Textiles & ApparelManufacturing

GST on Textiles — Fibre 5%, Yarn 12%, Fabric 5%, Garments 5/12%

Complete GST guide for textile industry: fibre-to-garment rate progression, inverted duty structure, ₹1000 threshold for apparel, job work rates, handloom/khadi, export refunds, and the deferred rate rationalization saga.

5%

Cotton/Silk (Fibre)

12%

Yarn (all types)

5%

Fabric (woven/knit)

5%

Garments (≤₹1000)

12%

Garments (>₹1000)

18%

Man-Made Fibre

12%

Branded Apparel

12%

Technical Textiles

Textiles Industry — GST Framework

Inverted Duty Structure — The Core Issue

Textiles faced 'inverted duty' until January 2022 — inputs (yarn 12%) taxed HIGHER than output (fabric/garments 5%). This caused massive ITC accumulation with no refund route. Government attempted correction on Jan 1, 2022 (raising all to 12%) but DEFERRED after industry backlash (53rd Council). Current status: fabric at 5%, garments ≤₹1000 at 5%, garments >₹1000 at 12%. The inverted duty problem PERSISTS for fabric manufacturers — they pay 12% on yarn but collect only 5% on fabric sales.

Fibre to Garment — Rate Progression

Natural fibre (cotton, silk, wool, jute): 5% GST (HSN 5001-5305). Man-made fibre (polyester, nylon, acrylic): 18% GST (HSN 5401-5504) — reduced from 18% to 12% in some cases. Yarn (cotton/blended/synthetic): 12% GST. Fabric (woven/knitted, all types): 5% GST. Garments/apparel ≤₹1000 per piece: 5%. Garments >₹1000: 12%. Made-ups (bedsheets, curtains, towels) ≤₹1000: 5%. Made-ups >₹1000: 12%. The ₹1000 threshold is based on TRANSACTION VALUE per piece (not MRP).

Job Work in Textiles

Textile job work: 5% GST (for fabric processing — dyeing, printing, bleaching, finishing). Garment job work: 12% GST. Embroidery work on fabrics: 5%. Embroidery on garments: 12%. Key rule: job worker must return processed goods within 1 year (extendable to 3 years) — otherwise deemed supply. Job work for export: 0% (under LUT). Major textile hubs using this: Tirupur (hosiery), Surat (synthetic weaving), Bhiwandi (powerloom), Ludhiana (woolen). ITC on job work inputs: available to principal manufacturer.

Handloom & Khadi — Special Provisions

Handloom products: 5% GST (same as regular fabric — no special exemption). Khadi fabric: 5%. However, KVIC (Khadi & Village Industries Commission) approved producers may benefit from specific schemes. Silk sarees (handwoven): 5%. Banarasi/Kanchipuram sarees: 5% on fabric value. Raw silk (cocoons): 5%. Tussar/Muga silk: 5%. Jute products: 5%. Coir products: 5%. Handloom cooperatives: registered under GST (threshold ₹20L for goods). Weavers selling <₹20L/year: exempt from registration. Craft export: 0% under LUT.

Export & Refund Mechanism

Textile exports (garments, fabric, yarn): 0% GST (zero-rated). Exporters can either: (1) Export under LUT (Letter of Undertaking) — no IGST payment, claim ITC refund. (2) Export with IGST payment — claim IGST refund. Refund timeline: 60 days (target). Reality: 90-180 days due to processing delays. Major textile exporters: Tirupur (₹30,000 Cr/year), Noida (garments), Surat (fabric). Deemed export (supplies to EOU/SEZ): also zero-rated. Duty drawback on textiles: separate from GST refund.

E-Commerce & Textile Aggregators

Textiles sold via e-commerce (Myntra, Ajio, Amazon Fashion, Flipkart): TCS 1% by marketplace. Small weavers/artisans selling online: MUST register for GST regardless of turnover (no threshold exemption for e-commerce sellers). This creates compliance burden for rural artisans selling on GEM/Amazon Karigar. Aggregator platforms collecting on behalf: operator pays GST if supplier not registered. Social commerce (Instagram/WhatsApp sellers): GST applicable if turnover >₹20L (but enforcement challenging). Live commerce: same rules as e-commerce.

Textiles — GST Rate Table

ItemHSNGST RateNotes
Cotton fibre/raw cotton5201-52035%Natural fibre
Silk (raw/waste)5001-50035%Cocoons, raw silk
Man-made staple fibre5501-550718%Polyester, nylon
Cotton yarn5204-520712%All counts
Synthetic yarn5402-540612%Textured, twisted
Woven fabric (all)5208-52125%Cotton/blend
Knitted fabric6001-60065%All varieties
Garments ≤₹1000/piece6101-61175%Transaction value
Garments >₹1000/piece6101-611712%Transaction value
Bedsheets/towels ≤₹10006302-63045%Made-ups
Technical textiles5903-591112%Coated, laminated
Textile job work (fabric)SAC 99885%Dyeing, printing

Frequently Asked Questions

Why was the textile GST rate hike to 12% deferred in January 2022?
The government had notified a uniform 12% rate on ALL textiles from January 1, 2022 — to correct the inverted duty structure (fabric at 5%, yarn at 12%). But massive industry opposition from Gujarat (Surat powerlooms), Tamil Nadu (Tirupur garments), and trader associations forced a rollback. The 46th GST Council (pre-ponement meeting on Dec 31, 2021) decided to DEFER the rate change — maintaining status quo (5% for fabric, 5% for garments ≤₹1000). Reason: The textile industry employs 45 million+ workers (second largest employer after agriculture), and a sudden rate hike would cause inflation in basic clothing — politically sensitive. The inverted duty problem remains unresolved.
How does the ₹1000 threshold work for garments — MRP or selling price?
The ₹1000 threshold is based on TRANSACTION VALUE (actual selling price) — NOT MRP. Example: A shirt with MRP ₹1,200 sold at discount for ₹899 → GST at 5% (because transaction value ≤₹1000). Same shirt sold at ₹1,050 → GST at 12%. For sets/combos: value is per piece. A pack of 3 t-shirts sold at ₹2,400 → per piece value = ₹800 → 5% GST. But a single designer kurta sold at ₹1,500 → 12%. For B2B (wholesale): transaction value between related parties must be at arm's length — cannot artificially reduce below ₹1000 to avail 5%. Accessories (belts, bags, shoes) have separate rates — not covered by this threshold.
What GST applies to sarees — silk, cotton, synthetic?
ALL sarees attract 5% GST (regardless of fabric type) — as long as transaction value is ≤₹1000 per piece. For sarees >₹1000: 12% GST. This covers: (1) Cotton sarees: 5% (HSN 5208/6206). (2) Silk sarees (Banarasi, Kanchipuram, Paithani): 5% if ≤₹1000, 12% if >₹1000. (3) Synthetic/polyester sarees: 5%/12% same threshold. (4) Blended sarees: same. In practice: most premium silk sarees (Kanchipuram ₹5,000-₹50,000+) attract 12%. Budget cotton sarees (<₹1000): 5%. Zari/gold thread ON the saree: part of saree value (not separate). Separately sold blouse piece: own classification (5% if fabric).
Can textile manufacturers claim ITC refund for inverted duty?
Technically YES — Section 54(3) of CGST Act allows ITC refund for inverted duty structure. But there's a CATCH: The refund formula (Rule 89(5)) uses 'Net ITC' which excludes ITC on input SERVICES and capital goods — only input GOODS qualify. For fabric manufacturers: they buy yarn at 12% (input goods — qualifies for refund calculation) and sell fabric at 5%. So they CAN claim refund on the inversion. However: refund processing is slow (3-6 months), documentation is heavy, and many small manufacturers don't file due to compliance cost. Estimated blocked ITC in textile sector: ₹5,000-8,000 Cr annually. The proper solution is rate rationalization — which keeps getting deferred.

Textile Billing — Threshold-Based Rate & Job Work Invoicing

Laabam.One auto-applies 5%/12% based on per-piece transaction value, handles textile job work challan, inverted duty refund calculation, and export LUT documentation for garment exporters.

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