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Hospital Refuses to Give You a GST Invoice

If a hospital won't give you a proper GST tax invoice for a taxable charge, first check what was taxable, then demand the invoice in writing before you escalate.

Reviewed on: 2026-05-29.

A patient and relative at a hospital cashier asking for a proper tax bill while staff hand over only a plain receipt.

When a hospital hands you a plain receipt but withholds a proper GST tax invoice, the fix starts with asking what was actually taxable.

Quick answer

If a hospital has charged you GST or made a taxable supply, it must give you a proper tax invoice showing its GSTIN, the item, the tax rate, and the tax amount. A plain cash receipt or a lump-sum bill is not enough where GST applies. Start by asking, in writing, for a full GST tax invoice for the specific charges, and keep the request and any reply.

One catch matters first: core hospital treatment of an admitted patient is generally exempt from GST, so for those charges the hospital may correctly issue a bill of supply rather than a tax invoice. The dispute is real only for the taxable parts of your bill, such as certain high room charges, retail pharmacy sales, cosmetic or aesthetic procedures, canteen or food, or services to a walk-in person. For those, a registered hospital must issue a tax invoice, and a refusal is worth escalating.

Who this guide is for

This guide is for you if you paid a hospital and could not get a proper GST tax invoice for a charge that looks taxable. It fits situations like these:

What you can do this weekend

Friday evening

Gather the paperwork and work out what was actually taxable.

Saturday

Put the request in writing and pin down the exact documents you want.

Sunday

Prepare your escalation so you can act on Monday.

Documents and evidence checklist

Document or evidence Why it matters / where to get it
Final hospital bill and all receipts Show the total you paid and how charges were grouped; they are the base for spotting which items were taxable.
Any receipt or note mentioning GST or tax If an amount was collected as tax, that is exactly where a proper tax invoice is owed to you.
Pharmacy and consumables slips Retail pharmacy sales to outpatients or after discharge are usually taxable supplies that need a tax invoice.
Discharge summary and treatment records Help separate exempt inpatient treatment from taxable add-ons like cosmetic work, food, or premium room charges.
The hospital's GSTIN, if shown anywhere Confirms the hospital is registered under GST and is therefore expected to issue tax invoices for taxable supplies.
Your written request for the invoice and its acknowledgement Proves you asked properly and gives the date the hospital refused or ignored you, which any escalation needs.
Insurance, reimbursement, or employer claim papers, if relevant Show why you need the tax invoice, since claims and input tax credit often require a GST-compliant document.
Screenshots of any portal or app receipt Capture digital receipts before they change, so your record of what was charged cannot be altered later.

Step-by-step action plan

  1. Separate the taxable charges from exempt treatment. Go through your bill and mark only the items that are taxable, such as anything billed as GST or tax, retail pharmacy purchases, cosmetic or aesthetic procedures, food or canteen, and premium room charges. Core treatment of an admitted patient is usually exempt, so do not chase a tax invoice for that part.
  2. Confirm the hospital is registered under GST. Look for the hospital's GSTIN on the bill, a board, or its website. A business that is registered and makes a taxable supply must issue a proper tax invoice. You can verify a GSTIN on the official GST portal if you are unsure.
  3. Ask for the tax invoice in writing. Send a written request, by email or for a stamped acknowledgement, to the billing or accounts department. Ask for a full GST tax invoice for each taxable charge, showing the GSTIN, the item, the HSN or SAC code, the rate, and the tax amount. Do not rely on a verbal request.
  4. Insist on a tax invoice, not just a receipt. A plain cash receipt or a lump-sum bill is not a substitute where GST applies. If staff offer only a receipt, state clearly in writing that you need a GST-compliant tax invoice for the taxable items, and keep their reply.
  5. Escalate to the hospital's accounts or grievance head. If the billing desk will not help, write to the accounts head, finance manager, or grievance officer. Reference your earlier request, attach the bill, and set a reasonable time to receive the invoice before you complain to the authorities.
  6. Raise it on the GST grievance portal. If the hospital still refuses, lodge a complaint on the GST self-service or grievance portal with your bill and the proof of your request. You can also flag it with the jurisdictional GST office or the CBIC GST helpdesk, since failure to issue a tax invoice is a GST compliance issue.
  7. Use the consumer route for deficiency in service. If the refusal caused you loss, such as a denied claim or lost input tax credit, file a complaint on the e-Daakhil consumer portal or call the National Consumer Helpline. Charging tax but refusing a valid tax invoice can be a deficiency in service.
  8. Use RTI only if it is a government hospital. If the hospital is government-run, you can file an RTI to seek its billing rules, GST registration details, and any record of your charges. For a private hospital, RTI does not apply, so rely on the GST and consumer routes instead.

Escalation ladder

Step Who to approach How to reach them Typical timeline
1. Hospital billing / accounts desk The billing or accounts staff who issued your bill Submit a written request, by email or for a stamped acknowledgement, for a GST tax invoice for the taxable items A few days
2. Accounts head / grievance officer The finance manager, accounts head, or designated grievance officer Write referencing your earlier request, attach the bill, and ask for the invoice within a reasonable time About one to two weeks
3. GST grievance portal / jurisdictional office GST self-service grievance portal, or the jurisdictional GST office and CBIC GST helpdesk Lodge a complaint online with your bill and proof of request, or email the CBIC GST helpdesk for central issues As per the portal
4. Consumer commission (e-Daakhil) District consumer disputes redressal commission File online through the e-Daakhil portal, or call the National Consumer Helpline first for guidance Varies by commission
5. RTI (government hospital only) Public Information Officer of the government hospital or health department File an RTI online or by post for the billing rules, GST details, and record of your charges As notified under the RTI Act
6. CPGRAMS (government hospital) The public grievance system for the central or state government Lodge a grievance on the CPGRAMS portal against the government hospital or health department As per the portal

Copy-paste complaint template

Adapt the bracketed parts. Keep a copy of everything you send.

Subject: Request for GST tax invoice for taxable charges - [Patient Name], Bill/IP No. [], dated [date]

To,
The Billing / Accounts Department
[Hospital Name], [City]

Subject: Request for a proper GST tax invoice for the taxable charges in Bill/IP No. [____] dated [date]

Dear Sir/Madam,

I paid the above bill for [Patient Name] on [date]. The bill includes charges that appear to be taxable supplies under GST, for which I have not received a proper GST tax invoice. The items are:

1. [Charge / item / service] - amount [Rs. ____], shown as [GST / tax / no breakup].
2. [Pharmacy / device purchase] - amount [Rs. ____].
3. [Room / food / cosmetic / other taxable charge] - amount [Rs. ____].

Against these charges I was given only [a plain receipt / a lump-sum bill], without your GSTIN, the HSN/SAC code, the applicable rate, or the tax amount.

As a registered person making a taxable supply, I request you to:
- Issue a proper GST tax invoice for the above charges, showing your GSTIN, the HSN/SAC code, the rate, and the tax amount, and
- Confirm in writing if you treat any of these charges as exempt, with the reason.

I need the tax invoice for [my records / reimbursement / insurance / input tax credit]. Please share it within a reasonable time and acknowledge this request with a reference number.

I have attached the bill, the receipts, and the relevant slips.

Thank you.

Yours faithfully,
[Full Name]
[Relationship to patient, if applicable]
[Mobile number] | [Email]
[Date]

When RTI can help

RTI works only where a public authority holds the records, and it gets you documents and rules rather than the invoice itself. RTI genuinely helps when:

When RTI will not help

RTI does not reach a purely private hospital, and it cannot order the hospital to issue an invoice or refund the tax. Most corporate and nursing-home hospitals are private bodies, so RTI does not apply to them.

Common mistakes to avoid

FAQs

Must a hospital give me a GST tax invoice?

Only for taxable supplies. A hospital that is registered under GST and makes a taxable supply, such as a retail pharmacy sale, a cosmetic procedure, food, or certain premium charges, must issue a proper tax invoice with its GSTIN, the item, the rate, and the tax. For exempt inpatient treatment it may instead issue a bill of supply, which is allowed.

If GST was actually collected, a plain receipt is not enough. A registered person making a taxable supply must give a proper tax invoice showing the GSTIN, HSN or SAC code, rate, and tax amount. Ask in writing for the tax invoice. If they refuse, raise it on the GST grievance portal and, if you suffered loss, through the consumer route.

Why does the hospital say it is exempt and refuse any tax document?

Core healthcare treatment of an admitted patient is generally exempt from GST, so for that part the hospital can issue a bill of supply rather than a tax invoice. But exemption does not cover every charge. For taxable items like retail pharmacy, cosmetic work, or food, a registered hospital must still issue a proper tax invoice, and it cannot use exemption to deny that.

Where do I complain if the hospital still refuses a GST invoice?

Use the GST self-service or grievance portal to report that a registered hospital refused a tax invoice for a taxable supply, attaching your bill and your written request. You can also flag it with the jurisdictional GST office or the CBIC GST helpdesk. If the refusal caused you loss, file a consumer complaint on the e-Daakhil portal or call the National Consumer Helpline.

Does RTI help me get a GST invoice from a hospital?

Only for a government or public hospital. There you can file an RTI for its billing rules, fee orders, GST registration details, and the record of your charges. RTI gets you documents and accountability, not the invoice itself, and it does not apply to a private hospital. For private hospitals, use the GST grievance and consumer routes instead.

I need the invoice for insurance or input tax credit. What should I do?

Ask in writing now, because claims and input tax credit usually require a GST-compliant tax invoice. Tell the hospital exactly why you need it and the details it must carry: GSTIN, HSN or SAC code, rate, and tax. Keep the request and their reply. If they delay or refuse, escalate on the GST grievance portal and, if a claim is denied, through the consumer route.

How do I check whether the hospital is registered under GST?

Look for the GSTIN printed on the bill, a notice board, or the hospital's website. You can verify a GSTIN using the search facility on the official GST portal. If the hospital is registered and made a taxable supply to you, it is expected to issue a proper tax invoice for that charge, and you can cite its GSTIN when you complain.

Can I get a refund of the GST if no valid invoice is given?

A refund is not automatic. First insist on a proper tax invoice for the taxable charge. If GST was collected but the hospital cannot show it was due or issue a valid invoice, raise it on the GST grievance portal and, where it caused you loss, through the consumer route. The authorities decide on tax that was wrongly collected; you focus on getting the correct documentation.

Clear next steps