
The month of February 2026 was a tremendous milestone in relation to GST jurisprudence in India. Notable decisions were passed by the Supreme Court of India, several High Courts, and the new operational GST Appellate Tribunal, ranging on the issues of eligibility of Input Tax credit, the scope of departmental powers, the validity of notice of services, the anti-profiteering duties, and the scope of extended limitation period.
All such decisions, collectively, support procedural fairness and provide significant legal protection to more authentic taxpayers. The article is an organised discussion on the key GST case laws of February 2026, aimed at Indian tax practitioners and companies that are to overcome complicated compliance and litigation issues.

A new GST Appellate Tribunal became operational in India and issued one of the most significant case laws in the GST case law in February 2026. The ruling directly addresses one of the most common compliance concerns faced by taxpayers across India.
Case Reference
What the Tribunal Decided
The GSTAT believed that the lack of alignment between GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B could not necessarily result in action under Section 74 of the CGST Act.
In the event that the underlying transactions are bona fide and are fairly reflected in the books of accounts, procedural lapse or reconciliation gap cannot be attributed to fraud, suppression, or wilful misstatement.
Key Takeaway
Reconciliation areas that have come up, especially within the initial years of the GST implementation, should be analysed pragmatically. The department cannot invoke the harsher provisions of Section 74 simply because of a data mismatch between two returns.
Rule 86A has been under a lot of debate as to its scope and limits since its introduction. In February 2026, much-demanded clarity was given on the matter by the Punjab and Haryana High Court.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court ruled that Rule 86A grants the department a preventive power to freeze available credit in the Electronic Credit Ledger. However, it cannot be used to create an artificial negative balance in the ledger or function as a recovery tool against the taxpayer.
Key Takeaway
Businesses facing ITC ledger freezes under Rule 86A can use this ruling to challenge arbitrary ledger debits made without prior adjudication. Recovery must always follow the prescribed legal process.

The Supreme Court of India has taken a position regarding the applicability of the unjust enrichment doctrine in the case of GST refund claims, a decision that has far-reaching implications for the businesses that have transferred the cost of taxes to their consumer base.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
According to the ruling of the Supreme Court, it was impossible to refund the GST paid on ocean freight charges when the payment on these charges has already been assigned to the final consumer.
The doctrine of unjust enrichment also helps prevent the refund claim of a taxpayer, even in cases where it is later discovered that the levy is unconstitutional, when the consumer has already paid the cost.
Key Takeaway
Companies that have passed on their GST expenses to their consumers are not entitled to refunds even after the charge has been ruled unconstitutional. This decision underlines the leading role of the doctrine of fraudulent enrichment in the GST refund jurisprudence.

The decision of the GST Appellate Tribunal on the anti-profiteering case in February 2026 sends a strong signal to businesses that the advantage of a cut in GST should always be transferred to the consumers without any alteration to the base price.
Case Reference
What the Tribunal Decided
The Tribunal decided that a restaurant that had raised its base prices on the same day when the GST rate went down to 5 percent had contravened the provisions of Section 171 of the CGST Act. The rate cut was practically nullified by the rise in prices.
Key Takeaway
Businesses must immediately pass on the benefit of GST rate reductions to their customers. Any simultaneous or subsequent increase in base price to offset the rate reduction will be treated as profiteering under Section 171.
The Uttarakhand High Court delivered a critical judgment on the viability of notifications delivered only using the GST portal in February 2026, which provides deep protection to taxpayers whose registration was cancelled.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court held that a notice that is presented by the GST portal alone lacks valid service once the registration of the taxpayer in GST is revoked.
Section 169 of the CGST Act gives various permissible service modes such as speed post, email, and courier, and the department cannot depend on portal communication once the registration is not active anymore.
Key Takeaway
Where GST registration has been cancelled, taxpayers should verify the mode of service for any notices. If served only through the portal, such notices may be challenged as invalid, and any orders passed pursuant to such notice can be contested.

In February 2026, an important decision was taken by the Calcutta High Court limiting the department from invoking the extended limitation period in a miscellaneous Statement over all the demands in one Show Cause Notice.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The Court held that the extended limitation period available under Section 74 cannot be applied as a blanket cover across all demands raised in a Show Cause Notice.
Each demand for which an extended limitation is sought must be independently supported by specific and substantiated allegations of fraud, suppression, or wilful misstatement.
Key Takeaway
Taxpayers subject to Show Cause Notices under Section 74 with multi-demand proceedings have to consider whether every demand is supported by any particular allegation. If not, the extended limitation for that demand can be legally challenged.
The Kerala High Court supported the relaxation that is given by the statute under Section 16(5) of the CGST Act, and it stated that taxpayers who submitted their returns within the stipulated extended timeframe can not be denied Input Tax Credit.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court stated that the restriction on time found in Section 16(4) of the CGST Act is overridden by Section 16(5) of that Act.
Therefore, ITC is not to be refused to a taxpayer simply because a procedural delay in the filing of returns occurred, as long as returns were filed on or before 30
November 2021, as the statutory relaxation allows.
Key Takeaway
Taxpayers who have received ITC denial orders pursuant to Section 16(4) because they filed their returns late would consider whether or not Section 16(5) is applicable in their case.
This ruling is a solid legal foundation against a rebuttal of the refusal where the returns were filed by 30 November 2021.
In February 2026, the Allahabad High Court revisited one of the most fundamental principles that were enshrined in the GST law, namely: The proceedings under Section 74 of the act can be initiated only after the existence of a clear, specific allegation of fraud, suppression, or wilful misstatement.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court dismissed Section 74 proceedings started against the taxpayer because the department had not established any particular claim of fraud, suppression, or wilful misstatement.
The transactions of the taxpayer were factual and were supported by a complete paper trail, such as invoices, e-way bills, and bank records.
Key Takeaway
Taxpayers who have genuine transactions and well-documented transactions should actively collect and retain their records.
In cases where the department in question is unable to identify a particular act of fraud or suppression, the proceedings of Section 74 are legally unsustainable.
The Orissa High Court addressed the procedural question of when writ jurisdiction before High Courts remains available for taxpayers challenging GST assessment orders, following the operationalisation of the GST Appellate Tribunal.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court observed that the GSTAT has now been made functional, and the government has notified extended timelines for filing appeals before the Tribunal. Accordingly, the continuation of writ proceedings was no longer justified.
The Court held that while writ jurisdiction can be invoked when statutory appellate forums are non-functional, once the forum becomes operational, the taxpayer must comply with the pre-deposit requirements under Section 112(8) and pursue the remedy through GSTAT.
Key Takeaway
Those taxpayers who had submitted writ petitions when GSTAT was not functioning will now need to move to use the statutory appellate remedy.
Legal advisors should promptly evaluate pending writs and file appeals before GSTAT within the notified extended timelines.
The Gujarat High Court clarified the scope of the ITC restriction under Section 17(5)(d) in the context of leasehold right transfers, ruling in favour of the assessee in a case involving GIDC sub-plot transactions.
Case Reference
What the Court Decided
The High Court ruled that Section 17(5)(d) restricts ITC only in respect of goods or services used for the construction of immovable property.
In this case, the petitioner was engaged solely in transferring leasehold rights over GIDC plots and had not undertaken any construction activity.
The department had wrongly invoked Section 17(5)(d) and issued a show cause notice demanding Rs. 98,11,678 along with interest and penalty.
Key Takeaway
The restriction under Section 17(5)(d) must be read narrowly and applied only where a direct link to construction activity is established.
Taxpayers involved in leasehold right transfers or similar non-construction activities should not face ITC denial under this provision.
The developments in understanding and application of GST provisions in India, with some critical case laws laid out in the GST case laws of February 2026. Rulings that concern return mismatches, unfair enrichment, the validity of the notice, and whether the tax authorities qualify as ITC enhance the significance of procedural fairness and the provision of clear laws to understand.
Platforms such as MyGSTRefund can also assist organisations by streamlining their GST compliance, monitoring submissions, managing notices, and providing real-time
financial intelligence on its CFO dashboard of the business to ensure the organisation remains compliant and minimises litigation risk.