Based on insights from over 100 CFOs and analysis of more than 12 crore enterprise tax transactions across sectors such as manufacturing, retail, logistics, e-commerce and FMCG, the report highlights a gap between regulatory capability and enterprise visibility.
It notes that tax authorities are using artificial intelligence and analytics to cross-verify GST filings, TDS returns, banking transactions and e-invoicing data in near real time. This reflects a shift from periodic audits to continuous monitoring of tax data.
On the enterprise side, the report finds that while most CFOs report confidence in their compliance systems, only about one-third have real-time visibility into tax exposure. This often leads to delayed identification of issues, typically after regulatory notices are issued.
At the same time, AI-enabled compliance systems show improvements in reconciliation and processing efficiency. Input Tax Credit (ITC) matching increases from around 80% under traditional methods to up to 98% with AI-led systems. The report also records a reduction in GST demand notices of up to 60% in organisations using automated mismatch detection tools.
Operational processes have also become faster, with GST return preparation timelines reducing from an average of 18 days to about 3 days, and TDS processing cycles narrowing from days to minutes.
The report adds that AI is being used to improve reconciliation, data validation and vendor visibility across tax workflows, reducing dependence on manual processes.
It also notes that as regulatory systems become more data-driven, enterprises using legacy compliance frameworks may face higher instances of mismatches and notices, pointing to an ongoing transition in compliance infrastructure.
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First Published: May 8, 2026 10:49 AM IST
