VerifyReels logo VerifyReels AI Engine

Instagram · May 18, 2026

Source-backed Partially True Truth Percentage: 80% CORRECT

GST Portal Feature Aids Payment Recovery, But Not a Guaranteed "Hack"

The video explains a secret GST hack to recover payments stuck for over six months without involving police or court.

What's right

The GST portal indeed has a "Communication Between Taxpayers" feature, accessible by navigating to "Services > User Services".
This feature allows taxpayers to send notifications to suppliers or recipients regarding various issues, including unpaid invoices or payments not received.
Sending a notification through this portal triggers an email and SMS alert to the counterparty, as well as an alert on their GST portal login.
The video accurately states that if a recipient fails to pay a supplier within 180 days from the invoice date, they are legally required to reverse the Input Tax Credit (ITC) availed on that amount, along with interest under Section 50 of the CGST Act.
Logging non-payment on the GST portal can create an official record, and the GST Department may take notice and send a notice to the client to check for ITC reversal compliance.
Furthermore, a business's GST compliance record, including any defaults or ITC reversals, is increasingly analyzed by banks and can impact future loan eligibility and creditworthiness.

What's wrong

While the "Communication Between Taxpayers" feature is a useful tool for formal communication and creating compliance pressure, some sources describe it as "informal and non-binding" and state that it "does not compel the buyer to act".
Therefore, presenting it as a guaranteed "hack" that will ensure the party "themselves come and pay the money" without any police or court involvement is an overstatement of its direct payment recovery power.
It creates strong incentives and compliance pressure, but it is not a direct payment recovery mechanism that bypasses all other legal or recovery processes.

Breakdown

The video accurately describes the existence and navigation of the "Communication Between Taxpayers" feature on the GST portal, which allows taxpayers to send notifications about unpaid invoices. It correctly states that this action sends immediate alerts (email, SMS, and portal notification) to the defaulting party.

The video also correctly highlights a significant consequence for the defaulter: if payment is not made within 180 days of the invoice date, the recipient is legally obligated to reverse the Input Tax Credit (ITC) claimed on the unpaid amount, along with applicable interest. Furthermore, the claim that GST compliance and defaults can affect a business's ability to secure bank loans in the future is supported by evidence that banks increasingly use GST data for credit assessment.

The GST Department may also issue notices based on such communications to verify ITC reversal compliance. However, the video's framing of this process as a "secret GST hack" that will guarantee the recovery of payments without any police or court involvement is misleading.

While the feature creates significant compliance pressure and consequences for the defaulter, it is primarily a communication tool and not a direct, enforceable payment recovery mechanism that bypasses legal recourse. The portal communication serves as an official record and can prompt regulatory action, thereby incentivizing payment, but it does not inherently force the defaulter to pay. [1][2][3]

Reference sources

Open source reel
Checked 1 time

AI Cross-Question & Answer

Estimated follow-up cost: 1 credit. No new sources will be searched.

Answers stay limited to this reel, this verdict and the sources already used.

Follow-up history

Loading follow-up questions...