PrintingPublishing & Media

GST on Printing & Publishing — Books 0%, Newspapers 5%, E-books 18%

Complete GST guide for printing & publishing: physical books (0% exempt), newspapers & magazines (5%), e-books & digital content (18%), printing services (12-18%), advertising space (5% print / 18% digital), content writing (18%), author royalties, inverted duty refund for publishers, and freelance writer compliance.

0% Exempt

Books (printed)

5%

Newspapers

18%

E-books/Digital

18%

Printing Services

5%

Advertising Space

5%

Journals/Periodicals

0% Exempt

Maps/Charts

18%

Content Writing

Printing & Publishing — GST Framework

Printed Books — 0% GST (Fully Exempt)

ALL printed books: 0% GST (EXEMPT — HSN 4901). No distinction between fiction/non-fiction, academic/general, Indian/imported. Textbooks: exempt. Novels/fiction: exempt. Reference books (encyclopedias, dictionaries): exempt. Religious books (Quran, Bible, Gita, Guru Granth Sahib): exempt. Children's books (picture books, colouring): exempt. Comic books: exempt. Law books (bare acts, commentaries): exempt. Medical/scientific books: exempt. Braille books: exempt. Atlases: exempt (HSN 4905). Maps/charts (printed): exempt (HSN 4905). Globes: 12% (NOT a book — educational apparatus). WHAT QUALIFIES AS 'BOOK': must be printed on paper/similar material, bound or in sheets. Audio books (CD/digital): 18% (NOT a book — digital content). E-books (Kindle, PDF): 18% (OIDAR — digital service). Colouring books WITH crayons (set): principal supply determines — if book is principal → exempt. Flash cards (printed educational): exempt (printed matter). Calendars with substantial text: exempt. Calendars without text (photo calendars): 12%. IMPORTED BOOKS: exempt from customs duty + 0% IGST (exempt). No duty on knowledge — India's policy since independence. Reason for exemption: Article 19(1)(a) — freedom of speech/press. Books are cultural/educational goods — taxing them is seen as taxing knowledge.

Newspapers & Periodicals — 5% GST

Newspapers: 5% GST (HSN 4902). Daily newspapers: 5%. Weekly newspapers: 5%. Magazines (general interest — India Today, Outlook): 5%. Journals (academic/scientific): 5%. Periodicals (monthly/quarterly): 5%. Trade publications: 5%. Newsletter (printed, subscription): 5%. PRE-GST: newspapers were exempt from central excise AND VAT. GST imposed 5% — industry objected strongly. PRINT VS DIGITAL: Physical newspaper: 5%. Digital newspaper (e-paper subscription): 18% (OIDAR service). This creates MASSIVE disparity — digital transition penalized by 13% rate difference. Industry demanding: reduce e-paper to 5% (same as physical). Government response: no change yet (digital = service = 18%). ADVERTISING IN NEWSPAPER: Selling ad space in print newspaper: 5% (composite with newspaper service). Selling ad space on newspaper website: 18% (digital advertising). Classified ads (print): 5%. Display ads (print): 5%. Supplement/insert advertising: 5% (part of newspaper). NEWS AGENCIES (PTI, ANI, Reuters): Agency subscription by newspaper: 18% (information service). Wire service: 18%. Photo syndication: 18%. ITC FOR NEWSPAPER PUBLISHERS: CAN claim ITC on newsprint (5%), ink (18%), printing machinery (18%), distribution (5%). Output is 5% — so ITC accumulates (inverted duty structure). Refund available for accumulated ITC under inverted duty.

E-books & Digital Content — 18% GST

E-books (Kindle, Kobo, Google Play Books): 18% GST. PDF books (downloaded): 18%. Online journals/research papers: 18%. Digital magazine subscription: 18%. Audio books: 18%. Podcast (if paid subscription): 18%. Online course content (video/text): 18% (unless educational institution). OIDAR (Online Information Database Access & Retrieval): any digital content accessed online = 18%. WHY 18% vs 0% FOR PRINT: GST law treats physical books as 'goods' (HSN Chapter 49) — historically exempt. Digital content = 'service' (electronically supplied) — standard 18% rate. No policy harmonization yet. GLOBAL COMPARISON: EU reduced e-book VAT to match physical books (0-5%). UK: 0% on both. Australia: 0% on both. India: 0% print, 18% digital — one of the largest gaps globally. LIBRARY IMPLICATIONS: physical books procured by library: exempt. Digital database subscription (JSTOR, Elsevier, Springer): 18%. University libraries pay 18% GST on journal databases — significant cost increase post-GST. SELF-PUBLISHING: Amazon KDP (Indian author): if sold in India — author may need to charge 18% GST (if registered). If sold outside India (export of digital service): zero-rated. If Amazon is e-commerce operator: TCS (Tax Collected at Source) applies — Amazon deducts 1% TCS.

Printing Services — 12-18% GST

Job work printing (printing on customer's paper/material): 12% (if goods belong to customer — job work on published goods). Printing services (printer provides paper + printing): 18% (composite supply of goods + service). DETAILED BREAKDOWN: (a) Offset printing (books for publisher — publisher provides content, printer provides paper): 12% (job work — published registered person provides paper) OR 18% (if unregistered person). Wait — clarification: Printing of books where content supplied by publisher: 12% (SAC 9989 — manufacturing service on physical inputs owned by publisher). Printing where printer owns all materials: 18% (supply of goods — printed material). (b) Visiting cards/letterheads/stationery: 18%. (c) Advertising material (brochures, flyers, pamphlets): 18%. (d) Packaging printing (labels, cartons): 18%. (e) Flex/banner printing: 18%. (f) Digital printing/photocopying: 18%. (g) Screen printing on garments (job work): 12% (job work on textiles). (h) 3D printing services: 18%. (i) Newspaper printing (done by third party for publisher): 5% (same as newspaper rate — exemption by notification). BINDING SERVICES: book binding: 18%. Lamination: 18%. Die-cutting: 18%. Embossing/foiling: 18%. All post-press services: 18%.

Advertising & Media Buying — 5% to 18%

PRINT ADVERTISING: Selling ad space in newspapers/magazines: 5% (linked to publication rate). DIGITAL ADVERTISING: Google Ads, Meta Ads, LinkedIn Ads: 18% IGST under RCM (import of service from foreign companies). Indian ad platforms: 18%. Programmatic advertising: 18%. BROADCAST ADVERTISING: TV advertising (selling airtime): 18%. Radio advertising: 18%. Cinema advertising (in-theatre): 18%. OOH (Out-of-Home — billboards/hoardings): 18%. Transit advertising (bus/metro wraps): 18%. ADVERTISING AGENCY services: Creative services (design, copywriting, strategy): 18%. Media planning/buying: 18%. Production (photo/video shoot): 18%. Digital marketing (SEO, SMM, content): 18%. Influencer marketing: 18% (if influencer is registered). PR services: 18%. Event management (brand activation): 18%. Sponsorship fee: 18%. KEY DISTINCTION — AD SPACE vs AD SERVICE: (a) Selling advertising space in PRINT publication: 5%. (b) Selling advertising space on DIGITAL platform: 18%. (c) Creating the advertisement (agency): 18% regardless of where it runs. (d) Bulk ad space reselling (media agency buying and reselling): 18% on margin OR 18% on total (depending on principal/agent structure). Government advertisements in newspapers: 5% (same rate — no exemption for government ads).

Content Creation & Writing Services — 18%

Content writing (articles, blogs, web copy): 18% GST. Copywriting (advertising): 18%. Technical writing (manuals, documentation): 18%. Ghostwriting (books written for others): 18%. Script writing (film/TV): 18%. Translation services: 18%. Transcription: 18%. Editing/proofreading: 18%. Indexing: 18%. Research writing (white papers): 18%. Grant/proposal writing: 18%. Resume/CV writing: 18%. Academic writing assistance: 18%. AUTHOR ROYALTIES: Royalty paid by publisher to author: 18% GST IF author is registered (turnover >₹20L). Most individual authors below threshold — no GST on royalty. Author with multiple bestsellers (>₹20L annual royalty): must register, charge 18% on royalties. Publisher claims ITC on author royalty. Self-published author selling directly: charges GST on book sale (but physical book = exempt, so 0%). Digital self-publishing: 18% on e-book revenue. FREELANCE WRITERS: Inter-state content writing (writer in Delhi, client in Mumbai): mandatory registration regardless of turnover? Notification exempts services <₹20L from inter-state compulsory registration. So: freelance writer earning <₹20L doesn't need GST registration even for inter-state clients. EXPORT of content writing (Indian writer for foreign client): zero-rated. File LUT, charge 0%. Common for Indian freelancers on Upwork/Fiverr.

Printing & Publishing — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN/SACGST RateNotes
Printed books (all types)49010% ExemptFiction, non-fiction, academic
Maps, atlases, charts49050% ExemptPrinted cartographic
Newspapers (daily/weekly)49025%Physical print only
Magazines/periodicals49025%Monthly/quarterly
E-books/digital publicationsSAC 998418%OIDAR — digital supply
Printing services (job work)SAC 998912%Customer provides content
Printing services (own material)491118%Brochures, stationery
Advertising in newspaperSAC 99835%Print ad space
Digital advertising servicesSAC 998318%Google/Meta/online
Content writing/copywritingSAC 998318%Articles, blogs, copy
Author royalty (>₹20L)SAC 997318%IP licensing
Newsprint (paper for printing)48015%Input for publishers

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are physical books exempt (0%) but e-books taxed at 18% — will India harmonize like EU?
CURRENT SITUATION: Physical printed books = 0% GST (exempt under HSN 4901). E-books/digital books = 18% GST (classified as OIDAR — Online Information Database Access & Retrieval service). GAP: 18 percentage points — one of the largest print vs digital tax gaps globally. WHY THE DISPARITY EXISTS: (1) HISTORICAL: physical books were exempt from all indirect taxes since independence — 'taxing knowledge' was politically unacceptable. This exemption was carried into GST. (2) CLASSIFICATION: GST law classifies based on physical form. 'Goods' follow HSN (Harmonized System). Books under HSN Chapter 49 = exempt. 'Services' follow SAC (Service Accounting Code). Digital content = electronically supplied service = 18%. (3) NO HARMONIZATION PROVISION: unlike EU (which explicitly equalized VAT on e-books and physical books in 2019), India's GST Act doesn't have a mechanism to treat digital equivalent of exempt goods as exempt. WILL INDIA CHANGE? Arguments FOR reducing e-books to 0%: (a) EU precedent (equalized in 2019). (b) UK: both at 0%. Australia: both at 0%. (c) 'Digital India' initiative contradicted by taxing digital reading. (d) Libraries, universities, researchers pay 18% on digital journal subscriptions — hurts academia. (e) National Education Policy 2020 promotes digital learning — 18% GST contradicts. Arguments AGAINST (government's position): (a) Revenue loss — digital content is growing, 18% generates significant revenue. (b) Definitional challenge — where does 'e-book' end and 'online course' begin? (c) Netflix, Spotify also 18% — reducing e-books creates pressure to reduce all digital content. LIKELY OUTCOME: eventual reduction to 5% (not 0%) for e-books specifically — but no timeline announced.
How does GST apply to newspaper publishers — inverted duty structure and ITC refund?
NEWSPAPER PUBLISHER GST FLOW: OUTPUT: sells newspaper at 5% GST. INPUT costs with higher GST: Newsprint (paper): 5% — same as output. Ink: 18% (higher). Printing machinery: 18% (capital goods — higher). Maintenance/repairs: 18%. Software (editorial systems): 18%. News agency subscription (PTI, Reuters): 18%. Vehicles (delivery vans): 28% (motor vehicle). Fuel: outside GST (petroleum). INVERTED DUTY STRUCTURE: Input tax (18% on ink, machinery, services) > Output tax (5% on newspaper). Result: ITC ACCUMULATES — publisher pays more GST on inputs than output. REFUND OF ACCUMULATED ITC: Section 54(3)(ii) CGST Act — refund available when output tax rate < input tax rate. Formula: Maximum refund = (Turnover of inverted-rated supply / Adjusted total turnover) × Net ITC − Output tax paid. Publisher can file monthly/quarterly refund claims (RFD-01). PRACTICAL EXAMPLE: Monthly revenue ₹1 crore (newspaper sales at 5%). Output GST: ₹5 lakh. Input GST: newsprint ₹3 lakh (5%) + ink ₹50K (18%) + services ₹2 lakh (18%) + machinery depreciation ₹1 lakh (18%) = ₹6.5 lakh. ITC accumulated: ₹6.5 lakh − ₹5 lakh = ₹1.5 lakh/month. Refund claimed quarterly: ₹4.5 lakh. ISSUES: (a) Capital goods (printing press — ₹50 crore+) generate huge ITC upfront — takes years to absorb. (b) Refund processing delays (60-180 days in practice). (c) Some publishers don't claim refund — use ITC against other registered activities (if they have digital business at 18%).
What GST rate applies to printing wedding cards, visiting cards, and custom stationery?
PRINTED STATIONERY (custom printing — wedding cards, business cards, letterheads): 18% GST. CLASSIFICATION DEPENDS ON WHO PROVIDES MATERIALS: SCENARIO 1 — Printer provides everything (paper, design, printing): Supply of GOODS (printed matter) — HSN 4911 — 18%. The customer just specifies content/design. Printer delivers finished product. This is the MOST COMMON case (wedding card printer, Vistaprint-type service). SCENARIO 2 — Customer provides paper, printer only prints: JOB WORK (manufacturing service) — SAC 9989 — 12%. Rare in practice for stationery. More common for book publishers providing paper to printer. SPECIFIC ITEMS: Wedding/invitation cards: 18% (HSN 4911). Visiting/business cards: 18%. Letterheads: 18%. Envelopes (printed custom): 18%. Calendars (custom/promotional): 18% or 12% (with substantial text = 12%, otherwise 18%). Diaries/planners (printed custom): 18%. Labels (product labels): 18%. Packaging (custom printed boxes): 18%. Menus (restaurant): 18%. Certificates/diplomas (printed): 18%. Greeting cards: 18% (HSN 4909). EXEMPT ITEMS (0%): If the printed product qualifies as 'book' (bound, substantial text, educational/literary content) — 0%. But: wedding cards, visiting cards, stationery are NOT books — never exempt. PRACTICAL: Wedding card shop billing ₹50,000 for 500 cards → GST: 18% = ₹9,000. Total: ₹59,000. For large orders (corporate — printing 50,000 brochures): 18% on full value. Corporate claims ITC (advertising/marketing expense).
How do freelance content writers and authors handle GST — registration, export, and royalties?
FREELANCE CONTENT WRITER GST GUIDE: REGISTRATION: Needed only if aggregate turnover >₹20 lakh/year (₹10 lakh in NE states). Turnover = total billing/revenue (not profit). Below threshold: no registration, no GST charged to clients. Voluntary registration: can register even below threshold — useful if exporting (to claim ITC refund). BILLING (if registered): Charge 18% GST on all invoices to Indian clients. Invoice format: writer's GSTIN, client details, SAC 9983, 18% (9% CGST + 9% SGST for same-state, 18% IGST for inter-state). File GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B (monthly or quarterly under QRMP if turnover <₹5 crore). EXPORT (foreign clients — Upwork, Fiverr, direct): Zero-rated: charge 0% GST. File LUT (Letter of Undertaking) annually — Form RFD-11. Conditions: payment in forex, client outside India, service not 'intermediary'. ITC on domestic expenses (laptop, internet, phone, co-working): claim refund since output is zero-rated. AUTHOR ROYALTIES: Publisher pays royalty to author. If author turnover >₹20L: author must charge 18% on royalty. If author turnover <₹20L: no GST on royalty (below threshold). Publisher's perspective: claims ITC on author royalty (if GST-inclusive). Self-published physical book sale: EXEMPT (0% — it's a book). Self-published e-book: 18% on sale price. PLATFORM IMPLICATIONS: Upwork/Fiverr taking 20% commission from Indian writer: platform charges 18% IGST on commission (import of service by writer under RCM). Writer pays 18% RCM on platform fee, then claims ITC. Net effect for small writers: complex compliance for minimal amounts — why most under ₹20L threshold don't register.

Publishing GST — Exempt Books, Inverted Duty Refund, Digital Content Billing

Laabam.One handles publishing industry GST: book sale exemption tracking, newspaper 5% with inverted duty ITC refund claims, e-book/digital content 18% billing, printing job work 12% vs own-material 18% classification, advertising space multi-rate management, and author royalty threshold compliance.

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