February |
|
Arif Shafakat Sajjad |
16- February |
|
Nakade Manoj Ramnath |
16- February |
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Suryavanshi Arjun Pandurang |
16- February |
|
Jaitapkar Yogesh Dipak |
16- February |
|
Porania Mansi Bharat |
16- February |
|
Chouhan Govind K |
17- February |
|
Desai Neelesh M. |
17- February |
|
Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
|
Agrawal Ravi |
17- February |
|
Poojari Poojashree Gopal |
17- February |
|
Arkal Sagar Nagesh |
17- February |
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Chaudhary Avachal Ganeshbhai |
17- February |
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Agrawal Pankaj Shyamsunder |
18- February |
|
Agrawal Pankaj Shyamsunder |
18- February |
|
Dedhia Manisha K |
18- February |
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Taparia Jitendra Shankarlal |
18- February |
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Jadhav Suhas Sukadev |
18- February |
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Deodhar Arya Pushkar |
18- February |
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Rahane Dilipkumar Mrigendra |
19- February |
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Gadhia Vijay Chandulal |
19- February |
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Thakarar Deepak Gordhandas |
19- February |
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Jain Vijaykumar Sarupchand |
19- February |
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Mundada Vijay Badrinarayan |
19- February |
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Doshi Biren Himatlal |
19- February |
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Shah Vipul Jitendra |
19- February |
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Dungarwal Rahul P |
19- February |
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Gandhi Jasmit Hiralal |
21- February |
|
Shah Vipul Manaharlal |
21- February |
|
Joshi Kiran Kantilal |
21- February |
|
Patel Geeta Hemant |
22- February |
|
Vasa Ketan Manharlal |
22- February |
|
Acharekar Rupesh Laxman |
22- February |
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Chande Ankit Kishor |
22- February |
|
Bapat Sanket Deepak |
22- February |
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Dixit Dilip Shriniwas |
23- February |
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Varde Vishwas Jaywant |
23- February |
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Kothadiya Sanjeev Sharao |
23- February |
|
Desai Vimal Dolatrai |
23- February |
|
Chitre Kiritkumar Vasant |
23- February |
|
Thakkar Pradip Kalidas |
23- February |
|
Darji Mittal Ramesh |
23- February |
|
Beriwala Neha |
23- February |
|
Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
|
Bhutada Ramratan Kashiram |
24- February |
|
Parikh Rajesh Chimanlal |
24- February |
|
Wagh Sunilkumar Madhukar |
24- February |
|
Joseph Jeberson Samuel |
24- February |
|
Mir Jawedali Yaqubali |
24- February |
|
Baldi Pawan Satynarayan |
24- February |
|
Kasare Atesh Ashok |
24- February |
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Khan Gulam Mujtaba Muslim |
24- February |
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Jhaveri Sanjiv Piyush |
25- February |
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Mahaldar Arun Hardeo |
25- February |
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Kharat Anil Dhondiram |
25- February |
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Dudani Sanjeev Anand |
25- February |
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Panchal Umang Vasantlal |
25- February |
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Salvi Kunal Vithal |
25- February |
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Nagla Pawankumar Madhusudan |
25- February |
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Bardia Saket |
25- February |
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Solanki Jagdish Ratanlal |
25- February |
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Khandelwal Sanket Sunil |
25- February |
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Daga Rajendra K |
26- February |
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Vora Mahendra K. |
26- February |
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Desai Rajesh N |
26- February |
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More Sanjay Govind |
26- February |
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Magar Subodh J |
26- February |
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Chandidas Ajaykumar Avinash |
26- February |
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Jain Popatalal Seshmal |
27- February |
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Darji Bharat Kasturbhai |
27- February |
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Chachra Gulab Inderlal |
27- February |
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Prajapat Dharmendra Bhooraram |
27- February |
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Nachanekar Mahesh Suryakant |
27- February |
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Siddiqui Mohammed Ali |
27- February |
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Adavadkar Milind P |
28- February |
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Assawa Shiwbhagwan Chaturbhuj |
28- February |
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Lingsur Ramakrishna Raghavendra |
28- February |
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Manek Nilesh Bharat |
28- February |
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Gaikwad Anand Murlidhar |
28- February |
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Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
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Palan Bhavesh S. |
28- February |
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Makani Adeeb Ayaz |
28- February |
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Upadhye Z. J. |
01- March |
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Bodake M. B. |
01- March |
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Parte Shobhana Bhalchandra |
01- March |
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Sheth Chetan Narendrakumar |
01- March |
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Pednekar Rajesh Kashinath |
01- March |
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Pawar Samir Vishnu |
01- March |
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Chauhan Somesh H |
01- March |
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Apoorav G. Mohanlal |
01- March |
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Karangutkar Siddhesh Anil |
01- March |
|
Shaha Vrindavan G |
02- March |
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Nachankar Ritesh Ravindra |
02- March |
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Jain Vijay Mangilal |
03- March |
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Patel Bharat Ranchhod |
03- March |
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Bhagwat M P |
03- March |
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Srivastav Vinod C |
03- March |
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Kanapade Sudesh Vishnu |
03- March |
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Pawar Jyoti Sanjay |
03- March |
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Jadhav Nilesh Rajendra |
03- March |
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Mehta Sujoy Pankaj |
03- March |
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Gupta Manisha |
03- March |
|
Shetty M D |
04- March |
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Bapatla Venkata Raja |
04- March |
|
Kolpe Raosaheb Dhondiba |
04- March |
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Khandwala Mihir H. |
04- March |
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Parmar Vishal Parasmal |
04- March |
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Doshi Bijal Rajesh |
04- March |
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Jambhekar Shweta Vinayak |
04- March |
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Bhuptani Bhavesh Chandrakant |
05- March |
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Matekar Dadasaheb B |
05- March |
|
Kale Subhash Laxman |
05- March |
|
Mistry Sandeep Bhagwanji |
05- March |
|
Hinduja Ajeet Singh Ranjeet Singh |
05- March |
|
Chhajed Kamlesh Sayarchand |
05- March |
|
Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
|
Shukla Satish Devnarayan |
05- March |
|
Patil Virendrakumar K |
05- March |
|
Tonge Pratik Dilip |
05- March |
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Vatnani Jai Moti |
06- March |
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Nagal Lata Leeladhar |
06- March |
|
Eriya Ilsha P. Joseph |
06- March |
|
Udani Roopa |
06- March |
|
Surte Shirish P |
07- March |
|
Patil Subhash Daga |
07- March |
|
Deshpande Atul Vishwanath |
07- March |
|
Jadhav Sachin Vitthal |
07- March |
|
Magar Nishikant Bapusaheb |
07- March |
|
Ransinga Amol Vitthal |
07- March |
|
Sheth Dinesh N |
08- March |
|
Members Name |
Date of Birth |
|---|---|
|
Jhunjhunwala Prakash G. |
08- March |
|
Mundada Gopal Ramvilas |
09- March |
|
Bhanushali Rajendra N. |
09- March |
|
Gurav Pramod Anant |
09- March |
|
Bhanushali Mahendra B. |
09- March |
|
Patil Komal Kailas |
09- March |
|
Rathi Dilip Narayandas |
10- March |
|
Karpe Venayack Baburao |
10- March |
|
Chulawala Manish Bhupendra |
10- March |
|
Balkawade Santosh R. |
10- March |
|
Parsewar Laxmikant Bhalchandra |
10- March |
|
Patil Rhushikesh Chandrakant |
10- March |
|
Jain Sachin Mahendrakumar |
10- March |
OUR PUBLICATIONS AVAILABLE FOR SALE
| Sr. No. | Name | Price |
|
1 |
FMCG & Pharmaceutical Industry – GST Issues & Challenges |
150/- |
|
2 |
Mega Full Day Seminar Booklet 6.5.2023 |
120/- |
|
3 |
Short Publication GST practical guides (5 Book Series) |
555/- |
|
4 |
47th RRC Lucknow Booklet |
250/- |
|
5 |
Mega Full Day Seminar Booklet 9.2.2024 |
150/- |
|
6 |
48th RRC Book |
250/- |
|
7 |
Mega Full Day Seminar Booklet 6. 7.2024 |
130/- |
|
8 |
Half Day Seminar Booklet 22.11.2024 |
100/- |
|
9 |
Writ Remedies Under Indian Constitution |
150/- |
|
10 |
Referencer 2025-26 |
750/- |
|
11 |
GST Beginners Book 2025 |
350/- |
|
12 |
50th RRC Book |
250/- |
Payment Link for Publication on Sales : https://www.gstpam.org/online/purchase-publication.php
GSTPAM News Bulletin Committee for Year 2025-26
Parth Badheka
President
|
Jatin Chheda
Chairman
|
Pratik Satyuga
Co. Convenor
|
Aloke R. Singh
Co. Convenor
|
|


