Dry FruitsNuts & Seeds

GST on Dry Fruits & Nuts — Raw 5%, Roasted 12%, Fresh Fruits 0%

Complete GST guide for dry fruits & nuts: fresh fruits 0% exempt, raw/dried nuts 5%, roasted/salted nuts 12%, flavoured nuts 12%, gift packs 12%, chocolate-coated 18%, cashew processing ITC, makhana classification, and import duty structure.

Nil

Fresh Fruits

5%

Dried Fruits (natural)

12%

Roasted/Salted Nuts

5%

Cashew (shelled)

5%

Almonds (in shell)

5%

Walnuts

12%

Trail Mix / Gift Pack

12%

Flavoured Nuts

Dry Fruits & Nuts — GST Framework

Fresh Fruits — NIL GST (Exempt)

ALL FRESH FRUITS — 0%: Fresh fruits (all varieties): 0% (HSN 0801-0810). Fresh apples: 0%. Fresh mangoes: 0%. Fresh grapes: 0%. Fresh bananas: 0%. Fresh pomegranate: 0%. Fresh oranges/citrus: 0%. Fresh watermelon: 0%. Fresh papaya: 0%. Fresh coconut (with water): 0%. Tender coconut: 0%. Fresh berries (strawberry, blueberry): 0%. Fresh figs (anjeer): 0%. Fresh dates (khajoor): 0%. WHY FRESH FRUITS ARE EXEMPT: Constitutional/political: Fruits are 'food articles' consumed by all sections. Agricultural produce from farmers — taxing would hurt farmers' margins. Perishable nature: any tax increases waste (unsold → tax cost → higher prices → less demand → more waste). Nutrition: Government promotes fruit consumption (public health). FRESH vs DRIED — THE LINE: Fresh fruit: 0% (any fruit in natural state). Sun-dried by farmer (no processing): STILL 0% (natural drying isn't 'processing'). Machine-dried / dehydrated (factory): 5% (processed — HSN 0813). Cut fruit (pre-packaged): 5% (ready-to-eat format changes classification). Frozen fruit: 5% (preservation process). Fruit pulp: 12% (highly processed). Fruit juice: 12% (extracted, packaged). COCONUT — SPECIAL: Fresh coconut (with shell): 0%. Copra (dried coconut for oil extraction): 5%. Desiccated coconut: 5%. Coconut milk (extracted): 18%. Coconut water (packaged): 12%. FARMER'S PRODUCE: Farmer selling fruits at mandi/market: 0% (always exempt). Even if farmer's aggregate turnover > ₹40 lakh: fruits remain exempt. FPO (Farmer Producer Organization) selling fresh fruits: 0%. Fruits sold on e-commerce (BigBasket, Blinkit): 0% on fruit + 18% on delivery service.

Dried Fruits (Natural) — 5% GST

DRIED FRUITS — 5%: Raisins (kishmish): 5% (HSN 0806). Black raisins: 5%. Golden raisins (sultanas): 5%. Dried figs (anjeer): 5% (HSN 0804). Dried dates (chhuhara): 5% (HSN 0804). Dried apricots (khubani): 5% (HSN 0813). Prunes (dried plums): 5% (HSN 0813). Dried cranberries: 5%. Dried mango slices: 5%. Dried papaya: 5%. Dried pineapple: 5%. Dried banana chips (without oil): 5%. Dried goji berries: 5%. Dried mulberries: 5%. DATES — IMPORTANT DISTINCTION: Fresh dates (soft, khalal/rutab stage): 0% (fresh fruit). Dried dates (chhuhara — hard): 5% (dried fruit). Dates (packaged — Medjool, Ajwa): 5%. Date syrup: 18% (processed food preparation). Date paste: 12% (fruit preserve/preparation). CURRANTS (Munakka): Dried black grapes (munakka): 5%. Same as raisins — dried grape classification. Used in Ayurvedic preparations: still 5% (food classification). DRIED BERRIES & EXOTIC: Dried blueberries (imported): 5%. Dried strawberries: 5%. Goji berries (dried): 5%. Dried mixed berries: 5% (if only dried fruit, no added sugar). If sugar-coated/candied: 12% (preserved fruit — HSN 2006). DEHYDRATED FRUITS: Dehydrated fruit chips (no oil): 5%. Freeze-dried fruits: 5% (same HSN as dried). Vacuum-dried: 5%. Sun-dried (by factory): 5%. PROCESSING LEVEL DETERMINES RATE: Natural drying (farmer): 0% (still agricultural). Factory drying/dehydration: 5% (processing involved). Sugar-coating/candying: 12% (preserved — HSN 2006). Chocolate-coating: 18% (chocolate product). Oil-frying (banana chips fried): 12% (snack food — HSN 2008). VOLUME & VALUE: India's dry fruit market: ₹40,000+ crore (2024). 80% imported (California almonds, Afghan raisins, Iranian dates). Import: Customs duty (varies) + IGST 5%. IGST on import: calculated on assessable value + customs duty.

Nuts — Raw & Processed — 5-12% GST

RAW/NATURAL NUTS — 5%: Almonds (badam) — in shell or shelled: 5% (HSN 0802). Cashew nuts (kaju) — shelled: 5% (HSN 0801). Cashew nuts — in shell (raw): 5%. Walnuts (akhrot): 5% (HSN 0802). Pistachios (pista): 5% (HSN 0802). Brazil nuts: 5%. Macadamia nuts: 5%. Hazelnuts: 5%. Pine nuts (chilgoza): 5%. Pecans: 5%. Chestnuts: 5%. PEANUTS/GROUNDNUTS: Raw peanuts (in shell): 0% (agricultural — groundnut is oilseed). Shelled peanuts (raw): 5% (processed — removed from shell). Peanut (roasted): 5% or 12% (depends on packaging — see below). PROCESSED/FLAVOURED NUTS — 12%: Roasted & salted almonds: 12% (HSN 2008). Roasted & salted cashews: 12%. Roasted peanuts (salted/masala): 12%. Honey-roasted nuts: 12%. Flavoured almonds (tandoori, wasabi): 12%. Spiced nuts (masala kaju): 12%. Caramelized nuts: 12%. Chocolate-coated nuts: 18% (chocolate classification). WHY THE 5% vs 12% SPLIT? 5% (HSN Chapter 8): Nuts in NATURAL state — raw, dried, shelled/unshelled. Minimal processing (drying, shelling, sorting). 12% (HSN 2008): Nuts that are PREPARED or PRESERVED. Roasting, salting, flavouring = 'preparation'. Coated, candied, spiced = 'preserved or prepared'. THE CRITICAL DISTINCTION: Almond (raw, plain): 5%. Same almond (roasted + salted): 12%. Same almond (chocolate-coated): 18%. Each processing step increases GST rate! SEEDS (Edible): Chia seeds: 5% (HSN 1207). Flax seeds (alsi): 5%. Pumpkin seeds (raw): 5%. Sunflower seeds (raw): 5%. Watermelon seeds (raw): 5%. Hemp seeds: 5%. Sesame seeds (til): 5%. If roasted/salted/flavoured: 12% (prepared seed). MAKHANA (Fox Nuts/Lotus Seeds): Raw makhana: 0% (agricultural produce — if sold loose by farmer). Packaged makhana (plain): 5% (dried seed — packaged). Roasted makhana (flavoured): 12% (prepared snack — HSN 2008). Makhana is HUGE in India: Bihar production + national snacking trend. Popular 'healthy snack' alternative: 12% (flavoured) vs 5% (plain). Brand examples: Farmley, True Elements, Happilo: 12% on flavoured variants.

Dry Fruit Gift Packs & Mixed Products — 12% GST

GIFT PACKS — 12%: Dry fruit gift box (assorted nuts + dried fruits): 12% (HSN 2008). Wedding dry fruit boxes: 12%. Diwali dry fruit hampers: 12%. Corporate gift packs: 12%. Festival season packs: 12%. WHY 12% (NOT 5%)? When dry fruits are: Assorted + packed together: classified as 'mixed nuts/fruits' (HSN 2008). Even if individual items are 5% separately. The MIXING + PACKAGING as 'prepared food' → 12%. EXCEPTION: If pack contains ONLY one type (e.g., only almonds, plain): 5%. If packed as GIFT (mixed variety): 12% (prepared/preserved classification). TRAIL MIX / MIXED NUTS: Trail mix (nuts + dried fruits + seeds): 12% (HSN 2008). Mixed nuts (plain, unsalted variety): 12% (mixed = prepared). Nut + fruit + chocolate combination: 18% (chocolate dominates). GIFT HAMPER WITH NON-FOOD: Dry fruits + decorative box: 12% (box is packaging — not separate supply). Dry fruits + silver coin + diya: MIXED SUPPLY → highest rate in bundle. If silver coin is 3% and dry fruits 12%: entire hamper at 12%. If hamper includes something at 18%: entire hamper at 18%. INDUSTRY PRACTICE: Separate invoice for food and non-food items (if possible). Avoids mixed supply problem. Customer gets multiple invoices but saves GST on lower-rate items. CORPORATE GIFTING RULES: Company giving dry fruit hampers to clients: Not considered 'supply' under GST if gift value < ₹50,000 per person/year. Above ₹50,000: GST applicable on value exceeding ₹50,000. ITC on gift purchases: BLOCKED (gifts to non-employees — Section 17(5)). Company giving to employees: Same ₹50,000 threshold applies. ITC: BLOCKED (gifts/perquisites). FESTIVAL SEASON IMPACT: Diwali: 60-70% of annual dry fruit sales happen in Oct-Nov. Massive GST collections in Q3 (Oct-Dec) from this sector. Compliance burden: high volume, multiple gift packs, B2B + B2C mix. E-COMMERCE DRY FRUITS: Amazon, Flipkart selling dry fruits: Normal GST applies (5-12% depending on type). TCS by marketplace: 1% (deducted by Amazon/Flipkart). D2C brands (Happilo, Farmley, Nutraj): 5-12% GST. Subscription boxes (monthly nut delivery): 12% on each supply.

Cashew Processing Industry — ITC & Compliance

CASHEW INDUSTRY — SPECIAL FOCUS: India is world's #1 processor and #2 producer of cashew. Cashew industry: ₹30,000+ crore. Major processing states: Kerala, Karnataka, Goa, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu. 90%+ units are small/medium enterprises (SMEs). CASHEW VALUE CHAIN & GST: 1. Raw Cashew Nut (RCN) — in shell: Domestic procurement from farmers: 5% (if registered supplier). Import (Africa — Ivory Coast, Tanzania, Guinea-Bissau): 5% BCD + 5% IGST. India imports 60-70% of raw cashew for processing. 2. Processing (Shelling, grading, peeling): Processing charge: 18% (if done by job worker — SAC 9988). But: If processor buys RCN and sells kernel (not job work): output at 5%. 3. Cashew kernel (white whole — W180, W210, W240, W320): Domestic sale: 5% (HSN 0801). Export: 0% (zero-rated). Different grades by size: same 5% rate for all. 4. Broken cashew / cashew pieces: Same 5% (all cashew regardless of grade). 5. Roasted / salted cashew: 12% (prepared — HSN 2008). 6. Cashew with flavouring (masala, pepper): 12%. ITC ISSUES FOR CASHEW PROCESSORS: Raw material (RCN): 5% ITC (if from registered farmer/trader). Processing equipment: 18% ITC. Packaging: 18% ITC. Output (kernel): 5%. Inverted duty situation: Equipment (18%) + Packaging (18%) vs Output (5%). Accumulated ITC: can claim refund (inverted duty). But: RCN input (5%) vs Kernel output (5%) = no inversion on main input. Inversion only on packaging/equipment (secondary inputs). Refund amount: relatively small compared to turnover. EXPORT CASHEW: India exports ₹5,000+ crore cashew annually. Major destinations: USA, UAE, Japan, Netherlands, UK. Export: 0% (zero-rated). Exporter claims ITC refund on all inputs. LUT route preferred (no upfront IGST payment). FSSAI + Spice Board: dual registration required for export. JOB WORK IN CASHEW: Many processors do shelling/peeling as JOB WORK: Principal (trader) sends RCN to processor. Processor shells, grades, returns kernels. Processor charges processing fee: 18% GST (job work). Principal: claims ITC on 18% processing charge. Input tax credit chain complete. TIME LIMIT: Job work goods must be returned within 1 year (extendable to 3 years). Cashew processing: typically 2-4 weeks (well within limit). CASHEW SHELL LIQUID (CNSL): Byproduct of cashew processing. Industrial chemical (used in brake linings, paints). GST: 18% (HSN 1404 or 3802). Additional revenue stream for processors. COMPLIANCE FOR SMALL CASHEW UNITS: Most units: turnover ₹50 lakh to ₹5 crore. Composition scheme: NOT ideal (cannot claim ITC, cannot do inter-state). Regular scheme recommended: Claim ITC on RCN + packaging. File monthly/quarterly returns. Claim inverted duty refund. E-INVOICE: Below ₹5 crore: not required. Above ₹5 crore: mandatory for B2B (large processors/exporters).

Import of Dry Fruits — Customs & IGST

IMPORT DUTY STRUCTURE: India imports massive quantities of dry fruits: Almonds (California, USA): India is WORLD'S LARGEST almond importer. Walnuts (Chile, USA): High import volume. Pistachios (Iran, USA): Major import. Dates (UAE, Saudi Arabia, Iran): Huge religious/cultural demand. Raisins (Afghanistan, Iran): Traditional trade route. Cashew RCN (Africa): For processing and re-export. CUSTOMS DUTY RATES (BCD): Almonds (shelled): 35-45% BCD. Almonds (in shell): 35-45%. Walnuts (in shell): 100% BCD (protective — India grows walnuts in Kashmir). Walnuts (shelled): 100%. Pistachios: 10-15% BCD (India doesn't grow — lower duty). Dates: 10-30% BCD (depends on variety). Raisins: 30-50% BCD. Cashew (raw, in shell): 5% BCD (India needs for processing). Dried figs: 30% BCD. Dried apricots: 30% BCD. IGST ON IMPORT: Calculated on: Assessable Value + BCD + any other duties. IGST rate: 5% (same as domestic — dried fruits/nuts). Example calculation: Almond import (1000 kg at $5/kg): CIF value: $5,000 (₹4,15,000 at ₹83/$). BCD (35%): ₹1,45,250. Social Welfare Surcharge (10% of BCD): ₹14,525. Assessable value for IGST: ₹4,15,000 + ₹1,45,250 + ₹14,525 = ₹5,74,775. IGST (5%): ₹28,739. Total duty: ₹1,45,250 + ₹14,525 + ₹28,739 = ₹1,88,514. Landed cost per kg: ₹6,035 (vs CIF ₹415/kg — 45% duties!). ITC ON IGST: The ₹28,739 IGST: claimable as ITC by importer. Reflects in GSTR-2B (auto-populated from customs data). Claimed in GSTR-3B (monthly return). Net GST cost for registered importer: ZERO (5% IGST → 5% ITC). Effective cost: only customs duty (BCD) which has NO credit. FREE TRADE AGREEMENTS: India-UAE CEPA: Reduced duty on dates (from UAE). India-Australia FTA: Some dry fruit concessions. India-ASEAN FTA: Coconut products at reduced rates. These reduce BCD but IGST remains same (5%). SPECIAL IMPORT SCHEMES: Advance Authorization: Import duty-free RCN if exported as processed kernel. Duty Drawback: Get back customs duty on re-export. MEIS/RoDTEP: Export incentives compensate import duty costs. FOR CASHEW PROCESSORS: Import RCN at 5% BCD + 5% IGST (very low). Process in India. Export kernel at 0% GST + claim ITC refund + get RoDTEP. This is why India dominates global cashew processing (low import duty on raw + export incentives). ANTI-DUMPING: No current anti-dumping duty on dry fruits. But: domestic lobby (Kashmir walnuts, Mahabaleshwar cashew) occasionally petitions for protection. Government uses BCD hikes instead of anti-dumping for agricultural products. ADVANCE RULING FOR IMPORTERS: If classification is unclear (e.g., is this a 'dried fruit' or 'preserved fruit'?): Apply to Customs AAR (Authority for Advance Ruling). Binding ruling on classification and applicable duty. Prevents disputes at port.

Dry Fruits & Nuts — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Fresh fruits (all varieties)0801-08100%EXEMPT — agricultural produce
Dried fruits (raisins, figs, dates)0806/08135%Naturally dried, no additives
Almonds (raw, shelled/unshelled)08025%Natural state — not roasted
Cashew kernels (plain)08015%Shelled, graded — no flavouring
Walnuts, pistachios, hazelnuts08025%All raw nuts in natural state
Roasted & salted nuts200812%Any processing = prepared food
Flavoured nuts (masala, honey)200812%Added flavouring/coating
Trail mix / mixed dry fruit packs200812%Assorted mix = prepared
Peanuts (raw, in shell)12020%EXEMPT — agricultural (oilseed)
Makhana (raw/plain packaged)08025%Plain lotus seeds
Sugar-coated/candied fruits200612%Preserved with sugar
Chocolate-coated nuts/fruits180618%Chocolate classification dominates

Frequently Asked Questions

What's the exact GST difference between raw nuts (5%) and roasted nuts (12%)? Where's the legal line?
RAW vs ROASTED NUTS — THE LEGAL CLASSIFICATION LINE: THE LAW: Chapter 8 (HSN 0801-0802): 'Edible nuts, fresh or dried, whether or not shelled or peeled' → 5%. Chapter 20 (HSN 2008): 'Nuts and other seeds, prepared or preserved, whether or not containing added sugar or spirit' → 12%. THE DISTINCTION: CHAPTER 8 (5%) — NATURAL STATE: The nut must be in its NATURAL form. Allowed processing (still 5%): Shelling (removing outer shell). Peeling (removing skin). Sorting/grading by size. Drying (removing moisture). Blanching (hot water to remove skin — disputed). NOT allowed (pushes to 12%): Roasting (dry or oil). Adding salt/seasoning. Flavouring (masala, honey, wasabi). Caramelizing/sugar coating. Smoking. CHAPTER 20 (12%) — PREPARED/PRESERVED: Any 'preparation' beyond natural state: Roasting (even plain roasting without salt): 12%. Argument: roasting CHANGES the character of nut (starch → sugar conversion). It's no longer 'fresh or dried' — it's 'prepared'. Salting: 12% (adding foreign substance). Blanching debate: Some AARs say blanching (quick boil to remove skin) is still 'peeling' → 5%. Others say: hot water treatment = processing → 12%. Industry generally treats blanched almonds as 5% (it's a form of peeling). SPECIFIC EXAMPLES: Plain raw almond (with skin): 5%. Blanched almond (skin removed by hot water): 5% (industry practice). Sliced almond (raw, plain): 5% (just cutting — form change, not character change). Slivered almond (thin strips): 5% (same logic — physical form change). Almond flour/powder (ground): 5% (just grinding — still Chapter 8). BUT: Almond butter: 12% or 18% (this is 'prepared' — pastes are food preparations). Roasted almond (plain, no salt): 12% (roasting = preparation). Roasted + salted almond: 12%. Honey-roasted almond: 12%. Chocolate-coated almond: 18% (Chapter 18 — chocolate). CASHEW EXAMPLES: Raw cashew kernel (W320 grade): 5%. Roasted cashew (plain): 12%. Salted cashew: 12%. Masala cashew: 12%. Cashew with caramel coating: 12%. PEANUT EXAMPLES: Raw peanut (in shell): 0% (agricultural — groundnut oilseed). Shelled raw peanut: 5% (Chapter 12 → processed seed). Roasted peanut (plain): 5% (HSN 2008 — but government notification specifically keeps 'roasted groundnuts' at 5%). Roasted + salted peanut: 12% (adding salt = preparation). Masala peanut: 12%. Coated peanut (like Japanese peanuts): 12%. Note: PEANUT IS SPECIAL — roasted (plain) stays at 5% unlike other nuts because of specific entry. COMPLIANCE TIP: If you sell both raw and roasted: Maintain separate SKUs, separate HSN codes. Invoice must show correct HSN for each item. 5% items: HSN 0801/0802. 12% items: HSN 2008. DON'T mix on same invoice line (different rates). Maintain clear stock records (raw vs processed inventory).
I run a dry fruit business (import + wholesale + retail + online). What's my complete GST compliance?
DRY FRUIT BUSINESS — COMPLETE GST COMPLIANCE FRAMEWORK: YOUR OPERATIONS: 1. Import (almonds, pistachios from USA/Iran). 2. Domestic wholesale (sell to retailers/distributors). 3. Retail shop (direct to consumers). 4. Online (Amazon, own website). REGISTRATION REQUIREMENTS: (a) GST Registration: Mandatory (any importer must register regardless of turnover). Multiple registrations if: Operating in multiple states (separate GSTIN per state). E-commerce sales outside home state (need registration in EACH state where you sell? NO — single GSTIN sufficient for interstate e-commerce since 2023 relaxation). (b) Import Export Code (IEC): Required for all imports (from DGFT). (c) FSSAI License: Food business — state or central license based on turnover. IMPORT COMPLIANCE (Monthly): Import RCN/almonds: pay BCD + IGST at port. Bill of Entry auto-reports IGST in GSTR-2B. Claim IGST ITC in GSTR-3B. Reconcile: customs data vs GSTR-2B (ensure all bills of entry reflected). Time limit: ITC must be claimed within due date of September return of next FY. DOMESTIC WHOLESALE: Sell to registered retailers: B2B tax invoice with GSTIN. Rate: 5% (raw) or 12% (processed). E-invoice: mandatory if your turnover > ₹5 crore. E-way bill: required if consignment value > ₹50,000. RETAIL SHOP: B2C invoices: consolidated (no customer GSTIN). Multiple rates in same bill: itemize each product with correct HSN + rate. Daily cash memo / POS billing: must show GST separately. ONLINE SALES: Amazon/Flipkart: TCS (Tax Collected at Source): 1% deducted by marketplace. You receive payment net of 1% TCS. Claim TCS credit in GSTR-3B. Marketplace handles return/refund but YOU handle GST credit notes. Own website (D2C): No TCS (direct sale). Payment gateway charges: 18% GST → ITC available. Shipping charges: 18% → ITC available. MONTHLY FILING ROUTINE: GSTR-1 (11th): All B2B invoices individually. B2C summarized (state-wise, rate-wise). Amendments/credit notes from previous months. GSTR-3B (20th): Output GST summary (5% + 12% + 18% — multiple rates). ITC claimed (import IGST + domestic purchases + services). Net payment calculation. GSTR-2B RECONCILIATION: Match import IGST (customs auto-populate). Match domestic supplier invoices. Flag mismatches (supplier filed late / wrong GSTIN). ANNUAL: GSTR-9: Annual return (all 12 months consolidated). Due: 31st December. Turnover > ₹5 crore: also file GSTR-9C (reconciliation with audited financials). ITC OPTIMIZATION: Import IGST: ALWAYS claim (no blocking). Domestic purchases (5% rate): ITC available. Packaging (18%): ITC available. Rent/office expenses (18%): ITC available — IF premises used for business. Cold storage (18%): ITC available. Transport (5% or 18%): ITC available (choose 18% transporter for higher ITC). Staff salary: no GST (no ITC issue). Electricity: no GST (state levy — no ITC). STOCK LOSS / EXPIRED GOODS: Dried fruits beyond expiry / damaged in storage: ITC reversal required on destroyed goods. Maintain destruction register (date, quantity, value, witness). Inform insurance company if insured. Write off in books → proportionate ITC reversal. VALUATION FOR RELATED PARTY: If selling to related parties (sister concern, family business): Sale price must be at 'open market value'. If below market: GST department can re-value at arm's length price. Maintain market rate documentation for inter-company transfers.
How are dry fruit gift hampers taxed during Diwali? What about mixed hampers with non-food items?
DIWALI DRY FRUIT HAMPERS — GST TREATMENT: SCENARIO 1 — PURE DRY FRUIT BOX: Contents: Only dry fruits/nuts (almonds, cashews, raisins, dates). Packaging: Decorative box (cardboard/wooden). GST: If contents are RAW dry fruits: 5% on entire value (including box). If contents are MIXED/PROCESSED: 12% (HSN 2008 — mixed dried fruits). The decorative box: considered PACKAGING (not separate supply). Rule: Packaging that is customary → included in product value. No separate GST on box. SCENARIO 2 — DRY FRUITS + OTHER FOOD: Contents: Dry fruits + chocolates + cookies + namkeen. This is MIXED SUPPLY (different goods, single price): GST at HIGHEST rate among items. Dry fruits: 5%. Chocolates: 18%. Cookies: 18%. Namkeen: 12%. Entire hamper: 18% (highest rate applies to full value). UNLESS: Each item is separately priced and invoiced → each at own rate. Industry practice: try to separate invoicing where possible. SCENARIO 3 — DRY FRUITS + NON-FOOD: Contents: Dry fruits + silver coin + candle + decorative item. MIXED SUPPLY: highest rate applies. Dry fruits: 5-12%. Silver coin: 3%. Candle: 12%. Decorative item: 18%. Entire hamper: 18% (highest rate on full value). THE SILVER COIN TRAP: Companies include ₹100 silver coin in ₹2000 hamper. Silver coin alone: 3% GST. But IN HAMPER: entire ₹2,000 at 18%! GST on silver coin portion: ₹18 (vs ₹3 if sold separately). Customer loses ₹15 in excess GST. SMART STRUCTURING (Legal): Option A — Separate invoices: Invoice 1: Dry fruits (₹1,500 at 12%) = ₹180 GST. Invoice 2: Chocolates (₹300 at 18%) = ₹54 GST. Invoice 3: Silver coin (₹200 at 3%) = ₹6 GST. Total GST: ₹240. Option B — Single mixed supply invoice: Entire ₹2,000 at 18% = ₹360 GST. Saving from Option A: ₹120! LEGAL REQUIREMENT FOR SEPARATE INVOICING: Items must be capable of being supplied separately. Customer must agree to separate supply. Items should NOT be naturally bundled (not composite supply). If decorative packaging BINDS them inseparably: mixed supply (highest rate). If items are placed in a tray and can be taken out individually: separate supply possible. COMPOSITE SUPPLY EXCEPTION: If one item is clearly PRINCIPAL supply and others are ANCILLARY: Rate of PRINCIPAL supply applies. Example: ₹1,800 dry fruits + ₹50 ribbon + ₹100 decorative basket. Dry fruits = clearly principal (90% of value). Basket + ribbon = ancillary (packaging/presentation). Rate: 12% on full ₹1,950 (dry fruit rate — principal supply). This is BETTER than mixed supply (18%). CORPORATE GIFTING TAX: Company buying Diwali hampers for clients/employees: ITC on gift purchase: BLOCKED (Section 17(5) — gifts). GST paid on purchase (12-18%): cannot be claimed as ITC. This is a REAL COST to the company. Budget impact: ₹1,000 hamper actually costs ₹1,180 (GST) + no ITC = ₹1,180 true cost. If company is in 30% tax bracket: hamper is deductible business expense. Corporate tax saving: ₹354 (30% of ₹1,180). Net after-tax cost: ₹826 per hamper. EMPLOYEE PERQUISITE: Hamper given to employee: Value > ₹5,000 (aggregate gifts in FY): taxable as perquisite. Employee pays income tax on value exceeding ₹5,000. Employer: GST ITC still blocked on gifts to employees. TDS: not applicable on gifts in kind (only on cash/vouchers).
What's the GST on makhana (fox nuts)? It keeps changing — what's the current rule?
MAKHANA (FOX NUTS / LOTUS SEEDS) — CURRENT GST POSITION: CURRENT RULES (as of 2024-25): (1) RAW MAKHANA (farmer selling): If sold LOOSE by farmer: 0% (agricultural produce). Even if farmer's turnover > ₹40 lakh: makhana as agricultural produce remains exempt. Sold at mandi/haat: 0%. (2) PLAIN MAKHANA (packaged but not processed): Pre-packaged and labelled (as per Legal Metrology Act): 5%. This covers: Plain makhana in sealed packet with weight/brand. Not roasted, no salt, no flavouring. Just cleaned, graded, dried, packed. HSN: 0801 or 0802 (edible seeds). (3) ROASTED/FLAVOURED MAKHANA: Any processing beyond drying: 12% (HSN 2008 — prepared or preserved nuts/seeds). Roasted makhana (plain): 12%. Roasted + salted: 12%. Flavoured (peri peri, cheese, masala): 12%. Caramel makhana: 12%. Herb-seasoned: 12%. HISTORY OF CHANGES: Pre-July 2022: Unbranded makhana (any form): 0%. Branded makhana (raw): 0% (argued as agricultural). Branded roasted makhana: 5% (some argued) or 12%. Confusion: multiple AARs with different conclusions. Post-July 2022 (current): Pre-packaged raw makhana: 5% (clear — same as other packaged agri products). Processed/roasted makhana: 12% (clear — prepared food). WHY THE CONFUSION EXISTED: Makhana is grown in water (lotus plant). Harvested, dried, popped (the 'popping' is traditional processing — like popping corn). Is POPPED makhana still 'raw'? Industry argument: popping is inherent to making makhana edible (like husking rice). It's not 'preparation' — it's making it usable. Government position: Popping = processing = 5% (not 0%, not 12% — if plain). If FURTHER processed (roasted + flavoured): 12%. CURRENT CLEAR POSITION: Loose makhana (raw/popped, unpackaged): 0%. Plain makhana (packaged, just popped + dried): 5%. Flavoured/roasted makhana (any packaging): 12%. BIHAR'S SPECIAL INTEREST: Bihar produces 80%+ of India's makhana. Mithilanchal region (Madhubani, Darbhanga): traditional cultivation. ₹2,500-3,000 crore industry. Political pressure from Bihar MPs: keep makhana at low rate. Recent demand: make ALL makhana 0% (agricultural argument). Government: hasn't agreed (processed/branded must pay GST). BRAND LANDSCAPE: Premium brands selling flavoured makhana at 12%: Farmley, Happilo, True Elements, Nutraj, Miltop, Sattviko, Lil Goodness. These brands have driven makhana's growth as 'premium healthy snack'. Market growing 20-25% CAGR (fastest growing snack category). ITC FOR MAKHANA BRANDS: Purchase raw makhana from Bihar (loose): 0% — no ITC. Processing (roasting equipment, seasoning): 18% ITC available. Packaging: 18% ITC. Output (flavoured makhana): 12%. Inverted duty on packaging: yes (18% input vs 12% output). Refund available? In principle yes — but quantum small. QUALITY GRADING: Makhana grades: 4-sutta (largest, premium): higher price, same GST rate. 3-sutta: medium. 2-sutta: small. Lava (broken pieces): cheapest, same rate. All grades: same GST treatment (rate based on processing, not quality).

Dry Fruits & Nuts GST — Import Duty, Classification & ITC Recovery

Laabam.One handles dry fruit business GST: multi-rate classification (0-5-12-18%), import IGST credit recovery, cashew processing inverted duty refunds, Diwali gift hamper mixed supply optimization, makhana classification disputes, e-commerce TCS reconciliation, and wholesale/retail dual compliance.

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