
Thousands of trips, dozens of GSTINs, entities that reorganise faster than processes do. At enterprise scale, unclaimed travel GST stops being noise, it compounds into a number that belongs in a review, with the working to survive one.
Nothing about the per-trip figure is impressive. That was never the point. Watch what your own scale does to it.
Here's the part that matters: suppose your process already captures 90% of it, genuinely good, by any standard. At your scale, the remaining sliver is still →
Enterprises don't lose travel GST through carelessness. They lose it through structure, three ways, reliably.
Every registration is another place a filing can land wrong, the right airline invoice against the wrong GSTIN is still lost credit. The more sophisticated your structure, the more seams it has, and seams are where credit strands.
A clean booking pipeline creates the feeling of control, but the GST invoice is the airline's document, and whether it was filed correctly against your GSTIN is a separate question nobody's pipeline answers. That question is the entire game.
An enterprise can't claim on a hunch. Every rupee needs a document trail that survives internal audit, statutory audit and a GST officer's afternoon. Recovery without the working is, for you, not recovery at all.
One engagement. Every registration reconciled, every invoice attributed to the entity that can actually claim it.
Because the shape of the leak is never generic, ten sectors, each with the pattern we've learned to find first.
The engine doesn't strain at ten thousand invoices, that's the volume it was built at, across enterprise structures, since 2018.
Enterprises meter everything material. This line simply hadn't crossed the threshold, until someone did the multiplication. Now it has.
Book a free reconciliation review, one quarter, all entities, and the multiplication done with your real numbers.