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Composition Scheme Calculator — GST Eligibility & Tax Comparison 2025 | GSTVerify
Special states: HP, Uttarakhand, all NE states, J&K, Ladakh, Sikkim
Total sales including all GSTINs under same PAN
Total GST paid on all business purchases — for regular scheme ITC comparison
Eligibility & Comparison
Composition Scheme Eligible?
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Turnover Limit
Composition Rate
Tax under Composition
Tax under Regular (Net of ITC)
Recommended Scheme
Regular GST vs Composition Scheme — Feature Comparison
Feature Regular GST Composition Scheme
Turnover limit No limit ₹1.5 crore (₹75L special states)
ITC on purchases ✓ Eligible ✗ Not allowed
Collect GST from customers ✓ Yes — on every invoice ✗ Cannot collect GST from customers
Returns to file Monthly GSTR-1 + GSTR-3B (or quarterly) Quarterly CMP-08 (tax payment) + Annual GSTR-4
Tax rate Standard rate (5%/12%/18%/28%) 1% or 5% or 6% on turnover
Inter-state supply ✓ Allowed ✗ NOT allowed — local sales only
E-commerce supply ✓ Allowed ✗ NOT allowed
Invoice type Tax invoice with GST details Bill of Supply (no GST amount shown)
Compliance burden High (monthly filings) Low (quarterly payments, annual return)
Tax on non-GST goods As per applicable rate ✗ Cannot opt in
Eligible business types All registered persons Traders, manufacturers, restaurants only
About GST Composition Scheme

The Composition Scheme under Section 10 of the CGST Act is designed to reduce compliance burden for small businesses. Instead of maintaining detailed records, filing multiple returns, and computing ITC, a composition dealer simply pays a fixed percentage of their turnover as tax.

The key trade-off: Composition dealers cannot claim ITC on purchases and cannot collect GST from their customers. This means their GST liability comes entirely from their margin. If a trader's margin is 10% and the composition rate is 1%, the effective tax on margin is only 10% of 1% — very low. But if purchase prices spike and margins shrink, the composition rate can become disproportionate.

Who should NOT choose composition: Businesses that sell inter-state, sell through e-commerce platforms (Flipkart, Amazon), have large purchase volumes (where ITC benefit under regular scheme would exceed composition tax savings), or have B2B customers who need GST invoices to claim ITC.

Composition scheme rules are governed by Section 10 of the CGST Act and CGST Rules 2017. Rates and thresholds are subject to GST Council revision.

Frequently Asked Questions
Service providers (other than restaurants) cannot opt for the standard composition scheme under Section 10(1). However, a special composition scheme under Notification 2/2019 allows service providers with turnover up to ₹50 lakh to pay 6% GST (3% CGST + 3% SGST) on their turnover without ITC.
File Form CMP-02 on the GST portal at the beginning of the financial year (before or by the 31st March of the preceding year). New registrants can opt in at the time of registration. Opting in is for the entire financial year — you cannot switch mid-year.
No. Composition dealers must issue a Bill of Supply instead of a Tax Invoice. A Bill of Supply does not show GST separately. This means your B2B customers cannot claim ITC on their purchases from you.
If your aggregate annual turnover exceeds ₹1.5 crore (or ₹75 lakh for special states) during the year, you must opt out of the composition scheme from the day you exceed the threshold and register as a regular taxpayer. File Form CMP-04 to opt out.