Government ServicesSovereign & Commercial

GST on Government Services — Exempt Sovereign vs Taxable Commercial

Complete GST guide for government services: exempt sovereign functions (Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule), taxable commercial activities by PSUs, RCM on government rent and services to business entities, fees vs taxes distinction, local authority exemptions, mining royalty implications, grants/subsidies treatment, and government procurement TDS.

Exempt

Sovereign Functions

18%

Commercial Activities

Not GST

Government Fees/Taxes

Exempt

Licensing/Permits

18%

PSU Services

Not Supply

Government Grants

Exempt

Statutory Body Fees

18% RCM

Government Rent

Government Services — GST Framework

Government Services — Exemption Framework (Article 243W/XII)

GOVERNMENT SERVICES — WHAT'S EXEMPT: Notification 12/2017 (Central Tax Rate) — Exemption Notification: Entry 4: Services by GOVERNMENT or LOCAL AUTHORITY: Exempt when provided in relation to function entrusted to a Panchayat under Article 243G (Eleventh Schedule) or Municipality under Article 243W (Twelfth Schedule). WHAT THIS MEANS: Government performing its CONSTITUTIONAL FUNCTIONS: exempt from GST. Not 'commercial' activity — sovereign/governmental activity. Eleventh Schedule (Panchayat — 29 subjects): Agriculture, land improvement, minor irrigation, animal husbandry, fisheries, social forestry, small-scale industries, khadi/village industries, rural housing, drinking water, fuel/fodder, roads/bridges/ferries, rural electrification, non-conventional energy, poverty alleviation, education, technical training, adult literacy, libraries, cultural activities, markets/fairs, health/sanitation, family welfare, women/child development, social welfare (disabled/distressed), public distribution, community assets maintenance, public amenities. Twelfth Schedule (Municipality — 18 subjects): Urban planning (regulation of land use, building construction), roads/bridges, water supply (domestic/industrial/commercial), public health/sanitation/conservancy/solid waste, fire services, urban forestry/ecology, safeguarding weaker sections, slum improvement, urban poverty alleviation, public amenities (parks/gardens/playgrounds), burial/cremation grounds, cattle pounds (prevention of cruelty), vital statistics (births/deaths), public amenities (street lighting/parking/bus stops), regulation of slaughterhouses/tanneries, town planning regulations, urban development authorities. EXEMPT SERVICES (common examples): Municipal water supply: exempt (drinking water — Twelfth Schedule). Road construction by government: exempt (roads/bridges — both Schedules). Government hospital services: exempt (health — both Schedules). Government school education: exempt (education — Eleventh Schedule). Fire services: exempt (fire — Twelfth Schedule). Burial/cremation by municipality: exempt. Street lighting by municipality: exempt. Public health/sanitation: exempt. WHAT'S NOT EXEMPT (taxable at 18%): Speed post/courier by India Post: taxable (commercial activity beyond sovereign). Indian Railways catering: taxable (commercial). Government-owned telecom (BSNL): taxable (commercial). PSU (Oil companies, banks): taxable (commercial entities). Government selling property/land on commercial basis: taxable. Government renting immovable property (commercial): taxable. KEY PRINCIPLE: If activity falls within Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule: EXEMPT. If activity is COMMERCIAL (even by government): TAXABLE.

Government as Service Provider — When GST Applies

WHEN GOVERNMENT BECOMES TAXABLE: Entry 4 exemption does NOT apply to: (a) Services by Department of Posts (speed post, express parcel, life insurance, agency services): TAXABLE at 18%. Ordinary mail/postcard: exempt (public amenity). Speed post, courier, business parcel: taxable. Post office savings: financial service → exempt (banking). (b) Services in relation to AIRCRAFT or VESSEL (inside/outside India): Airport services by AAI (landing charges, parking, etc.): taxable at 18%. Port services by major ports: taxable. Why: these are COMMERCIAL charges (not constitutional function). (c) Transport of goods or passengers: Government-run transport (KSRTC, UPSRTC, metro): taxable. Railway passenger transport: exempt (but catering/first class: taxable). Government bus services: exempt (local authority public transport). Interstate government bus: exempt (Notification 12/2017, Entry 15). But: AC bus services by state transport: 5% (with ITC) or 12%. (d) Services by government to BUSINESS ENTITIES: Government renting commercial property: 18% RCM (recipient pays). Government providing license/permit for COMMERCIAL use: may be taxable. Government issuing rights/privileges to business: taxable. ENTRY 5 — GOVERNMENT TO BUSINESS (RCM): Services supplied by Central/State Government or Union Territory or local authority to a BUSINESS ENTITY: TAXABLE under RCM (recipient business pays). EXCLUDES: (1) Renting of immovable property (separate entry). (2) Services by Department of Posts. (3) Services in relation to aircraft/vessel. (4) Transport of goods/passengers. These (1-4): forward charge (government charges). ALL OTHER services by government to business: 18% RCM. EXAMPLES — RCM ON GOVERNMENT SERVICES: Government department charges 'processing fee' to company for license: RCM — company pays 18%. Municipality charges 'trade license fee' to business: Exempt (if under Entry 4 — municipal function). OR: taxable under RCM if commercial. Government provides 'right to use' spectrum (telecom): Taxable — 18% (IGST — RCM). Government allots land/plot to business entity (lease premium): Taxable — 18% RCM (long-term lease of immovable property). PRACTICAL ISSUES: Many government charges are AMBIGUOUS: Is it a fee (exempt — sovereign) or consideration for service (taxable)? Test: Is this a SOVEREIGN FUNCTION or COMMERCIAL ACTIVITY? Court fee (for justice): sovereign → NOT supply. License fee (for permission to do business): could be either. Building plan approval fee: sovereign function → exempt. Commercial plot allotment premium: commercial → taxable. GOVERNMENT RENTING IMMOVABLE PROPERTY: Entry 5A: Services by way of renting of immovable property to a REGISTERED person: 18% under RCM (recipient pays). Government office leased to company: 18% RCM. Municipal shop rented to trader (registered): 18% RCM. Government land leased to factory: 18% RCM. If tenant is UNREGISTERED: No RCM (RCM only when recipient is registered). Forward charge (government should charge — but practically doesn't). Result: often falls through cracks (no GST collected in practice).

Fees, Taxes, Fines — Not GST (Article 265/266 Distinction)

TAXES/DUTIES/FEES vs GST — CRITICAL DISTINCTION: CONSTITUTIONAL PRINCIPLE: Taxes levied by government under Constitutional authority: NOT consideration for any 'service.' Tax = sovereign right to collect revenue (Article 265). No quid pro quo (nothing given in exchange). Therefore: NO GST on taxes/duties/fees paid to government. EXAMPLES — NOT SUBJECT TO GST: Stamp duty on property registration: state tax → NOT GST. Court fee: sovereign judicial function → NOT GST. Toll tax (on national highway — by government): tax/user charge → NOT GST. Property tax (to municipality): local tax → NOT GST. Water tax: local tax → NOT GST. Vehicle registration fee (RTO): statutory fee → NOT GST. Driving license fee: statutory → NOT GST. Passport fee: sovereign → NOT GST. Visa fee: sovereign → NOT GST. Pollution control consent fee: regulatory → NOT GST. FSSAI license fee: regulatory → NOT GST. Drug license fee: regulatory → NOT GST. Income tax / GST itself: obviously NOT subject to further GST. FINES AND PENALTIES: Traffic fine: NOT GST (punitive — not consideration for service). Late fee by government (delayed filing): NOT GST (penalty). Court-imposed fine: NOT GST. WHEN FEES BECOME TAXABLE: If government charges for a SPECIFIC SERVICE (not regulatory function): (a) Government testing lab charges testing fee to company: MAY be taxable (specific service rendered to specific entity). (b) Government training institute charges course fee: MAY be taxable (service rendered). (c) Government hospital charges to private patients: Exempt (healthcare — Entry 45 of Notification 12/2017). (d) Government provides consultancy to private entity: Taxable (not sovereign function — commercial advisory). TOLL — SPECIAL TREATMENT: National Highway toll (collected by government/NHAI): Exempt (Entry 23 — services by way of access to a road or bridge on payment of toll). State highway toll: Exempt (same entry). Private toll road (BOT operator): Exempt (same entry — access to road on payment of toll). NOTE: Toll exemption covers ALL toll collectors (government + private). PARKING CHARGES: Municipal parking: If under Twelfth Schedule function (public amenities): Exempt. If COMMERCIAL parking (municipality running for profit): May be taxable. Government-run multi-level parking: Exempt (public amenity). LIQUOR LICENSE/EXCISE: State excise duty on liquor: STATE TAX → NOT GST. Liquor license fee: regulatory → NOT GST. Bar license fee: regulatory → NOT GST. But: if government provides SPECIFIC SERVICE beyond license (training, support): may be taxable portion. SPECTRUM/MINING RIGHTS: Telecom spectrum (auction premium): TAXABLE — 18% (government granting right to use — it's a supply). Mining royalty: After Supreme Court (2024) — royalty is NOT tax. If royalty = consideration for right to extract: taxable service → 18% RCM. This is HIGHLY DISPUTED (evolving law). Mining lease premium: taxable (government supplying right to use land/minerals). SUMMARY PRINCIPLE: Taxes/statutory fees (no service rendered): NOT GST. Consideration for specific service/right: TAXABLE. Regulatory permits (part of sovereign function): EXEMPT (Entry 4). Commercial activities by government entities: TAXABLE (18%).

PSUs, Government Companies & Statutory Bodies — GST Position

PSUs (PUBLIC SECTOR UNDERTAKINGS) — FULLY TAXABLE: PSUs are BODY CORPORATES (companies registered under Companies Act). They are NOT 'government' for GST exemption purposes. Examples: BSNL, BHEL, ONGC, IOC, HPCL, GAIL, SBI, LIC, NTPC, Coal India. ALL their services: TAXABLE at applicable rate (18% usually). No exemption under Entry 4 (they're not 'government'). They charge GST normally (forward charge). They claim ITC normally. They file returns like any private company. EXCEPTION — PSU performing government function: If PSU is authorized/mandated to perform function under Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule: Rare but possible (e.g., water supply PSU mandated by government). Argument: performing governmental function → exempt. But: most PSUs perform COMMERCIAL activities (not constitutional functions). GOVERNMENT COMPANIES (Section 2(45) of Companies Act): Company where 51%+ equity held by government: Still a COMPANY (body corporate). Taxable like any company. No GST exemption by virtue of government ownership. Example: Air India (government company): All services taxable (transport, cargo, etc.). STATUTORY BODIES / REGULATORY AUTHORITIES: SEBI, RBI, IRDA, TRAI, EPFO, ESIC, etc.: ENTRY 47 (Notification 12/2017): Services by EPFO, ESIC: Exempt (statutory social security). RBI: Banking regulator — services to government: exempt. Regulatory services to banks: exempt (sovereign regulatory function). SEBI: Registration fee: regulatory → NOT GST. Annual fee from listed companies: regulatory → exempt. But: if SEBI provides specific commercial service: may be taxable. GENERAL PRINCIPLE for statutory bodies: (a) REGULATORY function (supervision, oversight, licensing): Exempt (sovereign). (b) COMMERCIAL function (selling publications, consulting): Taxable. (c) Functions mandated by statute (statutory obligation): Exempt. GOVERNMENT GRANTS / SUBSIDIES: Government gives grant to entity (hospital, educational institution): Is it CONSIDERATION for service? If grant is: (a) UNCONDITIONAL (no specific service expected): NOT supply → no GST. No quid pro quo = no supply. (b) CONDITIONAL (entity must provide specific service in return): Supply of service → taxable. But: if service is to government under Entry 4 function: exempt. Example: Government grants ₹5 crore to NGO for rural health program: Is NGO providing service to government? If YES (government is recipient of rural health service): Government paying for service → may be taxable (but likely exempt under healthcare/Entry 4). If NO (NGO provides to public, government merely funds): No supply to government → not taxable. Grant vs Consideration: thin line (factual determination). INTER-GOVERNMENTAL SUPPLY: One government department providing service to another: Government department A → Government department B: Is this a supply? Both are 'government' (same person — Union of India or State). Transactions within SAME legal entity: NOT supply (same person cannot supply to itself). Central government departments: same person (Union of India). State departments within same state: same person (State of XYZ). BUT: Centre → State (or vice versa): different persons → could be supply. However: Entry 4 exemption covers services BY government (regardless of recipient). So: Centre providing service to State (or vice versa): exempt (still government function). PRACTICAL GRAY AREAS: (1) Government canteen services to employees: Exempt? (employee welfare — government function). Or: taxable (food/catering service — commercial)? Likely exempt (if run by government department, not outsourced). (2) Government printing press (for government publications): Exempt (information dissemination — public function). For private printing: may be taxable (commercial activity). (3) Government auditor (CAG) services: Sovereign function → NOT supply. No GST on audit by CAG.

Local Authority Services — Municipality, Panchayat, Cantonment

LOCAL AUTHORITY — DEFINITION (Section 2(69)): 'Local authority means: (a) Panchayat (Article 243 — Constitution). (b) Municipality (Article 243P — Constitution). (c) Municipal Committee, Zilla Parishad, District Board. (d) Cantonment Board (Cantonments Act). (e) Regional council, District council (Sixth Schedule areas). (f) Development authority (under statute — urban development). (g) Regional council / autonomous district council. (h) Any other body entitled to function as local authority (under any law).' ALL local authority services related to Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule: EXEMPT (Entry 4). COMMON LOCAL AUTHORITY SERVICES — GST TREATMENT: (1) WATER SUPPLY: Municipal piped water: EXEMPT (Twelfth Schedule — water supply). Tanker water supply by municipality: EXEMPT. Water connection charges: EXEMPT (part of water supply function). BUT: Packaged drinking water sold by municipality: may be supply of GOODS (not service). If municipality sells bottled water: goods → 18% (packaged drinking water). (2) SOLID WASTE MANAGEMENT: Door-to-door waste collection fee: EXEMPT (sanitation/conservancy). Waste processing charges: EXEMPT. Tipping fee charged to private waste collectors: EXEMPT (municipal function). (3) PROPERTY TAX: Not a service — it's TAX. Not subject to GST (tax on tax not applicable). (4) TRADE LICENSE / SHOP LICENSE: Fee for granting trade license: EXEMPT (regulatory function — Entry 4). Renewal charges: EXEMPT. Encroachment removal charges: EXEMPT (public health/conservancy). (5) BUILDING PLAN APPROVAL: Plan approval fee: EXEMPT (town planning — Twelfth Schedule). Deviation regularization charges: EXEMPT (land use regulation). Completion certificate fee: EXEMPT. (6) BIRTH/DEATH CERTIFICATE: Issuing vital statistics documents: EXEMPT (Twelfth Schedule — vital statistics). (7) ADVERTISEMENT TAX: Municipality levies advertisement tax: It's a TAX → not subject to GST. Permission fee for hoarding/banner: EXEMPT (regulation of public spaces). (8) RENTING MUNICIPAL PROPERTY: Municipal shops rented to traders: TAXABLE — 18% RCM (Entry 5A). Municipality as landlord → tenant (registered person) pays RCM. Municipal community halls rented for events: If to registered business: 18% RCM. If to individuals (wedding): may be exempt or no RCM (unregistered recipient). (9) PARKING BY MUNICIPALITY: If under public amenity function: EXEMPT. If commercial parking (revenue generation): MAY be taxable. Most municipal parking: treated as exempt (public amenity). (10) SWIMMING POOL / SPORTS COMPLEX: Municipal sports facility — user charges: Exempt (cultural/sports — Twelfth Schedule — parks/playgrounds). CANTONMENT BOARD: Same as municipality — services under statutory function: exempt. Property tax, water, sanitation by cantonment board: exempt. DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY (BDA, DDA, NOIDA, etc.): Development authorities (registered under specific Acts): Qualify as 'local authority' if functioning under government statute. Services: allotment of plots, development charges, infrastructure fee. Plot allotment (premium): TAXABLE (commercial activity — land development for sale). Development charges (one-time): may be exempt (infrastructure development — public function). External development charges (EDC): DEBATED — some argue exempt (public infrastructure), others taxable. Maintenance charges (monthly — for amenities): TAXABLE if commercial (like RWA maintenance). PANCHAYAT SERVICES (Rural): Village panchayat services: All Eleventh Schedule functions: EXEMPT. Water supply, rural roads, sanitation, education: EXEMPT. Panchayat issuing certificates (caste, income, residence): EXEMPT (vital statistics). Panchayat charging for community hall: If nominal fee (public amenity): EXEMPT. If commercial rental: may be taxable (but usually exempt — small amounts).

Government Contracts — TDS, Works Contract & Procurement

GOVERNMENT AS RECIPIENT — PROCUREMENT: When government BUYS goods/services from private suppliers: Government is RECIPIENT (customer). Supplier charges: regular GST (forward charge). Government pays: invoice value + GST. Government does NOT claim ITC (no output supply — they're end consumer). But: government departments DEDUCT: (1) GST TDS (Section 51): 2% (1% CGST + 1% SGST) or 2% IGST. On all contracts > ₹2,50,000. Contractor gets TDS credit (in electronic cash ledger). (2) Income Tax TDS (Section 194C/194J): Separate — 1%/2%/10% depending on nature. Both TDS apply simultaneously (GST TDS + IT TDS). SPECIFIED PERSONS FOR GST TDS (Section 51): (a) Department/establishment of Central/State Government. (b) Local authority. (c) Government agencies. (d) Persons/categories notified: includes PSUs, authorities, societies established by government. Private companies: NOT specified for GST TDS (don't deduct). WORKS CONTRACT FOR GOVERNMENT: Rate: 12% (if original works for government/local authority). Government pays: contract value + 12% GST. Government deducts: 2% GST TDS + IT TDS. Contractor receives: net amount. Contractor's compliance: File GSTR-7 (TDS credits), GSTR-1, GSTR-3B. GOVERNMENT e-MARKETPLACE (GeM): Government procurement through GeM portal: Suppliers: must be GST registered. GST: charged normally (based on goods/services rate). TDS: deducted by government buyer. E-invoice: mandatory (if supplier > ₹5 crore turnover). Reverse charge: NOT applicable (supplier charges forward). GeM transactions: treated like any B2G sale. EXEMPT GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT: Government buying services that are EXEMPT (regardless of buyer): Healthcare services: exempt (to anyone). Educational services: exempt. Public transport: exempt. If service itself is exempt: no GST even when government buys. GRANTS AND SUBSIDIES — RECIPIENT PERSPECTIVE: Government gives subsidy/grant to recipient: If unconditional: NOT a supply event → no GST implications for recipient. If conditional (performance obligation): Recipient may be providing service to government → taxable. But: usually exempt under Entry 4 (if related to government function). Subsidy reducing price to consumers: Section 15(2)(e): Subsidy directly linked to supply price = part of value? If subsidy reduces price: value for GST = actual price charged to consumer (not reduced by subsidy). CBIC view: subsidy that reduces consumer price — doesn't reduce taxable value. GST on: price charged to consumer (subsidy helps consumer, not GST value). LIQUIDATED DAMAGES (LD) — Government Contracts: Government deducts LD for delayed project delivery: Is LD 'consideration for tolerating delay'? Pre-2024: Department argued YES → taxable at 18%. Post-Circular 178/10/2022: LD for breach of contract = NOT a supply. Tolerating an act = supply only if INDEPENDENT agreement exists. LD: consequence of breach (not agreed service). Current position: Liquidated damages = NOT supply → NO GST. Government deducting LD: no GST implication for contractor. But: some states still dispute this. Conservative: don't charge GST on LD (supported by Circular 178).

Government Services — Key Notifications & Judicial Decisions

KEY NOTIFICATIONS — GOVERNMENT SERVICES: Notification 12/2017 (Exemption) — Important Entries: Entry 4: Government/local authority services (Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule) → EXEMPT. Entry 5: Services by government to business entity (excluding certain) → EXEMPT (upto ₹5,000). Entry 5A: Renting of immovable property by government to registered person → TAXABLE (RCM). Entry 6: Services by RBI → EXEMPT. Entry 7: Services by government for passport, visa, driving license, birth/death certificate → EXEMPT. Entry 9: Services by government by way of: (a) Registration required under law: EXEMPT. (b) Testing/calibration in government lab: EXEMPT (educational/research institution). Entry 23: Access to road/bridge on payment of toll → EXEMPT. Entry 47: Services by EPFO, ESIC → EXEMPT. Entry 57 (inserted later): Government/local authority services (broad) → EXEMPT. Notification 13/2017 (RCM) — Government Services: Entry 5: Services supplied by Central/State Government or UT or local authority to business entity: RCM (recipient pays 18%). Exclusions from Entry 5 RCM: (a) Renting of immovable property (separate). (b) Department of Posts services. (c) Transport services. (d) Where consideration ≤ ₹5,000 per transaction (exempt — no RCM). THRESHOLD — ₹5,000 PER TRANSACTION: If government service to business ≤ ₹5,000: EXEMPT (no GST). If > ₹5,000: taxable under RCM. Example: Government charges ₹3,000 processing fee to company: Exempt (≤ ₹5,000). Government charges ₹15,000 processing fee: Taxable — 18% RCM (company pays ₹2,700). KEY JUDICIAL DECISIONS: (1) GREATER NOIDA INDUSTRIAL DEVELOPMENT AUTHORITY (GNIDA) — AAR: Allotment of industrial plots by development authority: HELD: Taxable at 18% (commercial activity — not sovereign function). Even though development authority is 'local authority': allotment of commercial/industrial plots = commercial activity. NOT exempt under Entry 4. (2) NHAI TOLL CHARGES: Toll collected by NHAI (National Highways Authority): Entry 23 exemption: access to road/bridge on payment of toll. HELD: Exempt (regardless of whether NHAI or private concessionaire collects). Both government toll and private toll (BOT): exempt. (3) MINING ROYALTY (Supreme Court, 2024): Supreme Court (Mineral Area Development Authority case): Royalty on minerals: NOT A TAX (overruling India Cement). Implication for GST: If royalty is NOT tax → it's consideration for RIGHT to extract minerals. Right to extract = service by government (granting right). Taxable: 18% RCM (government providing service to mining company). State governments collecting royalty: supplying service → 18% GST under RCM. This significantly impacts mining sector (was earlier treated as tax → no GST). (4) ELECTRICITY DUTY vs GST: Electricity duty by state government: State tax on electricity (not GST). Survives GST (not subsumed). Not 'consideration for service' → not subject to GST. But: forms part of value of supply of goods/services (Section 15(2)(a)). (5) MUNICIPAL DEVELOPMENT CHARGES: One-time development charge by municipality/development authority: If for specific service (water connection, road access): may be exempt (municipal function). If for general development (EDC/IDC): DEBATED. Conservative: exempt (infrastructure development — public function). Aggressive (department): taxable (consideration for providing infrastructure). PENDING CLARIFICATIONS: Several issues remain unclear: (a) Government hospital services to private patients: Exempt (healthcare) — but private wing charges? (b) Government university examination fees: Exempt (education) — but commercial courses? (c) Government tourism services (Jungle lodges, ITDC hotels): Taxable (commercial hospitality). (d) Government insurance (ECGC, DICGC): Taxable (insurance service) or exempt (government function)? COMPLIANCE FOR BUSINESSES: When paying government: Check: is it TAX/FEE (no GST) or CONSIDERATION FOR SERVICE (RCM)? If consideration > ₹5,000 to government: pay 18% RCM, claim ITC. If ≤ ₹5,000: exempt (no action). If purely tax/duty (property tax, stamp duty): NOT GST — no action needed.

Government Services — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Government services (Eleventh/Twelfth Schedule)9991ExemptConstitutional functions of Panchayat/Municipality
PSU commercial services (BSNL, BHEL, etc.)Various18%Not government — body corporate
Government renting to registered person997218% RCMRecipient pays under reverse charge
Government services to business (>₹5,000)999118% RCMRecipient pays under reverse charge
Government services to business (≤₹5,000)9991ExemptPer-transaction threshold
Toll charges (road/bridge access)9967ExemptEntry 23 — government or private
Mining royalty (post-2024 SC judgment)997318% RCMRight to extract — not a tax
Spectrum charges (telecom)997318% RCMRight to use spectrum
EPFO/ESIC services9991ExemptStatutory social security bodies
Court fee / stamp duty / property taxNot GSTTax/sovereign levy — not a supply
Land allotment premium (development authority)997218%Commercial activity — taxable
India Post — speed post/courier996818%Commercial postal services

Frequently Asked Questions

We received a government tender and they are deducting TDS. Is this GST TDS or Income Tax TDS? Do both apply?
BOTH APPLY — GST TDS (2%) + Income Tax TDS (1-2%) — SIMULTANEOUSLY: YES, government deducts BOTH types of TDS on the same payment. They are separate levies under different laws. (1) GST TDS — Section 51 of CGST Act: Rate: 2% of taxable value (1% CGST + 1% SGST, or 2% IGST). When: contract value > ₹2,50,000. Deducted on: TAXABLE VALUE (value excluding GST). By whom: all government departments, local authorities, PSUs (specified persons). Credit: goes to your Electronic Cash Ledger (use for output GST payment). Return: government files GSTR-7 (TDS return). Your action: claim credit in GSTR-2B, utilize in GSTR-3B. (2) Income Tax TDS — Section 194C/194J: Rate: 1% (individual/HUF) or 2% (company/firm) for contracts. Or: 10% under 194J (if professional/technical service). When: payment > ₹30,000 (single) or ₹1,00,000 (aggregate). Deducted on: GROSS amount (excluding GST — as per CBDT circular). Credit: against your income tax liability. EXAMPLE — Combined Deduction: Your invoice to government: Taxable value: ₹10,00,000. GST (12%): ₹1,20,000. Total invoice: ₹11,20,000. Government deducts: GST TDS: 2% × ₹10,00,000 = ₹20,000. IT TDS (194C — company): 2% × ₹10,00,000 = ₹20,000. Total deduction: ₹40,000. You receive: ₹11,20,000 - ₹40,000 = ₹10,80,000. GST TDS (₹20,000): credit in your GST cash ledger. IT TDS (₹20,000): credit against income tax. Both recoverable (not a permanent cost — just timing difference).
Our company pays rent to a government department for office space. Is GST applicable? Who pays — us or the government?
YES — 18% GST under RCM (YOUR COMPANY pays, not government): LEGAL BASIS: Notification 13/2017, Entry 5A: 'Services by way of renting of immovable property to a person registered under GST — supplied by Central Government, State Government, Union territory or local authority.' MECHANISM: RCM (Reverse Charge Mechanism). Your company (RECIPIENT) pays 18% GST. Government (supplier) does NOT charge GST on rent. HOW IT WORKS: Monthly rent to government: ₹2,00,000. GST (RCM): 18% × ₹2,00,000 = ₹36,000. You pay government: ₹2,00,000 (rent only — no GST collected by them). You self-assess: ₹36,000 (pay through your cash ledger). You claim ITC: ₹36,000 (available immediately — if office is for business). NET COST: ₹2,00,000 (ITC offsets the GST payment). COMPLIANCE: GSTR-3B: Report in Table 3.1(d) (RCM liability) + Table 4(A)(3) (ITC on RCM). GSTR-1: No reporting needed (you're recipient, not supplier). Payment: through Electronic Cash Ledger (cannot use ITC balance to pay RCM). Then: claim ITC equal amount (net zero — but cash flow impact exists). WHEN RCM DOES NOT APPLY: (a) If your company is UNREGISTERED (no GSTIN): No RCM (Entry 5A requires recipient to be 'registered person'). Government collects nothing, you pay nothing. Effectively: no GST if tenant is unregistered. (b) If rent is for RESIDENTIAL purpose: Exempt (renting for residence — Entry 12). No GST regardless of who the landlord is. (c) If rent ≤ ₹5,000 per transaction: Exempt under Entry 5 threshold (no RCM). IMPORTANT: This applies to ANY government landlord: Central government department. State government department. Municipality/local authority. Government autonomous body. Cantonment board. If they rent immovable property to your registered business: 18% RCM (you pay).
Is GST applicable on government fines, penalties, late fees, and court fees?
NO GST on fines, penalties, court fees, and most statutory levies: PRINCIPLE: Fines/penalties/court fees are NOT 'consideration for supply of service.' They are: (a) PUNITIVE (deterrent — not payment for service received). (b) SOVEREIGN EXERCISE (state's power to penalize/regulate). (c) NOT QUID PRO QUO (you don't receive any service in exchange). SPECIFIC EXAMPLES — NO GST: Traffic challan/fine: Punitive → NOT supply → no GST. Late payment fee on utility bills (if government utility): Penalty → NOT supply (debatable — but generally no GST). Court fee for filing case: Sovereign judicial function → NOT supply → no GST. Stamp duty on property: State tax → NOT supply. Property tax: Municipal tax → NOT supply. Water tax/sewerage tax: Local tax → NOT supply. Delayed payment interest on government dues: If it's 'interest on delayed payment': NOT supply (not consideration for tolerating delay). Compounding fee (for regulatory violation): Penalty → NOT supply. Environmental penalty: Punitive → NOT supply. WHAT MIGHT BE GST-ABLE (borderline): Late fee on government service (not penalty but 'expedited service'): If fee provides FASTER SERVICE (tatkal passport — extra ₹2,000): Is it consideration for 'expedited processing service'? Argument: YES — you get something extra (speed). But: currently exempt (passport/visa services — Entry 7). Convenience fee charged by government portal: If for specific digital service: potentially taxable. Currently: most government online fees treated as exempt (regulatory function). CIRCULAR 178/10/2022 — LIQUIDATED DAMAGES: Important clarification: Liquidated damages (LD) for breach of contract: NOT a supply. This applies to government contracts too. If government deducts LD from your bill: No GST liability on you for LD. No need to pay GST on the deducted amount. LD is consequence of breach — NOT agreed service. PENALTY vs SERVICE FEE — THE TEST: Ask: Am I RECEIVING anything in exchange for this payment? YES (service received): → May be taxable (subject to exemption check). NO (just paying penalty/tax): → NOT supply → no GST. Example: ₹500 for parking (government parking lot): receiving parking SERVICE → may be taxable (but usually exempt — municipal function). ₹500 challan for illegal parking: PENALTY → no GST (no service received).
Do we need to pay GST on government grants and subsidies received by our company?
DEPENDS on whether grant is CONDITIONAL or UNCONDITIONAL: UNCONDITIONAL GRANT (No GST): Government gives ₹50 lakhs as 'industry promotion grant' (no strings attached): NOT a supply event. No quid pro quo — government isn't receiving any service from you. Your obligation: NONE (just use the money). GST: NOT APPLICABLE (not consideration for any supply). CONDITIONAL GRANT (May attract GST): Government gives ₹50 lakhs for 'providing skill training to 500 youth': Government is RECIPIENT of training service (through you). You are SUPPLYING service (skill training) to government. Consideration: ₹50 lakhs. But: Is this service EXEMPT? If skill training under Eleventh Schedule function (education): Exempt (Entry 4 — government function). If commercial skill development (not constitutional): May be taxable at 18% (service to government). KEY TEST: (a) Is there a SPECIFIC OBLIGATION on you (supply a service)? (b) Is government the RECIPIENT of that service? (c) Does the grant function as CONSIDERATION for that service? If YES to all three: it's a supply → check exemption. If any is NO: not a supply → no GST. COMMON SCENARIOS: (1) R&D grant to company (for research): If research results shared with government: conditional → may be supply. If research is for company's own benefit (government just promotes R&D): unconditional → no GST. (2) Export incentive (MEIS/RoDTEP): Government gives duty credit for exports: This is fiscal incentive → NOT supply. No GST on export incentive received. (3) Subsidy on machinery purchase (capital subsidy): Government gives ₹10 lakh subsidy on machinery worth ₹50 lakhs: Not consideration for service BY you. It's subsidy to REDUCE YOUR COST. No GST implication for you (recipient of subsidy). But: Does it affect your ITC? If machinery cost: ₹50L, subsidy: ₹10L. Your actual cost: ₹40L. ITC: on FULL ₹50L (invoice value) — subsidy doesn't reduce ITC eligibility. Section 15(2)(e) debate: subsidies not linked to specific supply don't reduce value. (4) PLI (Production Linked Incentive) scheme: Government pays based on your production/sales targets: Is it consideration for 'service of manufacturing/producing'? Current view: PLI is fiscal incentive → NOT supply → no GST. Not paying for service — incentivizing private investment. (5) Viability Gap Funding (VGF) for infrastructure: Government VGF to private developer (road, metro project): If developer provides specific service to government/public: may be supply. But: if VGF merely reduces project cost (viability support): NOT supply. Typically: treated as grant (not consideration) → no GST. IMPORTANT — GST ON YOUR OUTPUT: Even if grant itself isn't taxable: Your OUTPUT service (funded by grant) may still be taxable. Example: You receive grant to provide cheap healthcare. Healthcare service to patients: Exempt (healthcare exemption applies regardless of funding source). Example: You receive grant to run coaching classes. Coaching service to students: May be taxable (commercial coaching — 18%). The grant is input (not taxable). Your service is output (may be taxable on own merit). Separate analysis required for each.

Government Services GST — Exemption Analysis, RCM & TDS Compliance

Laabam.One handles government GST: sovereign vs commercial classification, Entry 4 exemption eligibility, RCM on government rent and services, TDS deduction compliance, mining royalty treatment, grant/subsidy analysis, and local authority service mapping.

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