A registered person applies for amendment after receiving a cancellation notice—is it allowable?
A registered person cannot ordinarily seek amendment of registration after issuance of a cancellation show cause notice (SCN) under the GST Act. Once cancellation proceedings are initiated, the registration status enters a restricted zone, and amendment applications are generally kept in abeyance or rejected. However, amendment may be considered only after dropping the cancellation proceedings or upon revocation/restoration of registration, subject to facts and procedural compliance.
Legal Provision:
Section 29(2) – CGST Act, 2017
“The Proper Officer may cancel the registration of a person from such date, including any retrospective date, as he may deem fit, where—
(a) the registered person has contravened such provisions of the Act or the rules…”
Section 30 – CGST Act, 2017
“A registered person, whose registration is cancelled by the Proper Officer on his own motion, may apply for revocation of cancellation…”
Section 28 – CGST Act, 2017 (Amendment of Registration)
“Every registered person shall inform the Proper Officer of any changes in the information furnished at the time of registration…”
Rule 19 – CGST Rules, 2017 (Amendment)
“Where there are changes in the information furnished in the application for registration, the registered person shall submit an application for amendment…”
Rule 21A – CGST Rules, 2017 (Suspension)
“Where a registered person has applied for cancellation or where the Proper Officer has reasons to believe that registration is liable to be cancelled, the registration may be suspended…”
Analysis:
1. Statutory Scheme: Amendment vs Cancellation
The GST framework clearly prioritizes cancellation proceedings over amendment requests. Once a show cause notice under Section 29(2) is issued, the registration is either liable to suspension under Rule 21A or under active scrutiny. During this phase, the portal itself often restricts amendment functionality.
Legally, amendment under Section 28 presupposes a subsisting, compliant registration. A registration under threat of cancellation cannot ordinarily be altered to cure foundational defects.
2. Practical Effect of Cancellation SCN
In most cases, cancellation SCNs are issued for:
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Non-filing of returns
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Bogus registration
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Wrong address / non-existence of business
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Mismatch in core fields (principal place, nature of business)
Attempting amendment after SCN—especially of core fields—is viewed by authorities as an afterthought to defeat cancellation.
In my litigation practice before the Patna High Court, GST officers routinely reject amendment applications filed post-SCN on the ground that first the legality of registration must be adjudicated.
3. Whether Amendment Is Absolutely Barred?
There is no express statutory prohibition, but:
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Procedurally, the portal blocks it
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Administratively, officers decline to process it
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Judicially, courts require cancellation proceedings to conclude first
Thus, amendment is not maintainable as a matter of right after issuance of cancellation notice.
4. Correct Legal Course for the Taxpayer
Depending on the stage, the taxpayer should adopt one of the following routes:
(a) Reply to Cancellation SCN
Explain defects, produce documents, and seek dropping of proceedings.
(b) After Cancellation – Apply for Revocation (Section 30)
Once revocation is allowed, amendment can be filed thereafter.
(c) Writ Jurisdiction (Exceptional Cases)
Where cancellation is mechanical and amendment would resolve the issue, writ courts have intervened.
While drafting writ petitions in GST cancellation matters in Bihar, a common relief sought is direction to permit amendment after revocation, not during pendency of SCN.
5. Limitation and Procedural Caution
If registration is cancelled:
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Revocation must be filed within prescribed time (extendable)
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Amendment cannot substitute revocation
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Filing amendment instead of revocation risks limitation lapse
Note for Bihar Filers:
In Bihar, GST authorities strictly treat address mismatch and non-functional premises as fatal defects. Filing an amendment after receiving a cancellation notice often worsens the case. Practically, it is advisable to first secure revocation or dropping of cancellation, and only then proceed with amendment—preferably supported by site photographs, rent deeds, and electricity bills.
Note from the Author:
This response is for informational and educational purposes based on the GST law and judicial precedents available as of 2026. Practitioners are advised to verify the latest Notifications, Circulars, and judgments before filing or advising.
— Adv. Tabish Ahmad
Advocate, Patna High Court
LLM (Taxation), MBA (Finance)