If your yearly business turnover is under 1.5 crore and you are tired of monthly returns and complicated input tax credit maths, the GST composition scheme lets you pay one small flat percentage of turnover and file just one quarterly payment plus one annual return. Here is who can join, the exact rates, and how to opt in before 31 March.
Quick answer: A trader or manufacturer with turnover up to 1.5 crore (75 lakh in North-Eastern states and Himachal Pradesh) can opt for the composition scheme and pay a flat 1 percent of turnover. Restaurants not serving alcohol pay 5 percent. A separate route lets small service providers up to 50 lakh pay 6 percent. You opt in using Form GST CMP-02 before the financial year starts, then pay quarterly through CMP-08 and file the annual GSTR-4.
The GST composition scheme is a simplified tax route for small businesses. Instead of charging GST on every sale and claiming input tax credit, you pay a fixed low percentage of your total turnover and file far fewer returns. You cannot collect GST from customers or claim credit, but your paperwork and tax rate both drop sharply.
The scheme sits in Section 10 of the CGST Act 2017, with the detailed machinery in Rules 3 to 7 of the CGST Rules 2017. The composition levy for service providers up to 50 lakh comes from Notification 2/2019-Central Tax (Rate) read with Section 10(2A). The annual return due date was extended from 30 April to 30 June by Notification 12/2024-Central Tax dated 10 July 2024, following the 53rd GST Council meeting, and applies from financial year 2024-25 onward.
The administering authority is the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), and all forms are filed on the GST portal at https://www.gst.gov.in . The signboard and bill disclosure duty comes from Rule 18 of the CGST Rules 2017.
| Item | Detail |
|---|---|
| Turnover limit (goods, most states) | Up to 1.5 crore in the preceding year |
| Turnover limit (special states) | Up to 75 lakh in North-Eastern states and Himachal Pradesh |
| Service provider route | Up to 50 lakh, taxed at 6 percent |
| Manufacturers and traders | 1 percent of turnover (0.5 CGST + 0.5 SGST) |
| Restaurants (no alcohol) | 5 percent of turnover (2.5 CGST + 2.5 SGST) |
You cannot join, or you lose the scheme, if you:
While in the scheme you cannot collect GST from your customers and cannot claim input tax credit. You issue a bill of supply, not a tax invoice, and you must show the words “composition taxable person” on every bill of supply and on the signboard at your principal place of business under Rule 18.
Kashvi Pathak runs a small garment shop in Indore with a yearly turnover of about 80 lakh, all sales within Madhya Pradesh. Under normal GST she filed monthly returns and tracked input credit on every purchase. In March 2026 she filed Form GST CMP-02 before the deadline and reversed 12,000 of stock credit through Form GST ITC-03 within 60 days. From April 2026 she pays a flat 1 percent of turnover, roughly 800 per quarter through CMP-08, and files one annual GSTR-4 by 30 June 2027. Her accountant fee dropped because the monthly filing work disappeared.
To: My GST accountant Subject: Opting for composition scheme FY 2026-27 My turnover this year is about 80 lakh, all sales within the state, no e-commerce, no inter-state supply. Please: 1. File Form GST CMP-02 before 31 March 2026. 2. File Form GST ITC-03 to reverse stock credit within 60 days. 3. Set up quarterly CMP-08 reminders (due 18th after each quarter). 4. Diarise the annual GSTR-4 due 30 June 2027. From April my bills must say "composition taxable person".
For goods, up to 1.5 crore in most states and 75 lakh in the North-Eastern states and Himachal Pradesh. A separate service-provider route allows up to 50 lakh.
Manufacturers and traders pay 1 percent of turnover, restaurants not serving alcohol pay 5 percent, and the special service-provider route is 6 percent.
File Form GST CMP-02 on the GST portal before the financial year starts, that is by 31 March for the year ahead. If you held input credit on stock, also file Form GST ITC-03 within 60 days.
No. You cannot claim input tax credit and you cannot collect GST from customers. In return you pay a low flat rate and file far fewer returns.
No. Any inter-state outward supply of goods disqualifies you. The scheme is meant for businesses selling within their own state.
A quarterly payment statement, Form GST CMP-08, due the 18th of the month after each quarter, and one annual return, Form GSTR-4, due 30 June of the next financial year.
No. Supplying through an e-commerce operator that collects tax at source is not allowed for composition dealers.
Yes. Under Rule 18 you must issue a bill of supply that shows the words “composition taxable person”, and display the same words on the signboard at your principal place of business.