A show cause notice (SCN) is not a final demand. It is the department proposing a demand and asking you to explain why it should not be confirmed. That distinction matters: at the SCN stage you still have the most options and the lowest costs. What you do in the first few days often decides the outcome.
Step 1 — Read what kind of notice it is
GST notices are not all the same. Before reacting, identify:
- The form and section. A demand SCN is typically issued in Form DRC-01. The governing section tells you whether the department alleges an ordinary short-payment or an allegation involving fraud, suppression or wilful misstatement — the latter carries higher stakes and longer limitation.
- The tax periods covered.
- The amount of tax, interest and proposed penalty.
- The deadline to reply, and any personal hearing date.
Step 2 — Diarise the deadline immediately
The single most damaging mistake is missing the reply window. An unanswered SCN can be confirmed ex-parte, turning a contestable proposal into a recoverable demand. Put the date in writing the moment the notice arrives — even before you decide whether to engage an advisor.
The sooner a notice is reviewed, the more options exist. Some of the strongest defences — limitation, jurisdiction, classification — are only useful if raised in the reply.
Step 3 — Reconcile before you argue
Most SCNs arise from a mismatch: GSTR-1 vs GSTR-3B, GSTR-3B vs GSTR-2B, e-way bills, or annual return differences. Before drafting a single legal argument, reconcile the numbers. Often part of the demand is simply explained by timing or a clerical entry, and only the genuine balance needs a substantive defence.
Step 4 — Build the reply
A strong reply usually combines:
- A clear factual reconciliation with supporting documents (invoices, ledgers, contracts, e-way bills).
- Legal grounds where relevant — limitation, classification, valuation, eligibility of input tax credit, or jurisdiction.
- A request for a personal hearing, which you should almost always attend.
The reply is filed on the portal, typically in Form DRC-06, within the time allowed.
Step 5 — Decide on payment strategy
Sometimes paying an undisputed portion early (and contesting the rest) reduces interest and signals good faith. Sometimes it is better to contest in full. This is a judgement call — made with the reconciliation in front of you, not before it.
What not to do
- Don’t ignore it, and don’t assume it will “sort itself out.”
- Don’t fire off an emotional one-line reply — it wastes your best opportunity to frame the dispute.
- Don’t pay the whole demand reflexively just to make the notice go away.
If you’ve received an SCN, send it across as early as you can — ideally before the reply is drafted. The first response in such matters is time-sensitive, and the earlier it’s reviewed, the more can be done.