Conversion & Closure · Liquidation, Revival & Regulatory Support
Closure Documentation, Tax Clearance & Registration Cancellation
Winding up the legal entity is only half the job.
Chartered Accountants · Chennai · Hyderabad · Bangalore · Dubai · Since 1986
Winding up the legal entity is only half the job. Every registration a business ever took out — GST, PF, ESI, professional tax, IEC, Shops & Establishment, trade licence, MSME/Udyam — stays open and keeps generating notices and return obligations until it is formally cancelled. Tax clearances must be obtained. Refunds must be claimed before the window closes. PNPC handles the full documentation trail behind every closure — company, LLP, partnership, or proprietorship — so that no registration is left ticking after the business itself has stopped.
What it costs
No hidden charges. The exact figure is set in your engagement letter.
Closure Documentation, Tax Clearance & Registration Cancellation is the coordinated set of filings, clearances, and cancellation applications that must accompany — and often precede — the legal closure of a business entity under the Companies Act 2013, the LLP Act 2008, the Partnership Act 1932, or the cessation of a proprietorship. Legal dissolution of the entity (strike-off under Section 248, LLP Form 24, or dissolution of a partnership deed) is a separate act from cancelling the tax and regulatory registrations the entity held while operating. A company can be struck off from the MCA register while its GST number remains active, its EPFO code continues to generate return demands, and its Income Tax PAN carries an open assessment — each of these is a distinct process with its own authority, its own form, and its own timeline, and each must be closed in the correct sequence relative to the others.
The work spans four broad categories. First, GST cancellation (Form GST REG-16) with all pending returns filed up to the date of cessation, followed by the final return (Form GSTR-10) within three months of cancellation — missing GSTR-10 attracts a late fee and can trigger a best-judgment assessment. Second, labour and social security registrations — EPF (Form 5, via the EPFO Unified Portal) and ESI closure — which require final contribution reconciliation and a no-dues confirmation before the establishment code is closed. Third, other state and central registrations — Professional Tax deregistration, Shops & Establishment licence surrender, Import Export Code (IEC) deactivation with DGFT, trade licence surrender with the local municipal authority, and Udyam/MSME registration cancellation — each carrying its own local process. Fourth, income tax clearance — ensuring the entity's final return is filed, any refunds due are claimed before the entity ceases to have standing to claim them, TDS returns are reconciled and Form 26AS/AIS matched, and (in specific cases such as certain FEMA-regulated exits, or NRIs repatriating sale proceeds) a formal Income Tax Clearance Certificate under Section 230 is obtained.
The sequencing matters as much as the individual filings. GST cancellation should generally be initiated only once trading has genuinely stopped, because a live GSTIN with no returns filed accrues late fees faster than an active one with NIL returns. EPF and ESI closure needs final wage records and contribution challans reconciled — a mismatch discovered after the establishment is closed is far harder to correct. MCA strike-off (or LLP Form 24) should typically be the last step, filed only once every registration cancellation is either complete or formally in motion, because STK-2 and Form 24 both require a director/partner declaration that there are no pending statutory dues — a declaration that is false, and exposes the signatory personally, if a GST or PF registration is still technically live with unfiled returns.
For businesses with a UAE leg — a Free Zone or Mainland entity being wound down alongside the Indian one, or Indian promoters exiting a UAE structure — PNPC coordinates the Indian closure documentation with the UAE trade licence cancellation, VAT deregistration, and WPS payroll closure through its Dubai office, so that both sides of the exit are documented consistently and neither jurisdiction is left with an open registration that surfaces years later as a compliance surprise.
When you need closure documentation and tax clearance support
A company, LLP, partnership, or proprietorship has genuinely stopped operating and every open registration — GST, PF, ESI, PT, IEC, Shops & Establishment — needs to be formally cancelled, not just left dormant
The entity is going through STK-2 strike-off, LLP Form 24 closure, or partnership dissolution, and the directors/partners need every statutory registration cleared before signing the no-liability affidavit
A pending GST, TDS, or income tax refund exists and must be claimed before the entity's PAN or GSTIN loses active standing to file the claim
EPF or ESI final contribution reconciliation is needed before the establishment code can be closed with EPFO/ESIC — avoiding future demand notices to an entity that no longer operates
An NRI or foreign national is repatriating funds from an Indian entity exit or asset sale and needs a formal Income Tax Clearance Certificate under Section 230 for the transaction to proceed
A business is exiting India-UAE operations simultaneously and needs both jurisdictions' registration cancellations coordinated under one engagement
A promoter discovers — often years after operations stopped — that GST, PF, or PT registrations were never cancelled and are generating late-filing notices for a business that no longer exists in substance
Due diligence ahead of a company sale, merger, or NCLT liquidation reveals open registrations that must be cleaned up as a condition precedent to the transaction closing
When this is not the right service to start with
The business is still operating and simply wants to reduce compliance cost — closure/cancellation is irreversible for most registrations and is not a substitute for restructuring or cost optimisation advice
The entity itself has not yet decided on or initiated its legal closure route (STK-2, dormant status, IBC liquidation, Form 24, or deed dissolution) — that decision should be made first; see PNPC's company closure and LLP closure services
There are unresolved creditor disputes, active litigation, or contested tax demands — these need to be resolved or provisioned before cancellation documentation can be finalised, not filed around
The business intends to pause temporarily and resume within a year or two — dormant company status (Section 455) or simply continuing NIL filings may preserve the registrations at lower cost than cancelling and re-registering later
Only one specific registration needs closing (for example, just a GST cancellation with no broader entity closure) and no coordinated multi-registration exit is required — a narrower single-registration engagement may be more efficient
The entity has significant unresolved statutory demands (GST, Income Tax, Customs) that have not been quantified — these need a tax controversy or litigation engagement first
Closure documentation & clearance requirements by entity type
| Aspect | Private Limited / OPC / Public Ltd | LLP | Partnership Firm | Sole Proprietorship |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Legal closure route | STK-2 strike-off (s248(2)), dormant status (s455), or IBC voluntary liquidation | LLP Form 24 (striking off name) under LLP Rules 2009, or winding up under LLP Act s63-65 | Dissolution under Partnership Act 1932 s39-44, per the partnership deed's dissolution clause | No formal dissolution filing — cessation is evidenced by closing registrations and filing final returns |
| GST cancellation | Form GST REG-16 + final return GSTR-10 within 3 months | Form GST REG-16 + final return GSTR-10 within 3 months | Form GST REG-16 + final return GSTR-10 within 3 months | Form GST REG-16 + final return GSTR-10 within 3 months |
| EPF closure | Final contribution reconciliation + establishment code closure via EPFO portal | Same process — final reconciliation + code closure | Same process if PF was applicable (20+ employees) | Same process if PF was applicable (20+ employees) |
| ESI closure | Final contribution reconciliation + establishment closure with ESIC | Same process if ESI was applicable (10+ employees) | Same process if ESI was applicable (10+ employees) | Same process if ESI was applicable (10+ employees) |
| Income tax clearance | Final ITR (ITR-6) for the entity; refunds claimed before PAN standing lapses; Sec 230 clearance certificate in specific cross-border/repatriation cases | Final ITR (ITR-5) for the LLP; similar refund and reconciliation position | Final ITR (ITR-5) for the firm; partners' individual capital account settlement | Final ITR (ITR-3/4) in proprietor's individual capacity; no separate entity PAN to close |
| Directors'/partners' declaration | Directors' affidavit + indemnity bond confirming no liabilities (STK-2) | Partners' declaration of no liabilities (Form 24) | Dissolution deed executed by all partners settling accounts | No statutory declaration — but MSME/Udyam, Shops & Establishment, PT must still be individually cancelled |
| Typical additional registrations to cancel | IEC, Udyam/MSME, PT, Shops & Establishment, trade licence, ISO/BIS if held | IEC, Udyam/MSME, PT, Shops & Establishment | IEC, Udyam/MSME, PT, Shops & Establishment | IEC, Udyam/MSME, PT, Shops & Establishment |
| Sequencing discipline | Registration cancellations generally precede or run parallel to STK-2; STK-2 requires all cleared | Registration cancellations precede Form 24 filing | Registration cancellations precede or accompany dissolution deed execution | Registrations cancelled once trading stops; no entity-level filing gates this |
| Personal exposure if mishandled | Directors personally exposed via false STK-2 affidavit; disqualification risk under s164(2) for prior default years | Designated partners exposed via false Form 24 declaration | Partners jointly and severally liable — dissolution does not extinguish pre-existing liabilities | Proprietor personally liable in all cases — there is no separate entity shield to begin with |
This table gives directional guidance across common Indian structures — it is not a substitute for a facts-specific closure assessment. The correct sequence and the specific registrations to cancel depend on which registrations the entity actually held, its employee headcount history, its state of operation, and whether any cross-border element (FEMA, DTAA, repatriation) is involved.
| # | Stage & What PNPC Does | What Gets Missed Without a CA | Timeline |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Registration Inventory & Closure Assessment — map every registration the entity has ever held, active or lapsed | Businesses routinely forget registrations taken out years earlier — a Shops & Establishment licence from the first office, an IEC obtained for one export shipment, a PT registration in a state where operations ended. Each stays open and accrues obligations unless formally cancelled. PNPC pulls the full registration history before recommending a closure plan, not just the ones the promoter remembers. | Week 1 |
| 2 | Liability & Refund Position Review — outstanding dues, pending refunds, unreconciled TDS credits | Any pending GST input credit, income tax refund, or TDS mismatch needs to be identified and claimed before the entity's registrations are cancelled and its standing to claim lapses. PNPC reconciles Form 26AS/AIS, GST portal ledgers, and PF/ESI contribution records before any cancellation form is filed. | Weeks 1–3 |
| 3 | GST Return Regularisation — file all pending GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B up to the date of cessation | GST REG-16 cancellation cannot be processed cleanly with pending returns outstanding — and even after cancellation is applied for, GSTR-10 (final return) must still be filed within 3 months. A missed GSTR-10 draws a late fee and can trigger notice proceedings against a business that has already stopped. | Weeks 2–4 |
| 4 | GST Cancellation Filing — Form GST REG-16 with reason for cancellation and supporting stock/asset statement | The GST officer can ask for a statement of stock held on the date of cancellation, and any input tax credit reversal on remaining stock or capital goods must be computed and paid. This computation is regularly overlooked by businesses filing without CA support. | Weeks 3–6 for order; GSTR-10 due within 3 months of cancellation date |
| 5 | EPF Establishment Closure — final contribution reconciliation and closure request via EPFO Unified Portal | EPFO requires the last wage register, contribution challans, and a declaration of the date operations ceased. Employees' final PF settlements (withdrawal or transfer) should be completed before the establishment code is marked closed — leaving this until after closure makes employee settlement significantly harder to process. | Weeks 3–8 |
| 6 | ESI Establishment Closure — final contribution reconciliation and closure intimation to ESIC | Similar to EPF — final contribution reconciliation, employee-wise closure of ESI numbers, and confirmation that no pending claims are outstanding against the establishment code. | Weeks 3–8 |
| 7 | Professional Tax, Shops & Establishment, Trade Licence — state/municipal deregistration | Each state and municipal authority has its own deregistration form and its own local processing quirks — Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad municipal corporations each handle trade licence surrender differently. PNPC's local office presence in each city handles this directly rather than through a generic national process. | Weeks 3–10, varies by state/city |
| 8 | IEC Deactivation / Surrender — DGFT online portal | An Import Export Code not actively used still needs periodic annual updation on the DGFT portal under the Foreign Trade Policy — an IEC left unattended can be deactivated by DGFT itself, which is a messier outcome than a clean voluntary surrender. PNPC files the surrender request directly. | Weeks 4–6 |
| 9 | Udyam/MSME Registration Cancellation | Udyam registration, once self-declared, is rarely actively cancelled by businesses — it simply persists as a dormant record. Where the entity is closing entirely, PNPC files for deactivation so the registration does not surface in future searches by lenders or counterparties. | Weeks 4–6 |
| 10 | Income Tax Position Finalisation — final return, refund claims, TDS reconciliation | The entity's final Income Tax Return must reflect the closure-year income, any capital gains from asset disposal, and any refund claims. Any TDS credited to the entity's PAN that has not been claimed becomes very difficult to recover once the entity is legally dissolved. PNPC finalises this before, not after, the RoC/RoF closure order. | Weeks 6–12, aligned to the applicable ITR due date |
| 11 | Section 230 Income Tax Clearance Certificate (where applicable) | A formal tax clearance certificate is required in specific scenarios — for instance certain cases of persons leaving India permanently, or where FEMA/repatriation rules require confirmation that Indian tax obligations are settled before funds move outward. This is a distinct, narrower certificate from a routine ITR filing, and is often confused with general closure clearance. PNPC identifies whether it genuinely applies to your situation rather than defaulting to it unnecessarily. | Weeks 6–10 where applicable |
| 12 | No-Dues Confirmation Compilation — consolidated evidence file for the entity-level closure filing | STK-2 (companies), Form 24 (LLPs), or a dissolution deed (partnerships) each require a clean declaration of no outstanding statutory dues. PNPC compiles the GST cancellation order, EPF/ESI closure confirmations, IEC surrender acknowledgement, and income tax position into a single evidence file supporting that declaration — so the affidavit or declaration is factually defensible, not just procedurally filed. | Week 10–12 |
| 13 | Entity-Level Closure Filing Coordination — handoff to STK-2 / Form 24 / dissolution deed execution | Once every registration cancellation is complete or demonstrably in motion, the entity-level closure filing (handled under PNPC's company closure or LLP closure engagements) can proceed on a clean factual footing, minimising the risk of a rejected application or a later liability surfacing against the directors or partners personally. | Week 12 onward — coordinated with the entity closure engagement |
| 14 | Post-Closure Record Retention Advisory | Statutory records — GST returns, PF/ESI contribution history, income tax assessments — should be retained for the applicable limitation periods even after the entity ceases to exist, since a regulator can still reopen a matter relating to the pre-closure period within statutory time limits. PNPC advises promoters on what to retain and for how long. | Ongoing after closure |
Realistic timeline for a business with a moderate registration footprint (GST, PF, ESI, PT, one Shops & Establishment licence): 3–4 months from registration inventory to a fully documented, clearance-ready file for the entity-level closure filing. Businesses with multi-state registrations, foreign shareholders, or pending refunds/assessments should expect a longer timeline — PNPC gives a facts-specific estimate after the initial registration inventory review, not a generic promise.
PAN and TAN of the entity, plus CIN (companies), LLPIN (LLPs), or Registration of Firms number (partnerships)
List of all GSTINs held — including any additional state-wise GST registrations for entities operating across multiple states
EPF establishment code and ESI establishment code, if applicable — including historical codes if the entity relocated or restructured
Professional Tax registration certificate(s) — state-wise, as PT is a state subject with separate registration per state of operation
Shops & Establishment registration certificate(s) — one per premises/branch in most states
Import Export Code (IEC) certificate, if the entity ever conducted any cross-border trade transaction
Udyam/MSME registration certificate, if self-registered
Any sector-specific licences — FSSAI, trade licence, factory licence, pollution control consent, ISO/BIS certification — that were obtained during operations
All GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B filings up to the proposed date of cessation — no gaps permitted
Stock and capital goods statement as on the date of cancellation, with input tax credit reversal computation where applicable
Bank account statements reconciled against GST turnover reported, to pre-empt any mismatch query
GSTR-10 (final return) — to be filed within 3 months of the cancellation order date
Any pending GST refund applications — pursued to completion or formally withdrawn before cancellation, as a refund cannot ordinarily be pursued once the registration is cancelled and the matter is closed
Final wage register and attendance records for the last active payroll period
PF and ESI contribution challans for all periods up to closure, with any shortfall settled
Employee-wise final settlement status — PF withdrawal/transfer requests, ESI claim closure
Declaration of the date operations ceased, supported by the entity's own board/partner resolution or closure notice
No-dues confirmation request submitted to EPFO/ESIC as part of the establishment closure application
PT deregistration application in the prescribed state format, with proof of final PT payment
Shops & Establishment licence surrender application to the local municipal/labour authority
Trade licence surrender application with the municipal corporation, including any inspection or NOC required locally
IEC surrender/deactivation request filed on the DGFT portal
Udyam registration deactivation request on the Udyam portal
Final financial statements (balance sheet and P&L) for the closure-year period, audited where statutory audit still applies
Form 26AS / Annual Information Statement (AIS) reconciliation confirming all TDS credits have been claimed
Any pending income tax refund applications — status confirmed and pursued before the entity's return-filing standing lapses
Capital gains computation on disposal of any business assets as part of the closure, if applicable
Section 230 Income Tax Clearance Certificate application and supporting documents, only where the specific statutory trigger for that certificate applies (for example certain repatriation or departure scenarios)
GST cancellation order and acknowledgement of GSTR-10 filing
EPF and ESI establishment closure confirmations
PT, Shops & Establishment, and trade licence surrender acknowledgements
IEC surrender confirmation and Udyam deactivation confirmation
Final income tax return acknowledgement and refund status summary
Bank account closure confirmation letter(s) from the entity's banker(s)
Consolidated no-dues summary — cross-referenced against the affidavit/declaration required for the entity-level closure filing (STK-2, Form 24, or dissolution deed)
| Phase | Triggered By | PNPC's Role | Risk If Not Managed |
|---|---|---|---|
| Registration Inventory | Decision to close or wind down the entity | Full registration history pull across GST, EPFO, ESIC, state PT departments, DGFT, and Udyam — not just the registrations the promoter remembers | A forgotten registration continues generating return demands and penalty notices for years after the business itself has stopped |
| Liability & Refund Review | Inventory complete | Reconcile Form 26AS/AIS, GST ledgers, and PF/ESI contribution records; identify every refund or credit still claimable | Unclaimed TDS credits or GST input credit become unrecoverable once the entity's registrations are cancelled and legal standing lapses |
| GST Cancellation & Final Return | All returns current | File Form GST REG-16, compute any ITC reversal on closing stock, file GSTR-10 within 3 months of the cancellation order | GSTR-10 missed → late fee and potential best-judgment proceedings against an entity that has already stopped trading |
| EPF / ESI Closure | Final payroll period ends | Reconcile final contributions, settle employee PF/ESI claims, submit establishment closure request with no-dues confirmation | Establishment code left open continues to generate return obligations; employee PF/ESI claims become harder to process after closure |
| State & Sector Registrations | Ongoing, in parallel | File PT deregistration, Shops & Establishment surrender, trade licence surrender, IEC surrender, Udyam deactivation across every state/city of operation | Each open registration is a separate line of potential penalty exposure and a separate document a lender, buyer, or regulator can later flag |
| Income Tax Finalisation | Financial year of closure ends | Final ITR filed, refunds pursued, capital gains on asset disposal computed, Section 230 clearance certificate obtained only where genuinely applicable | Refunds foregone; capital gains on closure-related asset disposal missed or misreported; unnecessary clearance certificate applications for situations that do not require one |
| Evidence Consolidation | All cancellations complete or in motion | Compile a single evidence file cross-referenced against the entity-level closure declaration requirements | A director/partner affidavit signed without a verified evidence file creates personal exposure if a regulator later challenges the no-dues declaration |
| Entity-Level Closure Handoff | Evidence file complete | Coordinate with the entity's STK-2 / Form 24 / dissolution deed process (handled under PNPC's dedicated closure engagements) so the filing proceeds on a clean factual footing | Entity-level closure filed on an incomplete registration-cancellation picture risks rejection, delay, or a false-declaration exposure for the signatories |
| Post-Closure Retention | Entity legally closed | Advise on statutory record retention periods for GST, income tax, and labour law purposes even after the entity ceases to exist | Records discarded too early leave promoters unable to respond if a regulator reopens a pre-closure matter within the applicable limitation period |
Is cancelling GST registration the same as closing a company with the MCA?
No — they are entirely separate processes with separate authorities. GST cancellation (Form GST REG-16, followed by the final return GSTR-10) is handled by the GST department. Company closure (STK-2 strike-off, dormant status, or IBC voluntary liquidation) is handled by the Registrar of Companies under the Companies Act 2013. A company can be struck off from the MCA register while its GST registration remains technically active and continues to generate return obligations — and vice versa, a business can cancel its GST registration while the company itself remains on the MCA register. Both need to be addressed; neither substitutes for the other.
What is Form GSTR-10 and why does it matter even after GST cancellation is approved?
GSTR-10 is the 'final return' that every person whose GST registration is cancelled or surrendered must file within three months of the date of cancellation or the date of the cancellation order, whichever is later. It declares the closing stock and input tax credit position on the date of cancellation. Filing GSTR-10 is a separate, mandatory step after the cancellation order is issued — the cancellation order itself does not complete the process. Failure to file attracts a late fee and can prompt the GST department to issue a notice and proceed with a best-judgment assessment under the CGST Act.
We have unclaimed TDS credits or a pending income tax refund. Will we lose them if we close the business?
You can lose practical access to them if closure is completed before the refund is claimed. Once an entity is struck off (companies) or dissolved (partnerships/LLPs), pursuing a fresh refund claim for that now-defunct entity becomes procedurally complicated — there is no active legal person to receive the refund or respond to any departmental query about it. PNPC reconciles Form 26AS/AIS and the entity's GST and income tax ledgers before recommending closure timing specifically so that any claimable refund is pursued and, where possible, received before the entity's registrations and legal existence are wound up.
Do we need to close EPF and ESI registrations even if we never had more than a handful of employees?
If you ever registered for EPF (mandatory once headcount crosses 20 employees, though voluntary registration below that is also possible) or ESI (mandatory at 10 employees in most states), that establishment code stays open and continues to be tracked by EPFO/ESIC until you formally apply for closure — regardless of your current headcount. A dormant establishment code with unresolved contribution periods can surface later as a compliance notice, even years after the business effectively stopped operating.
What is Form STK-2's requirement for 'no pending statutory dues' — and how does that connect to this service?
Form STK-2, used for voluntary company strike-off under Section 248(2) of the Companies Act 2013, requires the directors to affirm — via affidavit and indemnity bond — that the company has no outstanding liabilities, including statutory dues to tax and regulatory authorities. If the company's GST registration is still active with unfiled returns, or its EPF/ESI establishment code is still open with unreconciled contributions, that affidavit is factually inaccurate — exposing the signing directors personally. This service exists precisely to complete every registration cancellation before the STK-2 (or the equivalent LLP Form 24) affidavit is signed, so the declaration is true, not just convenient.
What is a Section 230 Income Tax Clearance Certificate, and do most closing businesses need one?
Section 230 of the Income-tax Act empowers tax authorities to require certain persons — historically most relevant to individuals leaving India permanently, and in specific cross-border repatriation or asset-transfer contexts — to obtain a tax clearance certificate confirming no outstanding tax liability before funds or the person can leave the country or the transaction can proceed. It is a narrow, situation-specific certificate, not a routine requirement for every business closure. Most domestic business closures (a Chennai-based Pvt Ltd with resident Indian directors closing down, for example) do not need a Section 230 certificate at all — their obligation is simply to file a correct, complete final return.
Our company operated in three states. Do we need to cancel Professional Tax and Shops & Establishment registrations in all three?
Yes. Professional Tax is a state subject, registered separately in each state where the entity has a place of business or employs staff. Shops & Establishment registration is typically per-premises, registered with the local labour department or municipal authority in each city or municipal jurisdiction. Closing the entity nationally through MCA does not automatically cancel state-level or municipal-level registrations — each must be surrendered individually, following that state or city's own process and format.
We have an Import Export Code (IEC) we used once, years ago, and never touched again. Does it need formal closure?
Yes, ideally. Under the Foreign Trade Policy framework, IEC holders are required to update or confirm their IEC details annually on the DGFT portal between April and June each year, even with no import-export activity in that year. An IEC that is never used and never updated can be deactivated by DGFT on its own initiative, which is a messier record than a clean voluntary surrender initiated by the holder. If the entity is closing, PNPC files a formal surrender request so the IEC does not remain an ambiguous, unattended record.
Does Udyam/MSME registration need to be cancelled, or can it just be left dormant?
Udyam registration can technically be left dormant with no active filing obligation of its own, since it is a self-declared registration rather than one requiring periodic returns. However, if the entity is closing entirely, PNPC recommends filing for deactivation on the Udyam portal so the registration does not continue to appear as an active record — which can otherwise create confusion for lenders, credit bureaus, or counterparties who search the Udyam database and find a registration for an entity that no longer exists.
What happens if we simply stop filing GST returns instead of formally cancelling the registration?
The GST registration remains technically active, and late fees for non-filing of GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B continue to accrue per return, per month, indefinitely. Beyond a certain period of continuous non-filing, the GST department can initiate cancellation of the registration on its own motion under the CGST Act — but this is a punitive, department-initiated cancellation rather than a clean voluntary one, and it does not relieve the taxpayer of the late fees and any tax due that accumulated before the department acted. Formal voluntary cancellation, done promptly, avoids this entirely.
Can PNPC handle closure documentation for a business with operations in both India and the UAE?
Yes. PNPC has operating offices in Chennai, Bangalore, Hyderabad, and Dubai. For a business winding down operations in both jurisdictions, we coordinate the Indian side — GST, EPF/ESI, PT, IEC, Udyam, income tax clearance, and the entity-level MCA/RoF closure — alongside the UAE side — trade licence cancellation, VAT deregistration, and WPS payroll closure — under a single engagement, so that neither side is left with an open registration once the other has been closed.
How does this service differ from PNPC's Company Closure service?
PNPC's Company Closure service is about choosing and executing the correct legal dissolution route for the entity itself — STK-2 voluntary strike-off, dormant company status under Section 455, or IBC voluntary liquidation. This service — Closure Documentation, Tax Clearance & Registration Cancellation — is the supporting documentation layer that runs alongside or before that: cancelling every tax and regulatory registration the entity held (GST, PF, ESI, PT, IEC, Udyam, Shops & Establishment) and finalising the entity's income tax position, so that the legal closure filing can be made on a clean, verifiable factual footing. In practice, PNPC runs both together for most clients, since the entity-level closure filing's no-dues declaration depends directly on this documentation work being complete.
Our proprietorship has no separate PAN or CIN — does closure documentation even apply to us?
Yes, though the scope is narrower. A sole proprietorship has no separate legal identity from its owner, so there is no entity-level filing like STK-2 or Form 24. But the proprietorship may still hold a GST registration, a Shops & Establishment licence, a Professional Tax registration, an IEC, and possibly EPF/ESI codes if it employed staff — every one of these needs to be individually cancelled when the business stops trading. The proprietor's own income tax return simply continues under their personal PAN, incorporating the final year of business income and any capital gains from asset disposal.
We have a partnership firm that is dissolving because one partner is retiring. Does registration cancellation apply here too, or only on full closure?
If the firm itself is dissolving entirely (not simply reconstituting with a new partner replacing the retiring one), the same registration cancellation logic applies — GST, PF, ESI, PT, IEC, Udyam should all be cancelled or transferred as appropriate, and the dissolution deed should settle each partner's capital account and liability position. If instead the firm is being reconstituted (one partner exits, business continues under the same firm with remaining/new partners), the registrations typically continue under the reconstituted firm with updated partner details — no cancellation is needed, only amendment. The distinction between dissolution and reconstitution is important to get right before any cancellation filing is made.
What is the realistic total cost of closure documentation and tax clearance for a small business?
Cost depends heavily on the number of registrations held, the length of any filing backlog that needs regularising first, and whether any refund claims or reconciliations are contested. A business with GST, PF, ESI, and one Shops & Establishment registration, with all filings broadly current, sits at a materially lower cost than one with a multi-year filing backlog across several states. PNPC provides a written, fixed-fee estimate after the registration inventory and liability review step — not before, because an accurate quote depends on knowing exactly what needs to be regularised first.
If we discover an unresolved GST demand notice during this process, does that stop the closure?
It pauses the cancellation of that specific registration, not necessarily the entire closure plan. A GST demand — confirmed or under scrutiny — is a liability that must be addressed (paid, contested through appropriate appellate channels, or otherwise resolved) before GST cancellation can be cleanly completed and before any no-dues declaration referencing GST can be truthfully made. PNPC flags this immediately when discovered during the inventory or liability review stage, rather than after cancellation forms have already been filed, so the promoter can make an informed decision on how to resolve it before proceeding.
Does closing our GST registration mean we stop being liable for GST audits or scrutiny of past periods?
No. Cancelling a GST registration ends the obligation to file future periodic returns, but it does not extinguish the department's power to scrutinise, audit, or reassess past periods within the statutory limitation period under the CGST Act. Records relating to the periods the registration was active should be retained and remain producible if the department raises a query relating to a pre-cancellation period, even after cancellation is complete.
Can EPF and ESI closure be completed if some employees have not yet withdrawn their PF balances?
It is considerably harder, and PNPC recommends resolving employee-wise PF withdrawal or transfer requests before formally closing the establishment code, wherever practically possible. Once the establishment is marked closed, employees can, in principle, still claim their own accumulated PF balance directly through the EPFO member portal, but the employer-side coordination and any query resolution becomes materially more difficult once there is no active establishment contact point managing it.
How does PNPC verify that a registration is genuinely clear before signing off, rather than just assuming it is?
For each registration, PNPC pulls the relevant portal record directly — the GST portal ledger and return-filing status, the EPFO/ESIC establishment status and contribution history, the DGFT IEC status, the Udyam registration status, and the state PT department's payment record — rather than relying on the client's recollection of what has and has not been filed. This portal-level verification is what supports an accurate no-dues declaration for the entity-level closure filing, and it is also what protects the client from an inaccurate affidavit signed on the basis of an incomplete assumption.
We are a foreign subsidiary in India shutting down after the parent company decided to exit the market. Is there anything specific to FEMA that applies here?
Yes, in addition to the domestic registration cancellations covered above, a foreign-owned subsidiary winding down needs to address the FEMA/RBI side of its closure — this can include reporting the disinvestment or share transfer (FC-TRS, if shares are being transferred rather than the company simply closing), repatriation of any residual funds through the appropriate banking channel with a Chartered Accountant's certificate confirming tax compliance where the bank requires one, and, in the specific circumstances Section 230 applies, an income tax clearance in support of the outward remittance. PNPC coordinates this FEMA/RBI layer alongside the standard registration cancellation and entity-closure documentation for foreign-owned entities.
What is the risk of doing all of this ourselves through government portals directly, without a CA firm?
The individual portals — the GST portal, the EPFO Unified Portal, the ESIC portal, the DGFT portal, the Udyam portal, state PT department websites — are each usable directly by a business owner. The risk is not accessibility; it is sequencing, completeness, and the accuracy of the underlying declarations. A GST cancellation filed before pending returns are cleared gets stuck. An EPF closure filed before employee settlements are addressed creates ongoing employee grievances directed at a company that no longer has active staff managing them. A director's affidavit signed for STK-2 without verifying every registration first creates personal legal exposure that surfaces years later, when it is far more expensive to resolve than it would have been to prevent.
If our business is being acquired rather than closed, do we still need this service?
Usually not in the same form — an acquisition typically transfers the entity (and its registrations) to the new owner rather than cancelling them, so most registrations continue under the same legal entity with updated ownership or authorised signatory details. However, if the acquisition structure involves a slump sale or asset purchase where the original entity ceases operating after the sale (rather than the share sale route where the entity itself continues), the seller's shell entity may still need this same closure documentation process once the sale is complete and it has no further business purpose.
Does PNPC provide a single consolidated timeline and fee quote covering every registration, or do we get quoted separately for each one?
PNPC provides one consolidated, written engagement letter covering the full registration inventory, liability review, and cancellation process across every registration identified — GST, EPF, ESI, PT, Shops & Establishment, trade licence, IEC, Udyam, and income tax finalisation — along with coordination for the entity-level closure filing. This is deliberately structured as one engagement rather than piecemeal quotes per registration, because the sequencing and cross-referencing between registrations is where the real professional value and risk mitigation sits.
What documents does PNPC actually hand over to us at the end of this engagement?
A consolidated closure file containing: the GST cancellation order and GSTR-10 acknowledgement; EPF and ESI establishment closure confirmations; PT, Shops & Establishment, and trade licence surrender acknowledgements; IEC surrender confirmation; Udyam deactivation confirmation; the final income tax return acknowledgement and refund status summary; bank account closure confirmation letters; and a consolidated no-dues summary cross-referenced against the entity-level closure declaration. This file is what supports the STK-2 affidavit, Form 24 declaration, or dissolution deed representations, and it is also what the promoters retain as their own permanent closure record.
Is there a time limit within which all these registrations must be cancelled after operations stop?
Each registration has its own specific timeline rather than one uniform deadline. GST cancellation should generally be applied for promptly once the business ceases to be liable to be registered, with GSTR-10 due within three months of the cancellation order. IEC holders are required to confirm or update details annually regardless of activity. EPF and ESI have no single fixed statutory deadline for closure but continue to generate obligations the longer the establishment code stays open. There is no single countdown clock across all registrations — which is precisely why a coordinated review, rather than an ad hoc registration-by-registration approach, is the more reliable way to manage this.
Can this service also help claim GST or income tax refunds that are stuck in departmental processing, not just file the cancellation forms?
Yes. Where a refund claim is already filed and pending departmental action, PNPC follows up through the appropriate portal and, where needed, escalates through the department's grievance mechanism, as part of ensuring the refund is received before the underlying registration is cancelled and the entity's standing to pursue that claim becomes complicated. This follow-up is treated as part of the same engagement rather than a separate service, since a stuck refund directly affects the safe timing of the cancellation itself.
Why should we engage PNPC rather than handling closure documentation ourselves or through a portal-based filing service?
A portal-based filing service will submit the individual cancellation forms you ask for. It will not tell you that your GST cancellation should wait until a pending refund is resolved, that your EPF closure needs employee settlements addressed first, that your Udyam registration was never mentioned to them because you forgot it existed, or that the affidavit you are about to sign for STK-2 is inaccurate because your Professional Tax registration in a second state is still open. PNPC is a practising CA firm — we build the full registration inventory, verify each position directly against the relevant portal, sequence the cancellations correctly, and hand over a consolidated evidence file that protects the promoters personally, not just a stack of submitted forms.
Do we need to formally close the company's bank accounts as part of this process, or can we just stop using them?
They should be formally closed, with a written closure confirmation obtained from the bank. A dormant bank account left open in the entity's name can still attract account maintenance charges, minimum balance penalties, and, more importantly, a residual balance or an active account is itself evidence of an ongoing liability or asset that contradicts the 'no assets, no liabilities' declaration required for STK-2 or a similar no-dues affidavit. PNPC coordinates bank account closure and retains the bank's written confirmation as part of the consolidated closure evidence file.
Does a director's DIN or a designated partner's DPIN get affected once the entity's registrations are cancelled and the entity itself is closed?
No, not automatically. A properly executed, voluntary closure — where all registrations are cancelled cleanly and the entity-level filing (STK-2 or Form 24) is accepted without issue — leaves the individual director's DIN or partner's DPIN unaffected; they remain free to be appointed to other companies or LLPs. DIN deactivation or disqualification arises from separate causes — a missed annual DIR-3 KYC, or three consecutive years of default in filing annual returns for any company the person is a director of — not from a clean, voluntary registration-cancellation and entity-closure process handled correctly.
How long should we retain our closure documentation and underlying records after everything is cancelled?
There is no single uniform retention period across every register, so PNPC recommends retaining the consolidated closure file and the underlying GST, income tax, and payroll records for a minimum of eight years from the date of closure as a practical, conservative benchmark that comfortably covers the assessment and reopening windows applicable under the CGST Act and the Income-tax Act for most ordinary cases, recognising that certain matters (for example, cases involving specific search, survey, or fraud-related provisions) can carry materially longer look-back periods. Where any matter is under active dispute or scrutiny at the time of closure, records relevant to that specific matter should be retained until it is finally resolved, regardless of how long that takes.
Does the company still need a statutory audit for the closure-year financial statements if it had little or no activity?
Generally yes for a company — the Companies Act 2013 does not exempt a company from statutory audit merely because turnover was nil or minimal in the closure year; every company must have its accounts audited annually until it is formally struck off or dissolved. For an LLP, statutory audit is only mandatory where turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh or contribution exceeds ₹25 lakh in that year — many closing LLPs with minimal residual activity fall below this threshold and do not require an audit for the closure-year accounts. Partnerships and proprietorships follow the tax-audit thresholds under the Income-tax Act rather than a company-style statutory audit requirement.
If our GST turnover has simply dropped below the registration threshold, should we cancel the registration or just continue filing NIL returns?
This depends on your plans. If the business is genuinely winding down and will not resume, cancelling the GST registration (via Form GST REG-16) and filing the final GSTR-10 is the cleaner long-term path, since continuing to hold an active registration means continuing to file periodic returns indefinitely, NIL or otherwise, with late-fee exposure for any missed filing. If the drop in turnover is temporary or the business may pick back up, continuing NIL filings preserves the registration and avoids the cost and process of re-registering later. PNPC assesses this as part of the broader closure-versus-continuation decision rather than assuming cancellation is always the right call simply because turnover has dropped.
| What You Need | DIY / Portal-Based Filing | PNPC Global |
|---|---|---|
| Registration inventory | Limited to what the client remembers to mention | Full inventory pulled across GST, EPFO, ESIC, DGFT, Udyam, and state PT/Shops & Establishment records |
| Refund and credit recovery | Often abandoned once closure begins | Reconciled and pursued before any registration is cancelled and legal standing lapses |
| Sequencing discipline | Forms filed in whatever order the client requests | GST, PF/ESI, state registrations, and income tax finalisation sequenced correctly relative to the entity-level closure filing |
| No-dues affidavit accuracy | Template signed without independent verification | Verified registration-by-registration against portal records before any affidavit is signed |
| Multi-state coordination | Generic national process applied uniformly | Local office handling in Chennai, Bangalore, and Hyderabad for state/municipal-specific surrender processes |
| Cross-border coordination | Not addressed | India and UAE closure documentation coordinated under one engagement via PNPC's Dubai office |
| Section 230 clearance judgment | Applied for by default or missed entirely | Applied only where the specific statutory trigger genuinely exists — not as a blanket default |
| Post-closure record | Scattered emails and portal screenshots | Single consolidated, indexed evidence file retained by the promoter |
What the PNPC package includes
- 01
Full registration inventory across GST, EPFO, ESIC, DGFT, Udyam, and state PT/Shops & Establishment records
- 02
Liability and refund position review — Form 26AS/AIS reconciliation, GST ledger review, PF/ESI contribution reconciliation
- 03
GST return regularisation and Form GST REG-16 cancellation filing
- 04
GSTR-10 final return preparation and filing within the statutory window
- 05
EPF and ESI establishment closure — final contribution reconciliation and closure request
- 06
Professional Tax, Shops & Establishment, and trade licence surrender across every applicable state/city
- 07
IEC surrender on the DGFT portal and Udyam registration deactivation
- 08
Final income tax return preparation, refund pursuit, and capital gains computation on any asset disposal
- 09
Section 230 Income Tax Clearance Certificate application, where the specific statutory trigger genuinely applies
- 10
Consolidated no-dues evidence file cross-referenced against the entity-level closure declaration
- 11
Coordination with the entity's STK-2 / LLP Form 24 / dissolution deed closure process
- 12
India-UAE coordination for businesses winding down operations in both jurisdictions
- 13
Post-closure record retention advisory covering statutory limitation periods
Do not sign a closure affidavit until every registration behind it has actually been verified clear. Speak with a PNPC Chartered Accountant — we will map every open registration, the correct sequence to close them, and the realistic timeline and cost, in writing, before any filing begins.