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Economics May 01, 2026 5 min read Daily brief · #5 of 13

GST revenue follows annual pattern, hits all-time high of Rs 2.43 lakh crore in April 2026

GST collections in April 2026 reached ₹2,42,702 crore (reported as approximately ₹2.43 lakh crore), an all-time monthly high and 8.7% higher year-on-year — c...


What Happened

  • GST collections in April 2026 reached ₹2,42,702 crore (reported as approximately ₹2.43 lakh crore), an all-time monthly high and 8.7% higher year-on-year — consistent with the well-established annual pattern of April being the strongest GST month.
  • April collections are structurally elevated each year because they capture final-quarter (January–March) business settlements and year-end stock clearances, making absolute comparisons with other months less meaningful than year-on-year trends.
  • Import-related GST taxes surged 25.8% to ₹57,580 crore — the primary driver of record revenue — while domestic collections grew more modestly at 4.3%.
  • Net revenue after refunds was ₹2,10,909 crore, up 7.3% year-on-year, reflecting the underlying pace of revenue growth after accounting for exporters' input tax credit refunds.
  • Several states including Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, and Puducherry recorded double-digit growth in their SGST collections during the month.

Static Topic Bridges

The April GST Spike: Seasonal Patterns in Tax Revenue

India's GST system follows a predictable seasonal rhythm. April is consistently the highest month because it captures tax settlements for January–March — the final quarter — when businesses close books, clear inventory, and reconcile Input Tax Credit (ITC). Similarly, October (post-festive season) and January (post-December quarter) tend to be above-average months. Analysing GST revenue requires understanding this seasonality: a record April does not automatically signal an acceleration in underlying demand; rather, it reflects temporal bunching of tax settlements. The correct method for trend analysis is year-on-year comparison for the same calendar month.

  • April collections in recent years: ₹1.87 lakh crore (April 2023), ₹2.10 lakh crore (April 2024), ₹2.23 lakh crore (April 2025), ₹2.43 lakh crore (April 2026).
  • Consistent April premium: April collections are typically 15-25% higher than the preceding month (March).
  • Input Tax Credit dynamics: Year-end stock clearances create a surge in invoice matching and ITC settlement, generating a corresponding spike in net tax payable.

Connection to this news: The April 2026 record — while historically significant — fits the established seasonal pattern. The more analytically important signal is the 8.7% YoY growth rate and, critically, the 4.3% domestic growth vs. 25.8% import growth — the latter suggesting reliance on external trade rather than domestic demand momentum.

Fiscal Federalism and GST Revenue Sharing

GST fundamentally restructured India's fiscal federalism. Under the pre-GST architecture, states had significant autonomous revenue sources (VAT, octroi, entry tax). Post-GST, states surrendered these instruments in exchange for SGST collections plus a share of IGST. The 15th Finance Commission (2021-26) set vertical devolution at 41% of the divisible pool to states. However, GST Compensation Cess — a significant revenue item — is excluded from the divisible pool entirely, meaning states do not receive a share of cess collections. This creates a structural tension: higher cess-funded central receipts do not automatically translate into state revenue.

  • Vertical devolution: 41% of Union's net tax revenue (divisible pool) transferred to states — 15th Finance Commission recommendation.
  • Divisible pool exclusions: Cess and surcharges levied by the Centre (~23% of gross tax receipts in FY25) are not shared with states.
  • SGST: States retain 100% of SGST collected within their jurisdiction; they receive a share of IGST from inter-state transactions based on consumption destination.
  • GST Council: Article 279A body that collectively determines GST rates, exemptions, and revenue-sharing modalities; states have two-thirds voting weight collectively.

Connection to this news: The April 2026 record benefits states through higher SGST and IGST shares, but the asymmetric growth — imports (central IGST) rising 25.8% vs. domestic consumption (SGST-linked) rising 4.3% — means that the windfall accrues disproportionately to the Centre's IGST pool before sharing formulas apply. Strong state-level SGST growth in Maharashtra and Karnataka reflects their economic concentration in domestic services and manufacturing.

GST Council's Role in Rate Rationalisation

The GST Council has been engaged in an ongoing exercise to rationalise the rate structure — moving towards a simplified three- or four-rate structure, reducing exemptions, and broadening the base. Key items such as petroleum products (petrol, diesel, ATF) and electricity remain outside GST, representing a major base limitation. Inverted duty structures in some sectors continue to generate large refund outflows, reducing net revenue.

  • Items outside GST: Petroleum products, alcohol for human consumption, electricity — these remain under state excise and VAT.
  • Inverted duty structure: Occurs when input tax rate exceeds output tax rate, forcing large ITC refunds; common in textiles, footwear, fertilisers.
  • Rate rationalisation committee: GoM (Group of Ministers) constituted by GST Council to recommend rate simplification; work ongoing as of 2026.
  • Refund as fiscal drag: Net GST (after refunds) is structurally 10-15% lower than gross GST, reflecting large ITC credit pools in export-oriented sectors.

Connection to this news: The ₹31,793 crore gap between gross (₹2,42,702 crore) and net (₹2,10,909 crore) April 2026 collections reflects ongoing refund obligations. Rate rationalisation — if it reduces inverted duty structures — could reduce this gap and improve states' realised revenue without increasing nominal tax burden.

Key Facts & Data

  • April 2026 gross GST: ₹2,42,702 crore (~₹2.43 lakh crore) — all-time monthly high.
  • YoY growth: 8.7% over April 2025 (₹2,23,265 crore).
  • Domestic revenue: ₹1,85,122 crore (4.3% growth) — slower underlying demand signal.
  • Import revenue: ₹57,580 crore (25.8% growth) — primary driver of record.
  • Net revenue post-refund: ₹2,10,909 crore (7.3% growth).
  • GST introduced: 1 July 2017 — "One Nation, One Tax" replacing 17 central and state indirect taxes.
  • Article 246A: Constitutional basis; inserted by 101st Constitutional Amendment, 2016.
  • Article 279A: Constitutes the GST Council.
  • 15th Finance Commission: Recommended 41% vertical devolution to states for FY2021-26.
  • States with strong April 2026 SGST growth: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Puducherry.
  • GST compensation cess ended (guarantee period): June 30, 2022.
On this page
  1. What Happened
  2. Static Topic Bridges
  3. The April GST Spike: Seasonal Patterns in Tax Revenue
  4. Fiscal Federalism and GST Revenue Sharing
  5. GST Council's Role in Rate Rationalisation
  6. Key Facts & Data
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