Anti-Profiteering: Failure to Pass on ITC Benefits in Construction Contracts (Section 171)

By | March 25, 2026

Anti-Profiteering: Failure to Pass on ITC Benefits in Construction Contracts (Section 171)


Facts

  • The Complaint: NTPC filed a complaint with the Standing Committee alleging that the Respondent (the contractor) had failed to pass on the benefits of the GST transition in a construction contract for the period July 2017 to October 2023.

  • The Transition: Before GST, the tax incidence (Excise, VAT, etc.) was approximately 10.8%. Post-GST, the availability of Input Tax Credit (ITC) on raw materials (like binding wire, MS/Hume pipes, and instruments) increased significantly.

  • The Rebate: The contract originally carried a CA-certified rebate of Rs. 11.01 crores to account for the removal of erstwhile taxes. However, scrutiny revealed a short rebate of Rs. 2.54 crores.

  • Investigation Findings: The Director General of Anti-Profiteering (DGAP) found that the Respondent benefited from additional ITC post-GST which was not fully factored into the pricing or rebates provided to the client.

  • The Calculation: The DGAP computed the total profiteered amount at Rs. 12,20,694 based on the cost of materials and the tax transition benefit.


Decision

The Authority ruled against the Assessee, confirming the profiteering charge based on the following legal reasoning:

  • Mandate of Section 171: Any reduction in the rate of tax or the benefit of Input Tax Credit (ITC) must be passed on to the recipient by way of a commensurate reduction in prices.

  • Validation of Material Costs: The Authority accepted the DGAP’s inclusion of specific items like binding wire and pipes in the calculation, as these items saw a direct increase in ITC availability after the rollout of GST.

  • Proportionate Liability: Since the project was 76.33% complete according to the Letter of Award (LoA), the Respondent was held liable for a proportionate profiteered amount.

  • Final Verdict: The Respondent was found to have profiteered by Rs. 12.20 lakh in total. However, for the completed portion of the work, a sum of Rs. 9.36 lakh was ordered to be passed on to the applicant (NTPC) within 30 days.


Key Takeaways

  • Price Reduction is Mandatory: In high-value construction and infrastructure contracts, contractors must proactively adjust their billing or provide rebates when the tax regime shifts to one that allows broader ITC (like the shift from Service Tax/VAT to GST).

  • Work Completion Ratio: The liability for profiteering is often calculated proportionately to the stage of completion. Contractors should maintain “Percentage of Completion” (POCM) records to ensure any anti-profiteering demands are accurately limited to the work actually billed/performed.

  • CA Certification is Not Absolute: A rebate certified by a Chartered Accountant can still be challenged and recalculated by the DGAP if the underlying tax incidence data (pre-GST vs. post-GST) shows a higher benefit than what was disclosed.

  • Scrutiny of Input Goods: Anti-profiteering investigations specifically target “predetermined items” where the tax saving is obvious. Entities should perform internal “ITC gain-loss” audits for major raw materials to mitigate the risk of Section 171 litigation.


GOODS AND SERVICE TAX APPELLATE AUTHORITY , NEW DELHI BENCH
DG Anti Profiteering, Director General of Anti-profiteering, DGAP
v.
Kanwar Enterprises (P.) Ltd.*
Anil Kumar Gupta, Technical Member
NAPA/162/PB/2025
FEBRUARY  12, 2026
ORDER
1. The proceedings in the present case arise out of the investigation report dated 25.10.2024 (hereinafter referred to as the “DGAP Report”) submitted by the Director General of Anti-Profiteering (hereinafter referred to as the “DGAP”) under Section 171 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Act, 2017 (hereinafter referred to as the “CGST Act”), read with Rule 129 of the Central Goods and Services Tax Rules, 2017 (hereinafter referred to as the “CGST Rules”). The investigation was initiated pursuant to a complaint referred by the Standing Committee on Anti-Profiteering on an application filed by the Executive Director (Vigilance), NTPC, 6th Floor, Engineering Office Complex, Plot-A-8A, Sector-24, Noida-201301 (hereinafter referred as Applicant), alleging profiteering in respect of construction services supplied by M/s Kanwar Enterprises Pvt. Ltd., C-73, Sector- 73, Noida, Gautam Budh Nagar, Uttar Pradesh- 201301, (hereinafter referred to as “the Respondent”) for the Project “Ash Dyke Stage-II A NTPC Tanda Thermal Power Project”, situated at Uttar Pradesh. It was alleged that the Respondent had failed to pass on the benefit of input tax credit of GST as well as benefit due to reduced GST liability as compared to VAT & Service Tax in pre-GST period to M/s NTPC Ltd. in respect of the construction service of the said project.
2. The period covered by the current investigation is from 01.07.2017 to 31.10.2023.
3. The DGAP stated that following the introduction of GST from 01.07.2017, earlier taxes such as VAT and Service Tax were subsumed, and the contract was amended after the Respondent offered a rebate to NTPC to account for pre-GST tax liabilities and the impact of input tax credit. Initially, the Respondent calculated pre-GST taxes by applying VAT at 5% on 60% of the contract value and Service Tax at 14.5% on 40%, resulting in a rebate of ?11.01 crore, duly certified by a Chartered Accountant. However, upon examination prompted by a CVC query, it was observed that VAT at 5% was applicable on the full contract value, leading to a total pre-GST tax incidence of 10.8% of the base value and a revised pre-GST tax liability of Rs. 13.55 crore, thereby revealing a short rebate of Rs. 2.54 crore recoverable from the Respondent. Further, DGAP noted that GST enabled additional input tax credit on goods and services, including materials consumed, and under Section 171 of the CGST Act, 2017, the benefit of such additional ITC was required to be passed on to the service recipient. During examination of the CA certificate and contract details, DGAP concluded that certain pre-determined material items—namely binding wire, MS pipe/Hume pipe, and instruments—were to be considered for calculating profiteering on the basis of their total expected consumption over the project, with the profiteering amount to be proportionately passed on to NTPC for amounts already billed and to be adjusted similarly in future billings. Profiteering calculated by the DGAP is as follows:-
Calculation of Profiteering
Service/MaterialsTaxable Value as per agreement Rs.Rate of C. Excise Rs.Cost to supplier after adjusting for Margin* of Profit @12 % Rs.Taxable Value/Cost to Supplier after adjusting for Central Excise not applicable in pre-GST regime Rs.Reduction in cost due to Central Excise Duty being subsumed in GST and available as ITC Rs.
(A)(B)(C)(D=(B*100)/112)(E=(D*100)/112.5)(F=”D-E)
Instruments208700012.5%18633931656349207044
Binding Wire68160012.5%60857154095267619
Hume Pipe/RCC/MS Pipe953600012.5%85142867568254946032
Profiteering1220695

 

* Respondent has claimed that the cost of agreement includes 12 % margin of profit on its own cost of procurement of services or the inputs
From the above table, it is noticed that the total profiteering of Rs 12,20,695/- has accrued to the Respondent post implementation of the GST. The profiteering of Rs.12,20,695/- has to be passed on to the NTPC in respect of purchases of goods and services in the post GST period which is Rs.127,27,56,924/-.
4. The DGAP in its report concluded that as per Bill Summary submitted by the Respondent to the DGAP vide email dated 06.08.2024, the work of Rs.97,66,48,456/- i.e. almost 76.735% of the total work done in the post GST period, and accordingly, proportionate profiteering for the completed work comes to Rs.9,36,700/- and the same is required to be passed on to the NTPC. The Respondent is also required to pass on the remaining profiteering amount of Rs.2,83,995/- to the NTPC upon completion of the balance work.
5. The above report of the DGAP was received in Pr. Bench, GSTAT on 25.10.2024. A Notice dated 28.10.2025 was issued to the Respondent with intimation to the complainants to file written submissions on the report of the DGAP.
6. The Respondent, vide letter dated 01.12.2025, accepted the profiteered amount determined in the DGAP’s report dated 25.10.2024, stating that after internal verification and reconciliation of the DGAP’s calculations, the differential benefit under GST was acknowledged in good faith and as a measure of compliance with Section 171 of the CGST Act, 2017, while clarifying that there was no mala fide intent and that any non-passing of transitional benefit was inadvertent due to implementation challenges during the GST transition. Subsequently, NTPC, through an email dated 02.12.2025 from its Addl. General Manager (Vigilance), indicated that he was not associated with the contract and provided details of the concerned officials, pursuant to which notices were issued to them. Thereafter, NTPC, vide reply dated 07.01.2026 from its DGM and Package Incharge, informed that it had reviewed the DGAP’s report, the Respondent’s acceptance letter, and the rebate calculations, and accepted the computed additional profiteered amount of Rs. 12,20,329/-over and above the earlier acknowledged amount of Rs. 11.01 crore.
7. Hearings in the matter were conducted on 16.12.2025 and 28.01.2026, during which Sh. Sunil Kumar, Additional Assistant Director, and Sh. Anurag Gupta, Inspector, appeared on behalf of the DGAP, while Sh. Ajit Kumar Mahapatra, Taxation Manager, represented the Respondent, and Sh. Jai Prakash Gupta, DGM and Package In-charge, appeared on behalf of the Complainant, M/s NTPC Ltd. During the hearings, the Respondent reiterated its acceptance of the DGAP’s report, and the Applicant confirmed, as already communicated vide letter dated 07.01.2026, that the findings of the DGAP were acceptable to them. In view of such acceptance by both parties, the Departmental Representatives of the DGAP submitted that the matter may be closed in accordance with the DGAP’s report.
8. In view of the above, we hold that the Respondent has profiteered by an amount of Rs. 12,20,694/- which needs to be passed on to M/s NTPC Ltd. And as the work of Rs. 97,66,48,456/- has been completed which is about 76.735% of the total work done as per Letter of Award dated 15.09.2016 for the said project in post GST period, accordingly, proportionate profiteering amount for the completed work calculated as Rs. 9,36,700/- is liable to be passed to the Applicant. Further as per Rule 133(3)(b) of the Central Goods and Services Tax Rules, 2017, the Respondent is liable to pay interest as applicable to Applicant. The Respondent shall pay the profiteered amount of Rs. 9,36,700/- to the Applicant along with applicable interest within 30 days and submit compliance report to the jurisdictional CGST/SGST Commissioner with intimation to the DGAP within 2 months.
9. The case is disposed of, accordingly.
10. A copy of this order be supplied to the Respondent, the Applicant and to the concerned Commissioners CGST/SGST for necessary action.
11. Order is pronounced in the open court today.
Category: GST

About CA Satbir Singh

Chartered Accountant having 12+ years of Experience in Taxation , Finance and GST related matters and can be reached at Email : Taxheal@gmail.com