GST Invoice Format: Mandatory Fields, Rules and Examples for Businesses

Tallysolutions

Tally Solutions

Jun 2, 2026

30 second summary | A GST invoice must include specific mandatory fields under the GST Act, from GSTIN and HSN codes to tax breakdowns. Missing even one field can make an invoice non-compliant and block your buyer’s input tax credit claim.

A GST (Goods and Services Tax) invoice is a legal document issued by a registered supplier to a buyer for taxable goods or services. Its format is not discretionary: the GST law prescribes every field that must appear on a compliant invoice and an invoice that omits any of them can disqualify the buyer from claiming input tax credit (ITC). For businesses, that is a direct cost.

The Central Goods and Services Tax (CGST) Rules, 2017, specifically Rule 46, list what a tax invoice must contain. The rules apply to all GST-registered businesses, whether they supply goods, services or both. Understanding the required format before designing your GST bill book prevents compliance gaps and rejected ITC claims downstream.

What are the mandatory fields in a GST invoice format

Rule 46 of the CGST Rules, 2017, specifies 17 mandatory fields that every tax invoice must contain. Each field has a specific purpose in the GST compliance chain.

Field

What it must show

Why it matters

Name, address and GSTIN of the supplier

Legal name as on GST registration, full address and 15-digit GSTIN

Identifies the registered supplier issuing the invoice

Tax invoice number

A consecutive serial number, unique for the financial year (FY), up to 16 characters

Required for filing GSTR-1 and for ITC matching

Date of issue

The date the invoice is created (DD/MM/YYYY format recommended)

Determines the tax period for return filing

Name, address and GSTIN of the recipient

GSTIN mandatory for registered recipients; name and address for unregistered buyers

Enables the buyer to claim ITC

Place of supply

State code of the place where the supply occurs

Determines whether CGST+State GST (SGST) or Integrated GST (IGST) applies

HSN or SAC code

Harmonised System of Nomenclature (HSN) for goods or Services Accounting Code (SAC) for services

Classifies the supply for tax rate determination

Description of goods or services

Clear description of what is being supplied

Helps auditors and buyers verify the supply

Quantity and unit

Number of units and unit of measurement (e.g., kg, nos., litres). Applies to goods; not mandatory for services

This helps accurately determine the taxable value, verify HSN classification and prevent mismatches during GST audits or return reconciliation.

Total value of the goods or services

Gross value of the sale 

Helps estimate the correct taxable amount. 

Total taxable value

Value of supply after discounts, before tax

The basis on which GST is calculated

Applicable tax rate

Rate of CGST, SGST/UTGST or IGST applicable to the supply

Must match the GST rate for the HSN/SAC code

Amount of tax

Tax calculated separately for CGST, SGST/UTGST and IGST

Buyer uses this for ITC; supplier records tax liability

Place of origin (for interstate)

State of origin if IGST applies

Required for cross-state supplies

Signature or digital signature

Authorised signatory’s signature or DSC

Authenticates the invoice

Reverse charge applicability

State ‘Yes’ if tax is payable by recipient under reverse charge mechanism (RCM)

Mandatory declaration under GST law

Discount (if any)

Pre-supply discount deducted before tax calculation

Only pre-supply discounts reduce taxable value; post-supply discounts require a credit note

Shipping address (if different)

Delivery address if it differs from the billing address

Required when goods are dispatched to a different location

GST invoice for exports

Export invoices must carry the declaration “SUPPLY MEANT FOR EXPORT ON PAYMENT OF IGST” or “SUPPLY MEANT FOR EXPORT UNDER BOND OR LETTER OF UNDERTAKING WITHOUT PAYMENT OF IGST”. They must also include the buyer’s country and, where applicable, the shipping bill or bill of export number.

GST invoice template: a practical example

Below is a simplified GST invoice bill format based on the mandatory fields under Rule 46. This example covers a business-to-business (B2B) supply of goods within the same state (intrastate), where CGST and SGST apply.

Invoice field

Example value

Supplier name

Sunrise Trading Co.

Supplier address

12, MG Road, Bengaluru, Karnataka – 560001

Supplier GSTIN

29AABCS1429B1Z1

Invoice number

STC/2024-25/0042

Invoice date

15/07/2024

Buyer name

Horizon Retail Pvt. Ltd.

Buyer address

8, Commercial Street, Bengaluru, Karnataka – 560001

Buyer GSTIN

29AACCH4523M1Z3

Place of supply

Karnataka (State code: 29)

HSN code

6205 (Men’s shirts)

Description

Men’s cotton shirts, white, size M

Quantity

200 nos

Rate per unit

₹500

Taxable value

₹1,00,000

CGST @ 6%

₹6,000

SGST @ 6%

₹6,000

Total invoice value

₹1,12,000

Reverse charge applicable

No

Authorised signatory

Ramesh Kumar (Director)

For an interstate supply, IGST would apply instead of CGST+SGST, at 12% on the taxable value (i.e., ₹12,000 IGST, total ₹1,12,000 – same total, different tax component).

ConclusioA GST invoice must include specific mandatory fields under the GST Act, from GSTIN and HSN codes to tax breakdowns. Missing even one field can make an invoice non-compliant and block your buyer’s input tax credit claim.

Getting your GST invoice format right is not a one-time task; it is an ongoing compliance requirement. Every invoice you issue affects your buyer’s ITC eligibility, your own GSTR-1 accuracy and your audit trail. The mandatory fields under Rule 46 are non-negotiable and even a single missing field can make an invoice legally deficient.

If you want to eliminate manual errors and generate GST-compliant invoices consistently, TallyPrime’s built-in invoicing module handles the mandatory fields, tax calculations, HSN code mapping and serial number management automatically. 

FAQs

A GST-registered supplier must issue a tax invoice for every taxable supply of goods or services. For exempt supplies, a bill of supply is issued instead of a tax invoice. Suppliers below the GST registration threshold are not required to issue tax invoices but may issue regular bills.

Yes, for business-to-consumer (B2C) sales, the buyer’s GSTIN is not required since end consumers are not registered. However, for B2B transactions, the recipient’s GSTIN is mandatory. Without it, the buyer cannot claim ITC on that purchase and the invoice cannot be matched in GSTR-2B.

Under Section 122 of the CGST Act, 2017, a registered person who issues an incorrect or incomplete invoice can face a penalty of ₹10,000 or the amount of tax involved, whichever is higher. Repeated non-compliance can also attract scrutiny and audit proceedings.

No. A proforma invoice is a preliminary document issued before the supply is confirmed. It does not carry a tax invoice number, does not record a GST liability, and cannot be used by the buyer to claim ITC. A proper tax invoice must be issued once the supply is made.

A physical signature or digital signature certificate (DSC) is mandatory on a GST invoice. Invoices generated through approved accounting or billing software (including software integrated with the GST portal or e-invoicing system) may include an electronic signature or QR code in place of a manual signature, provided the software complies with applicable GST rules.

Published on June 2, 2026

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