Receiving a Show Cause Notice (SCN) under GST often creates anxiety among taxpayers. However, the outcome of most GST adjudication proceedings depends not merely on the allegations raised by the department but on the quality of the taxpayer’s reply submitted in Form GST DRC-06.
A well-drafted Form GST DRC-06 is far more than a routine, mechanical explanation. It represents the taxpayerβs formal written defence before the adjudicating authority and frequently establishes the evidentiary foundation for any subsequent appeal before the Appellate Authority, the GST Appellate Tribunal, the High Court, or the Supreme Court.
Many taxpayers make the fundamental error of submitting brief, skeletal replies that merely offer blanket denials or duplicate statutory provisions without presenting supporting evidence. Such responses fail to address the officer’s specific queries, almost always resulting in the confirmation of the proposed tax demand. To avoid this, your representation must be factual, structured, and legally supported from the very beginning.
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This guide explains how to prepare an effective DRC-06 reply, what documents should accompany your submission, the common drafting mistakes to avoid, and the practical strategies that improve your chances of successfully defending against a GST demand.
Who Should Read This Guide?
This guide has been structured specifically for:
- Registered business owners who have received a Show Cause Notice in Form GST DRC-01.
- GST practitioners and tax consultants drafting legal replies on behalf of clients.
- Finance heads, accounts managers, and corporate legal departments handling tax controversies.
- Taxpayers seeking to understand how to legally rebut system-generated mismatches or audit objections.
Quick Answer
Form GST DRC-06 is the statutory reply submitted by a taxpayer in response to a Show Cause Notice issued in Form GST DRC-01. To be effective, your DRC-06 reply must be highly structured and cover the following essential components:
| Essential Component | Strategic Importance in Adjudication |
|---|---|
| Facts of the Case | Establishes the factual background and business model of the taxpayer. |
| Issue-wise Reply | Addresses and dismantles every single allegation separately. |
| Documentary Evidence | Supports factual assertions with verifiable external data. |
| Relevant GST Provisions | Demonstrates the legal validity of the taxpayer’s position. |
| Notifications & Circulars | Clarifies and binds the department to its own official interpretations. |
| Judicial Precedents | Leverages established court rulings to defeat departmental assumptions. |
| Reconciliation Statements | Resolves arithmetic discrepancies (e.g., GSTR-2B vs. 3B or GSTR-1 vs. 3B). |
| Prayer Clause | Clearly states the exact relief sought and requests a personal hearing. |
What is Form GST DRC-06?
Form GST DRC-06 is the prescribed form under the Central Goods and Services Tax Rules through which a registered person furnishes a written reply to a Show Cause Notice issued under the GST law. While the department uses Form DRC-01 to propose a demand of tax, interest, or penalty, the taxpayer uses DRC-06 to state their defence and explain why those proposed demands should not be confirmed.
Where Does DRC-06 Fit in the GST Demand Process?
The GST administration operates on a structured timeline. Understanding exactly where your reply fits in the lifecycle of a dispute is crucial for mapping out your defence:
Why is DRC-06 So Important?
A common but highly dangerous assumption among businesses is that they can file a brief, generic reply before the adjudicating authority and explain the details later during the appeal stage. In practice, this strategy often proves fatal to the case.
Appellate authorities are legally bound to examine whether the taxpayer placed their factual and legal arguments on record before the original adjudicating officer. If key documents, reconciliations, or legal objections are omitted at the DRC-06 stage, introducing them later during an appeal under Section 107 requires additional justification and is often rejected. Therefore, you must draft your DRC-06 as if it will ultimately be scrutinized by the High Court.
Difference Between DRC-01 and DRC-06
Although both forms are part of the same adjudication lifecycle, they serve opposite functions:
| Particulars | DRC-01 (Show Cause Notice) | DRC-06 (Statutory Reply) |
|---|---|---|
| Filed By | The Proper Officer (GST Department) | The Taxpayer (or their authorized representative) |
| Purpose | Proposes a demand of tax, interest, and penalty | Contests the proposed demand with facts and law |
| Nature of Content | Departmental allegations and relied-upon data | Taxpayerβs detailed defence and reconciliations |
| Starts Adjudication | Yes (Sets the proceeding in motion) | No (Responds to the initiated proceeding) |
Why Many DRC-06 Replies Fail
In our practice, we see that most unsuccessful replies fail because of preventable drafting errors:
- They offer simple, unsupported denials (e.g., “the demand is incorrect”) without numerical proof.
- They fail to respond to each allegation individually, leaving some points completely unaddressed.
- They omit granular, invoice-wise or return-wise reconciliation statements.
- They focus purely on citing sections of the GST Act while completely ignoring the commercial facts of the transaction.
- They attach a massive stack of invoices without explaining how those documents disprove the officer’s allegations.
A professionally drafted DRC-06 should answer every allegation, reconcile every disputed figure, and support every factual assertion with documentary evidence. A comprehensive, litigation-ready reply at this initial stage substantially improves the taxpayer’s position in any subsequent appeal and often prevents the case from escalating further.
Statutory Framework Governing Form GST DRC-06
Form GST DRC-06 is the legal pleading submitted before the Proper Officer. The statutory authority for the notice being replied to dictates the legal boundaries of your defence:
| Statutory Provision | Nature of the Notice Being Replied To |
|---|---|
| Section 73 | Disputes involving non-payment, short payment, or wrong ITC where there is no allegation of fraud or suppression. |
| Section 74 | Proceedings involving allegations of fraud, wilful misstatement, or suppression of facts to evade tax. |
| Section 74A | The newly introduced unified adjudication framework for specified periods under the Finance Act, 2024. For a complete strategic breakdown of how these timelines affect your case, refer to our Section 73 vs 74 vs 74A Comparison Guide. |
| Rule 142 | The procedural rules governing the issuance of notices and the filing of DRC-06 replies. |
When Should DRC-06 Be Filed?
The written reply must be filed within the timeline specified in the Show Cause Notice, which is typically 30 days from the date of service. Taxpayers should never assume a standard period without reading the notice carefully. If additional time is required to compile transaction records or obtain certificates from suppliers, a written request seeking a reasonable extension must be submitted to the Proper Officer before the original due date expires.
Do not wait until the personal hearing to state your case. The written DRC-06 reply should contain your complete factual and legal defence. The personal hearing is intended to clarify issues already raised in your written submission, not to introduce entirely new documents or arguments. Presenting a comprehensive written reply first ensures the officer has a clear understanding of your position before you meet.
Step-by-Step Method for Drafting an Effective DRC-06
Experienced practitioners follow a disciplined drafting workflow to ensure the reply is legally impenetrable:
Suggested Structure of a Litigation-Ready DRC-06
To ensure the adjudicating officer can easily navigate your defence, your reply should be structured as follows:
Defeating an βΉ8 Lakh ITC Reversal Charge in DRC-06
A taxpayer received a Show Cause Notice proposing an ITC reversal of βΉ8,00,000 under Section 74, alleging wrongful availment of credit from a defaulting supplier. A generic reply denying the charge would have resulted in the demand being confirmed.
By structuring the DRC-06 reply with this combination of clear facts, indexed annexures, and binding judicial precedents, we proved that the taxpayer had fully satisfied the conditions of Section 16 of the CGST Act. The Proper Officer accepted the reply and dropped the proposed demand of βΉ8,00,000 in full.
Key Precedents to Cite in Your DRC-06
To give your written reply the necessary legal weight, cite and explain these landmark judgments where applicable:
Common Mistakes in Representation to Avoid
Submission Process on the GST Portal
Once your written reply is finalized, signed, and stamped, it must be uploaded to the GST common portal. Follow this structured process:
How We Approach This Issue at VirtualTax
At VirtualTax, our first step is never to draft the reply. We begin by analysing whether the notice itself is legally sustainable, whether the statutory provision invoked is appropriate, and whether the alleged discrepancies can be explained through reconciliation. Only after this preliminary assessment do we prepare issue-wise submissions supported by documentary evidence and applicable legal provisions.
We believe that successful dispute resolution is built on technical accuracy and systematic preparation. By diagnosing procedural gaps, verifying limitation timelines, and building robust, mathematically sound reconciliations before presenting legal arguments, we ensure that your representation stands on a solid foundation from day one.
Need Help Drafting an Effective GST DRC-06 Reply?
Every GST notice deserves careful legal and factual examination before any reply is submitted. A response prepared without proper reconciliation or understanding of the statutory provisions can severely weaken your position during adjudication and at any subsequent appeal stage.
At VirtualTax, we assist businesses across India in diagnosing notices, preparing litigation-ready replies, drafting comprehensive reconciliations, representing taxpayers during personal hearings, and handling GST appeals. Contact us before you file your response.