For years, manufacturers in highly regulated and heavily taxed sectors have utilized a standard, entirely legal strategy to manage their Goods and Services Tax (GST) liability: the transaction value method. By selling goods to wholesale distributors at a steeply discounted B2B invoice price, the GST was calculated on that lower transaction amount, keeping the upfront tax burden manageable.
As of February 1, 2026, the Ministry of Finance has officially closed this avenue for specific industries.
Through the implementation of Notification No. 20/2025–Central Tax, the government has introduced the draconian Rule 31D into the GST framework. This rule fundamentally changes the mathematics of taxation by mandating that GST for specified goods must now be calculated on the Maximum Retail Price (MRP) printed on the packaging, regardless of the actual price at which the goods are sold to the distributor.
If you manufacture or trade in Pan Masala, Tobacco, Cigarettes, and similar notified products, the rules of the game have flipped overnight. Continuing to generate e-way bills and invoices based on your wholesale transaction value is no longer just a calculation error—it is active tax evasion.
Here is a comprehensive breakdown of Rule 31D, the immediate impact on your cash flow, and the urgent steps you must take to restructure your compliance before the GST Department knocks on your factory doors.
The Update: Demystifying Rule 31D and MRP-Based Valuation
To understand the sheer magnitude of this update, we must look at why the government enacted it. Sectors like chewing tobacco and pan masala are notorious for revenue leakage. Manufacturers would frequently under-invoice their supplies to distributors to evade the heavy Compensation Cess and GST, while the end consumer still paid the full MRP at the retail shop. The government was losing thousands of crores in the middle of the supply chain.
Rule 31D eliminates the middleman in the tax calculation.
Under the new regime effective February 2026, the valuation of supply for these specified goods is strictly determined by the Retail Sale Price (MRP) declared on the package, minus a standard abatement (discount) notified by the government.
The Mathematical Reality (Before vs. After)
Let us assume you manufacture a pouch of Pan Masala with an MRP of ₹10.
- Before Feb 2026 (The Old Way): You sell this pouch to your primary distributor for a B2B transaction value of ₹4. You would calculate the 28% GST + Cess on the ₹4 invoice value. Your tax liability was relatively small.
- After Feb 2026 (Rule 31D): You still sell the pouch to your distributor for ₹4. However, the GST portal no longer cares about your ₹4 invoice. You must calculate the 28% GST + Cess on the ₹10 MRP (subject to any notified abatement).
The Machinery Registration Mandate (Form SRM-I)
The update does not stop at valuation. To ensure manufacturers aren't secretly producing un-invoiced goods to avoid this new MRP tax, the government has linked Rule 31D to strict manufacturing surveillance.
Manufacturers of these specified goods must now digitally register every single piece of packing machinery in their factory on the GST portal using Form GST SRM-I. You must declare the machine's capacity, make, and daily production limits. Furthermore, you are required to file a special monthly return detailing the exact number of pouches packed by each specific machine.
The Impact: Margin Erosion and Seizure Risks
If your finance team has not already restructured your pricing and billing software to accommodate Rule 31D, your business is facing severe, multi-tiered threats:
1. Severe Working Capital Blockage
This is the most immediate threat to your survival. Because you are now paying GST based on the retail price (₹10) while only receiving the wholesale price (₹4) from your distributor, your upfront cash outflow for tax purposes will skyrocket. If your distributor credit cycle is 45 to 60 days, you will be draining your working capital to pay the government taxes on profit margins that have not even been realized yet.
2. Complete Profit Margin Erosion
If you absorb this newly inflated tax liability without increasing the price to your distributors, your profit margins will vanish instantly. Alternatively, if you pass the entire tax burden to your distributors, they will demand higher retail margins, forcing you to potentially increase the MRP, which can destroy your market competitiveness.
3. Confiscation of Unregistered Machinery
The intelligence wings of the GST Department (like the DGGI) are currently conducting aggressive factory sweeps. If they find a packing machine on your premises that is producing goods but is not registered via Form GST SRM-I on the portal, the penalties are catastrophic. A flat penalty of ₹1 Lakh per unregistered machine is levied, and the machinery itself—along with the goods produced by it—can be instantly confiscated.
4. E-Way Bill and ITC Rejections
If you generate an e-invoice or an e-way bill using the old transaction value method for a notified Rule 31D product, the system may eventually flag the discrepancy. More importantly, your buyers will face intense scrutiny when claiming Input Tax Credit (ITC), leading to frozen vendor payments and broken supply chain trust.
The Solution: BookMyTM’s Rule 31D Restructuring Strategy
You cannot fight Rule 31D, but you can intelligently adapt to it. This requires a synchronized effort between your legal, financial, and IT departments. At BookMyTM, our specialized GST Advisory team handles this complex transition from end to end.
- 1. ERP and Billing Software Patching: The most common point of failure is legacy accounting software like older versions of Tally or custom ERPs that are hardcoded to calculate GST on the base invoice value. Our tech-compliance experts work with your IT team to patch your billing systems, creating a dual-value logic where the commercial invoice reflects the B2B price for accounting purposes, but the tax schedule calculates strictly on the declared MRP.
- 2. Strategic Supply Chain Repricing: You cannot operate on your 2025 pricing models. Our financial analysts help you conduct a thorough "Reverse Tax Calculation." We map out the new tax burden based on your MRPs and help you strategically adjust your distributor pricing, trade discounts, and retail margins to ensure you remain profitable without pricing yourself out of the market.
- 3. Seamless Machinery Registration and Reporting: We remove the administrative nightmare of the new surveillance rules. Our team handles the meticulous filing of Form GST SRM-I for all your packing machinery, ensuring that production capacities are accurately declared to avoid future show-cause notices. We also manage the complex monthly reporting of machine-wise production data, keeping you 100% compliant with the intelligence wings.
- 4. Advance Ruling Petitions: If your product falls into a grey area—for example, a mouth freshener that shares ingredients with pan masala but is fundamentally different—we can draft and file applications before the Authority for Advance Rulings (AAR) to legally establish whether Rule 31D applies to your specific HSN code, potentially saving you millions in taxes.
Conclusion
Rule 31D is a definitive shift in how the government taxes high-evasion sectors. It demands total transparency and rigorous pricing discipline. Do not let outdated billing practices turn into criminal tax evasion charges. Act now to protect your margins and legitimize your operations.