Interest Demand on Belated ITC Quashed; Retrospective Regularization of Section 16(4) applies to Interest too
Issue
Whether interest under Section 50 can be demanded on Input Tax Credit (ITC) claimed belatedly (beyond the Section 16(4) deadline), when the substantive ITC claim itself has been regularized by a retrospective statutory amendment (or court order giving effect to it).
Facts
Period: 2018-19.
The Dispute: The Department issued notices (ASMT-10/DRC-01) proposing to reverse ITC claimed in violation of the time limit under Section 16(4).
Regularization: In an earlier Writ Petition (WP No. 16289 of 2025), the High Court/Statute had regularized this belated ITC claim (likely referring to the insertion of Section 16(5) via Finance Act, 2024, which allows ITC for FY 17-18 to 20-21 if filed up to 30.11.2021).
The Residual Demand: Despite the ITC being regularized, the Department proceeded to demand interest on the “belated” availment and initiated recovery (DRC-13).
Petitioner’s Stand: Since the retrospective amendment regularizes the availment itself as if it were valid from the start, demanding interest for “delayed” availment is arbitrary and contradictory.
Decision
Arbitrary Recovery: The High Court held that once the belated availment of ITC stands regularized by a statutory insertion or court order, the foundation for levying interest (i.e., that the availment was “wrong” or “delayed” at that time) dissolves.
No Interest on Regularized ITC: Determining interest on an amount that the law now deems to have been validly claimed is arbitrary.
Ruling: The recovery notice (DRC-13) was quashed. The matter was remanded for reconsideration specifically to align with the earlier order regularizing the ITC.
Key Takeaways
Section 16(5) Effect: The new Section 16(5) (Finance Act, 2024) is a non-obstante clause that regularizes ITC claims for FY 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20, and 2020-21 filed up to 30.11.2021. The Department cannot levy interest on these claims because the provision deems them to be in accordance with the law retrospectively.
Check your DRC-07: If you have received orders demanding interest solely because you filed your GSTR-3B late (but before Nov 2021) for the initial years of GST, you can challenge the demand citing this regularization.
WMP. Nos. 45765 and 45766 of 2025