Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) in India (FY 2025): Uses in ITR, GST, TDS, ROC Compliance, Cost, Validity and Process
Introduction –
A Digital Signature Certificate (DSC) is the online equivalent of a manual signature. When you sign an offline form, you authenticate the filing. In online compliance, the same job is done by DSC—signing, authenticating and, where required, locking the document. In FY 2025, regulators rely on certificate-backed signatures to reduce tampering.
Main Discussion –
Where DSC is used: DSC is commonly used in Income-tax e-filing (ITR filing), GST filings, TDS return filing, and ROC compliances including company incorporation. It is also used for trademark/patent filing, PDF signing, e-tender/e-bidding, and import–export documentation.
What DSC actually is: A DSC is a digital certificate issued by an authorised certifying authority and stored inside a USB token (DSC token). When you sign, your system reads the certificate from the token, applies the digital signature, and captures signer identity with date and time. This is why DSC is treated as a compliance-grade signature and not merely a signature image.
eSign vs DSC: An e-signature (a drawn or typed signature image) may look similar on a PDF, but it does not provide the same certificate-based authentication. DSC is issued through authorised entities and is accepted on portals where stronger verification is expected.
How DSC signing works on a PDF: Open the PDF in a PDF reader, choose the option to use a certificate/digital sign, connect your DSC token, select the certificate, and proceed. You may lock the document after signing so the file cannot be edited. The system then asks for the DSC password. After signing, the PDF typically shows a signature panel with signer details and timestamp.
Types of DSC (usage-based): In current practice, Class 3 DSC is used. For most filings, a normal signing DSC is sufficient. For e-tender/e-bidding, a signing plus encryption DSC may be required. For import–export documentation, a DGFT-focused DSC is generally used.
Cost and validity (practical ranges): DSC pricing has two components—certificate fee and USB token fee. Validity commonly comes in 1-year, 2-year or 3-year options. Typical market ranges discussed are: normal signing DSC ₹2,000–₹2,500 (certificate + token), signing plus encryption ₹3,000–₹4,000, and DGFT DSC ₹3,500–₹5,000.
Practical Impact / Expert View –
From a compliance angle, DSC reduces disputes on “who approved what” because it records signer identity and timestamp. It also supports stronger controls: a signed and locked PDF prevents accidental edits. However, treat the USB token like an authorisation key: restrict access and protect the password.
Application process (typical steps): Contact an authorised certifying authority (or its authorised agent), pay the fees, submit documents, complete verification (OTP plus a short video verification), and then the certificate is issued and inserted into a USB token. Key checkpoints: PAN and Aadhaar details (especially date of birth) should match, and the Aadhaar-linked mobile number must be active for OTP validation.
Conclusion – key takeaways –
- DSC is the compliance-grade online signature used across ITR, GST, TDS and ROC filings in FY 2025.
- It is certificate-backed, stored in a USB token, and creates a verifiable signing trail.
- eSign and DSC are not the same; DSC is the expected standard where strong authentication is required.
- Choose the right type: signing, signing plus encryption (for e-bidding), or DGFT (for import–export).
- Keep PAN–Aadhaar details aligned and Aadhaar-linked mobile active to avoid verification failures.
- Plan cost and validity upfront; common ranges fall between ₹2,000 and ₹5,000 based on type and term.
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