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GST Council Meeting #45

45th GST Council Meeting — Swiggy/Zomato Tax & Textile Rates

The 45th Meeting (17 September 2021, Lucknow) made food aggregators liable for GST collection, proposed textile rate correction to 12%, exempted retro-fitment kits for disabled, and began phasing out COVID-era relief measures.

17 Sep 2021
Date
Lucknow
Location
App Tax
Key Topic
12+
Rate Changes

Key Decisions & Outcomes

Food Aggregators (Swiggy/Zomato)
  • E-commerce food delivery operators made liable to collect & pay GST at 5%
  • Tax responsibility shifted from restaurant to platform (Swiggy, Zomato, etc.)
  • Effective 1 January 2022 — platforms treated as 'deemed supplier'
  • No new tax on consumers — same 5% rate; only collection mechanism changed
  • Plugs revenue leakage from unregistered cloud kitchens operating via apps
Textiles & Footwear (Proposed)
  • Proposed inverted duty correction: textiles/footwear uniform 12% from 1 Jan 2022
  • Current: Garments <₹1,000 at 5%, above ₹1,000 at 12% — creates duty inversion
  • Footwear <₹1,000 at 5%, above ₹1,000 at 12% — similar issue
  • Rationale: Input yarn/fabric at 12-18% but output garment at 5% = refund claims
  • NOTE: This was later DEFERRED in the 46th Meeting (Dec 2021)
Rate Corrections & Increases
  • Biodiesel supplied to OMCs for blending — 5% → 12%
  • Specified renewable energy devices/parts — 5% → 12%
  • Cartons/boxes/cases of corrugated paper — 12% → 18%
  • Ores (iron, copper, aluminium slag) — 5% → 18%
  • Certain petroleum products for specified purposes — rates aligned
Rate Reductions & Exemptions
  • Retro-fitment kits for disabled vehicles — 28% → Exempt
  • Fortified rice kernels (FRK) for ICDS/MDM schemes — exempt till March 2023
  • Medicines: Keytruda (cancer), Zolgensma — exempt on humanitarian grounds
  • National permit fee for goods carriages — exempt
  • Skill development services by NSDC partners — exempt
COVID Relief Phase-Out
  • COVID drugs exemption: Extended from 30 Sep to 31 Dec 2021
  • COVID testing kits: 5% rate continued (not reverted to 12%)
  • Oxygen concentrators for personal use: 12% import duty continued
  • Hand sanitizers/alcohol-based solutions: reverted to 18% from 1 Oct 2021
  • Concessional rate on ambulances: 12% extended for medical vehicles
Compliance & Technology
  • GST Tribunal (GSTAT) — discussed but not finalized (pending GoM report)
  • Extension of late fee amnesty: GSTR-3B filing up to Nov 2021
  • Biometric Aadhaar authentication pilot expanded for new registrations
  • Risk-based verification for new GST registrations implemented
  • Annual return (GSTR-9) filing deadline extended to 31 Dec 2021

Major Rate Changes

Item / ServiceFromToCondition
Restaurant food via Swiggy/Zomato5% (restaurant pays)5% (platform pays)E-commerce operator liable from Jan 2022
Biodiesel (OMC blending)5%12%Supplied to oil marketing companies
Renewable energy devices5%12%Solar cells, wind turbine parts
Corrugated paper boxes12%18%Cartons, boxes, cases
Retro-fitment kits (disabled)28%ExemptVehicle modifications for disabled persons
Fortified rice kernels18%/5%ExemptSupplied to ICDS/MDM government schemes
Hand sanitizers5% (COVID)18% (reverted)COVID concessional rate ended
Iron/copper/aluminium ore5%18%All forms of specified ores

Frequently Asked Questions

What changed for Swiggy/Zomato in the 45th Meeting?
The most significant change: E-commerce food delivery operators (Swiggy, Zomato, Uber Eats successors) became liable to collect and remit GST at 5% on restaurant food deliveries from 1 January 2022. Previously, the restaurant was supposed to pay GST. Problem: Many small restaurants and cloud kitchens operating via apps were unregistered, leading to massive revenue leakage. Solution: Make platforms the 'deemed supplier' — they already collect payment, so they now collect tax too. Important: This does NOT increase the tax on consumers. The rate remains 5% on restaurant food. Only the mechanism changed — platforms pay instead of restaurants. This brought lakhs of unregistered cloud kitchens into the tax net.
What happened with the textile rate hike proposal?
The 45th Meeting APPROVED increasing textiles and footwear to a uniform 12% GST (from the existing split: <₹1,000 at 5%, >₹1,000 at 12%), effective 1 January 2022. Reason: Inverted duty structure — yarn/fabric inputs taxed at 12-18% but finished garments at 5% = manufacturers accumulate ITC and claim refunds (₹7,000 Cr refund burden). However: This was DEFERRED in the very next meeting (46th Meeting, 31 Dec 2021) after massive opposition from textile manufacturing states (Gujarat, Tamil Nadu, West Bengal). The rate increase never took effect.
Why did renewable energy device rates increase?
Solar cells/modules, wind-operated electricity generators, and related parts moved from 5% to 12%. Context: (1) The 5% concessional rate was introduced in 2017 to promote green energy adoption; (2) By 2021, the industry matured — solar costs dropped 80% in 5 years; (3) Domestic solar manufacturing was getting hurt — imports at 5% made domestic products (taxed at higher input costs) uncompetitive; (4) Basic Customs Duty on solar imports was also being introduced; (5) The increase aligned with the Atmanirbhar Bharat push. Industry initially protested but accepted after seeing the broader manufacturing incentives (PLI scheme).
What are fortified rice kernels (FRK) and why exempt?
FRK are specially manufactured rice grains fortified with iron, folic acid, and vitamin B12. The government distributes them through ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services) and MDM (Mid-Day Meal) schemes to combat malnutrition. The 45th Meeting exempted FRK from GST when supplied to these government programs — making the nutrition program cheaper. This aligns with the PM's Independence Day 2021 announcement of rice fortification across all government schemes by 2024. Only government program supplies are exempt — commercial FRK sales remain taxable.
When and where was the 45th GST Council Meeting held?
The 45th Meeting was held on 17 September 2021 in Lucknow, Uttar Pradesh. Notable context: (1) First physical meeting after the devastating COVID second wave (April-June 2021); (2) Held in UP just months before the critical UP state elections (Feb 2022); (3) Previous meetings (43rd, 44th) were held virtually due to COVID; (4) The meeting lasted a full day with extensive discussions on textile rates and Swiggy/Zomato tax. The FM held a detailed press conference afterward explaining the food aggregator decision.

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