Legal & AdvocacyRCM on Advocate Services

GST on Legal Services — 18% RCM on Advocate, Court Fees Exempt

Complete GST guide for legal services: advocate services 18% (mandatory RCM for business recipients), law firm fees under reverse charge, senior advocate RCM, arbitration 18%, notary services, court fees exempt, stamp duty (not GST), company secretary/CA 18% forward charge, and advocate ITC accumulation strategies.

18%

Legal Consulting

18%

Advocate (RCM)

18%

Arbitration

18%

Notary Services

Exempt

Court Fees

Not GST

Stamp Duty

18%

Senior Advocate (RCM)

18%

Law Firm (Partnership)

Legal Services — GST Framework

Advocate Services — 18% GST (RCM Mandatory)

ADVOCATE SERVICES — REVERSE CHARGE MECHANISM (RCM): Notification 13/2017 (Central Tax Rate), Entry 2: Services supplied by an INDIVIDUAL ADVOCATE (including senior advocate) or PARTNERSHIP FIRM OF ADVOCATES: To ANY business entity (registered or unregistered business): RCM applies — recipient pays 18% GST. HOW RCM WORKS FOR LEGAL SERVICES: Advocate (individual or firm of advocates) → Business entity: Advocate bills: ₹5,00,000 (WITHOUT GST — RCM applies). Business entity pays: ₹5,00,000 to advocate. Business entity ALSO pays: 18% RCM = ₹90,000 (to government via GSTR-3B). Business entity claims: ₹90,000 ITC (same period — net zero). Advocate: NO GST liability (doesn't collect or pay GST on this supply). WHO IS 'INDIVIDUAL ADVOCATE'? Enrolled under Advocates Act, 1961. Has Bar Council enrollment certificate. Includes: (a) Junior advocate / practicing advocate. (b) Senior advocate (designated by High Court/Supreme Court). (c) Advocate-on-record (Supreme Court). Does NOT include: (a) In-house legal counsel (employee — not 'advocate' for this purpose). (b) Legal consultant without Bar enrollment. (c) Company secretary / chartered accountant doing legal work. WHO IS 'FIRM OF ADVOCATES'? Partnership firm where ALL partners are enrolled advocates. Law firm (partnership): e.g., AZB & Partners, Cyril Amarchand, Khaitan & Co. LLP of advocates: YES — included (firm of advocates). Company (Pvt Ltd/Ltd): NOT a 'firm of advocates' → forward charge applies. CRITICAL DISTINCTION: Law firm (partnership/LLP of advocates) → Business client: RCM. Legal consultancy company (Pvt Ltd) → Business client: Forward charge (company charges 18%). WHY? Notification specifically says 'individual advocate or firm of advocates' — not 'company providing legal services'. WHO IS 'BUSINESS ENTITY'? Any entity carrying on business: company, partnership, proprietorship, trust (in business), LLP. Business entity INCLUDES: registered AND unregistered businesses. NOT business entity: Individual receiving legal service in PERSONAL capacity (divorce, property dispute as individual). WHEN RCM DOES NOT APPLY (Forward charge): (a) Advocate → Individual (non-business): NO RCM. Advocate charges 18% on forward charge (if advocate above ₹20L). Or: exempt (if advocate below ₹20L threshold). (b) Legal company (Pvt Ltd) → Anyone: Forward charge always. Company charges 18%. No RCM. (c) Advocate → Advocate (one advocate paying another): Not a 'business entity' as recipient? Debatable. If recipient advocate is in business of legal practice: arguably 'business entity' → RCM. Practice: most advocate-to-advocate payments → RCM applied by recipient. SENIOR ADVOCATE — SPECIAL POSITION: Senior advocates (designated by court): Typically appear through briefing advocate (junior briefs senior). Senior advocate → Briefing advocate (individual advocate): Is briefing advocate a 'business entity'? YES (practicing law is business). RCM: briefing advocate pays RCM on senior's fee? Technically YES — but creates complexity. Briefing advocate → Client (business entity): RCM on total (including senior's fee component). In practice: Client pays RCM on total legal fee (inclusive of senior's involvement). EXEMPT LEGAL SERVICES (NO GST): Court fees: NOT a supply (sovereign function — not taxable). Stamp duty: NOT GST (separate state levy — outside GST). Process serving fees: NOT supply (court administrative). Legal aid (free legal service to poor): NOT supply (no consideration). Pro bono: NOT supply (no consideration → no GST). Government legal department: sovereign function (not supply — Schedule III).

Law Firms & Corporate Legal — 18% GST

LAW FIRM (Partnership/LLP) — 18% GST (RCM): Major law firms in India: AZB & Partners (partnership). Cyril Amarchand Mangaldas (LLP). Khaitan & Co (partnership). Shardul Amarchand Mangaldas (LLP). Trilegal (LLP). JSA (partnership). These are ALL 'firms of advocates' → RCM applies when billing business entities. WHAT LAW FIRMS BILL FOR: Retainer fees (monthly): 18% RCM. Matter-based fees (per case/transaction): 18% RCM. Success fees / contingency: 18% RCM. Consultation/opinion: 18% RCM. Due diligence: 18% RCM. Contract drafting/review: 18% RCM. M&A advisory: 18% RCM. IP filing/prosecution: 18% RCM. Litigation/arbitration representation: 18% RCM. Regulatory advisory: 18% RCM. ALL legal services by firm of advocates to business: RCM. CORPORATE LEGAL DEPARTMENT (In-house): In-house lawyers (employees): Salary: NOT supply (employer-employee — Schedule III). No GST on employment of in-house counsel. No RCM — they're your employees. Company paying external law firm: RCM on external firm's fee. ITC: available to company (business input). LEGAL PROCESS OUTSOURCING (LPO): Indian LPO company doing document review for US law firm: This is a COMPANY (not firm of advocates). Forward charge: 18% (company charges). If export (service to US): zero-rated (LUT). LPO is NOT 'legal service by advocate' — it's IT/business process service. SAC: 998211 (legal advisory) or 998599 (business support). LEGAL TECH COMPANIES: LegalZoom, VakilSearch, IndiaFilings, ClearTax (legal section): These are COMPANIES (not firms of advocates). They provide: company registration, trademark filing, compliance services. Forward charge: 18% (not RCM — they're companies). Services: company incorporation (18%), trademark (18%), GST filing (18%). Customer: pays 18% directly to these companies. ITC: available (business input). FOREIGN LAW FIRMS (International): Foreign law firm advising Indian company: Import of service → RCM under Section 5(3) IGST Act. Indian company pays: fee + 18% IGST under RCM. ITC: available to Indian company. Foreign law firm (e.g., Clifford Chance, Linklaters): Not enrolled in Indian Bar → not 'individual advocate or firm of advocates'. RCM applies ANYWAY — import of service RCM (separate provision). So: foreign legal = RCM (import of service notification, not advocate notification). RETAINER AGREEMENTS: Monthly retainer (fixed fee — access to legal advice): Supply: continuous supply of service. Time of supply: date of invoice or payment (whichever earlier). If quarterly advance: time of supply = payment date (advance received). GSTR-3B: report in month of payment/invoice. RCM: recipient reports in 3.1(d) + claims ITC in 4(A)(3). CONTINGENCY / SUCCESS FEES: Advocate charges based on outcome (win = ₹10L, lose = ₹0): Supply: occurs when consideration is determinable. If case won → fee earned → time of supply = when fee becomes payable. RCM: recipient pays when invoiced/paid (not when case filed). Conditional fees: GST only when fee actually becomes payable. TRIBUNAL / QUASI-JUDICIAL: Advocate appearing before NCLT, ITAT, CESTAT, SAT, RERA: Same treatment: 18% RCM (it's still legal representation). Appearance before regulatory bodies (SEBI, RBI, CCI): 18% RCM. Arbitration representation: 18% RCM. All advocacy/legal representation: 18% RCM (regardless of forum).

Arbitration, Mediation & ADR — 18% GST

ARBITRATION — 18%: Arbitrator's fee: 18% (SAC 998211). Institutional arbitration fee (SIAC, ICC, LCIA, MCIA): 18%. Ad-hoc arbitration: 18%. Domestic arbitration: 18%. International commercial arbitration (seated in India): 18%. Arbitration venue/hearing room rental: 18%. Expert witness fees in arbitration: 18%. Stenographer/transcription for arbitration: 18%. ALL arbitration services: 18%. ARBITRATOR — RCM vs FORWARD CHARGE: If arbitrator is an INDIVIDUAL ADVOCATE (enrolled in Bar): RCM applies (advocate providing legal service to business entity). If arbitrator is retired JUDGE (not enrolled advocate): Is it RCM? Notification says 'individual advocate'. Retired judge as arbitrator: NOT an advocate (unless they re-enroll). Result: Forward charge (retired judge charges 18% if above ₹20L). If arbitrator is a NON-ADVOCATE PROFESSIONAL (CA, engineer as technical arbitrator): Forward charge (they're not 'advocates'). Charge 18% if registered. If arbitrator is ADVOCATE + ARBITRATOR (dual role): If providing service QUA advocate (legal representation): RCM. If appointed AS ARBITRATOR (quasi-judicial role): Debatable. Dominant view: arbitrator acting in quasi-judicial capacity ≠ advocate service. Some argue: if advocate is arbitrator, it's still legal service → RCM. SAFE APPROACH: If arbitrator is enrolled advocate → apply RCM (conservative). INSTITUTIONAL ARBITRATION BODIES: SIAC (Singapore International Arbitration Centre): If seated in Singapore: import of service → RCM (IGST). ICC (International Chamber of Commerce, Paris): Import → RCM (IGST). MCIA (Mumbai Centre for International Arbitration): Domestic → if body corporate: forward charge 18%. If entity of advocates: check notification. LCIA (London Court): Import → RCM. Administrative fee + arbitrator fee: both taxable. Institutions usually: register and charge GST (if Indian entity) or trigger RCM (if foreign). MEDIATION & CONCILIATION — 18%: Mediator's fee: 18%. Conciliator's fee: 18%. Lok Adalat (government — court-annexed): EXEMPT (government judicial function). Court-annexed mediation: EXEMPT (court function — no supply). Private mediation: 18% (if mediator is above threshold). Community mediation: typically below threshold (exempt). ALTERNATIVE DISPUTE RESOLUTION (ADR): Negotiation services: 18%. Expert determination: 18%. Dispute resolution board (construction): 18%. Online dispute resolution (ODR): 18%. All ADR mechanisms (private): 18%. EMERGENCY ARBITRATION: Emergency arbitrator fee: 18%. Expedited arbitration: 18%. Interim measures application: part of arbitration — 18%. INTERNATIONAL ARBITRATION (India-seated): Foreign party participating in India-seated arbitration: Arbitration service consumed in India (seat in India). If arbitrator is Indian: domestic supply. If arbitrator is foreign (appointed in India-seated arbitration): Import of service: RCM (IGST). Indian party (claimant/respondent): pays RCM on foreign arbitrator's fee. Foreign party: not required to register in India (below de minimis or not fixed establishment). ARBITRATION COSTS (Allocation): Tribunal awards costs to winning party: Cost allocation: NOT a supply (it's restitution/damages). The winning party receiving cost award: not providing service. No GST on cost reimbursement ordered by tribunal. But: each party pays GST on their own legal costs (RCM on their own advocate).

Notary, Documentation & Stamp Duty — Mixed Treatment

NOTARY SERVICES — 18%: Notarization of documents: 18% (SAC 998211). Affidavit attestation: 18%. Power of attorney notarization: 18%. Agreement attestation: 18%. Oath administration: 18%. Copy certification: 18%. Signature verification: 18%. Apostille assistance: 18% (the service — apostille fee itself is government). ALL notary services by private notary: 18%. NOTARY — RCM QUESTION: Notary is typically an ADVOCATE (many notaries are enrolled advocates). If notary is enrolled advocate: RCM (advocate to business entity). If notary is NOT enrolled advocate (appointed under Notaries Act only): Forward charge at 18% (not covered by advocate RCM notification). CHECK: Is your notary also a practicing advocate? YES → RCM on their fee. NO → Forward charge (they bill 18% to you). STAMP DUTY — NOT GST: Stamp duty: levied under Indian Stamp Act, 1899 (state legislation). It is NOT a tax under GST regime. Stamp duty: OUTSIDE GST (specifically excluded). States continue to levy stamp duty post-GST. NO INPUT CREDIT on stamp duty (it's not GST — can't be ITC). Examples: Property registration stamp duty: NOT GST (state levy). Share transfer stamp duty: NOT GST. Agreement stamp paper: NOT GST. Stamp duty on LLP deed: NOT GST. Stamp duty on insurance policies: NOT GST. COURT FEES — EXEMPT: Court fee (filing fee for suits, appeals): NOT a taxable supply. It's a SOVEREIGN function (access to justice). NOT subject to GST — government performing judicial function. Similarly: Tribunal filing fees (NCLT, ITAT, NCLAT): NOT GST. Arbitration filing fee (if through court): NOT GST. But: private arbitration institution's filing fee: 18% (commercial service). REGISTRATION CHARGES: Property registration (sub-registrar): Government fee → NOT GST. Registration of: company (MCA fee): NOT GST (government fee). Registration of: trademark (TM office fee): NOT GST. But: SERVICE of getting registration done (agent/consultant): Agent/CA/lawyer who helps file: 18% (professional service). Their service: 18%. Government fee they pay on your behalf: NOT taxable (reimbursement). DOCUMENTATION SERVICES — 18%: Document drafting: 18% (if by advocate → RCM; if by company → forward). Agreement preparation: 18%. Will drafting: 18%. Trust deed: 18%. Partnership deed: 18%. MOU/NDA: 18%. Legal opinion: 18%. Due diligence report: 18%. Legal notice drafting: 18%. ALL documentation/drafting services: 18%. FRANKING — NOT GST: Franking of agreements (stamp duty payment via franking machine): Franking is payment of STAMP DUTY (not GST). Franking agent commission: 18% (service of facilitating stamp duty payment). But stamp duty amount: NOT GST. E-STAMPING: E-stamp certificate: stamp duty (NOT GST). Stock Holding Corporation (SHCIL) providing e-stamping service: Service charge: 18% (SHCIL's facilitation service). Stamp duty value: NOT GST (pass-through).

Company Secretary, Patent Agent & Other Legal — 18%

COMPANY SECRETARY (CS) SERVICES — 18% (Forward Charge): Company secretary: NOT an advocate (unless dual-qualified). CS services: always FORWARD CHARGE at 18% (not RCM). Annual compliance: 18%. Board meeting secretarial: 18%. ROC filings: 18%. XBRL filing: 18%. Corporate governance advisory: 18%. Due diligence (CS): 18%. Merger/demerger compliance: 18%. NCLT petitions (if filed by CS): 18%. CS practices: Forward charge. CS in employment: Not supply (Schedule III). CHARTERED ACCOUNTANT (CA) — LEGAL OVERLAP: CA providing tax advisory: 18% forward charge. CA representing before ITAT/GST tribunal: 18% forward charge. CA is NOT an advocate → no RCM even when doing quasi-legal work. Tax consultation: 18%. Transfer pricing: 18%. Tax litigation support: 18%. Assessment representation: 18%. CA services: ALWAYS forward charge. PATENT / TRADEMARK AGENT — 18%: Patent agent services: 18% (SAC 998211). Trademark agent services: 18%. Design registration: 18%. Copyright registration: 18%. IP licensing advisory: 18%. Patent prosecution: 18%. Freedom-to-operate analysis: 18%. IP valuation: 18%. If patent agent is ALSO enrolled advocate: RCM may apply. If only patent agent (not advocate): forward charge. MOST patent agents: not enrolled advocates → forward charge. INSOLVENCY PROFESSIONAL (IP): Resolution professional fee (NCLT proceedings): 18%. Insolvency resolution services: 18%. Liquidation services: 18%. Interim resolution professional: 18%. IBBI-registered IP: forward charge (not 'advocate'). Even if IP is also advocate: service is insolvency (not advocacy) → forward charge. REGISTERED VALUERS: Valuation for NCLT/merger: 18%. Property valuation: 18%. Business valuation: 18%. Share valuation: 18%. IBBI-registered valuer: forward charge. Not RCM (not advocate service). COST ACCOUNTANT (CMA): Cost audit: 18%. Transfer pricing (CMA): 18%. Costing consultation: 18%. All forward charge (CMA is not advocate). FORENSIC AUDITOR / INVESTIGATOR: Forensic audit: 18%. Fraud investigation: 18%. Digital forensics: 18%. Expert witness testimony: 18%. All forward charge. COMPLIANCE OFFICERS / CONSULTANTS: Regulatory compliance service: 18%. SEBI compliance: 18%. RBI compliance: 18%. FEMA advisory: 18%. ESG compliance: 18%. Data protection (DPDP Act) compliance: 18%. ALL professional/consulting services: 18% forward charge (unless by enrolled advocate → RCM).

Legal Services — ITC, Compliance & Special Cases

RECIPIENT COMPLIANCE — RCM ON LEGAL: For business entity receiving advocate services under RCM: (1) Receive invoice from advocate (WITHOUT GST). Note: advocate may or may not issue GST invoice. Self-invoicing NOT mandatory for advocate RCM (unlike some other RCM categories). But: maintain record of payment + purpose. (2) Self-assess: 18% GST on advocate's fee in GSTR-3B. Table 3.1(d): inward supplies liable to RCM. (3) Pay: through Electronic Cash Ledger (cannot use ITC balance). (4) Claim ITC: Table 4(A)(3) — inward supplies under RCM. Available in same period. (5) Net effect: ZERO (pay ₹90K RCM, claim ₹90K ITC). Why bother? Compliance requirement — non-payment = interest + penalty. (6) GSTR-2B: may show (if advocate has filed GSTR-1 showing RCM supply). But: many advocates don't file GSTR-1 properly. Your ITC: NOT dependent on advocate's filing (self-assessed RCM). ADVOCATE's COMPLIANCE: Individual advocate earning < ₹20 lakh: NO GST registration required. No GST return filing. Why? Their supplies are all under RCM (recipient pays — not advocate). Turnover threshold: computed on advocate's total supply value (even though recipient pays tax). If advocate earns > ₹20 lakh: Should register (technically). But: still doesn't collect GST (all under RCM). Purpose of registration: compliance, ITC on own inputs, professional requirement. ADVOCATE's ITC: Advocate (if registered) can claim ITC on: Office rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Books/journals: 12% → ITC ✓. Computer/laptop: 18% → ITC ✓. Internet/phone: 18% → ITC ✓. Stationery: 12-18% → ITC ✓. Legal database (SCC Online, Manupatra): 18% → ITC ✓. Travel (domestic air): ITC ✓ (business travel). Hotel (for court hearings): ITC ✓ (if business purpose). But: advocate's OUTPUT is under RCM (they don't collect tax). ITC can be used: for other taxable supplies (if any). Or: accumulated (can't use if no forward charge output). This creates ITC accumulation issue for advocates. SOLUTION: Some advocates also provide: Training/seminar (forward charge): use ITC. Publication/book royalty (forward charge): use ITC. If purely advocate service (all RCM): ITC accumulates with no use → apply for refund (inverted duty). LEGAL + NON-LEGAL (Combined invoice): Law firm providing: legal advice (RCM) + office space (forward charge) + paralegal (forward charge): Each component: classified separately. Legal component: RCM. Office space/paralegal: forward charge by firm. But: if single composite supply (legal is principal): ENTIRE supply: RCM (principal supply determines treatment). PRACTICAL: Most law firms bill single invoice (legal service) → all under RCM. Don't bifurcate unless clearly separate services contracted separately. SPECIAL CASES: (1) LEGAL AID (Government scheme): Advocate providing free legal aid under NALSA: No consideration → NOT a supply → no GST. Government pays stipend to legal aid advocate: Is stipend 'consideration for supply'? Debated. If treated as consideration: RCM (government is business entity). If treated as honorarium (not consideration): no GST. (2) COURT-APPOINTED ADVOCATE: Court appoints advocate for accused (criminal cases): Fee paid by: state/court. Is state a 'business entity'? Debated (sovereign function vs entity in law). Conservative view: RCM by state (government is entity). Liberal view: judicial function → not taxable supply. (3) INTERNATIONAL LEGAL FEES: Indian company pays UK law firm (Clifford Chance): Import of service → RCM under Section 5(3) IGST Act. Rate: 18% IGST. ITC: available to Indian company. Different from domestic advocate RCM — this is import RCM. Both result in: recipient paying 18% + claiming ITC. (4) ARBITRATION IN INDIA (Foreign seat): If arbitration seat is OUTSIDE India but hearings in India: Arbitrator's fee: import of service (if arbitrator is based abroad). Indian party: RCM (IGST) on foreign arbitrator's fee. Domestic venue charges: domestic 18% (hearing room, stenographer).

Legal Services — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Advocate services (to business)99821118% RCMRecipient pays under RCM
Senior advocate fee99821118% RCMSame RCM as other advocates
Law firm (partnership/LLP)99821118% RCMFirm of advocates → RCM
Legal company (Pvt Ltd)99821118%Forward charge — no RCM
Arbitration services99821118%RCM if advocate-arbitrator
Notary services99821118%RCM if advocate-notary
Company secretary99821118%Always forward charge
Patent/trademark agent99821118%Forward charge (not advocate)
Court feesExemptSovereign/judicial function
Stamp dutyNot GSTState levy — outside GST
Legal aid (free)No GSTNo consideration — not supply
Foreign law firm (import)99821118% RCMImport of service — IGST

Frequently Asked Questions

We hire both individual advocates and a law firm (LLP). When exactly does RCM apply and when doesn't it?
RCM ON LEGAL SERVICES — COMPLETE DECISION TREE: STEP 1: WHO is providing the legal service? (A) Individual advocate (enrolled under Advocates Act 1961): → Proceed to Step 2. (B) Partnership firm of advocates (all partners are advocates): → Proceed to Step 2. (C) LLP of advocates (all designated partners/partners are advocates): → Proceed to Step 2 (LLP is treated as 'firm of advocates'). (D) Company (Pvt Ltd / Ltd / OPC) providing legal services: → FORWARD CHARGE. Company charges 18%. No RCM. Example: LegalZoom India Pvt Ltd, VakilSearch Pvt Ltd. (E) Legal consultant NOT enrolled as advocate: → FORWARD CHARGE. They charge 18%. No RCM. Not an 'advocate' under the notification. (F) Chartered Accountant / Company Secretary / Cost Accountant: → FORWARD CHARGE. Not advocates. Even if doing quasi-legal work. STEP 2: WHO is receiving the legal service? (A) Business entity (any form — company, partnership, proprietorship, trust in business, LLP, HUF in business): → RCM APPLIES. Recipient pays 18% under reverse charge. (B) Individual in PERSONAL capacity (not as business): Example: Individual getting divorce advice, will drafting for personal estate. → NO RCM. Advocate charges forward (if above ₹20L threshold). Or: exempt (below threshold). (C) Advocate receiving from another advocate: If recipient advocate is 'in business of law' → business entity → RCM. Example: Junior advocate hiring senior advocate for a case → RCM. STEP 3: What is the NATURE of service? (A) Legal advisory/consultation: RCM ✓ (if advocate to business). (B) Litigation representation: RCM ✓. (C) Drafting/documentation: RCM ✓. (D) Arbitration (if advocate acting as arbitrator): Debatable. Conservative: RCM ✓ (advocate providing service). Liberal: arbitrator is quasi-judicial, not advocate service. Safe approach: apply RCM if person is enrolled advocate. (E) Non-legal services by advocate (teaching, writing book): NOT legal service → RCM may not apply. If advocate provides training seminar: not 'legal service to business entity'. Forward charge by advocate. But: if training is on legal topics to a company: grey area. DECISION MATRIX: | Supplier | Recipient | RCM? | |----------|-----------|------| | Individual advocate | Company (business) | YES — RCM | | Individual advocate | Individual (personal) | NO — Forward charge | | Law firm (partnership) | Company | YES — RCM | | Law firm (LLP) | Company | YES — RCM | | Legal company (Pvt Ltd) | Company | NO — Forward charge | | CS/CA/CMA | Company | NO — Forward charge | | Foreign law firm | Indian company | YES — Import RCM (separate notification) | | Advocate | Government dept | YES — RCM (govt is business entity) | | Advocate | Another advocate (in practice) | YES — RCM (advocate is business entity) | YOUR SITUATION (Individual advocates + Law firm LLP): Both: RCM applies (you're a business entity receiving from advocates/firm of advocates). Your compliance: (1) Receive invoices without GST. (2) Self-assess 18% on each payment. (3) Report in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d). (4) Pay through cash ledger. (5) Claim ITC in Table 4(A)(3). (6) Net: zero (timing difference only). WHAT IF ADVOCATE IS BELOW ₹20L THRESHOLD? Even if advocate's turnover is below ₹20 lakh: RCM STILL APPLIES. There's no threshold exemption for RCM supplies. The notification covers ALL advocates regardless of their turnover. Advocate below ₹20L: not required to register (no compliance for them). But: YOUR obligation (recipient) to pay RCM: EXISTS regardless. You self-assess 18% whether advocate is registered or not. You don't need advocate's GSTIN to pay RCM. (Self-assessed — based on your payment records.)
Our company pays legal fees to advocates and also stamp duty, court fees, and government charges. What is the GST treatment of each?
LEGAL EXPENSES BREAKDOWN — GST TREATMENT: COMPONENT 1 — ADVOCATE FEES: Fee for legal opinion/consultation: 18% RCM ✓. Fee for litigation/representation: 18% RCM ✓. Fee for drafting agreements: 18% RCM ✓. Retainer fee (monthly fixed): 18% RCM ✓. Success fee / contingency: 18% RCM ✓ (when payable). Travel reimbursement to advocate: 18% RCM ✓ (part of consideration for service). Photocopying charges by advocate: 18% RCM ✓ (incidental to legal service). Typing/clerical charges by advocate's office: 18% RCM ✓. ALL payments to advocate for/related to legal service: 18% RCM. COMPONENT 2 — COURT FEES: Filing fee for civil suit: NOT GST (sovereign function — access to justice). Appeal filing fee: NOT GST. Certified copy fee (court): NOT GST. Process fee: NOT GST. Court stamp: NOT GST (court administrative). Caveat filing fee: NOT GST. These are GOVERNMENT FEES for judicial function — OUTSIDE GST. No ITC available (no GST charged). Expense: treated as non-GST cost in books. COMPONENT 3 — STAMP DUTY: Stamp duty on agreement: NOT GST (Indian Stamp Act — state levy). E-stamp certificate: stamp duty (NOT GST). Franking charges (stamp duty portion): NOT GST. Registration fee (sub-registrar): NOT GST (government fee). These are STATE LEVIES — EXCLUDED from GST by Constitutional design. No ITC. No refund possible. Pure cost to company. COMPONENT 4 — GOVERNMENT FEES (Various): MCA fees (company incorporation, annual filing): NOT GST. Trademark filing fee (TM office): NOT GST. Patent filing fee (IPO): NOT GST. NCLT filing fee: NOT GST. SEBI registration fee: NOT GST. RBI application fee: NOT GST. ALL government/regulatory filing fees: NOT GST. These are sovereign/regulatory functions — outside scope. COMPONENT 5 — THIRD-PARTY SERVICES (Through advocate): Advocate bills you for: (a) Advocate's own fee: 18% RCM. (b) Stenographer charges (paid by advocate for you): PART OF advocate's service? If incidental to legal service: composite → 18% RCM on total. If separately contracted by you: separate supply (stenographer charges 18% forward). (c) Expert witness fee (paid through advocate): If advocate pays as your agent: your RCM on expert's fee? NO — expert is not advocate. Expert's fee: separate 18% forward charge (expert to you). If advocate includes in single bill: composite → 18% RCM (legal service is principal). PRACTICAL: Most advocates bill SINGLE invoice (all-inclusive of expenses). Your treatment: 18% RCM on total billed amount (including reimbursements). Don't bifurcate advocate's invoice into components. COMPONENT 6 — ARBITRATION COSTS: Institutional arbitration fee (MCIA, ICC India): 18% (forward charge — institution is not 'firm of advocates'). Arbitrator's fee (if advocate): 18% RCM. Venue charges: 18% (forward charge — venue provider). Transcription: 18% (forward charge). Each component: assessed separately for RCM vs forward charge. SUMMARY TABLE: | Expense Type | GST Treatment | ITC? | |---|---|---| | Advocate fee | 18% RCM (self-assessed) | YES (claim in same period) | | Law firm fee | 18% RCM | YES | | Court filing fee | NOT GST | NO | | Stamp duty | NOT GST (state levy) | NO | | Sub-registrar registration | NOT GST (govt fee) | NO | | MCA/regulatory fees | NOT GST | NO | | Company secretary service | 18% forward | YES | | Arbitration (institution) | 18% forward | YES | | Expert witness (non-advocate) | 18% forward | YES | | Legal tech platform (company) | 18% forward | YES | BOOKING IN ACCOUNTS: GST expenses: book NET of ITC (cost = fee only, ITC recovered). Non-GST expenses (court fee, stamp duty): book at FULL cost. For RCM: Dr. Legal expense A/c: ₹5,00,000 (advocate fee). Dr. GST RCM receivable: ₹90,000. Cr. Bank: ₹5,00,000 (paid to advocate). Cr. GST RCM payable: ₹90,000 (to government). Then: ₹90,000 ITC claimed → offsets output GST. Net cost: ₹5,00,000 (advocate fee only — GST is wash).
We are a law firm (LLP). Do we need to register for GST? Can we claim ITC on our inputs?
LAW FIRM (LLP) — GST REGISTRATION & ITC: DO YOU NEED TO REGISTER? Technically: If aggregate turnover > ₹20 lakh: mandatory registration. BUT: Your entire output is under RCM (recipient pays). You DON'T collect GST. Should you still register? ARGUMENTS FOR REGISTRATION (Recommended): (1) Professional compliance: Shows good governance. (2) ITC CLAIMS: Can claim ITC on inputs (only if registered). (3) Interstate supplies: Technically need registration if supplying interstate. (4) Client requirement: Some corporate clients insist on GSTIN (for their records). (5) E-invoicing: May become mandatory for your turnover bracket. ARGUMENTS AGAINST REGISTRATION: (1) No output tax: You don't collect GST (all RCM — recipient pays). (2) ITC accumulation: If no forward charge output, ITC accumulates with no use. (3) Compliance burden: GSTR-1, GSTR-3B monthly/quarterly filing. (4) Audit: GST audit if turnover > ₹5 crore. RECOMMENDATION: REGISTER (benefits outweigh burden). ITC FRAMEWORK FOR LAW FIRMS: AVAILABLE ITC (if registered): Office rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Law library (books, journals): 12% → ITC ✓. Legal databases (SCC Online, Manupatra, Lexis): 18% → ITC ✓. Computer/laptop: 18% → ITC ✓. Office furniture: 18% → ITC ✓. Printer/scanner: 18% → ITC ✓. Internet/broadband: 18% → ITC ✓. Mobile phone bills (business): 18% → ITC ✓. Stationery: 12-18% → ITC ✓. Courier services: 18% → ITC ✓. Domestic air travel: ITC ✓ (business travel). Hotel accommodation (for court/client meetings): ITC ✓. Professional indemnity insurance: 18% → ITC ✓. Conference/seminar (if organizer charges GST): ITC ✓. Training (employees/associates): ITC ✓. Recruitment agency: 18% → ITC ✓. BLOCKED ITC: Motor vehicles (cars for partners): BLOCKED (Section 17(5)). Food & beverages (client entertainment): BLOCKED. Personal consumption items: BLOCKED. Club memberships: BLOCKED. THE ITC ACCUMULATION PROBLEM: Scenario: Your firm earns ₹5 crore/year (all under RCM — clients pay GST). Your inputs: ₹50 lakh with 18% GST = ₹9 lakh ITC. Output GST collected by you: ₹0 (all under RCM). ITC balance: ₹9 lakh (accumulates year after year). Can you use this ITC? ONLY if you have FORWARD CHARGE output: (a) Services to individuals (personal capacity): Forward charge (you collect 18%). If divorce client, personal will, etc.: you charge 18%. ITC used against this output. (b) Training/seminar income: Forward charge (18%). If firm conducts training programs (non-legal or to individuals): forward charge. (c) Publication income: Forward charge. Book royalties, article fees: forward charge. (d) Renting space (sub-let portion of office): Forward charge at 18%. HOW MOST LAW FIRMS HANDLE: If NO forward charge supply: ITC accumulates → cannot use. Can you claim REFUND of accumulated ITC? Section 54(3): Refund of ITC on account of inverted duty structure. Your output: ZERO rated? NO — it's RCM (not zero-rated). Inverted duty: means input rate > output rate. Your output rate: effectively 0% (you don't pay — recipient pays). Is this 'inverted duty'? DEBATED. Some tribunals: allowed refund (treating RCM output as 'nil' rated for refund purpose). Department: often resists (argues it's not 'nil rated' — it's RCM). CURRENT POSITION: Law firms with pure RCM output → ITC accumulation with limited use. Unless: some forward charge revenue exists (individual clients, training, rent). PRACTICAL STRATEGIES: (1) Register: claim ITC on all inputs. (2) Ensure SOME forward charge output (individual clients, consulting to non-business, training). (3) Use accumulated ITC against any forward charge output. (4) If substantial accumulation: explore refund route (may require litigation). (5) Consider: at least ₹10-20 lakh forward charge output annually (individual clients) to absorb ITC. (6) Track ITC utilization in electronic credit ledger carefully. GSTR-1 REPORTING: Even though output is RCM (recipient pays): Report in GSTR-1: Table 4B (taxable outward supplies — under reverse charge). This is reporting only — you don't pay output tax. Recipient uses your GSTR-1 data for their GSTR-2B auto-population. If you DON'T file GSTR-1: Your clients may face ITC issues (their claim may be questioned). So: FILE GSTR-1 properly (even though you don't collect tax). PARTNERSHIP DISTRIBUTION: Partners draw income from firm: Partner's share of profit: NOT supply (partner income from firm). No GST on partner's profit share. But: if partner provides service TO firm (as consultant separately): that's separate supply. Remuneration/salary to partner: DEBATED. If guaranteed payment (Section 40(b) Income Tax): Some argue: it's consideration for service. Department view (in some cases): partner remuneration = supply → GST. Supreme Court (likely): partnership profit ≠ supply (mutual agency — Schedule III overlap). CURRENT SAFE VIEW: Partner profit/remuneration in legal firm: NOT supply (mutual arrangement within partnership). No GST on partner draws/profit share.
How is GST handled when our advocate charges include travel, hotel, and out-of-pocket expenses?
ADVOCATE'S REIMBURSABLE EXPENSES — GST TREATMENT: SCENARIO: Your advocate bills: Professional fee: ₹3,00,000. Travel (flight): ₹25,000. Hotel: ₹15,000. Printing/photocopying: ₹5,000. Court fee (paid by advocate on your behalf): ₹10,000. Total invoice: ₹3,55,000. GST TREATMENT — COMPONENT WISE: RULE: All components that form CONSIDERATION for the advocate's service are part of taxable value under RCM. Section 15(2)(c): Incidental expenses charged by supplier → included in value of supply. Advocate charges travel/hotel AS PART OF legal engagement: These are INCIDENTAL to the legal service. Included in value for RCM calculation. COMPONENT 1 — Professional Fee (₹3,00,000): Part of taxable value: YES. RCM: 18% on ₹3,00,000 = ₹54,000. COMPONENT 2 — Travel (₹25,000): Part of taxable value: YES (incidental expense — Section 15(2)(c)). RCM: included in total for 18% calculation. This is NOT a separate supply of transport service — it's REIMBURSEMENT. Even though advocate may pass through at cost: still part of legal service value. COMPONENT 3 — Hotel (₹15,000): Part of taxable value: YES (same as travel). RCM: included in total. COMPONENT 4 — Printing/Photocopying (₹5,000): Part of taxable value: YES (incidental to legal work). RCM: included. COMPONENT 5 — Court Fee (₹10,000): THIS IS DIFFERENT. Court fee: payment to GOVERNMENT (not to advocate). If advocate pays court fee ON YOUR BEHALF: Pure agent argument possible: advocate is paying government fee as your agent. If PURE AGENT (Rule 33): Court fee EXCLUDED from taxable value. Conditions: (1) You authorize advocate to pay court fee on your behalf. (2) Court fee is separately shown on invoice. (3) Advocate passes at actual amount (no markup). (4) Payment is to government (sovereign — not supply). If all met: court fee EXCLUDED from RCM value. CALCULATION: With pure agent (court fee excluded): Taxable value: ₹3,00,000 + ₹25,000 + ₹15,000 + ₹5,000 = ₹3,45,000. RCM: 18% × ₹3,45,000 = ₹62,100. Court fee (pure agent): ₹10,000 (reimbursement — no GST). Total payment: ₹3,45,000 + ₹62,100 (RCM) + ₹10,000 = ₹4,17,100. Without pure agent (everything included): Taxable value: ₹3,55,000 (full invoice). RCM: 18% × ₹3,55,000 = ₹63,900. Difference: ₹1,800 (minimal). PRACTICAL: Most companies: apply RCM on FULL invoice amount (including court fee). Reason: (a) Simpler (b) ITC available anyway (net zero). (c) Avoids documentation burden of pure agent. (d) Court fee is usually small relative to total. TRAVEL/HOTEL — CAN YOU BOOK DIRECTLY INSTEAD? Yes. If you book advocate's travel yourself: Flight ticket in YOUR name: your expense (ITC on air travel available to you directly). Hotel in YOUR name: your expense (ITC on hotel available). Advocate's fee (only professional): ₹3,00,000 → RCM 18% = ₹54,000. Your ITC: Flight: ₹25,000 × 5% = ₹1,250 (economy) or 18% (business). Hotel: ₹15,000 × 12% = ₹1,800. RCM ITC: ₹54,000. Total ITC: ₹57,050. If advocate bills everything (inclusive): RCM: 18% × ₹3,45,000 = ₹62,100 (ITC). Which is better? Advocate bills all: ₹62,100 ITC (all at 18% rate). You book travel/hotel: ₹54,000 + ₹1,250 + ₹1,800 = ₹57,050 ITC. Actually: advocate billing everything gives MORE ITC (because travel/hotel gets 18% RCM rate vs actual lower rates). COUNTER-INTUITIVE: Letting advocate include travel gives you HIGHER ITC. Because: RCM applies 18% on entire amount (including ₹25K travel that was actually 5%). You get 18% ITC on travel component (vs 5% if you booked directly). IS THIS LEGITIMATE? YES. Section 15(2)(c) clearly includes incidental expenses in value. RCM at 18% on total: correct legal position. Your ITC at 18% on total: correct (you paid 18% RCM). No abuse — this is how the law works. ADVOCATE'S ITC ON TRAVEL: Advocate (if registered) books flight: ITC available to advocate. But: advocate can't use ITC (output is RCM — no output tax). If advocate claims ITC and passes through at cost: That's advocate's benefit (or problem — ITC accumulates). For YOU: doesn't matter. Your RCM is on what advocate CHARGES you. DOCUMENTATION REQUIRED: (1) Advocate's invoice (showing fee + expenses — breakdown). (2) Your payment record (bank transfer). (3) GSTR-3B entry (Table 3.1(d) — total value under RCM). (4) ITC claim (Table 4(A)(3) — same amount). (5) No need for: advocate's GSTIN (they may not be registered). Your ITC is self-assessed — based on your own records.

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Laabam.One handles legal services GST: RCM determination (advocate vs company), law firm partnership/LLP reverse charge, senior advocate fee treatment, arbitrator classification, court fee/stamp duty exclusion, travel reimbursement valuation, and ITC accumulation strategies for law firms.

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