Iron & SteelManufacturing

GST on Iron & Steel — Ore 5%, Steel Products 18%, Scrap RCM

Complete GST guide for iron & steel industry: iron ore 5%, pig iron & sponge iron 18%, TMT bars 18%, HR/CR coils 18%, stainless steel 18%, pipes & tubes 18%, scrap 18% (RCM from unregistered), construction sector ITC blockage, exports zero-rated, anti-dumping duties, e-invoicing, and Rule 86B anti-evasion measures.

5%

Iron Ore

18%

Pig Iron / Sponge Iron

18%

TMT Bars / Rebar

18%

Steel Plates & Sheets

18%

Stainless Steel

18%

MS Pipes / Tubes

18%

Scrap (Iron/Steel)

5%

Coal / Coke (input)

Iron & Steel — GST Framework

Iron Ore & Raw Materials — 5%

IRON ORE: Iron ore (all grades, lumps & fines): 5% GST (HSN 2601). Iron ore pellets: 5%. Manganese ore: 5%. Chrome ore: 5%. Coal (coking coal for steel): 5% (HSN 2701). Coke (metallurgical coke): 5% (HSN 2704). Limestone (for smelting): 5% (HSN 2521). Dolomite: 5%. WHY 5% ON RAW MATERIALS: Mining sector = primary industry. Government kept raw materials at 5% to: (a) support domestic steel manufacturing, (b) keep input costs low for MSMEs, (c) mining royalties already apply. MINING SERVICES: Mining contractor services: 18% GST. Overburden removal: 18%. Drilling & blasting: 18%. Crusher operation: 18%. Transport of ore (mine to plant): 5% (GTA) or 12% with ITC. DMF (District Mineral Foundation): NOT GST — it's a statutory levy on royalty. Royalty itself: 18% GST under RCM (government services). IMPORT OF IRON ORE: IGST: 5% + Basic Customs Duty (varies). Most Indian steel companies are DOMESTIC ore users. Import of coking coal: 5% IGST + customs (India imports ~55 MT/year coking coal). MERCHANT MINERS: Sell ore on open market: charge 5% GST. Captive mines (Tata Steel, JSW): internal consumption — no GST on self-use. Transfer between own units: if different GSTINs (state-wise), supply attracts 5%.

Primary Steel Products — 18%

PIG IRON: Pig iron (all types): 18% (HSN 7201). Spiegeleisen: 18% (HSN 7202). Ferro-alloys (ferro-manganese, ferro-silicon, ferro-chrome): 18% (HSN 7202). SPONGE IRON / DRI: Sponge iron (Direct Reduced Iron): 18% (HSN 7203). Hot Briquetted Iron (HBI): 18%. DRI is primary input for electric arc furnace (EAF) steelmaking — 18% input. SEMI-FINISHED STEEL: Billets: 18% (HSN 7207). Blooms: 18%. Slabs: 18%. Ingots: 18%. These are 'semi-finished' — produced in steel plants, sold to re-rollers. INVERTED DUTY — THE KEY ISSUE: Input (iron ore): 5%. Output (steel products): 18%. Net GST payable = 18% - 5% ITC = 13% effective on value addition. This is FAVORABLE for steel makers (no inversion problem). But: coal at 5% + ore at 5% → steel at 18% = value addition heavily taxed. Industry demand: reduce steel GST to 12%. Government position: steel at 18% is revenue-critical (₹40,000+ crore/year). COMPARISON WITH PRE-GST: Pre-GST: Excise 12.5% + VAT 5% + CST 2% = ~20% effective. Post-GST: 18% flat (with full ITC). Steel industry BENEFITED from GST — simplified, reduced cascading. Interstate movement: CST elimination saved 2% on every state-crossing.

Finished Steel — TMT, Sheets, Pipes — 18%

LONG PRODUCTS: TMT bars (reinforcement steel): 18% (HSN 7214). Wire rods: 18% (HSN 7213). Structural steel (angles, channels, beams): 18% (HSN 7216). Rails: 18% (HSN 7302). Wire: 18% (HSN 7217). FLAT PRODUCTS: Hot rolled coils (HRC): 18% (HSN 7208). Cold rolled coils (CRC): 18% (HSN 7209). Galvanized sheets (GP/GC): 18% (HSN 7210). Colour coated sheets: 18% (HSN 7210). Tin plates: 18% (HSN 7210). PIPES & TUBES: MS pipes (ERW/seamless): 18% (HSN 7304-7306). GI pipes: 18%. Spiral welded pipes: 18%. LSAW/HSAW pipes (oil & gas): 18%. Stainless steel pipes: 18%. STAINLESS STEEL: All stainless steel products: 18%. Flat (sheets, coils): 18% (HSN 7219-7220). Long (bars, angles): 18% (HSN 7221-7222). Kitchen utensils (SS): 12% (HSN 7323). WHY UTENSILS 12%: Common household items — lower rate for consumer benefit. SS utensils (thali, glass, bowl): 12%. Pressure cooker: 12%. But SS industrial equipment: 18%. SECONDARY STEEL / RE-ROLLING: Re-rolling mills buy billets (18%) and produce TMT (18%) — no inversion. But: small re-rollers often under-report output. Rule 86B: 1% minimum cash payment if turnover > ₹50 lakh (specifically targets steel sector evasion).

Steel Scrap & Recycling — 18% + RCM

IRON & STEEL SCRAP: All ferrous scrap: 18% GST (HSN 7204). Melting scrap: 18%. HMS (Heavy Melting Scrap): 18%. Shredded scrap: 18%. Turning & boring: 18%. REVERSE CHARGE ON SCRAP: Notification 43/2017: Scrap supplied by UNREGISTERED person to REGISTERED person: GST payable under RCM by recipient. WHY RCM ON SCRAP: Scrap is collected by: kabadiwallas, demolition workers, small traders — mostly unregistered. Steel mills buy scrap from unregistered suppliers (₹1,00,000+ crore market). Without RCM: supplier (unregistered) should pay GST but won't (no compliance). With RCM: steel mill (registered, large) pays GST → government revenue secured. PRACTICAL IMPACT: Induction furnace units buy scrap → pay 18% under RCM → claim ITC on output (TMT bars 18%). Cash flow hit: RCM payment due at time of purchase. But ITC available immediately (same return period) → net cash flow neutral. E-WAY BILL: Scrap movement > ₹50,000: e-way bill mandatory. Many scrap transactions are cash-based → e-way bill helps track. IRN (e-invoice): mandatory for scrap dealers above ₹5 crore turnover. SHIP BREAKING: Ship breaking scrap: 18% GST. Import of ships for breaking: 5% IGST (vessels). Breaking activity: manufacturing → 18% on scrap output. Alang (Gujarat) ship-breaking yard: largest in world — significant GST contributor.

Steel in Construction & Infrastructure

TMT BARS FOR CONSTRUCTION: Builders/developers buy TMT: 18% GST paid. Use in construction: ITC available if output is works contract (12%/18%). Residential construction (affordable housing): output at 1% (no ITC) or 5% (no ITC). PROBLEM: Builder buys TMT at 18% but residential output at 1-5% WITHOUT ITC. Steel cost embedded in flat price → increases housing cost. Industry estimate: GST adds 5-8% to housing cost due to blocked ITC on steel. INFRASTRUCTURE PROJECTS: Roads (NHAI): TMT/structural steel purchased at 18%. Road construction (works contract to govt): 12% GST. Contractor claims ITC (18% input vs 12% output): accumulates credit → refund eligible (inverted duty). Bridges, flyovers: same 12% output → steel ITC accumulates. Railways: steel for track/coaches → 5% output on coaches = massive ITC inversion. Metro: steel for structures → 12% output = moderate inversion. GOVERNMENT PURCHASES: Government departments buy steel directly: pay 18% GST. No ITC for government (not registered/not making taxable supply). Steel cost = 18% higher for government projects vs private (who claim ITC). ANTI-PROFITEERING: Steel prices fluctuate wildly. When steel prices fall + GST rate unchanged: builders expected to pass benefit. NAA (now CCI) investigated several builders for not passing steel cost reduction. STEEL FOR EXPORTS: Exported goods (machinery, auto, ships): steel ITC refundable. Refund under Rule 89 (zero-rated supply). ₹5,000-10,000 crore annual ITC refunds linked to steel inputs in exports.

Steel Industry Compliance & E-Invoicing

E-INVOICE: Mandatory for steel companies > ₹5 crore turnover. Steel trading (large volumes, thin margins): e-invoice is critical compliance. REAL-TIME REPORTING: Every B2B steel sale generates IRN on government portal. Helps track: fake invoicing (massive problem in steel sector). Pre-GST: steel sector had ~30% evasion. Post-GST with e-invoice: reduced significantly. E-WAY BILL CHALLENGES: Steel products are HEAVY — multiple vehicles per consignment. Single e-way bill for entire consignment vs per-vehicle: confusion. Solution: one e-way bill, multiple vehicle numbers updated via 'Part-B update'. Validity: 200 km/day for over-dimensional cargo (steel coils = ODC). ANTI-EVASION MEASURES: Rule 86B (mandatory 1% cash): specifically targets steel sector. Background: fake ITC through bogus invoices → steel mills show inflated purchases → pay zero cash. Rule 86B ensures minimum 1% of output liability in cash (not ITC). IMPACT: ₹50 crore turnover steel trader → ₹9 lakh/month (18%) output → ₹9,000/month minimum cash payment. For honest dealers: no impact (they already pay in cash). For evaders: forces cash outflow → reduces fake ITC incentive. COMPOSITION SCHEME: Steel traders < ₹1.5 crore: eligible for composition (1% tax). But: no ITC, no interstate supply, no e-commerce. Small fabricators/traders may opt for composition. QRMP SCHEME: Quarterly return, monthly payment: available for < ₹5 crore. Steel traders with moderate turnover: file GSTR-1/3B quarterly. But invoice upload: monthly (IFF — Invoice Furnishing Facility) for buyer's ITC.

Iron & Steel — GST Rate Table

ItemHSNGST RateNotes
Iron ore (lumps & fines)26015%All grades
Coal (coking/thermal)27015%Key steelmaking input
Pig iron / sponge iron7201/720318%Primary iron
Ferro-alloys720218%Ferro-manganese, silicon, chrome
Billets / blooms / slabs720718%Semi-finished steel
TMT bars / rebar721418%Construction steel
HR coils / CR coils7208/720918%Flat products
Galvanized / colour coated sheets721018%Roofing, cladding
MS / GI pipes7304-730618%Pipes & tubes
Stainless steel products7219-722218%All forms
SS kitchen utensils732312%Household items
Iron & steel scrap720418%RCM if from unregistered

Frequently Asked Questions

Why is iron ore taxed at 5% but steel products at 18% — and does this create a problem for steel makers?
IRON ORE 5% vs STEEL 18% — NO INVERSION PROBLEM: STRUCTURE: Iron ore (input): 5% GST. Coal/coke (input): 5% GST. Steel (output): 18% GST. ITC FLOW: Steel maker buys ore at 5% → gets ITC of 5%. Sells steel at 18% → pays 18% output. Net payment: 18% - 5% = 13% on value addition. This is NORMAL (output > input rate) — no inversion. WHAT INVERSION WOULD BE: If ore was 18% and steel was 5% → steel maker accumulates ITC (pays more on input than collects on output). That's NOT the case here. Steel sector has FAVORABLE structure: low-rate inputs, standard-rate outputs. REAL BENEFICIARIES: Pre-GST: steel had excise 12.5% + VAT 5% + CST 2% + entry tax + octroi = ~20-22% effective. Post-GST: 18% flat with full ITC chain. NET SAVING: 2-4% for steel industry from GST. Plus: elimination of CST on interstate movement (India's steel moves across 5-6 states from mine to consumer). INDUSTRY DEMAND — 12% GST ON STEEL: Steel associations demand 12% GST (currently 18%). Arguments: (1) steel is essential infrastructure input, (2) housing cost reduction, (3) global competitiveness. Government resistance: steel at 18% generates ₹40,000-50,000 crore annually. Moving to 12% = ₹15,000 crore revenue loss. Compromise unlikely in near term. MSME IMPACT: Small steel fabricators (gates, grilles, furniture): buy at 18%, sell at 18% — no issue. But their CUSTOMERS (individual consumers) can't claim ITC. So: steel fabrication for homes = 18% final cost (no ITC for homeowner). If steel was 12%: homeowner saves 6% on gates, grilles, railings.
How does RCM work on steel scrap — and why was it introduced specifically for the steel sector?
RCM ON SCRAP — STEEL SECTOR SPECIFIC: THE PROBLEM (pre-RCM): India's secondary steel sector uses 30-40 MT scrap/year. Scrap collected by: kabadiwallas, demolition contractors, household scrap dealers — 95% UNREGISTERED. Unregistered suppliers: no GST number → no GST charged → no GST paid to government. Steel mills buying scrap: no ITC available (supplier didn't charge GST). Result: ₹15,000-20,000 crore scrap market → ZERO GST collection. THE SOLUTION — REVERSE CHARGE (Notification 43/2017): When REGISTERED person buys scrap from UNREGISTERED person: Buyer (steel mill) pays 18% GST under RCM. Buyer reports in GSTR-3B under 'RCM liability'. Buyer claims SAME 18% as ITC (in same return). NET CASH IMPACT ON BUYER: Liability: +18%. ITC: -18%. Net: ZERO (cash flow neutral — pay and claim in same month). BUT: (1) Must have cash to pay RCM (before claiming ITC). (2) Compliance burden (filing, documentation). (3) Payment proof required (can't buy on undocumented basis). WHY GOVERNMENT BENEFITS: Every scrap purchase now DOCUMENTED. E-way bill generated for movement. Buyer's purchase matches with their output (TMT bars). Trail: ore → steel → scrap → re-melting → TMT → construction. Entire chain now visible. EVASION REDUCTION: Before RCM: scrap dealers operated 100% in cash, no trail. After RCM: buyer must report purchase → creates audit trail. Government can verify: 'You produced 1000 MT TMT but only bought 200 MT scrap? Where's the rest?' Cross-matching of input-output ratios catches under-reporting. PRACTICAL ISSUES: (1) Kabadiwalla won't give proper invoice → buyer must self-invoice (Section 31(3)(f)). (2) Payment must be through banking channel (> ₹10,000). (3) TDS under Section 194Q (Income Tax) also applies on scrap purchases > ₹50 lakh/year.
What GST challenges do steel companies face with construction sector (ITC blockage on housing)?
STEEL + CONSTRUCTION — THE ITC BLOCKAGE CRISIS: THE STRUCTURE: Steel sold to builder: 18% GST → builder gets ITC. Builder sells flat: 5% GST (under-construction, non-affordable) WITHOUT ITC. OR: 1% GST (affordable housing) WITHOUT ITC. RESULT: Builder paid 18% on steel (major construction input — 25-30% of cost). Cannot claim ITC (5%/1% scheme = no ITC by design). Steel GST becomes COST → passed to homebuyer. QUANTIFICATION: Typical 1000 sq ft flat: ₹30-40 lakh (metro city). Steel used: ~5-7 tonnes. Steel cost: ₹3-4.5 lakh. GST on steel: ₹54,000-81,000 (18%). This ₹54,000-81,000 EMBEDDED in flat price (not recoverable). Total blocked ITC on all inputs (steel + cement + fittings): ₹3-5 lakh per flat. HOME BUYER IMPACT: Pre-GST: builder could claim excise credit on steel (CENVAT). Post-GST (after March 2019 notification): NO ITC on any input for residential projects. Net increase to homebuyer: 3-5% of flat cost attributable to blocked ITC. BUILDER'S DILEMMA: Option A: 5% without ITC (simple, lower rate but cost absorption). Option B: Old scheme 12% with ITC (grandfathered — only for projects started before April 2019). Most new projects: mandatorily 5%/1% without ITC. ITC reversal if project started under old scheme and transitioned. COMMERCIAL CONSTRUCTION: Commercial buildings (office, mall, factory): 18% GST on construction (works contract). Full ITC available on steel inputs. Commercial real estate: NO blockage issue. Only RESIDENTIAL has the ITC problem. INDUSTRY DEMAND: Allow ITC in residential construction with higher output rate (say 12% with ITC). Government: 5% without ITC is simpler (no ITC tracking, no disputes). Stalemate continues — no change expected soon. CEMENT SAME ISSUE: Cement at 28% → blocked in residential construction. Combined steel (18%) + cement (28%) blocked ITC = ₹4-6 lakh per flat.
How does GST apply to steel exports and imports — and what about anti-dumping duties?
STEEL EXPORTS — ZERO-RATED + REFUND: EXPORT OF STEEL: Zero-rated supply (IGST rate = 0% on export). Two options: (1) Export under LUT (Letter of Undertaking): no IGST paid → claim refund of accumulated ITC (Rule 89). (2) Export with IGST payment: pay IGST → claim refund of IGST paid. MOST STEEL EXPORTERS: Use LUT route (no upfront IGST payment). Claim refund of ITC accumulated on: iron ore (5%), coal (5%), electricity (outside GST but no credit), services (18%). REFUND TIMELINE: Typical refund: 60-90 days for steel sector. Large exporters (Tata Steel, JSW, SAIL): ₹500-1,000 crore quarterly refunds. INVERTED DUTY REFUND: Some steel products have inverted duty (input 18% > output 5% — e.g., steel used in coach manufacturing at 5%). Refund formula (Rule 89(5)): considers turnover of inverted rated supplies. STEEL IMPORTS: Basic Customs Duty (BCD): 7.5-15% (varies by product). IGST on imports: 18% (on assessable value + BCD). Social Welfare Surcharge: 10% of BCD. Total landed cost: BCD + SWS + IGST = 28-35% on imported steel. ITC on IGST: fully available to importer. ANTI-DUMPING DUTY (ADD): India imposes ADD on steel from China, Korea, Japan, EU. ADD is SEPARATE from GST. ADD: ₹5-500 per MT (product-specific). IGST is charged on (Assessable Value + BCD + ADD). So: ADD increases the base for IGST calculation → double impact. CVD (Countervailing Duty): replaced by IGST under GST. Earlier: CVD = excise equivalent on imports. Now: IGST covers both excise + VAT equivalent. SAFEGUARD DUTY: Temporarily imposed on steel imports (2015-2020 period). Now expired. If reimposed: IGST calculated on (AV + BCD + Safeguard). STEEL EXPORT DUTY (2022): Government imposed 15% export duty on steel (May-Nov 2022). Reason: control domestic steel prices (inflation). GST on export: still zero-rated. But export duty: separate levy on export. This reduced steel exports from 15 MT to 5 MT in that period.

Iron & Steel GST — Mining to Manufacturing to Export Compliance

Laabam.One handles iron & steel GST: ore procurement 5%, finished steel 18% invoicing, scrap RCM from unregistered suppliers, e-way bill for heavy cargo, export LUT/refund processing, anti-dumping duty calculations, Rule 86B minimum cash tracking, and e-invoice compliance for high-volume steel trading.

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