Manpower SupplyStaffing & Contract Labour

GST on Manpower & Staffing — 18% on Total Billing, RCM on Security

Complete GST guide for manpower and staffing services: 18% on full billing (wages + margin), RCM on security services from non-body-corporate, contract labour, secondment/deputation, director sitting fees RCM, gig economy, employee vs contractor distinction, and staffing agency ITC framework.

18%

Manpower Supply

18%

Staffing Agency Fee

18%

Security Guard Supply

18%

Contract Labor

18%

Housekeeping Staff

18%

Driver Supply

Not GST

Labour Cess

Not Supply

Direct Employment

Manpower & Staffing — GST Framework

Manpower Supply Services — 18% GST (SAC 998519)

MANPOWER SUPPLY — WHAT IS IT? Supply of manpower (human resources) by one entity to another, where the SUPPLIED WORKERS perform duties under the control/supervision of the RECIPIENT. Key distinction: (a) Manpower supply: Agency supplies workers → workers work at client's premises under client's control. (b) Outsourcing/service contract: Agency provides SERVICE output → agency controls workers, client gets deliverable. BOTH are 18% — but classification matters for RCM, TDS, labour law. GST RATE: 18% (SAC 998519 — labour supply services). Applies to: Temporary staffing (blue collar, white collar). Contract labour supply. Security guard supply. Housekeeping staff supply. Driver supply. Factory workers supply. IT staffing (contract employees). Nursing/medical staff supply. Construction labour supply. ALL manpower supply: 18%. TAXABLE VALUE — WHAT'S INCLUDED: Section 15 — value of supply includes: Agency's margin/commission: YES (taxable). Workers' wages (paid through agency): YES (part of consideration). PF/ESI contribution (statutory): YES (included in value). Bonus/gratuity (if billed by agency): YES. Uniform/safety equipment (provided through agency): YES. EVERYTHING billed by staffing agency to client: 18% on TOTAL amount. Example: Agency bills client ₹10,00,000/month: ₹8,00,000 (worker wages + PF/ESI). ₹2,00,000 (agency margin). GST: 18% × ₹10,00,000 = ₹1,80,000. NOT: 18% × ₹2,00,000 (margin only). FULL billing is taxable value. EXCEPTION — PURE AGENT: Can agency claim 'pure agent' for wage component? Rule 33 conditions: (1) Client authorizes agency to pay wages on client's behalf. (2) Wages are separately identified. (3) Agency doesn't use the service. (4) Payment at actual (no markup on wages). If ALL conditions met: wages excluded from value (only margin taxable). REALITY: Most staffing agencies CANNOT qualify as pure agent because: Workers are AGENCY'S employees (not client's). Agency has employment relationship (issues appointment letter, pays salary). Agency is NOT paying 'on behalf of client' — it's paying its own employees. Pure agent: extremely difficult to establish for staffing. DEPARTMENT VIEW: Wages paid by agency = consideration for services received by agency from workers. Agency then supplies manpower service to client = output. Full amount billed: taxable. This is confirmed by multiple AARs and tribunal decisions.

RCM on Manpower Supply — Security, Cleaning, Contract Labour

REVERSE CHARGE MECHANISM (RCM) — MANPOWER SUPPLY: Notification 13/2017 (Central Tax Rate), Entry 1: Supply of SECURITY SERVICES by any person OTHER THAN a body corporate: RCM applies — recipient (body corporate) pays GST. WHAT'S COVERED: Security personnel supply (guards, bouncers, patrol): RCM (if supplier is not body corporate). Individual security agency (proprietorship): supplies security guards → RCM. Partnership firm supplying security: RCM. HUF supplying security: RCM. WHAT'S NOT RCM (Forward charge): Body corporate (Pvt Ltd, Ltd, LLP, OPC) supplying security: FORWARD CHARGE. G4S (company), SIS (company): charge 18% forward. If supplier is: Securitas (company) → forward charge. If supplier is: Ramesh Security Services (proprietorship) → RCM. CHECK SUPPLIER'S STATUS: before applying RCM or forward charge. RCM FOR SECURITY — MECHANICS: Supplier (proprietorship/partnership) supplies security guards to recipient (company): Supplier bills: ₹5,00,000 (WITHOUT GST — or with GST notation 'RCM'). Recipient (company): Self-assesses 18% = ₹90,000. Pays ₹90,000 through cash ledger. Claims ₹90,000 ITC (same period). Net: zero (compliance exercise). MANPOWER SUPPLY (NON-SECURITY) — RCM? General manpower supply (housekeeping, drivers, factory labour): NO RCM notification for general manpower supply. Only SECURITY SERVICES have specific RCM (Entry 1 of 13/2017). Housekeeping staff supply: Forward charge ALWAYS (no RCM — regardless of supplier type). Driver supply: Forward charge. Factory labour: Forward charge. Construction workers: Forward charge. IT staffing: Forward charge. ONLY security has RCM (for non-body-corporate suppliers). GOVERNMENT/PSU AS RECIPIENT: When government/PSU receives manpower services: Section 51 — TDS: 2% TDS (1% CGST + 1% SGST) if value > ₹2,50,000. This is GST TDS — separate from income tax TDS. Government paying security agency (proprietorship): RCM + TDS both apply? YES: Government pays RCM (they're body corporate/government entity). AND: Government deducts TDS (as specified person under Section 51). Complex compliance for government agencies receiving security services. STAFFING vs OUTSOURCING — CLASSIFICATION: (a) STAFFING (manpower supply): Agency supplies workers. Client directs/controls workers. Workers follow client's instructions. Agency's role: recruit, payroll, statutory compliance. Client's role: assign work, supervise, review. (b) OUTSOURCING (service contract): Agency provides deliverable/output. Agency controls workers. Client specifies WHAT result — not HOW. Agency manages workers internally. GST IMPACT: Both are 18%. But: if classified as 'security service' → RCM may apply (for non-body-corporate). If classified as 'facility management service' → no RCM (only security-specific RCM). STRATEGIC: Some non-body-corporate suppliers structure as 'integrated facility management' (not just security) to AVOID RCM complexity for both parties.

Staffing Agency — ITC, Compliance & Valuation

STAFFING AGENCY — ITC FRAMEWORK: Output: Manpower supply service at 18%. Available ITC: Office rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Recruitment platform subscriptions (Naukri, LinkedIn): 18% → ITC ✓. Background verification services: 18% → ITC ✓. Training for deployed staff: 18% → ITC ✓. Technology (payroll software, HRMS): 18% → ITC ✓. Transport for staff deployment: ITC ✓ (if business). Uniform/safety gear for deployed staff: 12-18% → ITC ✓. BLOCKED ITC: Food provided to deployed staff: BLOCKED (Section 17(5)). Personal benefits to staff: BLOCKED. Motor vehicles: BLOCKED (unless for transportation business). VALUATION ISSUES — COMMON DISPUTES: (1) WAGES vs MARGIN: Department may argue: full billing = taxable value. Agency may argue: wages are 'reimbursement' (not value of service). LAW: Section 15 — value = everything paid BY recipient TO supplier (as consideration). Full amount paid by client to agency = consideration for manpower service. Wages are NOT 'reimbursement' — they're part of service delivery cost. (2) PF/ESI: Employer's PF contribution: part of statutory compliance cost. Billed to client as part of manpower cost. INCLUDED in taxable value (Section 15(2)(a) — taxes/duties other than GST). (3) OVERTIME / INCENTIVES: Extra overtime billed by agency (above normal rates): Part of manpower service value → 18%. Variable component: taxed when invoiced/paid. (4) RECRUITMENT FEE (ONE-TIME): Agency charges one-time recruitment fee (for permanent placement): 18% (placement service — SAC 998515). This is SEPARATE from ongoing staffing. One-time fee for finding and placing candidate. ITC: available to company (recruitment is business input). COMPLIANCE — STAFFING AGENCIES: E-invoicing: Mandatory if turnover > ₹5 crore. HSN/SAC: 998519 (labour supply), 998515 (recruitment). TDS (Income Tax): Company paying agency: TDS under Section 194C (2% — contract) or 194J (10% — professional). Debate: staffing = contract (194C — 2%) or professional service (194J — 10%)? Dominant: 194C (contract for supply of labour) — 2% TDS. GST TDS (Section 51): Only if recipient is government/PSU/specified. Private companies: NO GST TDS on manpower supply. Time of supply: Date of invoice or payment (earlier of the two). Monthly billing: supply on invoice date (typically month-end). Place of supply: Location of RECIPIENT (Section 12(2) — B2B general rule). Multi-state staffing: If agency in Delhi supplies staff to work in Mumbai (client registered in Maharashtra): Place of supply: Maharashtra (recipient's GSTIN state). IGST: applies (Delhi → Maharashtra interstate). Even though staff physically works in Mumbai — place of supply is RECIPIENT's location. ANNUAL CONTRACTS: Long-term staffing contract (1-3 years): Continuous supply of service (Section 2(33)). Time of supply: each periodic payment/invoice. Not: entire contract value upfront. Monthly billing: each month is separate supply event.

Employment vs Manpower Supply — Schedule III Exclusion

EMPLOYMENT IS NOT SUPPLY — SCHEDULE III: Schedule III, Entry 1 of CGST Act: 'Services by an employee to the employer in the course of or in relation to his employment' — NEITHER supply of goods NOR supply of services. WHAT THIS MEANS: If person is YOUR EMPLOYEE (employment relationship): Salary: NOT supply → no GST. Benefits (medical, LTA, bonus): NOT supply → no GST. Stock options (ESOPs): NOT supply → no GST. Reimbursements to employee: NOT supply → no GST. NO GST on employer-employee relationship — PERIOD. WHEN DOES IT BECOME 'MANPOWER SUPPLY'? Three parties involved: (1) Worker → employed by AGENCY (employment relationship). (2) Agency → supplies worker to CLIENT (service relationship). (3) Client → uses worker (under client's control/supervision). Here: Worker-to-Agency: employment (Schedule III — no GST). Agency-to-Client: SUPPLY of manpower SERVICE (18% GST). The taxable event: Agency supplying service to Client. NOT: Worker supplying service to Client (there's no direct employment). DIRECTOR'S SERVICES — SPECIAL CASE: Director of company: Is director an 'employee'? (a) Executive/whole-time director (on company payroll): EMPLOYEE → salary not taxable (Schedule III). (b) Independent/non-executive director (sitting fees, commission): NOT employee → SERVICE supply → 18% GST. RCM: Notification 13/2017, Entry 6: Services by a DIRECTOR to a body corporate: RCM (recipient company pays). Applies to: independent directors receiving sitting fees/commission. Does NOT apply: executive directors receiving salary (employment — not supply). SECONDMENT / DEPUTATION: Company A 'seconds' employee to Company B: Employee remains on Company A's payroll. Company A charges Company B for salary costs. IS THIS MANPOWER SUPPLY? Landmark case: Northern Operating Systems (Supreme Court, 2022): If Company A: merely recovers salary cost (no profit). If employee: works under Company B's control. If arrangement: temporary transfer of employee. SUPREME COURT HELD: This IS supply of manpower service by Company A to Company B. Even if at cost (no margin): it's a taxable supply at 18%. Company A's recovery of salary = consideration for service. GST: 18% on full amount (salary + benefits + PF) recovered. ITC: Company B claims ITC. IMPLICATIONS: All secondment arrangements: GST at 18% on cost recovery. Cross-border secondment (foreign company seconds employee to India): Import of service → RCM (IGST 18%). Indian company → foreign company: export of service (zero-rated if conditions met). Intra-group secondment (parent to subsidiary): GST at 18% (even between related parties — Rule 28). RELATED PARTY SUPPLIES (Rule 28): Staffing between related companies (same group): Value: open market value (or cost + 10% if no OMV). Even if charged at cost: GST applies (related party deemed supply). Parent supplying staff to subsidiary: 18% on OMV or cost+10%. ITC: subsidiary claims full ITC. CONTRACTOR vs EMPLOYEE — MISCLASSIFICATION: If company treats worker as 'contractor' (to avoid employment obligations): For GST: if 'contractor' is actually under company's control = employment. If employment: no GST (Schedule III). If genuine contractor (independent, multiple clients, own tools): separate supplier → 18%. Labour department scrutiny: may override contractual label. For GST: follow SUBSTANCE over form. If substance = employment: no GST. If substance = independent supply: 18%.

Contract Labour & Labour Laws — GST Interface

CONTRACT LABOUR (Regulation & Abolition) Act, 1970: Contract labour: Workers employed BY CONTRACTOR, deployed AT PRINCIPAL EMPLOYER's establishment. GST VIEW: Contractor (labour supplier) → Principal employer (client): SUPPLY of manpower at 18%. Contractor is the supplier. Principal employer is the recipient. Workers are contractor's employees. PRINCIPAL EMPLOYER's OBLIGATIONS: (1) Pay contractor's invoice + 18% GST. (2) If RCM applies (security — non-body-corporate): pay RCM. (3) Claim ITC on manpower cost (business input). (4) Labour law compliance (PF, ESI verification) — separate from GST. CONTRACTOR's OBLIGATIONS: (1) Register under GST (if turnover > ₹20L). (2) Charge 18% on billing (unless RCM — then don't charge). (3) File returns (GSTR-1, GSTR-3B). (4) Pay output GST after ITC offset. LABOUR CESS — NOT GST: Building and Other Construction Workers' Cess: 1% labour cess on construction cost: NOT a GST levy. Levied under: Building and Other Construction Workers' Cess Act, 1996. Collected BY: state labour welfare board. NOT abolished by GST (survives GST — separate constitutional provision). If contractor bills: labour cess separately: It's part of value of supply (Section 15(2)(a) — other taxes/duties). 18% GST applies on amount including labour cess. Example: Construction contract: ₹1,00,00,000. Labour cess: 1% = ₹1,00,000. GST value: ₹1,01,00,000 (including cess). GST: 18% × ₹1,01,00,000 = ₹18,18,000. PF / ESI — GST TREATMENT: Employer's PF contribution (12% of basic): Part of manpower cost → included in taxable value. ESI contribution (employer's share — 3.25%): Part of manpower cost → included. Admin charges by EPFO: NOT supply (statutory body — government). These statutory contributions when billed by agency to client: Included in 18% taxable value (not separate). GRATUITY / BONUS: If agency bills gratuity reserve/bonus provision to client: Part of manpower service value → 18%. Even if provisioning (future liability): billed now = taxable now. LEAVE ENCASHMENT: Billed by agency when worker goes on leave (client pays for unbilled days): Part of contractual arrangement → 18% if invoiced. MULTI-LOCATION DEPLOYMENT: Agency in Delhi deploys workers across India: Worker in Mumbai (for Maharashtra client): IGST (Delhi → Maharashtra). Worker in Delhi (for Delhi client): CGST + Delhi SGST. Worker in Chennai (for Tamil Nadu client): IGST (Delhi → TN). Place of supply: RECIPIENT's registered state (not worker's deployment location). If CLIENT has multiple GSTINs: Invoice to specific GSTIN of ordering location. STATE-SPECIFIC GSTIN: Large staffing company with GSTINs in multiple states: Use GSTIN of state from which service is supplied. If centralized billing from HQ: HQ GSTIN → IGST to other states. If state-wise billing: State GSTIN → CGST+SGST if same state, IGST if different. ISD (Input Service Distributor): For distributing ITC from centralized inputs to branches.

Temporary Staffing, Flexi-Staffing & Gig Economy

TEMPORARY / FLEXI STAFFING — 18%: Temporary staffing for project-based work: 18%. Seasonal staffing (festivals, events): 18%. Maternity cover staffing: 18%. Interim/acting role staffing: 18%. Flexi-workforce deployment: 18%. ALL temporary staffing: same 18% as permanent staffing. No differentiation in GST rate based on duration. GIG ECONOMY — GST CLASSIFICATION: (a) PLATFORM MODEL (Uber, Ola, Swiggy, Zomato, Urban Company): Platform connects worker with customer. Worker is INDEPENDENT (not platform's employee). Worker → Customer: supply of service (transport, delivery, home service). Platform → Worker: platform/intermediary service. Platform → Customer: e-commerce operator provisions (Section 9(5)). Currently Section 9(5) applies to: restaurant services via platforms (Swiggy/Zomato). Transport services via platforms (auto-rickshaw — Ola/Uber). In these cases: PLATFORM pays GST (not the worker). Worker doesn't need GST registration (platform discharges liability). (b) INDIVIDUAL GIG WORKERS (Freelancers): Freelance developer, designer, writer: If turnover < ₹20L: no GST. If turnover > ₹20L: register + charge 18%. They provide SERVICE to client directly. No intermediary platform involvement (or platform is just marketplace). (c) STAFFING THROUGH PLATFORMS (like Apna, WorkIndia): Platform connects staffing agency/worker with employer: If platform is intermediary: charges commission at 18%. Agency → Client: manpower supply at 18%. Platform → Agency: platform service at 18%. Multiple GST layers in marketplace model. AGGREGATOR vs SUPPLIER: If platform merely CONNECTS (marketplace): Platform is intermediary — charges commission. Actual service provider (worker/agency) pays GST on service. If platform IS THE SUPPLIER (Section 9(5) deemed): Platform is deemed supplier — pays GST. Worker is below-threshold — no registration needed. URBAN COMPANY / HOUSEJOY: Home service aggregator: Currently: workers registered on platform provide services. If worker > ₹20L: should register and charge GST. If Section 9(5) extended: platform would pay. As of now: housekeeping/plumbing/electrical through platforms: Worker above threshold: charges client (through platform). Worker below threshold: no GST. Platform commission: 18% (platform charges worker/client). DELIVERY PARTNERS (Swiggy, Zomato, Dunzo): Delivery partner is independent contractor: Delivery fee: part of restaurant service (platform pays under 9(5)). Or: separate delivery charge to customer. If separate delivery (not restaurant food): 18% (courier/delivery service). If bundled with food delivery: platform handles GST (Section 9(5)). Delivery partner's income: if > ₹20L: should register. But: if platform discharges GST under 9(5) on their behalf: no separate registration needed by partner. INTERNATIONAL FREELANCING (Indian freelancer → Foreign client): Indian gig worker providing service to foreign company: If meets EXPORT conditions: Zero-rated (LUT). Developer in Bangalore → US startup: export of service → 0%. Must: receive payment in forex, file LUT, maintain export invoices. If < ₹20L: no registration needed (even for export). Above ₹20L: mandatory registration (or can voluntarily register for LUT benefits). COMPLIANCE FOR STAFFING COMPANIES: Large staffing companies (TeamLease, Quess, Randstad India): Turnover: hundreds of crores → full compliance. E-invoicing: mandatory. Monthly returns. ITC management across states. Transfer pricing (if international group). Multi-GSTIN operations. Section 51 TDS: received from government clients. HSN summary in returns. Annual audit (GSTR-9C).

Manpower & Staffing — Key Judicial Decisions & FAQs

KEY JUDICIAL DECISIONS — MANPOWER GST: (1) NORTHERN OPERATING SYSTEMS (Supreme Court, 2022): Secondment of employees from overseas parent to Indian subsidiary: HELD: Supply of manpower service. Taxable at 18% (import of service under RCM for pre-GST). Post-GST: same principle — secondment = taxable supply. Even at cost recovery (no profit): still a supply. Impact: All MNC secondment arrangements: GST at 18%. (2) MICROSOFT / GOOGLE INDIA (Various AARs): Expat employees on Indian payroll (employed by India entity): HELD: Employment relationship → Schedule III → no GST. Key: WHO issues appointment letter? If India entity: employment (no GST). If foreign entity (only secondment): supply (18% GST/RCM). (3) CONCENTRATED INDIA (AAR, Maharashtra): Labour supply agency charging cost-to-cost (no margin): HELD: Still a taxable supply at 18%. Value = total amount charged (even if exactly matching cost). Pure agent argument: rejected (agency has employment relationship with workers). (4) SEARCE COSOURCING (AAR, Gujarat): IT staffing company deploying consultants to clients: HELD: Manpower supply service at 18% (not IT service). Classification: SAC 998519 (not 998314). Impact: staffing of IT professionals = manpower supply (not IT/ITES). (5) SABSALE ASSOCIATES (AAR, Maharashtra): Contractor supplying cleaning staff to factories: HELD: If proprietorship (non-body-corporate) supplying SECURITY: RCM. If supplying CLEANING staff (not security): forward charge. RCM limited to security services only. KEY CLARIFICATIONS: Q: If workers deployed at client's premises are client's statutory employees (for labour law): Does that make it employment (no GST) or still manpower supply (18%)? A: For GST purposes: look at WHO is billing. If agency bills client for workers: SUPPLY of manpower (18%). Labour law classification (principal employer) is irrelevant for GST. Q: Agency pays ₹15,000/month salary, bills client ₹20,000/month. Taxable value? A: ₹20,000/month (full billing). Not margin (₹5,000). GST: 18% × ₹20,000 = ₹3,600/month. Q: If we hire temporary staff through app (like UrbanClap/WorkIndia): GST? A: If platform is marketplace: worker charges you (if above ₹20L threshold). If platform is deemed supplier (Section 9(5)): platform charges GST. Check: platform's terms — who is the 'supplier' of service. Q: Can staffing agency opt for Composition Scheme? A: NO — composition scheme is NOT available for service providers (except restaurants). Staffing agencies: MUST be on regular scheme (18%). Q: Client doesn't pay agency for 6 months. Does agency still owe GST? A: YES — time of supply is invoice date (not payment date for B2B). Agency must pay output GST when invoice is raised. If client pays late: agency has already paid GST. If client NEVER pays: bad debt — no refund of GST (unless credit note issued). Q: Cross-charge between branches (same company, different states): Is it supply? A: YES (different GSTINs = different persons for GST). HQ in Delhi charges Mumbai branch for shared services (HR, Finance): Supply of services: 18% (on OMV or cost+10% — Rule 28). This is NOT manpower supply — it's inter-branch service. But: if HQ allocates employee cost to branch (cost allocation): Similar treatment — supply between distinct persons.

Manpower & Staffing — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Manpower supply (general)99851918%All labour supply services
Security guard supply (body corporate)99851918%Forward charge
Security guard supply (non-body-corporate)99851918% RCMRecipient pays under RCM
Housekeeping staff supply99851918%Always forward charge
IT staffing / contract employees99851918%Manpower, not IT service
Recruitment/placement fee99851518%One-time placement service
Secondment cost recovery99851918%Even at cost — taxable supply
Director sitting fees (independent)99851918% RCMCompany pays RCM
Employment (salary to own staff)Not SupplySchedule III exclusion
Labour cess (construction)Not GSTSeparate state levy
PF/ESI admin charges (EPFO)Not SupplyGovernment statutory body
Gig worker (above ₹20L)99851918%Must register + charge

Frequently Asked Questions

We are a staffing agency billing clients for worker wages + our margin. Is GST on total billing or only on our margin/commission?
GST ON TOTAL BILLING (Not just margin): CLEAR ANSWER: GST is on the TOTAL amount billed by your agency to the client. NOT just your margin/commission. LEGAL BASIS: Section 15(1): Value of supply = 'the price actually paid or payable for the supply'. Your supply: manpower service. Price paid by client: total invoice amount (wages + PF/ESI + margin). The entire amount is CONSIDERATION for your service. You cannot bifurcate into 'reimbursable wages' and 'taxable margin'. EXAMPLE: Your billing: Worker salary component: ₹8,00,000. PF (employer 12%): ₹96,000. ESI (employer 3.25%): ₹26,000. Bonus provision: ₹67,000. Agency margin: ₹2,00,000. Total invoice: ₹11,89,000. GST: 18% × ₹11,89,000 = ₹2,14,020. NOT: 18% × ₹2,00,000 (margin) = ₹36,000. WHY THE 'MARGIN ONLY' ARGUMENT FAILS: (a) Workers are YOUR employees (agency's payroll). You pay them salary as their employer. This salary is YOUR COST of providing the service. Just like a restaurant: food cost is included in taxable value (not just profit margin). (b) You are NOT a 'pure agent' because: You have employment relationship with workers. You issue appointment letters, manage HR. Workers' services are used BY YOU (to provide manpower service). You mark up/manage/control the engagement. Pure agent: pays third party on client's behalf — you PAY YOURSELF (your own employees). (c) Section 15(2) explicitly includes: All taxes/duties (PF/ESI are statutory levies → included). Incidental expenses (uniform, training → included). Interest/penalties (late fee → included). WHAT ABOUT 'COST-TO-COST' RECOVERY? Some agencies claim: 'We recover exact salary cost — no margin'. Still taxable at 18% on full amount. Case: Concentrated India (AAR) — even at-cost recovery = supply. Reason: You're providing a SERVICE (manpower supply). The fact that you make zero margin doesn't mean no supply. Related party rule (Rule 28): even between group companies at cost → taxable. CAN YOU REDUCE TAXABLE VALUE LEGALLY? (a) If client DIRECTLY pays workers (not through you): You bill only margin: 18% × margin = lower GST. But: labour law complications (who is employer?). If client pays workers: client may be deemed employer (PF/ESI liability). Most clients DON'T want this (that's why they hire staffing agency). (b) Restructure as OUTSOURCING (deliverable-based): Instead of 'supplying 10 workers' → 'providing facility management service'. Value: based on output/deliverable (may be lower than per-head billing). But: this is commercial restructuring — genuine only if substance matches. Don't just change invoice label — substance must change. (c) Composition scheme: NOT available for staffing (service provider). YOUR CLIENT'S POSITION: Client pays ₹11,89,000 + GST ₹2,14,020 = ₹14,03,020. Client's ITC: ₹2,14,020 available (manpower is business input — not blocked). Net cost to client: ₹11,89,000 (ITC recovered). So: the 18% is effectively a CASH FLOW issue (not permanent cost) for registered clients.
When does RCM apply for manpower/staffing services and when is it forward charge?
RCM vs FORWARD CHARGE — MANPOWER SERVICES — COMPLETE GUIDE: RULE: RCM for manpower services is LIMITED. Only SECURITY SERVICES from NON-BODY-CORPORATE suppliers trigger RCM. DECISION MATRIX: | Service Type | Supplier Type | Charge Mechanism | |---|---|---| | Security guards | Company (Pvt Ltd/Ltd/LLP/OPC) | Forward charge — supplier charges 18% | | Security guards | Proprietorship | RCM — recipient pays 18% | | Security guards | Partnership firm | RCM — recipient pays 18% | | Security guards | Individual | RCM — recipient pays 18% | | Security guards | HUF | RCM — recipient pays 18% | | Housekeeping staff | ANY (company or not) | Forward charge — ALWAYS | | Drivers | ANY | Forward charge — ALWAYS | | IT staffing | ANY | Forward charge — ALWAYS | | Factory workers | ANY | Forward charge — ALWAYS | | Office staff | ANY | Forward charge — ALWAYS | | Construction labour | ANY | Forward charge — ALWAYS | KEY INSIGHT: ONLY 'security services' have RCM notification. ALL other manpower supply: forward charge regardless of supplier type. WHAT QUALIFIES AS 'SECURITY SERVICES'? Notification 13/2017 Entry 1: 'Security services (services provided by way of supply of security personnel)'. Includes: Armed security guards. Unarmed security guards. Bouncers. Security supervisors. Access control personnel. CCTV monitoring personnel (if part of security guard supply). Patrol services (manned patrolling). Does NOT include (even if 'security' related): Electronic surveillance system installation: IT/technical service (not security personnel supply). CCTV camera installation: goods + installation service. Alarm system monitoring (automated, no personnel): technical service. Cybersecurity consulting: IT service. Fire safety equipment supply: goods supply. These are NOT 'supply of security personnel' → no RCM. HOW TO VERIFY SUPPLIER TYPE: Before applying RCM: (1) Check supplier's PAN type: Company PAN starts with 'A' in 4th character (e.g., AABCX1234X). Individual/proprietor: 'P' (e.g., ABCPD1234X). (2) Check GSTIN: 15th character for entity type. Companies: registered as 'Regular' with company PAN. (3) Ask supplier: Are you body corporate (company/LLP/OPC)? Get declaration (recommended). (4) If unsure: apply RCM (conservative — you pay and claim ITC). BODY CORPORATE INCLUDES: Private Limited Company. Public Limited Company. LLP (Limited Liability Partnership). OPC (One Person Company). Section 8 Company (not-for-profit). Foreign company (Indian branch). Government company. PSU (Public Sector Undertaking). BODY CORPORATE DOES NOT INCLUDE: Proprietorship (individual running business). Partnership firm (not LLP). Hindu Undivided Family (HUF). Association of Persons (AOP). Trust (unless registered as company). Society (unless registered as Section 8 company). MIXED SERVICES (Security + Housekeeping): Contract includes: security guards + housekeeping staff (combined facility management): If SINGLE composite supply: What is the principal supply? If SECURITY is principal (majority of workers are guards): RCM on full amount (if non-body-corporate supplier). If HOUSEKEEPING/general is principal: Forward charge on full amount. If SEPARATE supplies (itemized invoice): Security component: RCM (if applicable). Housekeeping component: forward charge. RECOMMENDATION: For mixed contracts with non-body-corporate: Separate invoicing (security separate from others). Avoids dispute on composite supply classification. Security invoice: RCM. Other services invoice: forward charge. RECIPIENT COMPLIANCE FOR RCM: (1) Receive invoice from security supplier (without GST or marked 'RCM'). (2) Self-assess: 18% × invoice value. (3) Report in GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d). (4) Pay through CASH LEDGER (cannot use ITC for RCM payment). (5) Claim ITC: Table 4(A)(3) — same period. (6) GSTR-2B: auto-populated (if supplier files GSTR-1 with RCM marking). (7) Net: zero (pay ₹X, claim ₹X ITC — cash flow neutral).
Our company seconds/deputes employees to our subsidiary. Do we need to charge GST on salary cost recovery?
SECONDMENT / DEPUTATION — GST ON COST RECOVERY: SHORT ANSWER: YES — you must charge 18% GST on salary cost recovery from subsidiary. LEGAL BASIS: Northern Operating Systems Pvt Ltd v. Commissioner (Supreme Court, 2022): FACTS: Foreign parent seconded employees to Indian subsidiary. Indian subsidiary paid foreign parent (cost-to-cost salary recovery). HELD: This is 'supply of manpower' by foreign parent to Indian subsidiary. Taxable under GST (was service tax pre-GST). Even though: (a) No profit/margin charged. (b) Employees work exclusively for subsidiary. (c) It's intra-group arrangement. The SUPPLY is: 'making available human resources' = manpower service. APPLYING TO YOUR SITUATION: Your company (parent/HQ) → Subsidiary: Parent seconds employees to subsidiary. Parent charges subsidiary: salary + PF + benefits (at cost). This IS a supply of service: SAC 998519 (manpower supply). Rate: 18% GST. VALUATION (Rule 28 — Related Parties): Since parent-subsidiary = related persons: Value: Open Market Value (OMV) of similar service. If no OMV: value = cost + 10% (Rule 30). If cost-to-cost (no margin): Technically should apply OMV or cost + 10%. Practically: most companies apply cost + 10% as safe harbor. Or: if genuinely arm's length cost recovery: argue it's OMV (what you'd charge third party). EXAMPLE: Employee salary (CTC): ₹25,00,000/year. PF/ESI (employer): ₹2,50,000/year. Total cost: ₹27,50,000. If at cost: GST value = ₹27,50,000. GST: 18% × ₹27,50,000 = ₹4,95,000. If cost + 10% (safer): GST value = ₹30,25,000. GST: 18% × ₹30,25,000 = ₹5,44,500. Subsidiary pays: ₹27,50,000 + ₹4,95,000 = ₹32,45,000 (at cost model). Subsidiary ITC: ₹4,95,000 (available — business input). Net cost to subsidiary: ₹27,50,000 (same as before — ITC offsets GST). WHEN IS IT NOT SUPPLY (Schedule III)? If seconded employee BECOMES subsidiary's employee: Subsidiary issues appointment letter. Subsidiary is employer (PF/ESI in subsidiary's name). Employee is on subsidiary's payroll. Parent has NO ongoing employment relationship. In this case: it's a TRANSFER of employment (not secondment). No ongoing 'supply' by parent. One-time transfer: not a recurring manpower service. BUT: if parent retains control, issues salary, recovers from subsidiary monthly → secondment → supply. KEY DISTINCTION: (a) Employee on PARENT'S payroll (parent pays, recovers from subsidiary): SUPPLY of manpower → 18% GST on recovery. (b) Employee on SUBSIDIARY'S payroll (subsidiary pays directly): EMPLOYMENT → Schedule III → no GST. (c) Employee on BOTH payrolls (dual employment/split arrangement): Determine: who is the PRIMARY employer? If parent: supply by parent to subsidiary (18%). If subsidiary: employment (no GST). CROSS-BORDER SECONDMENT: Foreign parent (USA) seconds expat to Indian subsidiary: IMPORT of service by Indian subsidiary. Indian subsidiary: pays 18% IGST under RCM (reverse charge — import of service). Claims ITC: immediately. Foreign parent: no Indian GST registration needed (reverse charge handles it). Indian subsidiary: self-assesses, pays, claims. Indian subsidiary seconds employee to foreign subsidiary: EXPORT of service (if conditions met). Zero-rated: under LUT. Conditions: recipient abroad, payment in forex, etc. DOCUMENTATION REQUIRED: (1) Secondment/deputation agreement (detailing terms). (2) Monthly invoice: parent → subsidiary (showing salary cost + GST). (3) GSTR-1 reporting (parent reports as outward supply). (4) GSTR-3B: subsidiary claims ITC. (5) If cross-border: LUT for export / RCM for import. COMMON MISTAKE: Companies 'allocating' salary costs via journal entries (debit subsidiary, credit parent): This is NOT invoicing. GST requires: proper tax invoice. Without invoice: no ITC for subsidiary. Journal entry ≠ tax invoice. Always: raise formal tax invoice for secondment cost recovery.
How is GST handled for independent directors' sitting fees and non-executive director remuneration?
DIRECTOR SERVICES — GST TREATMENT: CLASSIFICATION: Notification 13/2017, Entry 6: 'Services supplied by a DIRECTOR of a company or body corporate to the said company or body corporate': RCM — company (recipient) pays 18%. BUT: This applies only to directors providing services IN CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR (not as employee). EXECUTIVE DIRECTOR (Whole-time/Managing Director): Executive director = EMPLOYEE of company. Salary: Schedule III exclusion (employment — NOT supply). No GST on: Monthly salary. Annual bonus. Perquisites (car, house, medical). Stock options / ESOPs. Gratuity / PF. ALL employment-related payments: NOT supply. NO RCM. WHY: Executive director is on company's payroll. Has employment contract. Subject to company's control and direction. This IS employment (Schedule III — activities not treated as supply). NON-EXECUTIVE / INDEPENDENT DIRECTOR: Not an employee (no full-time employment). Attends board meetings. Provides oversight/governance. Receives: Sitting fees (per board meeting attended). Commission (linked to profit/performance). Professional fees (for specific advisory). These are NOT employment — they're SERVICES by director to company. GST: 18% under RCM (company pays). MECHANICS: Independent director invoices: Sitting fees for Q1: ₹3,00,000 (no GST charged — RCM). Company's obligation: Self-assess: 18% × ₹3,00,000 = ₹54,000. Pay: ₹54,000 through cash ledger. Claim: ₹54,000 ITC (immediately). Report: GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d) + 4(A)(3). DIRECTOR AS PROFESSIONAL (Consultant): Director who also provides consulting services to company: Example: Director is a CA and provides tax consulting beyond board role. If consulting is SEPARATE from directorship (separate contract): Could be: professional service (forward charge by CA). Or: still 'director to company' — RCM. CBIC Circular 140/10/2020: If payment is for service rendered IN CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR: RCM. If payment is for PROFESSIONAL/CONSULTANCY service (separate engagement): Check if also happens to be director (but service is independent). If services are inseparable from director role: RCM. Practical: most payments to independent directors = RCM (hard to separate). DIRECTOR BELOW ₹20L THRESHOLD: Independent director earning sitting fees < ₹20 lakh: Does RCM still apply? YES — threshold exemption does NOT apply to RCM supplies. Company must pay RCM regardless of director's total income. Director need not register (their supply is under RCM — they don't collect). But: company's RCM obligation exists always. COMMISSION TO DIRECTORS: Profit-linked commission (Section 197, Companies Act): To executive director: part of salary → NOT supply (Schedule III). To non-executive director: SERVICE → 18% RCM. Annual commission payment: time of supply = invoice/payment date (earlier). If director doesn't invoice (common): Company should self-invoice or maintain record of payment date. Pay RCM in the month of payment to director. MULTIPLE DIRECTORSHIPS: Director sits on boards of 5 companies: Each company: pays RCM on its own sitting fees independently. Director's total sitting fee income (across companies): If > ₹20L: should register? Technically yes (aggregate turnover > threshold). But: since ALL supplies are under RCM: registration has limited utility. Still recommended: for compliance and if any forward-charge supply exists. NOMINEE DIRECTORS (Government nominee on PSU board): Government nominee director on PSU board: Sitting fees: still 18% RCM (PSU is recipient body corporate). Government nominee receiving fee in personal capacity: RCM by PSU. If fee goes to government (not personal): May be government service → separate exemption analysis. But: typically nominee retains sitting fee → RCM applies. DIRECTOR IN FOREIGN COMPANY: Indian person is director of foreign company: Indian director → Foreign company: services outside India. If payment in forex + recipient abroad: EXPORT (zero-rated). Director provides governance to foreign company: Export of service. File: LUT + export invoices. Foreign person is director of Indian company: Import of service → RCM (IGST 18%). Indian company: pays IGST under RCM + claims ITC. Payment to foreign director: also TDS 10% under Section 195 (Income Tax — separate).

Manpower & Staffing GST — Full Billing Valuation, RCM & Compliance

Laabam.One handles manpower GST: full-billing valuation (not margin-only), security services RCM determination, secondment/deputation taxation, director sitting fees, contract labour compliance, gig economy classification, and staffing agency ITC optimization.

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