PlasticPackaging

GST on Plastic & Packaging — Polymers 18%, Boxes 18%, Jute Bags 5%

Complete GST guide for plastic & packaging: polymer granules 18%, corrugated boxes 18%, PET bottles 18%, plastic bags (legal) 18%, kraft paper 12%, glass/metal packaging 18%, single-use plastic ban impact, biodegradable packaging 18%, jute bags 5%, recycling chain GST, and EPR compliance.

18%

Plastic Raw Material

Banned

Plastic Bags (≤ 50 micron)

18%

Corrugated Boxes

18%

PET Bottles

18%

Polythene Bags (legal)

12% / 5%

Paper/Jute Bags

12%

Biodegradable Packaging

18%

Aluminium Foil Packaging

Plastic & Packaging — GST Framework

Plastic Raw Materials — 18% GST

POLYMERS & RESINS: Polyethylene (PE — HDPE, LDPE, LLDPE): 18% (HSN 3901). Polypropylene (PP): 18% (HSN 3902). PVC (Polyvinyl Chloride): 18% (HSN 3904). PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate): 18% (HSN 3907). Polystyrene (PS): 18% (HSN 3903). ABS (Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene): 18% (HSN 3903). Nylon/Polyamide: 18% (HSN 3908). Polycarbonate: 18% (HSN 3907). MAJOR MANUFACTURERS: Reliance Industries (largest PE/PP producer): 18% on all polymer sales. IOCL (petrochemical division): 18%. GAIL: 18%. Haldia Petrochemicals: 18%. IMPORT: Imported polymers: 18% IGST + 5-7.5% customs duty. Anti-dumping duty on some grades from China/Korea/Saudi Arabia. RECYCLED PLASTIC: Recycled plastic granules: 18% (same as virgin). Waste plastic (for recycling): 5% (HSN 3915). Plastic scrap (import): 18% IGST + customs (restricted import — requires permission). MASTERBATCH & ADDITIVES: Color masterbatch: 18%. Filler masterbatch (CaCO3 based): 18%. UV stabilizers: 18%. Plasticizers: 18%. Processing aids: 18%. CONVERSION: Polymer → finished product: No separate GST event (internal process). Toll conversion (job work on plastics): 12% (manufacturing job work). Returns after job work: within 1 year (no tax). After 1 year: deemed supply (18% applicable).

Plastic Products & Packaging — 18%

PLASTIC PACKAGING: Plastic bags/sacks (above 50 micron): 18% (HSN 3923). BOPP bags: 18%. Woven PP sacks (cement/fertilizer bags): 18%. Stretch film/shrink wrap: 18%. Bubble wrap: 18%. Plastic containers (food grade): 18%. PET bottles (preform + blown): 18%. HDPE drums: 18%. Plastic pallets: 18%. SINGLE-USE PLASTIC (BANNED ITEMS): As per Plastic Waste Management Rules 2021 (effective July 2022): Plastic plates/cups (disposable): BANNED (not a GST question — product is illegal). Plastic straws: BANNED. Plastic cutlery: BANNED. Plastic carry bags < 75 micron: BANNED. Plastic flags/sticks: BANNED. Cotton buds with plastic sticks: BANNED. BUT: these items were 18% GST BEFORE the ban. Now: no GST applicable because product cannot be legally manufactured/sold. LEGAL CARRY BAGS: Plastic bags ≥ 75 micron (from Dec 2022: ≥ 120 micron in some areas): 18% GST. Non-woven polypropylene bags: 18%. Compostable plastic bags: 18% (same rate despite being eco-friendly — industry demands 12%). MULTI-LAYER PACKAGING (MLP): Chips packets, snack wrappers: 18% (HSN 3920/3921). Tetrapak (multi-layer): 18%. Standup pouches: 18%. Laminated films: 18%. Aluminium + plastic laminate: 18%. FOAM PRODUCTS: Thermocol (expanded polystyrene): 18%. Foam packaging: 18%. EPE foam (protective packaging): 18%. XPS foam boards: 18%.

Paper & Cardboard Packaging — 12% / 18%

CORRUGATED BOXES: Corrugated paper/board: 18% (HSN 4808). Corrugated boxes & cartons: 18% (HSN 4819). Pizza boxes: 18%. E-commerce shipping boxes: 18%. Custom printed cartons: 18%. Pre-GST: corrugated boxes were 12% excise + 5% VAT = 17%. Post-GST at 18%: marginal increase. KRAFT PAPER & BOARD: Kraft paper (for corrugation): 12% (HSN 4804). Kraft liner: 12%. Test liner: 12%. Fluting medium: 12%. INTERESTING: Raw paper for making boxes = 12%, but finished box = 18%. Creates slight ITC accumulation for box makers (input 12%, output 18% = positive margin). PAPER BAGS: Paper bags (branded, printed): 18% (HSN 4819). Paper bags (unbranded, commodity): 12%. Distinction is fuzzy — department often disputes. Paper cups (disposable): 18%. Paper plates: 18% (if coated/laminated) or 12% (plain paper). LABELS & STICKERS: Self-adhesive labels: 18% (HSN 4821). Printed labels (woven): 12%. Tags: 18%. Hologram stickers: 18%. QR code labels: 18%. FLEXIBLE PACKAGING: Printed laminates (BOPP/PET/PE combination): 18%. Pouches (retort, stand-up, flat): 18%. Sachets (shampoo, ketchup): 18%. Blister packs (pharma): 18%. Strip packs: 18%. Alu-alu packs: 18%. India: 3rd largest flexible packaging market globally. Key players: Uflex, Huhtamaki, Constantia, Ester Industries — all output at 18%.

Glass & Metal Packaging — 18%

GLASS PACKAGING: Glass bottles (beverage): 18% (HSN 7010). Glass jars (food): 18%. Pharmaceutical glass (vials, ampoules): 18%. Cosmetic glass containers: 18%. Lab glass (borosilicate): 18%. Key manufacturers: Piramal Glass, AGI Glaspac, Hindusthan National Glass — 18%. METAL PACKAGING: Tin cans (food): 18% (HSN 7310). Aluminium cans (beverage): 18%. Aluminium foil: 18% (HSN 7607). Crown caps (bottle): 18%. Aerosol cans: 18%. Steel drums: 18%. Metal closures/lids: 18%. ALUMINIUM FOIL CONTAINERS: Aluminium foil containers (takeaway food): 18%. These replace banned plastic containers — but SAME 18% rate. Industry argument: should be 12% to incentivize shift from plastic. Government: no differentiation yet. COLLAPSIBLE TUBES: Laminated tubes (toothpaste): 18%. Aluminium tubes (pharma ointments): 18%. Plastic tubes: 18%. COMPOSITE CANS: Cardboard + metal end (like Pringles): 18%. Paper composite drums: 18%. Spiral wound tubes: 18%. CLOSURES & DISPENSING: Plastic caps (for bottles): 18%. Pump dispensers: 18%. Spray nozzles: 18%. Dropper assemblies: 18%. Child-resistant closures: 18%. PALLETS & CRATES: Wooden pallets: 18%. Plastic pallets: 18%. Metal crates: 18%. Returnable plastic crates: 18% (on first sale). Deposit-based crate system (like Coca-Cola): complex — deposit not taxable, rental may be taxable.

E-Commerce & Sustainable Packaging

E-COMMERCE PACKAGING BOOM: India e-commerce: ₹7 lakh crore GMV (2024-25). Each order generates: 1 corrugated box (18%), bubble wrap/air pillows (18%), tape (18%), invoice envelope (18%), filler material (18%). Amazon/Flipkart/Meesho: massive packaging procurement → 18% GST on all. ESTIMATED GST REVENUE FROM E-COMMERCE PACKAGING: 5 billion+ parcels/year × ₹15-50 packaging cost × 18% = ₹1,500-5,000 crore GST annually. SUSTAINABLE PACKAGING ALTERNATIVES: Compostable bags: 18% (no incentive vs regular plastic — industry demands 12% or 5%). Biodegradable packaging: 18% (treated same as conventional). Mushroom packaging: 18% (emerging — same rate). Seaweed-based wraps: 18%. Recycled content packaging: 18% (no rate benefit for using recycled material). GOVERNMENT'S EPR (EXTENDED PRODUCER RESPONSIBILITY): All producers/importers/brand owners: must manage plastic waste. EPR registration: mandatory (on CPCB portal). EPR fee: NOT subject to GST (it's a regulatory compliance fee, not service). BUT: waste collection/recycling service: 18% GST. Waste management company charges: 18%. PAPER vs PLASTIC (TAX COMPARISON): Plastic carry bag (legal thickness): 18%. Paper carry bag: 12-18% (depending on plain vs printed). Jute bag: 5%. Cloth bag (cotton): 5%. Tax incentive for eco-bags: exists (5% vs 18%). But: manufacturing cost of paper/jute bags is 3-5x higher than plastic. Tax difference alone doesn't drive shift — bans are more effective. PACKAGING WASTE CESS (PROPOSED): Multiple proposals to add 'plastic cess' or 'environmental cess'. Not implemented yet. If implemented: would be similar to compensation cess (additional to 18%). Revenue earmarked for: waste management infrastructure.

Printing & Branding on Packaging — 18%

PRINTING SERVICES: Printing on packaging material: 18% SAC (service). Flexographic printing: 18%. Gravure printing: 18%. Digital printing on packaging: 18%. Screen printing: 18%. PRINTING INK: All printing inks: 18% (HSN 3215). Flexo ink: 18%. Gravure ink: 18%. UV-curable ink: 18%. Water-based ink: 18%. Solvent-based ink: 18%. DESIGN & PRE-PRESS: Graphic design for packaging: 18% (professional service). Die-making (for cutting): 18%. Cylinder engraving (gravure): 18%. Plate making (flexo): 18%. Artwork/digital file preparation: 18%. BARCODE & LABELING: Barcode printing service: 18%. RFID tags: 18%. NFC tags: 18%. Tamper-evident labels: 18%. Security printing (anti-counterfeiting): 18%. PACKING MACHINES: Packaging machinery: 18% (capital goods — ITC available). Form-fill-seal machines: 18%. Shrink wrapping machines: 18%. Carton sealing machines: 18%. Strapping machines: 18%. Labeling machines: 18%. Blister packaging machines: 18%. PACKING MATERIALS (MISC): Adhesive tape (BOPP tape): 18% (HSN 3919). Strapping band (PP/PET): 18%. Stretch film: 18%. Corner protectors: 18%. Void fill (air pillows, paper): 18%. Desiccants (silica gel): 18%. Cushioning material: 18%. JOB WORK: Printing job work on customer's material: 12% (manufacturing). Packing/repacking job work: 18% (not manufacturing — classified as 'other' job work). Labeling/relabeling: 18%.

Plastic & Packaging — GST Rate Table

ItemHSNGST RateNotes
Polyethylene / Polypropylene (granules)3901/390218%Reliance, IOCL, GAIL
PVC resin390418%Chemplast, DCW, Finolex
PET resin / preforms390718%Bottle-grade polymer
Plastic bags (≥ 75 micron)392318%< 75 micron: BANNED
Corrugated boxes / cartons481918%E-commerce, FMCG
Kraft paper (for boxes)480412%Raw material for boxes
Glass bottles / jars701018%Beverage, pharma, food
Aluminium foil760718%Food wrap, containers
Tin cans (food packaging)731018%Canned food, paint
Jute bags / sacks63055%Eco-friendly alternative
Biodegradable / compostable bags392318%No rate incentive yet
Printing ink321518%All types (flexo, gravure)

Frequently Asked Questions

Why doesn't the government give lower GST on biodegradable/compostable packaging to incentivize eco-alternatives?
BIODEGRADABLE PACKAGING — WHY NO GST INCENTIVE: CURRENT SITUATION: Regular plastic packaging: 18%. Biodegradable/compostable packaging: 18% (SAME rate). No tax incentive for choosing eco-friendly option. INDUSTRY DEMANDS: (1) Reduce to 5% for certified compostable packaging. (2) Exempt bio-based packaging from GST entirely. (3) At minimum: 12% (differential of 6% vs plastic). GOVERNMENT'S REASONS FOR NOT REDUCING: (1) CLASSIFICATION PROBLEM: What qualifies as 'biodegradable'? Standards: IS 17088 (Indian Standard for compostable plastics). But: many products claim 'biodegradable' without certification. If rate reduced: fake claims would proliferate (greenwashing for tax benefit). Enforcement: testing every product is impractical. (2) REVENUE IMPACT: Packaging is ₹5+ lakh crore industry. If significant shift to 'biodegradable' at 5%: revenue loss = ₹30,000-50,000 crore. Government unwilling to take this hit. (3) BANS ARE MORE EFFECTIVE: Government's chosen tool: BAN problematic plastics entirely. Single-use plastic ban (2022): more effective than tax differential. Logic: if product is banned, no tax question arises. For legal products: 18% uniform rate regardless of material. (4) COST ALREADY HIGHER: Compostable bags: 3-5x more expensive than plastic. Consumer already pays premium for eco-choice. Additional 13% tax saving (18% → 5%): may not change behavior (material cost dominates). (5) LEVEL PLAYING FIELD: If bio-bags at 5% and plastic at 18%: ITC chain disrupts for multi-material packaging. Companies mixing bio + conventional: complex dual-rate billing. Simpler to keep uniform 18%. WHAT WOULD HELP INSTEAD: (a) EPR credit trading: companies meeting targets get financial benefit (not via GST). (b) Green procurement by government at premium price. (c) Capital subsidy for bio-packaging plants (not GST reduction). (d) Consumer awareness (people willing to pay more for eco). INTERNATIONAL COMPARISON: EU: no VAT differential for bio-packaging (standard rate applies). UK: no difference. Italy: briefly reduced VAT on bio-plastics (then reversed). No major economy uses VAT/GST differential for packaging sustainability. ALL rely on: bans + EPR + standards.
How does GST work for the corrugated box industry — and why is there an inverted duty issue?
CORRUGATED BOX INDUSTRY — GST & INVERTED DUTY: THE INDUSTRY: India: 2nd largest corrugated packaging market in Asia. Annual production: 15+ million tons. Companies: 15,000+ (mostly MSME). Key players: ITC (packaging division), Packman, Priti International, PakStar. SUPPLY CHAIN: (1) Waste paper (recycled): 5% GST (HSN 4707). (2) Kraft paper (from waste paper): 12% GST (HSN 4804). (3) Corrugated board/box: 18% GST (HSN 4819). (4) End customer (FMCG, e-commerce): pays 18% to box maker. ITC FLOW: Step 1 → Step 2: Paper mill pays 5% on waste paper, charges 12% on kraft paper. ITC: 5% input, 12% output. Positive: pays 7% cash to government. Step 2 → Step 3: Box maker pays 12% on kraft paper, charges 18% on boxes. ITC: 12% input, 18% output. Positive: pays 6% cash to government. NO inverted duty in THIS chain (each step has higher output rate). WHERE IS THE INVERTED DUTY?: SMALL BOX MAKERS buying from INTEGRATED mills: Integrated mill sells CORRUGATED BOARD (pre-made sheets): 18%. Box maker converts sheets to boxes: also 18%. Input: 18%. Output: 18%. NO inversion (same rate). ACTUAL ISSUE — STARCH & ADHESIVE: Corrugated boxes need STARCH ADHESIVE (to glue layers): Starch (maize/tapioca): 18% (processed). Adhesive chemicals: 18%. Other inputs: machinery spare parts (18%), energy (outside GST). No specific inversion — 18% in, 18% out. THE REAL COMPLAINT: Industry wanted BOXES at 12% (same as kraft paper). Logic: 'packaging is essential, not luxury.' Government said NO: 18% since inception, pre-GST was also 17-18%. Revenue loss if reduced to 12%: ₹8,000-10,000 crore. GST Council: 'packaging serves luxury products too (phones, electronics, cosmetics).' IMPACT ON E-COMMERCE: Every Amazon/Flipkart order: ₹15-50 box cost + 18% GST. Millions of orders daily: significant GST revenue. If boxes were 12%: e-commerce packaging cost drops slightly. But: e-commerce companies claim ITC anyway (registered businesses). End consumer bears the cost (in product MRP). SME box makers: prefer 12% (their customers often can't claim ITC — unregistered sellers).
What's the GST impact of India's single-use plastic ban — does banning items affect GST revenue?
SINGLE-USE PLASTIC BAN & GST REVENUE IMPACT: WHAT WAS BANNED (July 1, 2022): Category A (immediate ban): Plastic earbuds, balloon sticks, flags, candy sticks, ice cream sticks, plates, cups, glasses, forks, spoons, knives, straws, trays, sweet boxes wrapping, invitation card wrapping, cigarette packets wrapping, PVC banners < 100 micron. Category B (Dec 31, 2022): Carry bags < 75 micron thickness. Category C (phased): Plastic sachets, multi-layer packaging (not yet banned — under review). GST REVENUE IMPACT: PRE-BAN: All these items were at 18% GST. Estimated market: ₹15,000-20,000 crore annually. GST revenue from banned items: ₹2,700-3,600 crore/year (18% of market). POST-BAN: Revenue: ZERO from banned products. But SHIFT happened: Plastic plates → Paper plates (18% GST) or Areca leaf plates (exempt). Plastic cups → Paper cups (18%) or Kulhad (exempt). Plastic bags → Non-woven bags (18%) or Jute bags (5%). Plastic straws → Paper straws (18%) or Metal straws (18%). NET REVENUE IMPACT: Revenue from banned plastic: -₹3,000 crore. Revenue from alternatives: +₹2,000-2,500 crore (alternatives are also taxed). Net loss: ₹500-1,000 crore (not significant in ₹20 lakh crore total GST collection). WHY GOVERNMENT DIDN'T CARE ABOUT REVENUE LOSS: (1) Environmental damage cost: estimated ₹75,000-1,00,000 crore annually (pollution, health, waste management). (2) Ban saves more than it costs in GST revenue. (3) Alternative products generate similar (or higher) GST. (4) International pressure: India committed to reduce plastic waste (G20, UNEP). ENFORCEMENT CHALLENGES: (1) Manufacturing continues in some states (weak enforcement). (2) Items sold without invoice (cash economy). (3) Interstate movement of banned items (hard to check every truck). (4) Only ₹52 crore penalties collected (2022-2024) — very low deterrent. GST ANGLE IN ENFORCEMENT: If manufacturer produces banned items: No GST invoice possible (product is illegal). No ITC available to buyer. If caught: product confiscated + environmental fine + potential criminal charges. GST department: shares data with CPCB (if registered manufacturer suddenly shows zero production of plastic items — suspicious activity report).
How does GST apply to plastic recycling businesses — is there any incentive for the circular economy?
PLASTIC RECYCLING & GST — CIRCULAR ECONOMY TAX TREATMENT: THE RECYCLING CHAIN: (1) Waste plastic collection: Ragpickers/waste collectors: mostly unregistered (below threshold). Sell to aggregators: no GST (unregistered seller). Kabadiwala (scrap dealer): may be registered (if > ₹20L turnover). Waste plastic scrap: 5% GST (HSN 3915). (2) Washing/sorting/segregation: Service by recycling unit: 18% (processing service). Or: if buying waste and selling sorted waste: 5% (same HSN 3915). (3) Recycling (mechanical): Input: waste plastic at 5%. Process: shredding → washing → pelletizing. Output: recycled plastic granules at 18% (same as virgin polymer). ITC position: Input 5%, Output 18% = positive (no inversion). (4) Product manufacturing: Input: recycled granules at 18%. Output: plastic product at 18%. ITC: fully available (no issue). TAX INCENTIVE ANALYSIS: Is recycling incentivized by GST? Partially YES: Waste plastic: 5% (low rate — encourages collection). Processing: normal rates (no penalty, no incentive). Output granules: 18% (same as virgin — NO INCENTIVE to use recycled over virgin). WHAT INDUSTRY WANTS: (1) Recycled granules at 12% (vs 18% for virgin) — would make recycled cheaper. (2) Products made from recycled content: lower rate (e.g., 12% vs 18%). (3) Exemption for waste collection (already effectively exempt for small collectors). (4) ITC benefits for recycling machinery purchase. GOVERNMENT POSITION: (1) Cannot differentiate 'recycled' from 'virgin' granules (same chemical composition). (2) Verification: how to prove product is made from recycled material? (3) Fraud risk: companies claiming 'recycled' to get lower rate on virgin material. (4) Revenue loss: if all polymer at 12%: ₹15,000-20,000 crore loss. EPR + GST INTERACTION: EPR certificates: bought/sold between producers. EPR certificate trading: likely 18% GST (service). Waste processing service (for EPR compliance): 18% GST. Recycling capacity investment: 18% GST on machinery (ITC available). CEMENT KILNS CO-PROCESSING: Plastic waste → fuel for cement kilns: Sale of waste plastic to cement company: 5% GST. The cement company uses it as 'alternative fuel.' RDF (Refuse Derived Fuel) from plastic: 5%. Reduces cement company's coal consumption + manages plastic waste. GST doesn't hinder this pathway.

Plastic & Packaging GST — HSN Classification, Recycling & EPR Compliance

Laabam.One handles plastic & packaging GST: polymer invoicing at 18%, corrugated box billing, PET bottle supply chain, kraft paper at 12% with ITC flow, single-use plastic ban tracking, recycling chain (5% → 18%), EPR compliance documentation, and multi-material packaging HSN classification.

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