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GST · 25 June 2026

What Is Section 17(5)? The Blocked Credits You Cannot Claim

Section 17(5) of the CGST Act lists the "blocked credits", purchases on which input tax credit cannot be claimed even when you hold a valid tax invoice and meet every Section 16 condition. The main blocked categories are passenger motor vehicles with up to 13 seats, food and beverages, outdoor catering, club and health memberships, goods used for personal consumption, and goods lost, stolen, or destroyed. Each category has narrow exceptions tied to the nature of your business. Knowing the list keeps you from claiming credit that a GST notice will later reverse with interest.

In this section
Myth

If you hold a valid pakka bill, you can always claim the GST on it as input tax credit.

Fact

Even with a perfect tax invoice, Section 17(5) of the CGST Act blocks input tax credit on a fixed list of purchases, such as passenger cars, food, and personal-use goods.

What is Section 17(5)?

Short answer

Section 17(5) of the CGST Act is the list of "blocked credits", specific purchases on which input tax credit is denied even if you hold a valid invoice and have met every other condition.

Section 16 tells you when you can claim ITC. Section 17(5) then overrides it for a fixed set of items. So a purchase can tick every box, a genuine pakka bill, goods received, supplier-reported, return filed, and the credit is still blocked because the item itself is on the list.

Which purchases are blocked credits?

Short answer

Section 17(5) blocks credit on roughly eleven categories. These are the ones a small business meets most often.

  • Passenger motor vehicles with seating up to 13 persons, including the driver, plus their insurance and repairs, unless your business is to resell vehicles, run passenger transport, or teach driving.
  • Food and beverages, outdoor catering, and restaurant meals, unless you supply the same category onward or the law forces you to provide them.
  • Membership of a club, health, or fitness centre.
  • Goods or services used for personal consumption rather than for the business.
  • Goods lost, stolen, destroyed, written off, or given away as free samples or gifts.

Why does the blocked list matter to you?

Short answer

Because claiming a blocked credit is a reversal waiting to happen: the department can recover it with interest under Section 50, plus a penalty.

  • A car bought for the office, a team lunch, or a Diwali gift carries GST you simply cannot recover. Treat that GST as a real cost when you price.
  • Each category has a narrow business-nature exception, so a cab operator can claim ITC on cars while a consultant cannot.
  • Run the test before you claim, not after: a wrongly claimed credit surfaces in reconciliation and triggers a notice.

How is this different from a kaccha bill problem?

Short answer

A kaccha bill blocks ITC because the document is invalid. Section 17(5) blocks ITC even when the document is a perfect pakka bill.

  • Kaccha bill: no valid invoice, so no credit can travel at all.
  • Section 17(5): valid invoice, but the law denies credit for that category of spend.
  • Both end the same way for you, GST you paid that you cannot reclaim, so both belong in your costing.