Cleaning & SanitationFacility Housekeeping

GST on Cleaning & Housekeeping — 18% GST, Municipal Work Exempt

Complete GST guide for cleaning and housekeeping: commercial cleaning 18%, pest control 18%, waste management 18% (exempt for municipal), laundry/dry cleaning 18%, facility housekeeping 18%, and critical distinction between cleaning service (no RCM) vs manpower supply (RCM applicable).

18%

Cleaning Services

18%

Pest Control

18%

Waste Management

18%

Laundry/Dry Cleaning

18%

Sanitation Service

18%

Fumigation

18%

Facility Housekeeping

18%

Janitorial Supplies

Cleaning & Housekeeping — GST Framework

Commercial Cleaning Services — 18% GST

COMMERCIAL CLEANING — 18%: Office cleaning: 18% (SAC 998531). Industrial cleaning: 18%. Factory/plant cleaning: 18%. Hospital cleaning: 18%. School/college cleaning: 18%. Mall/retail cleaning: 18%. Hotel housekeeping (outsourced): 18%. Airport cleaning: 18%. Railway station cleaning: 18%. IT park cleaning: 18%. Bank/ATM cleaning: 18%. Window cleaning (exterior — building): 18%. Carpet cleaning (commercial): 18%. Upholstery cleaning: 18%. Deep cleaning (post-construction): 18%. SPECIALIZED CLEANING: Facade/glass cleaning (high-rise): 18%. Tank cleaning (water/chemical): 18%. Kitchen hood/exhaust cleaning: 18%. Duct cleaning (HVAC): 18%. Solar panel cleaning: 18%. Cold room cleaning: 18%. Clean room maintenance (pharma/semiconductor): 18%. Data center cleaning: 18%. ALL commercial cleaning: uniformly 18% GST. NO exemptions for any commercial cleaning service. CLASSIFICATION — SAC CODE: 998531: Building and industrial cleaning services. 998532: Window cleaning services. 998533: Disinfecting and exterminating services. 998534: Sweeping and snow removal services. 998535: Other cleaning services n.e.c. All under Group 99853: Cleaning services. RCM — NOT APPLICABLE (for cleaning): Unlike security/manpower supply: NO RCM notification for cleaning services. Cleaning service: always forward charge (agency charges 18%). Even if supplier is non-corporate proprietorship. Exception: if cleaning is provided as MANPOWER SUPPLY (providing cleaners, not cleaning service): RCM may apply under 'manpower supply' notification. DISTINCTION — CLEANING SERVICE vs MANPOWER SUPPLY: Cleaning SERVICE: 'Keep premises clean' (output-based — no RCM). Manpower SUPPLY: 'Provide 10 housekeeping staff' (input-based — RCM possible). KEY: What does the contract say? If contract mentions: area, frequency, quality standards → SERVICE (no RCM). If contract mentions: number of persons, deployment, shifts → MANPOWER (RCM possible). PRACTICAL TIP: Draft contracts as 'cleaning service agreement' (not 'manpower supply'). This avoids RCM complications for non-corporate suppliers.

Pest Control & Fumigation — 18% GST

PEST CONTROL — 18%: General pest control (cockroach, ants, mosquito): 18% (SAC 998533). Termite treatment (pre-construction): 18%. Termite treatment (post-construction): 18%. Rodent control: 18%. Bed bug treatment: 18%. Mosquito fogging: 18%. Wood borer treatment: 18%. Bird control/netting: 18%. Snake control: 18%. Fumigation (warehouse/godown): 18%. Container fumigation (export): 18%. Ship fumigation: 18%. Grain fumigation (food storage): 18%. ALL pest control/fumigation: 18%. CHEMICALS USED IN PEST CONTROL: Pesticides (goods — sale): 18% (HSN 3808). Insecticides: 18%. Rodenticides: 18%. Fumigants: 18%. Disinfectants: 18% (HSN 3808). Herbal/organic pest control: 18%. If pest control company SELLS chemicals only (without application): Supply of GOODS: 18% (HSN 3808). If pest control company APPLIES chemicals (service): Supply of SERVICE: 18% (SAC 998533). COMPOSITE: usually service (application is principal — chemicals are incidental). FUMIGATION FOR EXPORT: Phytosanitary certificate: government fee (not GST). Fumigation service for export goods: 18% (domestic service — even if goods going abroad). The goods being exported get 0% GST. But fumigation service consumed in India: 18%. Exporter can claim ITC on fumigation (input service for export). AGRICULTURAL PEST CONTROL: Pest control for STANDING CROPS (in field): EXEMPT? — argued as 'support service to agriculture'. Support services to agriculture (SAC 998611): EXEMPT. But: standalone pest control company providing to farmer: Debatable — EXEMPT (if treated as agricultural support) or 18% (if treated as pest control service). Most pest control companies: charge 18% (take conservative view). Government-sponsored pest control (free to farmers): not a 'supply' — no GST.

Waste Management & Disposal — 18% GST (Exemptions for Municipal)

WASTE MANAGEMENT — 18%: Commercial waste collection: 18% (SAC 999412). Industrial waste disposal: 18%. Biomedical waste treatment: 18%. Hazardous waste management: 18%. E-waste recycling/disposal: 18%. Construction & demolition waste: 18%. Sewage treatment (commercial): 18%. Effluent treatment: 18%. Solid waste processing: 18%. Scrap collection/recycling: 18%. Oil/chemical waste disposal: 18%. EXEMPT — MUNICIPAL/GOVERNMENT WASTE: Pure services by government/local authority: EXEMPT. Municipal solid waste collection (by municipality): EXEMPT (government function). Sewerage/sanitation by local authority: EXEMPT. Drainage maintenance by municipality: EXEMPT. Public toilet maintenance by government: EXEMPT. Composite supply (goods + services) to government: EXEMPT if value of goods ≤ 25% of total. PRIVATE COMPANIES DOING MUNICIPAL WORK: Private contractor hired by municipality for waste collection: This is a supply TO the government. If pure service (no goods component > 25%): EXEMPT (Entry 3, Notification 12/2017 — services to government for specified functions). Specified functions include: water supply, sanitation, solid waste management. So: private company providing waste management TO municipality/government: EXEMPT. Same private company providing TO corporate client: 18% (not exempt — commercial client). KEY DISTINCTION: WHO is the recipient determines exemption: Government/local authority recipient → EXEMPT (for specified functions). Commercial/corporate recipient → 18% (no exemption). BIOMEDICAL WASTE (BMW): BMW treatment facility (incineration/autoclaving): 18% (SAC 999412). Hospitals pay: BMW treatment charges to authorized facility. Rate: 18% GST. Hospital's ITC: REVERSED (healthcare output is exempt). BMW operator: charges 18%, claims ITC on equipment/chemicals. HAZARDOUS WASTE: Treatment, storage, disposal facility (TSDF): 18%. Transport of hazardous waste: 18% (specialized — not GTA). Remediation/site cleanup: 18%. Environmental consulting: 18%. E-WASTE: E-waste recycling service: 18%. E-waste collection (PRO — Producer Responsibility Organization): 18%. Sale of recovered materials (gold, copper, etc. from e-waste): As goods (respective HSN rates — gold 3%, copper 18%). SEWAGE TREATMENT PLANT (STP): STP operation & maintenance: 18%. STP construction: 18% (works contract). But: STP provided by government/municipal body: EXEMPT. Private housing society's STP maintenance: 18% (commercial activity).

Laundry, Dry Cleaning & Textile Care — 18% GST

LAUNDRY & DRY CLEANING — 18%: Laundry service (washing/ironing): 18% (SAC 998971). Dry cleaning: 18%. Pressing/ironing only: 18%. Stain removal: 18%. Carpet cleaning (portable — brought to shop): 18%. Curtain cleaning: 18%. Leather/suede cleaning: 18%. Wedding dress preservation: 18%. Industrial laundry: 18%. Hotel linen laundry (outsourced): 18%. Hospital linen laundry: 18%. Uniform laundry (corporate): 18%. ALL laundry/cleaning of textiles: 18% GST. DHOBI (Traditional washerman): If turnover < ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh in special states): NO GST registration required. Threshold exemption applies. Individual dhobi earning ₹15 lakh/year: NOT required to register. If turnover > ₹20 lakh: Must register and charge 18%. COMPOSITION SCHEME (if eligible): If turnover < ₹1.5 crore (services < ₹50 lakh): Composition rate: 6% (3% CGST + 3% SGST) — for service providers. Cannot charge GST on invoice (no ITC to recipients). Useful for: small laundry chains below ₹50 lakh. COMMERCIAL LAUNDRY (B2B): Large commercial laundry serving hotels/hospitals: Charges: 18% GST on total service value. Billing: per kg or per piece. Hotels claim: ITC (if hotel output at 12/18%). Hospitals: ITC REVERSED (exempt output). Airlines: ITC available (18% — airline services). COIN-OPERATED LAUNDROMAT: Self-service laundry: 18% (service — making facility available). Whether attended or unattended: 18%. Token/coin mechanism: still a service supply. LINEN RENTAL (Hotels/Hospitals): Renting linen (not washing): 18% (rental of goods — SAC 997319). Washing + rental (combined): 18% (composite — linen care is principal). If buying linen (goods): Bedsheets: 5% (HSN 6302 — cotton) or 12% (synthetic). Towels: 5-12% (depending on material). Uniforms: 12% (readymade apparel). These are GOODS rates — different from service rate.

Facility Management & Housekeeping Contracts — 18% GST

INTEGRATED HOUSEKEEPING (Part of FM): Facility management contract including housekeeping: 18%. If housekeeping is one component of larger FM contract: COMPOSITE SUPPLY — rate of principal supply. Principal supply in FM: usually property management (18%). All components (cleaning, maintenance, security, landscaping): 18%. Single invoice: 18% on total contract value. HOUSEKEEPING STAFF SUPPLY vs HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE: HOUSEKEEPING SERVICE (output-based): Contract: 'Maintain cleanliness of 50,000 sq ft office to Grade A standard'. Agency responsible for: quality, supplies, equipment, supervision. Billing: per sq ft or lump sum monthly. GST: 18% — forward charge (no RCM). This is PREFERRED for tax efficiency. HOUSEKEEPING STAFF SUPPLY (input-based): Contract: 'Deploy 15 housekeeping staff for 3 shifts'. Client supervises/controls staff. Billing: per-person per-month. GST: 18% — but RCM may apply (if non-corporate supplier to registered recipient). This creates RCM complications (compliance burden on recipient). CONTRACT STRUCTURING ADVICE: For non-corporate agencies: Use SERVICE model (output-based) → avoids RCM. Don't use: 'supply of X number of staff' language. Do use: 'provide cleaning service for premises' language. RCM ONLY APPLIES TO: 'Supply of manpower' or 'supply of security personnel'. NOT: cleaning services, pest control, waste management (these are always forward charge). COMMON AREA MAINTENANCE (CAM): Commercial building: landlord provides cleaning to tenants via agency: Agency → Landlord: 18% (cleaning service — forward charge). Landlord → Tenant: 18% (CAM charges as part of rent or separately). Tenant: claims ITC on CAM (commercial input). Residential society: If monthly maintenance ≤ ₹7,500 per member: EXEMPT. If > ₹7,500: 18% on FULL amount (not just excess). ANNUAL MAINTENANCE CONTRACTS (AMC): AMC for cleaning equipment: 18% (maintenance service). AMC for HVAC (includes duct cleaning): 18%. AMC for washroom dispensers: 18%. These are all services at 18%. ITC: available to recipient (if taxable output). GOVERNMENT CONTRACTS — EXEMPTION: Housekeeping for government buildings (Swachh Bharat etc.): If pure service to government for 'sanitation conservancy' function: EXEMPT (Entry 3, Notification 12/2017). Private company doing Swachh Bharat contract for municipality: EXEMPT. Same company doing corporate cleaning: 18%. MAINTAIN SEPARATE ACCOUNTS for exempt (government) and taxable (corporate) contracts. ITC REVERSAL: If both exempt + taxable: Rule 42/43 proportional reversal.

Cleaning & Housekeeping — ITC, Supplies & Compliance

CLEANING COMPANY — ITC FRAMEWORK: Output: Cleaning services at 18%. Available ITC: Cleaning chemicals (phenyl, acid, detergent): 18-28% → ITC ✓. Mops, brooms, dusters: 12-18% → ITC ✓. Vacuum cleaners: 18% → ITC ✓. Floor scrubbing machines: 18% → ITC ✓. Pressure washers: 18% → ITC ✓. Cleaning trolleys: 18% → ITC ✓. Disposable gloves/masks: 12% → ITC ✓. Uniforms for staff: 12% → ITC ✓. Vehicles (transport staff): BLOCKED (motor vehicle — Section 17(5)). Diesel/petrol: NO GST currently → no ITC. Insurance (professional liability): 18% → ITC ✓. Office rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Training expenses: 18% → ITC ✓. CLEANING SUPPLIES (Goods — HSN Rates): Phenyl/floor cleaner: 18% (HSN 3402). Toilet cleaner: 18% (HSN 3402). Dish wash liquid: 18% (HSN 3402). Glass cleaner: 18% (HSN 3402). Hand wash/soap: 18% (HSN 3401). Paper napkins/tissue: 12% (HSN 4818). Garbage bags: 18% (HSN 3923). Air freshener: 28% (HSN 3307 — if spray/aerosol). Disinfectant spray: 18% (HSN 3808). Microfiber cloth: 12% (HSN 6307). Dustbin (plastic): 18% (HSN 3924). Dustbin (metal): 18% (HSN 7323). COMPLIANCE — CLEANING COMPANIES: GST Registration: Mandatory if turnover > ₹20 lakh. Multi-state operations: register in each state with fixed establishment. Composition scheme: 6% if services < ₹50 lakh turnover (no ITC to clients). E-invoice: if turnover > ₹5 crore. GSTR-1: monthly (if > ₹5 cr) or quarterly (QRMP if < ₹5 cr). GSTR-3B: monthly or quarterly. TDS under GST: Government departments deduct 2% TDS (1% CGST + 1% SGST) on payments > ₹2.5 lakh per contract. Credit available in electronic cash ledger. CLEANING FOR EXEMPT SECTORS: Hospitals: Hospital pays 18% for cleaning. But: hospital output (healthcare) is EXEMPT. So: hospital CANNOT claim ITC on cleaning charges. Impact: 18% GST is a COST for hospitals. Schools/educational institutions: Same as hospitals — exempt output → no ITC. Government departments: May be EXEMPT supply (if covered under Entry 3). Or: TDS deduction at 2% if not exempt. RESIDENTIAL — DOMESTIC HELP: Individual hiring domestic help (maid/cook): NOT a supply (employer-employee or informal — below threshold). No GST implications. Domestic help agency (providing maids to households): If turnover > ₹20L: must charge 18%. But: most agencies below threshold (informal sector). Urban Company / BookMyShow-type platform: Platform charges customer: 18% on service fee. Service provider (individual): if below ₹20L — no GST. Platform: may be liable as e-commerce operator (TCS). This space is evolving — gig worker GST treatment being clarified. SUSTAINABILITY / GREEN CLEANING: Eco-friendly cleaning products (organic/biodegradable): Same rate as conventional (18% — no GST benefit for 'green'). Green building maintenance: 18%. Organic waste composting (commercial service): 18%. Water recycling service: 18%. No GST incentive for sustainable cleaning (rates are same).

Cleaning & Housekeeping — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Commercial cleaning service99853118%Office/factory/hospital
Pest control service99853318%All types — no exemption
Fumigation service99853318%Warehouse/export cargo
Waste management (commercial)99941218%Collection/disposal
Waste management (for govt/municipal)999412ExemptPure service to govt
Laundry/dry cleaning99897118%All textile cleaning
Facility housekeeping99853118%Integrated FM cleaning
Biomedical waste treatment99941218%Hospital/clinical waste
Sewage treatment (private)99941218%STP operation
Cleaning chemicals (phenyl etc.)340218%Goods — HSN rate
Disinfectant/pesticide380818%Goods — chemicals
Paper napkins/tissue481812%Washroom supplies

Frequently Asked Questions

We're a cleaning company providing services to both commercial clients and government (Swachh Bharat contracts). How to handle different GST treatments?
CLEANING COMPANY — DUAL CLIENTS (Commercial + Government): YOUR SITUATION: Commercial clients (offices, malls, IT parks): 18% GST. Government contracts (Swachh Bharat, municipal cleaning): potentially EXEMPT. GOVERNMENT EXEMPTION — WHEN DOES IT APPLY? Entry 3, Notification 12/2017 (as amended): Pure services (excluding works contract/goods supply) provided to: Central Government, State Government, Union Territory, Local Authority. For functions entrusted to: Panchayat (Article 243G) or Municipality (Article 243W). SPECIFIED FUNCTIONS include: Public health, sanitation, conservancy. Solid waste management. Water supply. Drainage. These are EXACT MATCH for cleaning/sanitation services. SO: Your Swachh Bharat contract to municipal corporation: EXEMPT (0% GST). Your office cleaning to Infosys: 18% GST. CONDITIONS FOR EXEMPTION: (1) PURE SERVICE: Only services — no goods component > 25%. If you supply cleaning materials + service: Goods (materials) < 25% of contract value → EXEMPT (composite — pure service dominant). Goods (materials) > 25% → NOT exempt (composite supply involving goods). Practical: most cleaning contracts — labour is 80%+ and materials 10-20% → EXEMPT. (2) TO GOVERNMENT/LOCAL AUTHORITY: Direct contract with government body. If sub-contracted (you work for another company who has government contract): You → Main contractor: 18% (your recipient is not government). Main contractor → Government: EXEMPT (their recipient is government). So: sub-contractors DO NOT get exemption (their supply is to the main contractor). (3) SPECIFIED FUNCTION: Must be sanitation, public health, solid waste management, water supply, drainage. General office cleaning for government office: DEBATED. Argument FOR exemption: cleaning government building = sanitation/conservancy. Argument AGAINST: it's facility management (not public sanitation function). SAFE VIEW: Municipal/public area cleaning → clearly EXEMPT. Government office/building cleaning → grey area (conservative: charge 18%). ITC IMPLICATIONS: CRITICAL: If you have BOTH exempt and taxable supplies: ITC REVERSAL required (Rule 42/43). Input ITC must be proportioned between: Taxable supplies (commercial — 18%): ITC available. Exempt supplies (government): ITC NOT available (reversed). Formula: Eligible ITC = Total ITC × (Taxable turnover ÷ Total turnover). Example: Total ITC: ₹5,00,000/year. Commercial revenue (taxable): ₹60,00,000. Government revenue (exempt): ₹40,00,000. Eligible: ₹5L × (₹60L ÷ ₹100L) = ₹3,00,000. Reversed: ₹2,00,000 (cannot claim). ACCOUNTING REQUIREMENTS: Maintain SEPARATE accounts for: Exempt supplies (government contracts). Taxable supplies (commercial contracts). Common inputs (shared between both). ITC reversal: compute every month in GSTR-3B. Annual reconciliation in GSTR-9. PRACTICAL TIPS: (1) If government contracts are small (< 20% of revenue): ITC reversal impact is minimal — simpler to manage. (2) If government contracts are large (> 50%): Consider: separate entity for government contracts (no ITC accumulation issue). Or: accept ITC reversal as cost of doing business. (3) INVOICE FORMAT: Government: invoice with 'Exempt under Notification 12/2017, Entry 3'. Commercial: invoice with 18% GST. (4) Tax on chemicals (supplied as part of service): Government contract (pure service): chemicals included → still EXEMPT (if < 25% of value). Commercial: chemicals part of composite service → 18% (service rate). (5) TDS BY GOVERNMENT: Even though supply is EXEMPT from GST: Government may deduct TDS at 2% (Section 51). Wait — if supply is EXEMPT, TDS doesn't apply (TDS only on taxable supplies). Confirm: exempt supplies → no GST TDS. But: income tax TDS (Section 194C — contractor) still applies (1-2%).
How should residential housing societies handle GST on housekeeping and cleaning contracts?
RESIDENTIAL WELFARE ASSOCIATION (RWA) — CLEANING GST: BACKGROUND: RWA collects monthly maintenance from members. Uses funds for: security, cleaning, maintenance, electricity, water, etc. RWA hires cleaning agency for common areas. GST FRAMEWORK FOR RWA: STEP 1 — RWA PAYING CLEANING AGENCY: Agency charges RWA: 18% GST on cleaning service. This is INWARD supply for RWA. Can RWA claim ITC? DEPENDS on Step 2 (RWA's output). STEP 2 — RWA CHARGING MEMBERS: Entry 77 of Notification 12/2017: RWA's supply to members: EXEMPT if: (a) Monthly contribution per member ≤ ₹7,500; AND (b) RWA is registered under Societies Act / Co-operative Act / similar. If BOTH conditions met: RWA → Members: EXEMPT (0% GST on maintenance). If monthly contribution > ₹7,500 per member: RWA → Members: 18% GST on FULL amount (not just excess over ₹7,500). ITC ANALYSIS: Case 1: Monthly maintenance ≤ ₹7,500 (EXEMPT output): RWA's output = EXEMPT. ITC on cleaning agency bill: REVERSED (cannot claim). The 18% paid to cleaning agency = COST to RWA. Members indirectly bear this cost (through higher maintenance). Case 2: Monthly maintenance > ₹7,500 (TAXABLE output — 18%): RWA's output = TAXABLE (18%). ITC on cleaning agency bill: AVAILABLE (can claim). The 18% paid to cleaning agency: offset against 18% charged to members. Net GST impact: NIL for RWA (pass-through). But: members pay 18% on top of maintenance (non-refundable for residential use). THRESHOLD — DOES RWA NEED TO REGISTER? RWA with aggregate turnover > ₹20 lakh: MUST register. Turnover = total maintenance collection from ALL members (annual). Example: 100 members × ₹5,000/month = ₹50,000/month × 12 = ₹60,00,000/year. This is > ₹20 lakh → RWA must register. But: if ALL members pay ≤ ₹7,500 → exempt supply → still register (for compliance) but no GST charged. If SOME members pay > ₹7,500: RWA charges GST to THOSE members only. ITC: proportionate (based on taxable vs exempt ratio). PRACTICAL SCENARIOS: Scenario A: Society with 200 flats, maintenance ₹4,000/member/month: Total: ₹4,000 × 200 × 12 = ₹96 lakh (> ₹20L — must register). But: ₹4,000 < ₹7,500 → EXEMPT supply to members. GST charged to members: ₹0. ITC on cleaning agency: BLOCKED (exempt output). Cleaning cost (₹2L/month + 18% = ₹2.36L): paid from maintenance fund (no ITC recovery). Scenario B: Luxury society, maintenance ₹15,000/member/month: ₹15,000 > ₹7,500 → TAXABLE at 18%. GST to members: 18% × ₹15,000 = ₹2,700/member/month. ITC on cleaning: AVAILABLE. Cleaning: ₹5L/month + ₹90K GST → RWA claims ₹90K ITC. Net: members pay more (18% maintenance) but RWA's costs are offset. Scenario C: Mixed (some flats high maintenance, some low): 2BHK: ₹5,000/month (< ₹7,500 → exempt). 3BHK: ₹8,000/month (> ₹7,500 → taxable at 18%). 4BHK penthouse: ₹12,000/month (> ₹7,500 → taxable at 18%). ITC: proportional (based on taxable member revenue vs total). Complex accounting but required by law. TIPS FOR RWA COMMITTEES: (1) Keep maintenance ≤ ₹7,500 if possible (exempt — saves 18% for members). (2) If > ₹7,500 unavoidable: maximize ITC claims on all inputs. (3) Sinking fund / corpus fund: NOT part of ₹7,500 calculation (one-time contribution, not monthly maintenance). (4) Non-member charges (rented flat — tenant maintenance): If billed to member (owner): same ₹7,500 rule. If billed directly to tenant (non-member): always 18% (Entry 77 only for members). (5) Parking charges (separate from maintenance): If separately billed: 18% (immovable property service). If included in maintenance: part of ₹7,500 calculation.
What is the GST treatment for manpower supply for housekeeping vs. cleaning service? When does RCM apply?
MANPOWER SUPPLY (HOUSEKEEPING) vs CLEANING SERVICE — RCM DISTINCTION: THIS IS THE MOST IMPORTANT DISTINCTION FOR HOUSEKEEPING CONTRACTS: CLEANING SERVICE (No RCM): Definition: Providing cleaning/housekeeping as a SERVICE (outcome-based). Contract says: 'Maintain cleanliness of premises to specified standards'. Agency controls: HOW the cleaning is done (methods, chemicals, equipment). Agency provides: staff + materials + equipment + supervision. Billing: per sq ft, per area, lump sum monthly. Client pays for: RESULT (clean premises). SAC: 998531 (cleaning services). GST: 18% — FORWARD CHARGE always (agency charges, agency pays). NO RCM regardless of supplier type (corporate or non-corporate). MANPOWER SUPPLY (RCM Possible): Definition: Providing PERSONS (inputs) to the client. Contract says: 'Deploy X number of housekeeping staff at client premises'. Client controls: HOW staff work (client supervises, gives instructions). Agency provides: ONLY people (client provides materials, equipment, supervision). Billing: per person per month/day. Client pays for: PEOPLE (not outcome). SAC: 998512 (temporary staffing/labour supply). GST: 18% — but RCM applies if supplier is NOT body corporate AND recipient IS registered. RCM TRIGGER — NOTIFICATION 13/2017 (Entry 14): 'Supply of security services (supply of security personnel)' and by extension supply of manpower. When supplier is: Individual, Proprietor, Partnership, HUF, Trust, AOP (NOT company/LLP). When recipient is: Registered person under GST. Then: Recipient pays 18% under RCM. HOW TO DETERMINE — CONTRACT ANALYSIS: RED FLAGS FOR MANPOWER SUPPLY (RCM risk): ❌ 'Provide 10 housekeeping boys for 3 shifts'. ❌ 'Deploy staff as per our requirement — we will supervise'. ❌ 'Replace staff if we find unsatisfactory'. ❌ Billing per-person per-shift. ❌ Client provides cleaning materials. ❌ Client's supervisor directs daily work. GREEN FLAGS FOR CLEANING SERVICE (No RCM): ✅ 'Maintain cleanliness of 50,000 sq ft to Grade A standard'. ✅ 'Agency shall use own chemicals and equipment'. ✅ 'Agency's supervisor shall ensure quality compliance'. ✅ Billing per sq ft or lump sum. ✅ Performance SLA with penalties for non-compliance. ✅ Agency decides number of staff needed. THE GREY AREA (Real-world): Most contracts have ELEMENTS OF BOTH: Agency provides staff but client also gives some direction. Agency's supervisor is present but client's FM manager oversees. Billing is partly per-person, partly per-area. In such cases: SUBSTANCE OVER FORM. What is the DOMINANT nature of the arrangement? If agency has significant control + accountability for outcomes: CLEANING SERVICE (no RCM). If client has primary control + agency just deploys bodies: MANPOWER SUPPLY (RCM possible). JUDICIAL/DEPARTMENTAL VIEWS: Courts have looked at: (1) Who has the right to control and supervise the workers? (2) Who provides tools and materials? (3) What is the basis of billing (outcome vs headcount)? (4) Can the client reject/replace specific individuals? If answers point to CLIENT having control: manpower supply. If answers point to AGENCY having control: service supply. PRACTICAL RECOMMENDATION: For cleaning/housekeeping agencies that are NOT body corporate: ALWAYS structure as SERVICE AGREEMENT: 'We provide cleaning service for your premises. We determine staffing, methods, materials.' This AVOIDS RCM complications entirely. Your recipient (corporate client) prefers this too: No RCM compliance burden (don't need to self-assess). Clean ITC claim on agency's forward charge invoice. For body corporate agencies (Pvt Ltd, LLP): Doesn't matter — no RCM either way (body corporate = always forward charge). Can use either service or manpower model. DOCUMENTATION CHECKLIST: (1) Contract title: 'Housekeeping Service Agreement' (not 'Manpower Supply'). (2) Scope: define areas/frequency/standards (not headcount). (3) Control: 'Agency shall supervise its own personnel'. (4) Materials: 'Agency shall provide all cleaning materials and equipment'. (5) Billing: per-area or lump sum (not per-person). (6) SLA: quality standards with measurement criteria. (7) Insurance: agency carries worker insurance (not client). These 7 points make it clearly a SERVICE — no RCM risk.
How should hospitals and schools handle GST on cleaning services since their output is exempt?
HOSPITALS & SCHOOLS — CLEANING GST (Exempt Output Entities): THE PROBLEM: Hospitals provide: healthcare services → EXEMPT (0% GST). Schools provide: educational services → EXEMPT (0% GST). Both need: cleaning services → PAY 18% GST to agency. Can they claim ITC? NO — because their output is EXEMPT. Section 17(2): ITC attributable to EXEMPT supplies → NOT available. IMPACT ON HOSPITALS: Cleaning agency charges hospital: ₹10,00,000/year + 18% GST = ₹1,80,000 GST. Hospital's output: healthcare (exempt). ITC available: ₹0 (must reverse any ITC claimed). The ₹1,80,000 GST: pure COST (added to hospital's operating expenses). This increases healthcare costs (passed to patients via higher fees). HOSPITAL — STRATEGIES TO MINIMIZE: (1) Employ own cleaning staff (no GST): In-house housekeeping team on hospital payroll. Salary: not a supply → no GST. Materials (chemicals, equipment): purchase at 18% — ITC BLOCKED (exempt output). But: no 18% on SERVICE component (which is the major portion). Savings: entire agency margin + 18% service GST avoided. (2) Composition dealer cleaning agency: If agency is on composition scheme (6%): Agency doesn't charge GST to hospital. But: agency can't issue tax invoice (hospital can't claim ITC anyway). Lower effective rate (6% composition tax embedded in price). Hospital negotiates lower price (no 18% GST markup). (3) Reduce contract value (legitimate — better pricing): Provide materials yourself (hospital buys chemicals — blocked ITC anyway). Agency charges only for labour (lower service value = lower GST base). Agency service: ₹7,00,000 (labour only) + 18% = ₹1,26,000 GST. Materials (hospital buys directly): ₹3,00,000 + 18% = ₹54,000 (blocked — cost). Total GST cost: ₹1,80,000 (same! — no real saving). ACTUALLY: reducing agency value doesn't help because all ITC is blocked. IMPACT ON SCHOOLS: Same as hospitals — educational institution with exempt output. Cleaning GST: pure cost (no ITC). Schools with TAXABLE activities: Coaching classes (commercial coaching — taxable at 18%). Hostel > ₹7,500/month (taxable). Skill development courses (some taxable). If school has BOTH exempt + taxable: Proportionate ITC on cleaning (Rule 42). Only the portion attributable to taxable output → ITC available. MIXED-USE HOSPITALS: Hospital with: Healthcare (exempt): 70% revenue. Pharmacy (5% GST on medicines sold): 10% revenue. Canteen (5% on food): 5% revenue. Room > ₹5,000/day (5% GST since 2022): 15% revenue. Taxable revenue: 30% of total. ITC on cleaning: 30% available, 70% reversed. Calculation: Cleaning GST paid: ₹1,80,000/year. Eligible ITC: 30% × ₹1,80,000 = ₹54,000. Reversed: ₹1,26,000 (cost). IT'S STILL MOSTLY A COST for hospitals. CHARITABLE TRUSTS / NGOs: Charitable hospital (Section 12AA/12AB registered trust): Same treatment — healthcare exempt → no ITC on cleaning. Charitable trust doing: Religious activities (exempt). Educational (exempt). No taxable output → 100% ITC reversal. GOVERNMENT HOSPITALS: Government hospital (not separate legal entity — part of government): Cleaning service TO government for public health function: EXEMPT (Entry 3, Notification 12/2017). So: agency providing cleaning to government hospital: 0% GST (exempt supply). But: agency providing to PRIVATE hospital: 18% GST. IMPORTANT DISTINCTION: Government hospital = exempt supply (agency charges 0%). Private hospital = taxable supply (agency charges 18%, hospital can't claim ITC). THIS IS WHY: Private hospitals' costs are higher than government (GST is one factor). RECOMMENDATIONS FOR EXEMPT ENTITIES: (1) In-house staff where possible (zero GST on employment). (2) For outsourced cleaning: negotiate pricing that factors in non-creditable GST. (3) If partially taxable: maintain proper records for proportionate ITC. (4) Consider: government entity partnerships (to access exempt supply). (5) Long-term: industry lobbying for exemption on healthcare/education inputs (ongoing demand at GST Council).

Cleaning & Housekeeping GST — Service vs Manpower, ITC & RWA

Laabam.One handles cleaning & housekeeping GST: service vs manpower supply classification (RCM avoidance), government contract exemptions, RWA ₹7,500 threshold optimization, pest control & waste management compliance, hospital/school ITC blocking, and multi-state facility management.

Explore GST Law