Introduction
Critical Issues In First Appeal And Second Appeal Under GST
GST litigation has now entered its most important institutional phase. The first appeal under Section 107 and the second appeal before GSTAT under Section 112 are not mere continuation of departmental proceedings. They are statutory, conditional and highly technical remedies. A good case may fail if limitation, pre-deposit, appealability, form, evidence or portal acknowledgement is mishandled.
GST Appellate Tribunal (GSTAT) Procedure Rules, 2025 were notified through G.S.R. 256(E) dated 24 April 2025 under Section 111 for regulating the procedure and functioning of GSTAT. GSTAT was formally launched on 24 September 2025, marking a major step in GST dispute resolution. GST appellate practice will now move from informal representation-based practice to registry, document, evidence and portal-based practice.
CHART 1: GST APPELLATE ROUTE
| Stage | Provision | Forum | Time limit | Core condition |
| First appeal | Section 107 | Appellate Authority | 3 months from communication | Admitted dues + 10% disputed tax |
| Department application | Section 107 | Appellate Authority | 6 months | Authorised by Commissioner |
| Second appeal | Section 112 | GSTAT | 3 months from communication or notified date, whichever later | Further pre-deposit |
| Cross objection | Section 112 | GSTAT | 45 days | Filed in prescribed form |
| Further appeal | Sections 117/118 | High Court/Supreme Court | As applicable | Substantial question of law |
Discussion
1. Appealability is the first gate
Not every communication is appealable. Demand orders under Sections 73, 74 or 74A, refund rejection orders, registration cancellation orders, assessment orders, penalty orders and final detention/confiscation orders are generally appealable. But SCN, summons, DRC-01A, audit memo, inspection authorisation and internal letters are not normally appealable. Section 121 further bars appeal against orders such as transfer of proceedings, seizure/retention of books, sanction for prosecution and instalment orders under Section 80.
Filing appeal against a non-appealable proceeding wastes limitation and money. Conversely, treating an appealable order as “only a portal communication” may result in finality.
2. Limitation: communication, not order date
The most common controversy is the date from which limitation runs. Section 107 uses “communicated”, not “passed”. The practitioner must preserve the portal screenshot, email header, order download log, speed post envelope and acknowledgement.
CHART 2: LIMITATION RISK MATRIX
| Issue | Practical position |
| Order passed but not communicated | Limitation should not run merely from order date |
| Uploaded in wrong tab | Challenge communication; preserve screenshots |
| Appeal after 3 months but within 4 months | File condonation application |
| Appeal after 3+1 months | High risk; Appellate Authority has no general power |
| Writ after limitation expired | Weak, unless jurisdiction/natural justice/service defect exists |
The Supreme Court in Singh Enterprises held that where the special statute fixes the condonable period, the appellate authority cannot condone beyond that limit. In Glaxo Smith Kline Consumer Health Care, the Supreme Court cautioned that writ jurisdiction should not ordinarily be used merely to revive a statutory appeal lost by limitation. However, Radha Krishan Industries confirms that writ jurisdiction survives in exceptional GST cases, especially where jurisdiction, natural justice or coercive attachment is involved.
3. Pre-deposit: compute manually, do not rely blindly on portal
For first appeal, Section 107 requires full payment of admitted tax, interest, fine, fee and penalty, plus 10% of the remaining disputed tax, subject to the statutory cap. In a normal tax dispute, disputed interest and penalty are not part of the 10% base.
From 1 October 2025, penalty-only appeals require careful handling because the new proviso requires 10% of penalty where the order demands penalty without tax demand.
CHART 3: PRE-DEPOSIT COMPUTATION
| Situation | First appeal pre-deposit |
| Tax ₹10 crore, interest ₹4 crore, penalty ₹10 crore, all disputed | ₹1 crore |
| Only admitted tax | Pay admitted amount fully |
| Penalty-only order after applicable date ie 1-10-2025 | 10% of penalty |
| Prior DRC-03 paid | Map properly; use DRC-03A where needed |
| Wrong portal auto-calculation | Upload computation note and proof |
Circular No. 224/18/2024-GST clarified that DRC-03 payments may be adjusted against pre-deposit for Section 107/112 appeals. DRC-03 by itself is not always portal-recognised as pre-deposit. Mapping, demand ID, DRC-03A and ledger screenshots should be maintained.
4. Deemed stay is statutory, but recovery protection letter is essential
Section 107(7) grants deemed stay of the balance demand once the pre-deposit under Section 107(6) is made. Similarly, Section 112(9) grants deemed stay after payment under Section 112(8). Circular No. 224 recognises the same principle in the GSTAT context.
After filing appeal, immediately send a recovery-protection letter with APL acknowledgement, challan, DRC-03A if any, and demand ledger screenshot.
5. Powers of First Appellate Authority: no casual remand
Section 107(11) empowers the Appellate Authority to confirm, modify or annul the decision or order, but not to remand the matter back. Relief should be drafted as annulment, modification, deletion, recomputation or consequential relief, and not merely as “remand”.
This is vital in refund, ITC mismatch and registration cancellation matters. If facts are complete, ask for final relief. If natural justice is violated, ask for annulment and consequential restoration.
6. Additional evidence: Rule 112 is not a free second chance
Rule 112 restricts additional evidence before the Appellate Authority or GSTAT, except where evidence was wrongly refused, the appellant was prevented by sufficient cause, relevant evidence could not be produced earlier for sufficient cause, or the order was passed without sufficient opportunity.
CHART 4: EVIDENCE DISCIPLINE
| Appeal type | Must-have documents |
| ITC dispute | Invoice, e-way bill, GRN, payment proof, 2A/2B, supplier data, ledger |
| Refund dispute | Shipping bill, LUT, BRC/FIRC, GSTR-1/3B, turnover reconciliation |
| Registration cancellation | SCN, reply, hearing proof, portal screenshots, returns status |
| Penalty | Mens rea defence, movement records, tax payment proof |
| Natural justice | RUD request, hearing request, denial proof, prejudice note |
7. GSTAT: final fact-finding forum
GSTAT appeal lies against Section 107/108 orders, not directly against original orders. GSTAT is therefore the last effective forum for facts. Later High Court appeal generally lies on substantial question of law. Factual record must be built before the Appellate Authority and GSTAT; evidence should not be “reserved” for High Court.
Rule 110 provides that GSTAT appeal is filed in Form GST APL-05 with relevant documents; final acknowledgement and appeal number are critical. GSTAT Procedure Rules, 2025 recognise the GSTAT portal, interlocutory applications, authorised representatives, certified copies, Principal Bench and State Benches.
8. ₹50,000 threshold is discretionary
Section 112(2) permits GSTAT to refuse admission where tax, ITC, fine, fee or penalty does not exceed ₹50,000. It is not an automatic bar. Admission may still be justified for recurring issues, fraud findings, jurisdictional defects, registration consequences, classification/valuation questions or adverse findings affecting future years.
9. Departmental appeals: monetary limits are not immunity
Circular No. 207/1/2024-GST fixes monetary limits for departmental litigation: ₹20 lakh for GSTAT, ₹1 crore for High Court and ₹2 crore for Supreme Court. But non-filing by the Department due to monetary limits does not mean acceptance of the taxpayer’s view, and exceptions exist for recurring legal issues, classification, valuation, refund and constitutional validity.
CONCLUSION
GST appeals are no longer only drafting exercises. They require limitation audit, pre-deposit mapping, portal discipline, evidence indexing, recovery protection and precise relief drafting. The first appeal is the foundation. GSTAT is the final factual battlefield. A scholar-practitioner must therefore approach every appeal with two files: one legal and one evidentiary.
“In the happiness of the people lies the happiness of the ruler; what is beneficial to the people is his real benefit.”
— Kautilya, Arthashastra
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About the Author: CA Rajender is a Chartered Accountant with about 24 years of professional practice and deep engagement with GST law, litigation and advisory. He is known for his practical, research-driven and taxpayer-focused approach to indirect tax disputes, appellate strategy and GST compliance.
Disclaimer: This article is for academic and professional discussion only. It is based on the law, notifications, circulars and available material as referred to above. Readers should verify the current statutory position, State-specific amendments, portal functionality and latest judicial developments before acting in any matter. This article does not constitute legal opinion or professional advice for any specific case.


