I've received a GST notice — what should I do first?
Reviewed June 2026
First, breathe: a notice is a question, not a verdict. The department sees a mismatch or wants an explanation, and a clear, timely, well-documented reply resolves the large majority of matters at the very first step.
Three moves matter immediately. One — note the reply deadline; time is the most valuable thing a notice gives you. Two — identify exactly what is being asked: which form, which period, which figures. Three — reconcile the underlying data (your returns, books, e-way bills and supplier statements) so your reply rests on numbers that tie together.
What strengthens your position is responding within time, in the right format, with annexures that anticipate the next question. That's precisely the work we do — from drafting the first reply to representing you through assessment and appeal if a matter travels further. Send us the notice early, and the path stays calm.
Does this sound like your situation?
Tell us what’s on your mind — we’ll look at your specific facts and set you on the confident path.
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This explainer simplifies the law on purpose and is general guidance, not advice on your specific facts. Rules, rates and thresholds evolve. For your situation, talk to us — that first conversation is exactly what we’re here for.