LeatherFootwear

GST on Leather & Footwear — Shoes 12%/18%, Hides 5%, Leather 12%, Bags 18%

Complete GST guide for leather & footwear: footwear ≤₹1,000 at 12%, footwear >₹1,000 at 18%, raw hides 5%, finished leather 12%, leather bags 18%, garments 12%, inverted duty history, export zero-rating, synthetic vs genuine leather classification, and MSME composition scheme.

12%

Footwear (≤₹1000)

18%

Footwear (>₹1000)

5%

Raw Hides & Skins

12%

Finished Leather

18%

Leather Bags / Wallets

12%

Leather Garments

18%

Synthetic Leather

12-18%

Shoe Components

Leather & Footwear — GST Framework

Footwear — 12% / 18% (Price-Based Split)

PRICE-BASED CLASSIFICATION (from Jan 2022): Footwear with sale value ≤ ₹1,000 per pair: 12% GST. Footwear with sale value > ₹1,000 per pair: 18% GST. HISTORY OF RATE CHANGES: July 2017 - Dec 2019: ≤₹500 = 5%, >₹500 = 18%. Jan 2020 - Dec 2021: ≤₹1,000 = 5%, >₹1,000 = 18%. Jan 2022 onwards: ≤₹1,000 = 12%, >₹1,000 = 18%. WHY INCREASE FROM 5% TO 12%: The 5% rate caused INVERTED DUTY (inputs at 12-18%, output at 5%). Manufacturers couldn't use ITC → applied for refunds (massive burden). Solution: raise to 12% → reduces inversion, ITC flows normally. WHAT COUNTS AS 'SALE VALUE': Retail sale price (MRP) — NOT the taxable value. If MRP = ₹999: 12%. If MRP = ₹1,001: 18%. PROBLEM: brands pricing at ₹999 to stay in 12% slab. HSN CODES: All footwear: Chapter 64 (6401-6405). Waterproof footwear: 6401. Sports shoes: 6402-6404. Leather shoes: 6403. Textile upper footwear: 6404. Other footwear: 6405. Chappal/sandals: 6402. ALL follow the same price-based rule. COMPONENTS: Soles (rubber/PU/EVA): 18% (HSN 6406). Uppers: 18%. Laces: 12%. Insoles: 18%. Heels: 18%. Buckles/ornaments: 18%.

Raw Hides, Skins & Tanning — 5% to 12%

RAW MATERIALS: Raw hides and skins (fresh, salted, dried): 5% (HSN 4101-4103). Cow/buffalo hides: 5%. Goat/sheep skins: 5%. Reptile skins: 5%. TANNING: Tanned/crust leather (semi-processed): 12% (HSN 4104-4106). Wet blue leather: 12%. Crust leather (vegetable/chrome tanned): 12%. Finished leather (dyed, polished): 12% (HSN 4107). Patent leather: 12%. TANNING CHEMICALS: Chrome sulphate (tanning agent): 18%. Vegetable tanning extracts: 18%. Synthetic tanning agents: 18%. Dyes for leather: 18%. Fat liquoring agents: 18%. INVERTED DUTY IN TANNING: Input (raw hides): 5%. Tanning chemicals: 18%. Output (finished leather): 12%. Net: some inputs at 18% vs output at 12% → moderate inversion. But: raw hide (major input) at 5% vs leather at 12% → no inversion on main input. Overall: tanneries have mixed ITC position — generally manageable. EXPORT OF RAW HIDES: India RESTRICTS export of raw hides (environmental + value addition policy). Export of finished leather: zero-rated (encouraged). Export of raw/semi-processed: technically zero-rated but restricted by other policies. LEATHER CLUSTERS: Major clusters: Kanpur, Chennai, Kolkata, Ambur, Vaniyambadi, Ranipet. These clusters have common effluent treatment plants (CETP): 18% GST on CETP services.

Leather Goods & Accessories — 18%

BAGS & LUGGAGE: Leather handbags: 18% (HSN 4202). Travel bags/suitcases: 18%. Wallets/purses: 18%. Briefcases: 18%. Laptop bags (leather): 18%. School bags: 18% (even if leather/synthetic). Belt bags: 18%. KEY DISTINCTION: Bag/luggage (4202): always 18% regardless of material (leather, synthetic, fabric). Footwear (6401-6405): 12% or 18% based on price. Different chapters → different rules. LEATHER GARMENTS: Leather jackets: 12% (HSN 4203). Leather coats: 12%. Leather gloves: 12%. Leather caps/hats: 12%. WHY GARMENTS 12%: Apparel/garments follow APPAREL rules (Chapter 42/62). Garments ≤₹1,000: 5%. Garments >₹1,000: 12%. Leather garments (being garments): 12% regardless of price (specific entry). SPORTS GOODS (LEATHER): Cricket balls: 12% (HSN 9506). Footballs/volleyballs: 12%. Boxing gloves: 12%. Sports goods generally: 12%. SADDLES & HARNESS: Horse saddles: 18% (HSN 4201). Dog collars/leashes: 18%. Leather straps: 18%. INDUSTRIAL LEATHER: Leather belting (power transmission): 18%. Leather washers: 18%. Chamois leather: 18%. SYNTHETIC/ARTIFICIAL LEATHER: Rexine/PU leather: 18% (HSN 3921 or 5903). Faux leather (PVC-based): 18%. Products made from synthetic leather: same rate as leather equivalent (bags 18%, footwear 12/18%).

Footwear Manufacturing — ITC Chain

MANUFACTURING PROCESS & GST: Step 1: Buy raw leather (12% GST) or synthetic (18%). Step 2: Buy soles (18%), adhesives (18%), thread (12%), laces (12%). Step 3: Manufacturing (value addition). Step 4: Sell finished footwear (12% or 18% based on MRP). ITC POSITION (footwear ≤₹1,000 at 12%): Output: 12%. Inputs: leather 12% (neutral), soles 18% (inversion), adhesives 18% (inversion). Moderate inversion exists — but less severe than old 5% regime. ITC POSITION (footwear >₹1,000 at 18%): Output: 18%. Inputs: leather 12% (favorable), soles 18% (neutral), adhesives 18% (neutral). NO inversion — output rate ≥ input rates. ITC flows smoothly. JOB WORK: Footwear manufacturing on job work: 12% GST (manufacturing — goods belong to principal). Upper stitching (job work): 12%. Sole attachment (job work): 12%. Finishing/polishing (job work): 12%. Movement for job work: e-way bill required for goods + challans. ITC on job work charges: fully available to principal manufacturer. BRAND OWNER vs CONTRACT MANUFACTURER: Brand owner (Nike, Bata, Relaxo): owns design, sells under brand. Contract manufacturer (OEM): produces for brand. Brand owner pays job work charges: 12% GST. Or: buys finished goods from manufacturer: 12%/18% based on price. Deemed manufacture for brand owner: valuation at transaction value (not MRP for B2B).

Footwear Exports — Zero-Rated

INDIA'S FOOTWEAR EXPORTS: India: 2nd largest footwear producer globally (after China). Export value: ₹22,000-25,000 crore/year. Major markets: UK, USA, Germany, France, Italy, Spain. Export hubs: Agra (North), Chennai/Ambur (South), Kolkata (East). GST ON EXPORTS: All footwear exports: zero-rated (0% GST). LUT route: export without IGST → claim ITC refund. IGST route: pay IGST → claim refund via shipping bill. REFUND ISSUES: Leather footwear exporters face: (1) Input accumulation (12% leather + 18% chemicals → 0% export). (2) Refund delays (60-90 days typical). (3) Working capital pressure (especially SMEs in Agra). ADVANCE AUTHORIZATION: Duty-free import of inputs (leather, components) for export production. IGST exemption on advance authorization imports (Notification 78/2017). Reduces working capital requirement. DEEMED EXPORTS (supply to EOU/SEZ): Supply to SEZ unit: zero-rated. Footwear SEZs in Tamil Nadu: significant export volume. DTA to SEZ supply: LUT applicable. FOREIGN BRAND MANUFACTURING: Indian factories produce for: Adidas, Puma, Clarks, M&S, Zara. These are 'merchant exports' — Indian manufacturer exports. GST: zero-rated on physical export. Design/royalty fees paid to foreign brand: 18% IGST under RCM (import of service). DRAWBACK: Duty Drawback scheme: refund of customs duty on imported inputs. GST refund is SEPARATE from drawback. Cannot claim both IGST refund and drawback on same inputs. Choose: either claim ITC refund (GST route) or drawback (customs route).

Retail, E-commerce & Compliance

RETAIL CHALLENGES: MRP-BASED CLASSIFICATION: Rate depends on MRP (≤₹1,000 = 12%, >₹1,000 = 18%). PROBLEM: Same shoe model in different sizes may have different MRP. Size 6 (₹999 MRP): 12%. Size 11 (₹1,099 MRP — extra material): 18%. Retailer must apply correct rate PER PAIR. DISCOUNT & SALE: Original MRP ₹1,500 (18%). Discounted to ₹800 during sale: GST still 18% (based on ORIGINAL classification at time of supply). OR: if new MRP sticker at ₹800 → 12%? Dispute area — department may argue original MRP determines rate. SAFE APPROACH: use price at which goods are ACTUALLY SUPPLIED (transaction value). E-COMMERCE (Flipkart, Amazon, Myntra): TCS: 1% collected by platform on net sales. Seller charges 12% or 18% based on price. Platform displays 'inclusive of taxes' price. Return handling: credit note if returned → TCS adjusted. COMPOSITION SCHEME: Small footwear manufacturers/traders (< ₹1.5 crore turnover): Can opt composition (1% tax). No ITC, no interstate supply. Many small chappal/sandal makers in Agra/Kolkata use composition. QUARTERLY FILING: Footwear MSMEs (<₹5 crore): QRMP scheme (quarterly returns). Useful for small manufacturers with seasonal demand. E-INVOICE: Threshold ₹5 crore — most medium/large footwear companies covered. Bata, Relaxo, Liberty, Metro: all generate e-invoices. Real-time reporting helps track interstate movement. HSN REPORTING: 4-digit HSN mandatory for > ₹5 crore turnover. 6-digit HSN for > ₹5 crore (from April 2021). Footwear must specify: 6401, 6402, 6403, 6404, 6405 precisely.

Leather & Footwear — GST Rate Table

ItemHSNGST RateNotes
Footwear (sale value ≤ ₹1,000)6401-640512%All materials — price-based
Footwear (sale value > ₹1,000)6401-640518%All materials — price-based
Raw hides & skins4101-41035%Fresh, salted, dried
Tanned / finished leather4104-410712%Wet blue, crust, finished
Leather bags / wallets / luggage420218%All materials
Leather garments (jackets, gloves)420312%Apparel classification
Footwear components (soles, uppers)640618%Parts & accessories
Synthetic / artificial leather3921/590318%Rexine, PU leather
Leather belts (fashion)420312%Apparel accessory
Sports goods (leather balls)950612%Cricket, football
Tanning chemicals320218%Chrome, vegetable extracts
Shoe polish / care products340518%Cleaning/maintenance

Frequently Asked Questions

Why did footwear GST increase from 5% to 12% for affordable shoes — wasn't 5% better for consumers?
5% TO 12% INCREASE — THE INVERTED DUTY LOGIC: THE PROBLEM AT 5%: Footwear ≤₹1,000 was at 5% GST (July 2017 - Dec 2021). But inputs: Soles (rubber/PU): 18%. Adhesives: 18%. Chemicals: 18%. Packaging: 18%. Leather: 12%. Services (job work, transport): 12-18%. RESULT: Output 5% < Inputs 12-18% = MASSIVE INVERTED DUTY. Manufacturers accumulated ₹100s crores of ITC that couldn't be used. Had to file refunds → delays, rejections, working capital crisis. GOVERNMENT'S SOLUTION (Jan 2022): Raise footwear (≤₹1,000) from 5% to 12%. At 12% output: leather input (12%) = neutral. Sole input (18%) = still some inversion but manageable. Net inversion reduced by 70%. CONSUMER IMPACT: Shoe priced at ₹800: Old: ₹800 × 5% = ₹40 GST → ₹840 total. New: ₹800 × 12% = ₹96 GST → ₹896 total. Increase to consumer: ₹56 per pair. BUT: manufacturers argued that embedded cost (blocked ITC) added ₹50-80/pair anyway. So: 5% with blocked ITC = same effective cost as 12% with flowing ITC. NET IMPACT: Manufacturer: BENEFITS (ITC flows, no refund hassle, better cash flow). Consumer: marginal increase (₹50-60/pair on ₹800 shoe). Government: more revenue (12% vs 5%) + less refund outflow. POLITICAL REACTION: Opposition parties criticized: 'tax on common man's footwear doubled'. Reality: for VERY cheap footwear (₹200-300 chappals): increase from ₹10-15 to ₹24-36 GST. For daily-wage earners buying ₹200 chappals: noticeable impact. COMPOSITION OPTION: Small chappal makers (< ₹1.5 crore): can use composition scheme (1% flat tax). This is lower than both 5% and 12% — available for micro enterprises.
How does the ₹1,000 threshold work in practice — what if MRP changes or discounts apply?
₹1,000 THRESHOLD — PRACTICAL ISSUES: THE RULE: If sale value per pair ≤ ₹1,000: 12% GST. If sale value per pair > ₹1,000: 18% GST. WHAT IS 'SALE VALUE'?: 'Sale value' = transaction value (price actually charged). NOT MRP in strict legal sense — but MRP is used as proxy in retail. For B2B (manufacturer to dealer): invoice price per pair. For B2C (retailer to consumer): actual selling price. SCENARIO 1 — SAME MODEL, DIFFERENT SIZES: Men's shoe model 'X': Size 7-9: MRP ₹999 → 12%. Size 10-12 (extra material): MRP ₹1,099 → 18%. Retailer must maintain separate GST rates for SAME model in different sizes. Billing system must handle per-SKU rate assignment. SCENARIO 2 — DISCOUNTS: Original price ₹1,200 → customer gets 30% discount → pays ₹840. GST rate: 12% (transaction value = ₹840 ≤ ₹1,000). If discount is AFTER supply (post-sale credit note): original rate at time of supply applies (18%). KEY: timing matters — discount BEFORE or AT TIME of supply = use discounted value. SCENARIO 3 — BUNDLED OFFERS: 'Buy 1 get 1 free' — 2 pairs for ₹1,500. Per pair value: ₹750 → 12% on each pair. Buy 2 pairs (₹800 + ₹1,200) for ₹1,800: Each pair retains individual value → ₹800 pair at 12%, ₹1,200 pair at 18%. SCENARIO 4 — EXPORTS: Export value in foreign currency. Convert to INR at exchange rate on date of supply. If converted value ≤ ₹1,000: technically 12% (but export is zero-rated anyway). Classification still matters for: domestic clearance of rejected export goods, or DTA sale by EOU. SCENARIO 5 — E-COMMERCE: Flipkart shows 'price inclusive of tax'. Backend: platform knows per-SKU rate (12% or 18%). Seller must correctly classify each SKU by price point. Price changes (flash sale): rate may change if price crosses ₹1,000 threshold. RETAILER COMPLIANCE: Must configure POS system with threshold logic. Audit trail: what rate was charged on each pair. Annual reconciliation: if thousands of SKUs, classification accuracy is critical.
What's the GST impact on India's leather export industry — and how do Agra/Chennai clusters handle compliance?
LEATHER EXPORTS — INDIA'S COMPETITIVE POSITION: INDUSTRY SIZE: Leather & footwear exports: ₹22,000-25,000 crore/year. India: 2nd largest footwear producer, 5th largest exporter. Employment: 4+ million (mostly in clusters). EXPORT CLUSTERS & GST IMPACT: AGRA (Uttar Pradesh): Product: men's leather shoes, ladies' sandals. Size: 5,000+ units, mostly MSME. GST challenge: small units (₹50 lakh - ₹5 crore) struggle with compliance. Many were exempt pre-GST (turnover below excise threshold of ₹1.5 crore). Now: GST registration mandatory for exporters (no threshold for interstate/export). POSITIVE: ITC refund mechanism — earlier, excise on inputs was embedded cost. CHENNAI/AMBUR/VANIYAMBADI (Tamil Nadu): Product: finished leather, leather garments, upholstery. Size: large tanneries + small manufacturers. GST challenge: tanning chemicals at 18% → finished leather at 12% = slight inversion. EXPORT BENEFITS: (1) Zero-rating eliminates 12-18% GST from export price. (2) ITC refund ensures no embedded taxes (competitive pricing globally). (3) Compared to pre-GST: CST, entry tax, octroi ELIMINATED = logistics cheaper. PRACTICAL REFUND ISSUES: (1) Small exporters in Agra: lack documentation skills for refund filing. (2) Chartered accountant cost: ₹50,000-1,00,000/year for GST compliance (burdensome for ₹50 lakh turnover unit). (3) Refund rejections: common reason = mismatch between GSTR-1 and shipping bill. (4) Advance Authorization route avoids IGST on imported inputs — but complex procedurally. GOVERNMENT SUPPORT: Rebate of State & Central Taxes & Levies (RoSCTL): Additional incentive on footwear exports (2-5% of FOB value). Not technically GST — it's reimbursement of embedded taxes NOT covered by GST refund (electricity, fuel, property tax, stamp duty). Available alongside GST refund — not double-benefit. COMPARISON WITH COMPETITORS: Vietnam/China: no equivalent GST → lower compliance cost. Bangladesh: VAT on inputs rebated fully for exports. India: GST refund mechanism is GOOD but implementation is slow for MSMEs. NET: Large exporters (Tata International, Mirza, Superhouse): manage well. Small exporters (Agra cottage industry): compliance burden remains challenging.
How is synthetic/faux leather taxed differently from genuine leather — and what about vegan leather products?
GENUINE vs SYNTHETIC vs VEGAN LEATHER — GST CLASSIFICATION: GENUINE LEATHER: Raw hides/skins: 5% (HSN 4101-4103). Tanned leather: 12% (HSN 4104-4107). Finished products (bags): 18% (HSN 4202). Garments: 12% (HSN 4203). SYNTHETIC LEATHER (REXINE/PU LEATHER): Material itself: 18% (HSN 3921 — plastics in sheet form). OR: 18% (HSN 5903 — textile fabrics coated with plastics). Classification dispute: is it 'plastic' or 'textile'? Generally 3921 for PU/PVC-based. Product made from synthetic leather: Same rate as equivalent genuine leather product: Bag from synthetic leather: 18% (HSN 4202 — covers 'all materials'). Footwear from synthetic: 12%/18% (based on ₹1,000 threshold — same as leather). Garment from synthetic: may follow Chapter 39 (plastics) or Chapter 62 (garments). VEGAN LEATHER (NEW CATEGORY): Piñatex (pineapple leaf leather): classified as 'textile' → 12% or 18% depending on processing. Mushroom leather (Mylo): no specific HSN → falls under 'other articles' → 18%. Cork leather: 18% (HSN 4503 — articles of cork). Apple leather: likely 18% (processed material). Cactus leather: likely 18%. KEY POINT: GST doesn't distinguish based on 'vegan' — classification is by MATERIAL composition. If it's plastic-based (PU): 18% as plastic. If it's plant-fiber-based: 12% as textile OR 18% as 'other manufactured article'. FOOTWEAR CLASSIFICATION — MATERIAL DOESN'T MATTER: Critical rule: footwear is classified by CHAPTER 64, not by material. Whether genuine leather, synthetic, or vegan: Same rate (12% ≤₹1,000, 18% >₹1,000). Material only matters for: bags (Chapter 42), garments (Chapter 42/62), raw material (Chapter 41/39/56). VALUATION DIFFERENCE: Genuine leather bag (Hidesign): ₹5,000 → 18% GST = ₹900. Synthetic leather bag (equivalent): ₹1,500 → 18% GST = ₹270. Same rate (18%) but lower value = lower absolute GST. Vegan leather (premium brand like Matt & Nat): ₹8,000 → 18% = ₹1,440. Premium positioning → higher GST in absolute terms.

Leather & Footwear GST — Price Threshold, Exports & ITC Management

Laabam.One handles leather & footwear GST: ₹1,000 threshold automation, 12%/18% rate switching, export LUT and ITC refunds, tanning industry inverted duty, job work 12% tracking, e-commerce TCS for footwear sellers, and composition scheme for MSME chappal manufacturers.

Explore GST Law