HandicraftsArtisans & Crafts

GST on Handicrafts & Artisans — Handloom 5%, Woodcraft 12%, Jewellery 3%

Complete GST guide for handicrafts & artisans: handloom textiles 5%, pottery 5%, wooden crafts 12%, gold/silver jewellery 3%, brass/copper ware 12%, bamboo products 5%, carpet/rugs 12%, art & paintings 12%, and export zero-rating with ITC refund strategies.

5%

Handloom (cotton/silk)

5%

Pottery & Earthenware

12%

Wooden Handicrafts

3%

Handmade Jewellery

5%

Bamboo Products

12%

Brass/Copper Ware

12%

Hand-painted Art

12%

Cane & Rattan

Handicrafts & Artisans — GST Framework

Handloom & Textiles — 5% GST

HANDLOOM PRODUCTS — 5%: Handloom sarees: 5% (HSN 5007-5208). Cotton handloom fabric: 5%. Silk handloom (Banarasi, Kanchipuram, Patola): 5%. Khadi cloth: 5%. Ikat fabric: 5%. Jamdani: 5%. Chanderi: 5%. Pochampally: 5%. Maheshwari: 5%. Tant (Bengal cotton): 5%. Linen handloom: 5%. ALL handloom fabrics irrespective of value: 5%. Note: No distinction between handloom and powerloom for GST rate. Both cotton and silk fabrics: 5% (unified rate since Jan 2022). Pre-Jan 2022: fabrics were mostly 5% with some at 12%. Post-Jan 2022: ALL fabrics uniformly 5%. HANDLOOM GARMENTS: Ready-made garments (handloom): If sale value ≤ ₹1,000 per piece: 5%. If sale value > ₹1,000 per piece: 12%. This is VALUE-BASED rate (not product-based). Expensive Banarasi saree (₹50,000): 12% GST. Cheap cotton saree (₹500): 5% GST. KHADI (Special): Khadi products sold through KVIC/KVI institutions: 0% (exempt). Khadi sold through private retail: 5% (same as other fabric). Khadi Village Industries Commission goods: many are exempt. Key: the CHANNEL determines exemption (KVIC route = exempt). THREAD/YARN FOR HANDLOOM: Cotton yarn: 5% (HSN 5205-5207). Silk yarn: 5%. Zari (gold/silver thread): 5%. Dyes for handloom: 18%. Sizing chemicals: 18%. HANDLOOM WORKER/WEAVER: Individual weaver selling own production: If turnover < ₹40 lakh: NO registration needed (threshold). If above threshold: 5% GST on fabric. Most weavers: Below threshold → effectively 0% compliance. Government schemes: MUDRA loans, Bunkar Sahay → no GST concession (rate same). GI-TAGGED HANDLOOMS: Pochampally Ikat (Telangana): 5%. Mysore Silk: 5%. Lucknow Chikankari: 5%. Phulkari (Punjab): 5%. Pashmina (Kashmir): 5%. GI tag doesn't change rate — adds premium value only.

Pottery, Earthenware & Ceramics — 5-18% GST

TRADITIONAL POTTERY — 5%: Earthen pots (matka): 5% (HSN 6901-6904). Clay lamps (diya): 5%. Terracotta items (handmade): 5%. Clay cooking vessels: 5%. Flower pots (terracotta): 5%. Decorative terracotta (wall hangings): 5%. Kullad (clay cups): 5%. Surahi (water cooler): 5%. Handi (cooking pot): 5%. Idols (clay/terracotta): 5%. WHY 5% (Not exempt)? Pre-GST: many clay items were exempt in various states. Post-GST: 5% is lowest non-zero rate. Government's reasoning: 5% allows ITC chain (supply chain benefits). Artisans below ₹40 lakh: still effectively exempt (threshold). BLUE POTTERY — 5-12%: Traditional blue pottery (Jaipur): If classified as earthenware/ceramic: 5% (HSN 6912). If classified as decorative/art piece: 12% (HSN 6913). Grey area: depends on use (utilitarian vs decorative). Practical: most blue pottery sold as 5% (earthenware classification). CERAMIC PRODUCTS (Factory-made) — 18%: Ceramic tiles: 18% (HSN 6907-6908). Sanitary ware (toilet, sink): 18% (HSN 6910). Ceramic tableware (factory): 18% (HSN 6911). Fine china/bone china: 18%. Porcelain items: 18%. HANDMADE vs FACTORY — THE DISTINCTION: Handmade pottery on wheel: 5% (traditional craft). Machine-made ceramic: 18% (industrial product). Semi-mechanized (small unit): depends on classification. If the ARTISAN makes it by hand: argue for 5%. If factory-produced with machinery: 18%. PRACTICAL ISSUES FOR POTTERS: Most potters: annual turnover < ₹40 lakh (exempt). Even if above: 5% rate is low. ITC: raw materials (clay): often 0% (natural earth — not taxed). Kiln fuel (wood, gas): 5-18% → ITC available (if registered). Packaging: 18% → ITC available. Export of pottery: 0% (zero-rated). Indian pottery exports growing (USA, Europe demand for ethnic items). DOKRA/BELL METAL CASTING: Traditional Dokra (tribal art): 12% (metal article — HSN 7419). Not pottery — but similar artisan context. Lost-wax casting technique (Chhattisgarh, West Bengal, Odisha): 12%. Tribal artisans making Dokra: mostly below threshold.

Wooden Handicrafts & Furniture — 12% GST

WOODEN HANDICRAFTS — 12%: Carved wooden items: 12% (HSN 4420). Wooden statues/figurines: 12%. Wooden boxes (decorative): 12%. Wooden toys: 12% (HSN 9503 — toys are 12%). Wooden frames (photo/mirror): 12%. Wooden wall hangings: 12%. Sandalwood carvings: 12%. Rosewood art: 12%. Teak carvings: 12%. Sheesham/walnut wood crafts: 12%. WOODEN FURNITURE (Handmade): Handcrafted furniture: 12% (HSN 9403). Antique reproduction furniture: 12%. Rajasthani carved furniture: 12%. Kashmir walnut wood furniture: 12%. Jaipur painted furniture: 12%. Note: furniture rate is 12% regardless of handmade/factory (unified under HSN 9403). WOODEN KITCHENWARE: Wooden spoons, spatulas: 12%. Chopping boards: 12%. Mortar & pestle (wooden): 12%. Rolling pins (belan): 12%. LACQUERWARE: Channapatna toys (Karnataka — GI-tagged): 12% (toy classification). Lacquer bangles (Rajasthan): 12%. Lacquer craft items: 12%. BAMBOO PRODUCTS — 5-12%: Raw bamboo: 0% (agricultural produce). Bamboo flooring: 12%. Bamboo furniture: 12%. Bamboo handicrafts: 12%. Bamboo baskets: 5% (HSN 4602 — basketwork). Bamboo mats: 5%. Bamboo blinds/curtains: 12%. Bamboo charcoal: 5%. Agarbatti (bamboo stick base): 5%. CANE & RATTAN — 12%: Cane furniture: 12%. Rattan baskets: 5% (same as bamboo basket). Cane handicrafts: 12%. NORTHEAST BAMBOO/CANE ARTISANS: States: Assam, Meghalaya, Manipur, Nagaland, Tripura. Traditional bamboo/cane craft: 5-12%. Most artisans: below threshold (₹40 lakh → exemption). Northeast special: ₹20 lakh threshold for special category states (lower). But: crafts are low-value → most still below even ₹20 lakh threshold. WOOD CARVING CLUSTERS: Saharanpur (UP): Sheesham wood carving. Jodhpur (Rajasthan): Antique/painted furniture. Srinagar (Kashmir): Walnut wood carving. Mysore (Karnataka): Sandalwood and rosewood. Kumortuli (Kolkata): Clay/wood idol making. All produce at 12% GST — mostly for export or tourist sale.

Metal Handicrafts & Jewellery — 3-12% GST

GOLD/SILVER JEWELLERY (Handmade) — 3%: Handmade gold jewellery: 3% (HSN 7113). Handmade silver jewellery: 3%. Kundan jewellery: 3%. Meenakari jewellery: 3%. Temple jewellery: 3%. Filigree (silver wire work — Cuttack): 3%. Note: ALL jewellery at 3% regardless of handmade/machine-made. No distinction for GST — flat 3% on value. Making charges also 5% (service component): If jewellery sold inclusive of making: 3% on total. If making charges billed separately: 5% GST on service. ARTIFICIAL/FASHION JEWELLERY — 12%: Oxidized silver jewellery: 12% (HSN 7117). Brass jewellery: 12%. Beaded jewellery (handmade): 12%. Lac bangles (Rajasthan): 12%. Glass bangles: 18% (glass classification). Terracotta jewellery: 12%. Shell/bone jewellery: 12%. Wooden jewellery: 12%. Thread jewellery (handmade): 12%. BRASS & COPPER WARE — 12%: Brass idols (Moradabad): 12% (HSN 7419). Copper vessels (kalash): 12%. Brass utensils: 12%. Copper bottles/tumblers: 12%. Bell metal (kansa) plates: 12%. Brass lamps (diya): 12%. Ashtadhatu idols: 12%. MORADABAD BRASSWARE (Major cluster): Moradabad (UP): 'Brass City of India'. ₹5,000+ crore industry. 5,000+ units, mostly MSMEs. Products: Decorative items, tableware, lamps, vases. Export: 60-70% of production exported. Export GST: 0% (zero-rated) → ITC refund claimed. Domestic: 12%. BIDRIWARE — 12%: Bidriware (Bidar, Karnataka — GI-tagged): 12%. Silver inlay on zinc alloy — unique craft. Extremely niche — small artisan community. DHOKRA / TRIBAL METAL ART — 12%: Dhokra (Chhattisgarh, Odisha, Bengal): 12%. Tribal metal casting using lost-wax technique. Small figurines, lamps, jewellery. Artisans mostly below threshold. SILVER FILIGREE (Cuttack): Tarakasi work — intricate silver wire: If sold as jewellery: 3% (HSN 7113). If sold as decorative item: 3% (silver article — same HSN). Silver articles: 3% (all silver goods). METAL ARTISAN ITC: Raw material (brass sheets): 18% (metal — HSN 7403). Output (brassware): 12%. Inverted duty: 18% input vs 12% output. Accumulated ITC: refund available (same as any inverted duty). But: Most small artisans below threshold — ITC is non-issue.

Textiles & Embroidery Crafts — 5-12% GST

EMBROIDERED TEXTILES — 5%: Chikankari (Lucknow): 5% (fabric). Kantha (Bengal): 5% (fabric — embroidered). Phulkari (Punjab): 5% (fabric). Kashmiri aari/crewel: 5% (fabric). Kutch embroidery (Gujarat): 5% (fabric). Zardozi (metallic embroidery): 5% (fabric). Mirror work (Gujarat/Rajasthan): 5% (fabric). Toda embroidery (Nilgiris): 5% (fabric). ALL embroidered FABRIC: 5% (same as plain fabric — no distinction). EMBROIDERED GARMENTS: Chikankari kurta (value ≤ ₹1,000): 5%. Chikankari kurta (value > ₹1,000): 12%. Phulkari dupatta (≤ ₹1,000): 5%. Kashmir shawl (> ₹1,000 — obviously): 12%. HIGH-VALUE CRAFT TEXTILES: Pashmina shawl (Kashmir — ₹10,000-₹5,00,000): 12% (value > ₹1,000). Banarasi brocade saree (₹20,000+): 12%. Kanjeevaram silk saree (₹15,000+): 12%. Paithani saree (₹30,000+): 12%. Patola saree (₹50,000-₹5,00,000): 12%. ALL premium handloom: 12% (because value > ₹1,000/piece). CARPET & RUGS: Handmade carpets (Kashmir/Bhadohi): 12% (HSN 5701-5702). Machine-made carpets: 12%. Dhurrie (flat weave): 12%. Coir mats/rugs: 5% (HSN 5702 — coir specific entry). Jute rugs: 5% (jute specific). NOTE: All carpets 12% EXCEPT coir and jute (5% — natural fiber concessional). BLOCK PRINTING: Hand block printed fabric (Jaipur/Sanganer): 5% (fabric). Block printed garments (> ₹1,000): 12%. Batik print fabric: 5%. Kalamkari fabric: 5%. Ajrakh (Kutch): 5%. Dabu print: 5%. TIE & DYE (Bandhani): Bandhani fabric (Rajasthan/Gujarat): 5%. Bandhani saree/dupatta (value based): 5% or 12%. Leheriya fabric: 5%. Shibori (Japanese-influenced): 5%. NATURAL DYES: Natural dye chemicals: 18% (chemical classification). Indigo (natural): 5% (specific entry). Natural dye service (dyeing job work): 5% or 18% (disputed). Hand dyeing by artisan: If below threshold → exempt. TAILORING/STITCHING SERVICE: Tailoring service: 18% (SAC 9988 — job work on textiles). But: if tailor is below ₹40 lakh threshold: exempt. Most individual tailors: below threshold → no GST.

Export of Handicrafts — Zero-Rated & Incentives

HANDICRAFT EXPORTS — ZERO-RATED: All handicraft exports: 0% GST (zero-rated — IGST Act). India's handicraft exports: ₹35,000+ crore (2023-24). Major export items: Carpets, jewellery, metalware, woodcraft, textiles. Major markets: USA (35%), UK, Germany, France, UAE, Australia. EXPORT INCENTIVES (Beyond GST): (1) RoDTEP (Remission of Duties and Taxes on Exported Products): Additional rebate (1-5% of FOB value). Compensates embedded taxes that aren't refunded through ITC. Handicrafts get higher RoDTEP rates (government promotes craft exports). (2) Market Access Initiative (MAI): Subsidized participation in international trade fairs. Buyer-seller meets funded by government. (3) Vishwakarma Yojna: Government scheme for traditional artisans. Skill development + tool upgrade + credit access. GST: no rate benefit, but capacity building support. ITC REFUND FOR EXPORTERS: Export under LUT (Letter of Undertaking): No IGST paid on export invoice. Claim refund of ALL accumulated ITC. Monthly refund possible (GST RFD-01). Timeline: 30-60 days (should be — often delayed). LUT conditions: No prosecution pending. No outstanding demand > ₹2.5 crore. Annual renewal on GST portal. ITC SOURCES FOR HANDICRAFT EXPORTERS: Packaging material: 18% → refund. Freight to port/airport: 5-18% → refund. Quality testing: 18% → refund. Warehousing: 18% → refund. Customs handling/CHA charges: 18% → refund. Design services: 18% → refund. Raw materials (where purchased from registered): 5-18% → refund. CHALLENGE: Much raw material sourced from unregistered artisans (0% — no ITC). Export company's refund limited to ITC from REGISTERED sources only. Solution: Some exporters bring artisans into registration (voluntary registration even below threshold). EPCH (Export Promotion Council for Handicrafts): Mandatory membership for handicraft exporters. Issues RCMC (Registration Cum Membership Certificate). Required for: RoDTEP claims. Participation in fairs. Export incentive schemes. ARTISAN CARD / AWARD: Artisans can get: National Award for Handicrafts (recognition). State artisan card: subsidized raw materials, exhibition access. These are identity/welfare measures — no GST rate benefit. ONE DISTRICT ONE PRODUCT (ODOP): Government identifies unique product per district. Promotes export of that specific handicraft. GST treatment: same as regular (no special rate). But: government support in marketing, packaging, logistics. GEOGRAPHICAL INDICATION (GI) EXPORTS: GI-tagged handicrafts get better market access: Pochampally Ikat, Bidriware, Channapatna Toys, Banarasi Silk. GI: no GST benefit. But: higher export price (premium for authenticated origin). Anti-counterfeiting protection in international markets. E-COMMERCE EXPORT (Handicrafts on Etsy/Amazon Global): Indian artisans selling on global platforms: Same zero-rating applies. Need: GST registration + IEC + AD code (bank). LUT for zero-rated supply. Platform charges (Etsy 6.5% fee): 18% GST on import of service (reverse charge). Shipping (DHL, FedEx): 18% → ITC available. FAIR TRADE & ORGANIC CERTIFICATION: Fair trade certified handicrafts: no GST benefit. Organic dye certification: no GST benefit. These are marketing/premium pricing tools — not tax classification.

Handicrafts — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Handloom fabric (cotton/silk/khadi)5007-52085%All fabric uniform 5%
Garments (value ≤ ₹1,000)6101-61175%Value-based rate
Garments (value > ₹1,000)6101-611712%Premium handloom included
Pottery & earthenware (handmade)6901-69125%Traditional clay items
Wooden handicrafts & carvings442012%Carved/decorative wood
Bamboo baskets & mats46025%Basketwork products
Gold/silver jewellery (handmade)71133%All precious metal jewellery
Artificial/fashion jewellery711712%Non-precious materials
Brass/copper handicrafts741912%Metal craft items
Hand-knotted carpets570112%All carpets except coir/jute
Coir & jute mats/rugs57025%Natural fiber concessional
Paintings & art (original)970112%Original hand-painted art

Frequently Asked Questions

I'm a handloom weaver earning ₹3-4 lakh/year. Do I need GST registration? What about selling on Amazon/Flipkart?
HANDLOOM WEAVER — GST REGISTRATION & E-COMMERCE GUIDE: YOUR SITUATION: Annual income: ₹3-4 lakh. Product: Handloom fabric/sarees. Selling: Local market + considering e-commerce. REGISTRATION REQUIREMENT: OFFLINE SALES (Local market, exhibitions, buyers): Threshold: ₹40 lakh (for goods — most states). Your turnover: ₹3-4 lakh (FAR below threshold). Result: NO registration required. You can sell without GST, without invoicing GST, without filing returns. ONLINE SALES (Amazon, Flipkart, Meesho): THIS IS WHERE IT GETS COMPLICATED. Rule: E-commerce operators (Amazon/Flipkart) must collect TCS (Tax Collected at Source) at 1%. For TCS to work: seller MUST be registered under GST. Therefore: To sell on Amazon/Flipkart, you NEED GST registration (regardless of turnover). EXCEPTION (Since Jan 2023 — Section 10(2A) amendment): Small sellers making INTRA-STATE supply through e-commerce: If aggregate turnover ≤ ₹40 lakh: NO registration needed for e-commerce. Condition: Only selling WITHIN your state via e-commerce. NOT applicable for interstate e-commerce sales. So: If you're in Tamil Nadu selling handloom sarees ONLY to Tamil Nadu customers on Amazon: NO registration needed (below ₹40 lakh + intra-state only). If selling to customers ALL OVER INDIA (interstate): Registration REQUIRED (regardless of turnover). PRACTICAL ADVICE: (1) If selling only locally + within-state online: Don't register. Save compliance cost. Sell freely up to ₹40 lakh. (2) If you want ALL-INDIA online reach: Register voluntarily. Benefits: Sell interstate on e-commerce. Issue tax invoices (B2B buyers prefer). Claim ITC on yarn, dyes purchased. Build formal business record. Costs: Must file GSTR-1, GSTR-3B monthly/quarterly. Compliance: ₹5,000-₹10,000/year (CA fees). (3) COMPOSITION SCHEME (turnover ₹40L-₹1.5Cr): Pay 1% GST (instead of 5%). Simplified quarterly return (CMP-08). No ITC available. Cannot sell interstate (limitation!). Good for local market, not for online. SELLING ON GOVERNMENT PLATFORMS: GEM (Government e-Marketplace): GST registration mandatory. Craftsvilla, Itokri, Okhai: Check platform rules. Meesho (reseller model): Typically needs registration for seller. WEAVERS COOPERATIVE (Alternative): Join weaver cooperative/SHG: Cooperative registers for GST. Individual weavers supply to cooperative (below threshold — no GST). Cooperative sells (charges 5% GST, files returns). Weavers focus on production — cooperative handles compliance. This is the MODEL promoted by government for handloom sector. SCHEMES AVAILABLE: PM Vishwakarma Yojana: ₹3 lakh loan + training. No GST benefit but capacity building. MUDRA Loan: Up to ₹10 lakh (micro). E-commerce onboarding support (Amazon Saheli, Flipkart Samarth). Digital payment incentive (for formal sales). GI registration support (collective — for product cluster).
We're a handicraft export company. How do we handle ITC refund when most artisans we buy from are unregistered?
HANDICRAFT EXPORTER — ITC REFUND WITH UNREGISTERED SUPPLIER BASE: THE CORE PROBLEM: You export handicrafts (zero-rated — 0% GST). You buy from village artisans (mostly unregistered — no GSTIN). Unregistered supplier = no GST charged = no ITC for you. Your eligible ITC refund is LIMITED to: only ITC on purchases from REGISTERED suppliers. WHAT ITC DO YOU HAVE? From registered sources (ITC available): Packaging material (boxes, bubble wrap): 18% → ITC ✓. Freight to port (registered transporter): 5-18% → ITC ✓. Warehousing rent: 18% → ITC ✓. CHA (Customs House Agent): 18% → ITC ✓. Quality testing/certification: 18% → ITC ✓. Bank charges for LC/FIRC: 18% → ITC ✓. Design services (freelancer — if registered): 18% → ITC ✓. Office expenses (electricity — no GST, rent, internet): mixed. From unregistered sources (NO ITC): Handicraft products from artisans: 0% or unregistered → NO ITC. Raw materials (artisan-supplied): NO ITC. Local transport (unorganized): NO ITC. REFUND MECHANISM: File GST RFD-01 (refund of ITC on zero-rated supply). Refund = ITC accumulated from registered purchases only. Formula: Refund = (Export turnover ÷ Total turnover) × Net ITC. If 100% export: full eligible ITC refunded. Timeline: 30-60 days (CBIC guidelines — reality: 60-120 days). STRATEGIES TO MAXIMIZE ITC: STRATEGY 1 — Bring artisans into GST fold: Encourage key suppliers to register voluntarily. Even if below threshold: voluntary registration possible. They charge 5-12% GST → you claim ITC. Your cost: same (you pay purchase price + GST, then claim ITC back). Artisan's burden: must file returns (you may help/fund their compliance). Some exporters: provide CA support to key artisans (₹5-10K/year). STRATEGY 2 — Cooperative model: Form artisan cooperative (registered entity). Cooperative registers for GST. Artisans supply to cooperative (below threshold — no GST). Cooperative sells to you at 5-12% GST. You claim ITC on cooperative's invoice. Cooperative's ITC: limited (raw materials from nature/market). But: your ITC on finished goods: secured. STRATEGY 3 — Job work arrangement: You provide raw materials to artisan (you buy materials from registered supplier). Artisan does job work (crafting/carving/weaving). Job work charges: 5-12% GST (if artisan is registered for job work). You claim ITC on both: raw material + job work. Better ITC recovery than buying finished goods from unregistered artisan. STRATEGY 4 — Focus on other ITC sources: Maximize ITC from logistics, packaging, warehousing. Use registered transporters (even if slightly costlier — ITC makes up). Formal warehousing (18% GST — full ITC). Premium packaging (high value, 18% GST — good ITC). RODTEP — COMPENSATES FOR EMBEDDED TAXES: RoDTEP scheme specifically exists to compensate: Taxes embedded in export products that cannot be refunded via ITC. Includes: taxes paid by unregistered suppliers in their supply chain. Handicraft RoDTEP rates: 1-5% of FOB value. This is government's solution for the unregistered supplier problem. File: ICEGATE system (linked to shipping bills). Credited as: scrip in IEC holder's account (tradeable/usable). PRACTICAL EXPORT COMPLIANCE: (1) Register for LUT annually (Form GST RFD-11). (2) File shipping bills with correct HS codes. (3) Maintain: Export invoices (with proper HSN). Realized export proceeds (FIRC from bank). Bank realization certificate. (4) File RFD-01 monthly/quarterly (for ITC refund). (5) File RoDTEP claims via ICEGATE. (6) Reconcile: GSTR-1 (exports reported) vs shipping bill data (ICEGATE). DOCUMENTATION FOR REFUND: Export invoice (with GSTIN, date, value). Shipping bill / bill of export. BRC (Bank Realization Certificate) — within 9 months. FIRC (Foreign Inward Remittance Certificate). Statement of ITC (electronic credit ledger). CA certificate (if refund > ₹2 lakh).
What GST concessions exist for tribal artisans and Self-Help Groups (SHGs) selling handicrafts?
TRIBAL ARTISANS & SHGs — GST CONCESSIONS & BENEFITS: FUNDAMENTAL TRUTH — NO RATE CONCESSION: There is NO special GST RATE for tribal/SHG products. A bamboo basket made by tribal artisan: 5% (same as factory-made basket). A brass idol by Dokra artisan: 12% (same as Moradabad factory). GST does NOT distinguish based on WHO makes it — only WHAT it is. HOWEVER — EFFECTIVE CONCESSIONS EXIST: (1) THRESHOLD EXEMPTION (Most important): Turnover ≤ ₹40 lakh: NO GST registration needed. Turnover ≤ ₹20 lakh: for special category states (NE states, Uttarakhand, Himachal). Most tribal artisans: turnover ₹1-5 lakh/year. They are AUTOMATICALLY exempt — no registration, no GST, no compliance. This IS the biggest concession (even if not labelled as one). (2) KVIC/KVI EXEMPTION: Products sold through Khadi & Village Industries Commission: Many are EXEMPT (0%). Includes: khadi cloth, village industry products. Not all handicrafts — specific KVIC-listed items. If your SHG is affiliated to KVIC: ask about exempt product list. (3) COMPOSITION SCHEME: SHG with turnover ₹40 lakh - ₹1.5 crore: Can opt for 1% GST (composition). Simplified compliance (quarterly filing). Suitable for: SHGs selling locally (cannot do interstate under composition). (4) COOPERATIVE SOCIETY PROVISIONS: If SHG is registered as cooperative society: Same GST rules as any business. No rate concession for cooperative structure. But: income tax benefits (Section 80P) — not GST. GOVERNMENT PROCUREMENT — GST HANDLING: When government/PSU procures from SHGs: SHG (if registered) charges GST on supply. Government claims ITC. If SHG is unregistered (below threshold): Government pays total price (no GST added by SHG). No reverse charge (RCM) if from unregistered supplier for goods < ₹5,000/day. Government procurement from SHGs/artisans: Often through GEM (Government e-Marketplace). Preference given (3% price preference for MSEs). But GST: standard rates apply. TRIBAL COOPERATIVE MARKETING (TRIFED): TRIFED (Tribal Cooperative Marketing Development Federation): Buys from tribal artisans: at fair price. Sells through Tribes India outlets / online. TRIFED is registered for GST. Artisans selling to TRIFED: below threshold → no GST. TRIFED selling to consumers: charges 5-12% GST. ITC for TRIFED: limited (most procurement from unregistered tribals). SPECIFIC SCHEMES: PM Vishwakarma Yojana (2023): For traditional artisans (18 specified trades including weaving, pottery, goldsmithing). Benefits: ₹3 lakh collateral-free loan, ₹500/day training stipend. GST impact: No rate benefit. But: helps artisans grow (may eventually need registration). If they grow above ₹40 lakh: must register (but that's a success story). SFURTI (Scheme of Fund for Regeneration of Traditional Industries): Cluster-based approach for traditional industries. Bamboo, honey, khadi, pottery clusters. Funding for: common facility centers, raw material bank, marketing. GST: standard rates for products (5-12%). ODOP (One District One Product): Identifies unique product per district. Marketing + export support. GI tagging support. GST: no rate benefit but helps in export (zero-rated). MARKETPLACE FOR SHGs: Government-promoted platforms: Tribes India (TRIFED online). SARAS Aajeevika (DAY-NRLM — SHG products). Amazon Saheli (Amazon's initiative for women SHGs). Flipkart Samarth. MyStore (Open Network for Digital Commerce). GST on these platforms: standard rules. SHG below threshold selling on Amazon within state: no registration (post-Jan 2023). PRACTICAL RECOMMENDATION FOR SHG/TRIBAL GROUP: (1) If total group turnover < ₹40 lakh: Don't register for GST (exempt). Sell freely — local, exhibitions, Tribes India. (2) If growing + want interstate/e-commerce: Register voluntarily (in group/cooperative name). Charge 5-12% GST on products. Claim ITC on inputs (packaging, transport, materials from registered sources). File returns (get CA support — funded by cluster scheme). (3) For export: Must register (for LUT + ITC refund). Join EPCH (Export Promotion Council for Handicrafts). Get RCMC. Use LUT route (zero-rated export + ITC refund).
How are handmade paintings, art, and sculptures taxed under GST?
PAINTINGS, ART & SCULPTURES — GST CLASSIFICATION: ORIGINAL PAINTINGS — 12%: Original paintings (by hand — oil, acrylic, watercolor): 12% (HSN 9701). Original drawings: 12%. Original pastels: 12%. Collages and decorative plaques: 12%. Note: ORIGINAL means one-of-a-kind, created by artist. Not prints/reproductions. ORIGINAL SCULPTURES — 12%: Hand-carved stone sculpture: 12% (HSN 9703). Wood sculpture (original): 12%. Metal sculpture (original): 12%. Mixed media sculpture: 12%. Installation art: 12%. PRINTS & REPRODUCTIONS — 12%: Lithographs (limited edition): 12% (HSN 9702). Etchings/engravings (original prints): 12%. Art prints (reproductions): 12%. Canvas prints: 12%. Poster prints: 18% (commercial printing — HSN 4911). Greeting cards with art: 18% (HSN 4909). Calendars with art: 18%. ANTIQUES (> 100 years old) — 12%: Antique paintings: 12% (HSN 9706). Antique sculptures: 12%. Antique furniture: 12%. Antique coins/medals: 12%. Note: No special lower rate for antiques under GST. PHOTOGRAPHY — 18%: Photography services: 18% (SAC 9989). Photographs sold as art (limited edition): 12% (if classified as 'artistic' under 9702). Photographs sold commercially: 18%. Photo printing service: 18%. DIGITAL ART / NFTs: Digital artwork: 18% (IT service/intangible asset). NFT sale: 18% (digital supply). BUT: if artist is below ₹40 lakh threshold: exempt. Indian NFT platforms (WazirX NFT, etc.): Complex — international supply rules apply. ARTIST'S GST OBLIGATIONS: Individual artist (painter, sculptor): If annual turnover < ₹40 lakh: NO registration needed. Sell paintings without GST. No invoicing or filing required. If turnover > ₹40 lakh: Must register. Charge 12% GST on sales. File returns. ITC available on: canvas, paints, brushes (18%), studio rent (18%), framing (18%). GALLERIES & ART DEALERS: Art gallery selling paintings: Commission-based: 18% on commission (agent service). Outright purchase + resale: 12% on sale price. Consignment sale: gallery charges 18% commission, artist charges 12% on painting. ARTIST + GALLERY ARRANGEMENT: Artist (registered) consigns painting to gallery. Gallery sells to buyer at ₹1,00,000. Gallery commission: 30% (₹30,000). Gallery charges buyer: ₹1,00,000 + 12% GST = ₹1,12,000. Gallery remits to artist: ₹70,000 + 12% GST = ₹78,400. Gallery's income: ₹30,000 (commission). Gallery's GST: collects 12% on ₹1 lakh, pays 12% on ₹70K to artist = net 12% on ₹30K. Alternatively: Gallery as pure agent: Artist invoices buyer directly (12% on ₹1 lakh). Gallery invoices artist for commission (18% on ₹30K). ART EXHIBITIONS & FAIRS: Stall rental at art fair: 18% → ITC for artist. Transport of artwork: 18% → ITC. Insurance during exhibition: 18% → ITC. Framing (for exhibition): 18% → ITC. If art is sold at exhibition: 12% on sale price. If artist participates via gallery: gallery handles invoicing. EXPORT OF ART: Art export: 0% (zero-rated). Indian contemporary art: growing export market. Platforms: Artsy, Saatchi Art (international). Physical export: shipping bill + LUT. Digital export (prints/files): online export — same zero-rating. ITC refund: available on all inputs (framing, packaging, shipping). MURALS & COMMISSIONED ART: Wall mural (commissioned for building): 18% (works contract — immovable). If classified as 'artistic service': 18%. If classified as painting supply: 12% (but mural can't be detached — it's immovable). Generally: commissioned mural = service (18%). Commissioned portrait/canvas: 12% (movable goods — painting).

Handicrafts & Artisans GST — Export Refund, SHG Compliance & Classification

Laabam.One handles handicraft sector GST: multi-rate classification (3-5-12%), handloom weaver threshold optimization, artisan cooperative structuring, export zero-rating with LUT & ITC refund, SHG compliance simplification, GI-tagged product marketing, and e-commerce registration requirements.

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