Back to GST Council Overview
GST Council

53rd GST Council Meeting — Key Decisions & Outcomes

Held on 22 June 2024 in New Delhi, the 53rd Meeting focused on hostel exemptions, Section 128A amnesty for early GST years, Invoice Management System, and multiple rate rationalization decisions.

22 Jun 2024
Date
New Delhi
Venue
7+
Rate Changes
Amnesty
Key Focus

Key Decisions & Recommendations

Rate Reductions

Indian Railways services

Platform tickets, cloakroom, battery-operated car services — exempt from GST

Passenger benefit

Hostel accommodation

Hostel accommodation up to ₹20,000/month per person — exempt from GST (outside hotel/club premises)

Students & working professionals

Milk cans (steel/iron/aluminium)

Rate reduced from 12% to 5% GST

Dairy sector

Carton boxes (corrugated/non-corrugated)

Rate reduced from 18% to 12% GST

Packaging industry

Solar cookers

Rate reduced from 12% to 5% GST

Clean energy push

Fire sprinklers

Reduced from 18% to 12% GST

Safety equipment

Compliance & Technology

Biometric Aadhaar authentication

Nationwide rollout for GST registration — reduces fake registration fraud

Anti-fraud

Invoice Management System (IMS)

New module for GSTR-2B to allow recipients to accept/reject/pending invoices

ITC accuracy

GSTR-1 amendments

Allow amendment of GSTR-1 details even after filing GSTR-3B for that period

Error correction

E-way Bill validity

Extended validity for over-dimensional cargo — 200 km per day instead of 75 km

Logistics

Clarifications & Services

Co-insurance premium

Lead insurer paying to co-insurer — not a separate supply, no GST on apportionment

Insurance sector clarity

Reinsurance commission

Clarified that commission/brokerage on reinsurance transactions is taxable at 18%

Insurance sector

Cloud computing/IT services

Clarified as 'online information and database access or retrieval services' (OIDAR) for cross-border taxation

Tech companies

Ancillary services by Goods Transport Agency

Loading/unloading/packing when part of GTA contract — same rate as GTA service

Transport sector

Section 128A — Amnesty

Interest & penalty waiver recommended

For Section 73 (non-fraud) demand notices for FY 2017-18, 2018-19, 2019-20 — waive interest and penalty if tax amount paid by 31 March 2025

Litigation reduction

Conditional waiver

Taxpayer must pay full tax demanded, withdraw any appeal/writ petition

Dispute resolution

Implementation timeline

Recommended insertion of Section 128A in CGST Act via Finance Act 2024 — operationalized later

Legislative change

GST Rate Changes Summary

Item/ServiceOld RateNew RateEffective
Hostel accommodation (≤₹20,000/month)12%ExemptNotified later
Milk cans (steel/iron/aluminium)12%5%Notified later
Carton boxes (all types)18%12%Notified later
Solar cookers12%5%Notified later
Fire sprinklers18%12%Notified later
Platform tickets (Railways)18%ExemptNotified later
Popcorn (ready-to-eat, not pre-packaged)5%5%Clarified (no change)

Frequently Asked Questions

When and where was the 53rd GST Council Meeting held?

The 53rd GST Council Meeting was held on 22 June 2024 in New Delhi, chaired by Union Finance Minister Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman. It was attended by State/UT Finance Ministers and senior officials. This was the first Council meeting after the 2024 Lok Sabha elections and the formation of the new government.

What is the hostel accommodation exemption from 53rd Meeting?

The Council recommended exempting hostel accommodation from GST when the rent is up to ₹20,000 per month per person and the hostel is outside of a hotel, inn, guest house, club, or campsite. This benefits students and working professionals staying in paying guest accommodations or hostels. The exemption applies only when the accommodation is the primary supply.

What is Section 128A waiver recommended in this meeting?

The 53rd Council recommended introducing Section 128A in the CGST Act to provide a conditional waiver of interest and penalty for demand notices issued under Section 73 (non-fraud cases) for FY 2017-18, 2018-19, and 2019-20. The condition is that the taxpayer must pay the full tax amount by 31 March 2025 and withdraw any pending appeal or writ petition. This was later enacted through the Finance Act 2024.

What is the Invoice Management System (IMS) announced?

IMS is a new functionality announced for the GST portal that allows recipients to actively accept, reject, or keep pending the invoices appearing in their GSTR-2B. This gives taxpayers better control over their Input Tax Credit claims and reduces disputes. Only accepted invoices will flow into ITC. Rejected invoices will notify the supplier to take corrective action.

What was clarified about cloud computing services?

The Council clarified that cloud computing services (SaaS, PaaS, IaaS) qualify as 'Online Information and Database Access or Retrieval Services' (OIDAR) when provided cross-border. This means foreign cloud providers supplying to Indian consumers must register for GST and charge 18% GST. For B2B supplies, reverse charge mechanism applies. This impacts companies like AWS, Azure, Google Cloud.

Stay Updated on GST Council Decisions

Get expert interpretation of Council recommendations and understand how they impact your business.

Consult a GST Expert