Courier & ExpressLogistics & GTA

GST on Courier & Postal Services — Courier 18%, GTA 5%, Post Exempt

Complete GST guide for courier and postal services: courier/express delivery 18%, India Post (ordinary) exempt, Speed Post 18%, Goods Transport Agency (GTA) 5%/12%, international courier 0-18%, warehousing 18%, packaging 18%, and RCM obligations for freight recipients.

18%

Courier Service

18%

Speed Post (India Post)

Exempt

Ordinary Post (letters)

5%

GTA (Road Freight)

18%

Express Cargo (air)

18%

Warehousing

18%

Packaging Service

18%

E-commerce Delivery

Courier & Postal — GST Framework

Courier & Express Delivery — 18% GST

COURIER SERVICE — 18%: Courier service (door-to-door delivery): 18% (SAC 996812). Express delivery: 18%. Same-day delivery: 18%. Next-day delivery: 18%. Surface courier (road): 18%. Air courier (domestic): 18%. International courier: 18% (or 0% if export of service conditions met). Document courier: 18%. Parcel courier: 18%. Cash-on-delivery facilitation: 18% (on COD charges). MAJOR COURIER COMPANIES: DTDC, Blue Dart, Delhivery, Ecom Express, FedEx India, DHL India: All charge 18% GST on courier charges. Invoice components: Base freight: 18%. Fuel surcharge: 18% (part of service value). COD charges: 18%. Insurance (if bundled): 18%. Packaging charges (if bundled): 18%. CLASSIFICATION — COURIER vs GTA: COURIER (SAC 996812 — postal/courier): 18% (no option for lower rate). Door-to-door, express, time-definite delivery. Individual shipments (B2C or B2B small parcels). Examples: Blue Dart, DTDC, FedEx, DHL. GTA — GOODS TRANSPORT AGENCY (SAC 996511): 5% WITHOUT ITC or 12% WITH ITC. Full truck load (FTL), part load (PTL). Consignment note issued. Bulk goods transportation. Examples: transport companies, fleet operators, logistics firms. KEY DIFFERENCE: Courier = individual parcel service (18%). GTA = bulk goods movement via consignment note (5/12%). Same company can provide both: courier charges at 18%, freight charges at 5/12%. E-COMMERCE LOGISTICS: Delivery partners (Delhivery, Ecom Express, Shadowfax): Charge 18% to e-commerce companies (it's courier/delivery service). E-commerce company: claims ITC on delivery charges. Last-mile delivery: 18%. First-mile pickup: 18%. Reverse logistics (returns): 18%. Hyperlocal delivery (Dunzo, Swiggy Instamart): 18% (courier/delivery service). Quick commerce (10-min delivery — Blinkit, Zepto): Platform charges: 18% (delivery fee to customer). Delivery partner payment: 18% (if registered). Many delivery agents: below ₹40 lakh threshold (no GST).

India Post & Government Postal Services — Exempt/18%

INDIA POST — EXEMPTIONS: Ordinary post (letters up to certain weight): EXEMPT (Entry 7, Notification 12/2017). Postcard: EXEMPT. Inland letter: EXEMPT. Book post (printed material): EXEMPT. Postal stationery: EXEMPT. Money order: EXEMPT (government postal service). Postal order: EXEMPT. These are SOVEREIGN FUNCTIONS — government postal monopoly. TAXABLE INDIA POST SERVICES — 18%: Speed Post: 18% (express service — similar to courier). Business Post: 18%. Express Parcel Post: 18%. Logistics Post: 18%. e-Post: 18%. Retail Post (parcels above basic weight): 18%. Media Post: 18%. Bill Mail Service: 18%. Direct Post: 18%. WHY THE DIFFERENCE? Basic mail delivery = government's sovereign duty → EXEMPT. Premium/express/commercial services = competitive with private couriers → 18% GST. India Post competes with DTDC/Blue Dart in express segment → same GST treatment. POST OFFICE SAVINGS: Post office savings account interest: NOT GST (financial service — already exempt interest). Postal Life Insurance: 18% GST (insurance service). Sukanya Samriddhi, PPF, NSC: Government savings — NOT taxable. Aadhaar services at post office: EXEMPT (government function). Passport services at post office: EXEMPT (government). FRANKING MACHINE: Franking (pre-paid postage): Exempt (part of basic postal service). Franking machine rental: 18% (equipment rental). PRIVATE POSTAL/MAILROOM: Corporate mailroom management: 18% (facility management). PO Box rental: 18% (if private/commercial). Document management/scanning: 18%. Registered post tracking (value-added): 18% (for premium tracking services).

Goods Transport Agency (GTA) — 5% or 12% GST

GTA DEFINITION: Goods Transport Agency: any person who provides goods transport service and issues a CONSIGNMENT NOTE. Key requirement: CONSIGNMENT NOTE must be issued. Without consignment note: not GTA (becomes general transport — 18%). With consignment note: GTA (5% or 12%). GTA RATE OPTIONS (w.e.f. January 2022): OPTION 1: 5% WITHOUT ITC (default). Transporter charges 5% GST. Cannot claim ITC on diesel, tyre, vehicle maintenance. Most small transporters use this. OPTION 2: 12% WITH ITC (opt-in). Transporter opts by filing declaration before start of FY. Can claim ITC on all inputs (diesel if GST applicable, tyres, repair, etc.). Better for: large fleet operators with high input costs. OPTION 3: Forward Charge by GTA (since Jan 2022). GTA can opt to pay GST themselves under forward charge. Files declaration to jurisdictional officer. Then: GTA charges 5% or 12% (their choice) and pays to government. Recipients: no RCM obligation. REVERSE CHARGE MECHANISM (RCM) — GTA: If GTA does NOT opt for forward charge: RCM applies on CERTAIN recipients: (a) Factory (registered under Factories Act). (b) Society (registered under Societies Act). (c) Co-operative society. (d) Body corporate (company, LLP). (e) Partnership firm (registered/unregistered). (f) Casual taxable person. (g) Person registered under GST. If recipient is: individual, HUF (non-business), government: NO RCM (GTA pays forward charge or exempt). RCM RATE: 5% (recipient pays 5% under RCM and claims ITC). EXEMPTIONS FROM GTA: Agricultural produce transport: EXEMPT. Milk/salt/food grains/organic manure/newspaper/relief goods: EXEMPT. Single consignment value ≤ ₹750: EXEMPT. Single carriage value (all consignments in one vehicle) ≤ ₹1,500: EXEMPT. Defence/military equipment: EXEMPT. MULTIMODAL TRANSPORT: If single contract covers road + rail + sea: Treated as single supply (multimodal transport). Rate: 12% (multimodal transport operator — SAC 996521). If separate contracts for each leg: Each leg: respective rate (road GTA 5%, rail 5%, sea 5%). FREIGHT FORWARDER vs GTA: Freight forwarder: Arranges transport (doesn't own vehicles). Issues: House Bill of Lading / Airway Bill (not consignment note). Rate: 18% (logistics/intermediary service). GTA: Actually transports goods (owns/hires vehicles). Issues: consignment note. Rate: 5% or 12%. KEY: The DOCUMENT issued determines classification.

International Courier & Customs — 0-18% GST

INTERNATIONAL COURIER (OUTBOUND — India to abroad): If courier service qualifies as EXPORT OF SERVICE: Rate: 0% (zero-rated under LUT/bond). Conditions for export: (1) Supplier in India ✓. (2) Recipient outside India ✓ (foreign addressee). (3) Place of supply: outside India (where goods/documents are delivered). (4) Payment in convertible foreign exchange ✓. If conditions met: courier company charges 0% GST on outbound international shipment. Most international couriers (DHL, FedEx, UPS): charge 0% on India-to-abroad courier. But: if INDIAN sender pays (and recipient is in India too — just sending abroad): Debated — most treat as domestic supply (18%) since payer is in India. INTERNATIONAL COURIER (INBOUND — abroad to India): Courier charges for bringing shipment INTO India: If foreign courier (FedEx US, DHL Germany) bills foreign sender: No Indian GST (foreign supply outside India). If Indian subsidiary (FedEx India, DHL India) handles Indian delivery leg: Indian delivery charges: 18% GST. Customs clearance charges: 18% GST. Indian handling: 18% GST. CUSTOMS DUTY ON COURIER IMPORTS: Courier imports (goods imported via courier): All courier imports processed through EDI (electronic): De minimis: Gifts up to ₹5,000: exempt from customs duty. Commercial goods: Full customs duty + IGST applies. IGST on import (courier goods): Same as regular imports. Rate: as per HSN of goods (5%, 12%, 18%, 28%). Paid at: customs clearance (before delivery). Assessed by: Customs (courier companies handle on behalf). ITC: Available to recipient (if registered — based on Bill of Entry). EXPRESS CARGO (AIR): Air express cargo (same-day/next-day delivery by air): Service: 18% (air transport of goods — SAC 996511). Different from passenger air transport (5%). Cargo handling at airport: 18%. Cold chain logistics (air — pharma/perishables): 18%. Air freight (international — import): IGST under RCM at 5% (transport of goods by vessel/air). Air freight (international — export): 0% (zero-rated). CUSTOMS BROKER / CLEARING AGENT: Customs brokerage (filing BOE, clearance): 18% (customs house agent service). Documentation charges: 18%. Terminal handling: 18%. Container freight station charges: 18%. All CHA/clearing agent services: uniformly 18%. ITC: Available to importer (business input). COURIER IMPORTS UNDER ₹50,000: Simplified clearance: Bill of Entry not required for shipments ≤ ₹50,000. Courier companies file: Courier Shipping Bill (export) / Courier Bill of Entry (import). But: GST/IGST still applies (no exemption on GST for low-value imports). Only customs duty may be exempt (de minimis — ₹5,000 for gifts).

Warehousing, Packaging & Logistics — 18% GST

WAREHOUSING — 18%: Warehouse rental (commercial): 18% (SAC 997212 — immovable property rental). Cold storage (commercial): 18%. Bonded warehouse: 18%. Free trade warehouse: 18%. E-commerce fulfillment center: 18%. Dark store (quick commerce): 18%. EXEMPTION — AGRICULTURAL WAREHOUSING: Storage/warehousing of AGRICULTURAL PRODUCE: EXEMPT. Cold storage for agricultural produce: EXEMPT. What qualifies: Grains, pulses, fruits, vegetables, spices (raw agricultural). What does NOT qualify: Processed food (frozen, packaged): 18%. Value-added products: 18%. Non-agricultural goods in cold storage: 18%. PACKAGING SERVICES: Contract packaging (packing goods for others): 18% (SAC 998540). Gift wrapping: 18%. Shrink wrapping: 18%. Labeling: 18%. Palletization: 18%. Packing material (goods): Cardboard boxes: 18% (HSN 4819). Bubble wrap: 18% (HSN 3923). Tape: 18%. Thermocol: 18%. Stretch film: 18%. But: packaging AS PART OF manufacturing: included in product's HSN rate. Standalone packaging service: 18%. THIRD-PARTY LOGISTICS (3PL): Full 3PL service (storage + picking + packing + shipping): 18% (composite supply — logistics dominant). If broken into components: Storage: 18%. Picking/packing: 18%. Shipping (if GTA with consignment note): 5/12%. Shipping (if courier-type): 18%. Most 3PLs: bill everything at 18% (one composite invoice). SUPPLY CHAIN MANAGEMENT: SCM consulting: 18%. Inventory management service: 18%. Demand planning: 18%. Route optimization: 18%. All SCM/logistics services: 18% (professional/management service). LOADING/UNLOADING: Loading/unloading of goods: 18% (cargo handling — SAC 996719). Crane service: 18%. Forklift operation: 18%. Stevedoring (port): 18%. But: if loading/unloading by GTA (included in freight): Part of GTA service (5/12%). Separate billing for loading: 18%. CONTAINER SERVICES: Container leasing/rental: 18%. Container freight station (CFS): 18%. Inland container depot (ICD): 18%. Container tracking: 18%. LOGISTICS AGGREGATOR (Porter, Lalamove): Platform service: 18% (e-commerce operator). Driver partner: if below threshold — no GST. If above threshold: GTA rules or transport service. TCS by platform: 1% on supply value. Similar model to ride-hailing (Ola/Uber for goods).

Courier & Logistics — ITC, RCM & Compliance

COURIER COMPANY — ITC FRAMEWORK: Output: Courier service at 18%. ITC Available: Vehicles (delivery vans, bikes): ITC AVAILABLE (business of transport — exception to Section 17(5)). Fuel (diesel/petrol): Currently NO GST on fuel (outside GST — state tax). If fuel comes under GST (future): ITC will be available. Tyres: 28% → ITC ✓. Vehicle maintenance/repair: 18% → ITC ✓. Sorting machinery: 18% → ITC ✓. Warehouse rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Technology/software: 18% → ITC ✓. Packaging material: 18% → ITC ✓. Insurance (vehicle): 18% → ITC ✓. Staff uniform: 12% → ITC ✓. Scanner/barcode equipment: 18% → ITC ✓. VEHICLE ITC — SPECIAL RULE: General rule: ITC on motor vehicles BLOCKED (Section 17(5)(a)). EXCEPTION: Vehicles used for TRANSPORTATION OF GOODS: ITC AVAILABLE. Courier company/GTA: vehicles are used to transport goods → ITC allowed. Delivery bikes: ITC ✓ (transport of goods). Delivery vans: ITC ✓. Trucks: ITC ✓. But: employee transport vehicles (staff bus): BLOCKED (not transport of goods). Owner's car: BLOCKED. GTA — ITC (If opted for 12% with ITC): Vehicle purchase: 28% → ITC ✓. Tyres: 28% → ITC ✓. Repair/maintenance: 18% → ITC ✓. Toll charges: EXEMPT (no GST on toll — no ITC). Diesel: No GST currently → no ITC. Insurance: 18% → ITC ✓. GPS/tracking: 18% → ITC ✓. Driver salary: No GST → no ITC. Hired vehicles (sub-contracted): 5% or 12% → ITC ✓. GTA — ITC (If opted for 5% without ITC): ZERO ITC on anything. All inputs are sunk cost. This is the trade-off: lower rate but no ITC recovery. Suitable for: owner-operators with minimal non-fuel inputs. REVERSE CHARGE — GTA RECIPIENTS: Who pays RCM on GTA services: All companies/body corporates receiving GTA service: Pay 5% under RCM. Claim ITC on RCM paid (self-assessed). Timeline: Pay RCM in month of receiving service. Claim ITC: in same month's GSTR-3B. Net effect for registered business: NIL (5% paid → 5% ITC claimed). But: compliance burden (must report in GSTR-3B). E-WAY BILL: Courier shipments of goods value > ₹50,000: E-way bill mandatory. Courier companies: generate e-way bills for all qualifying shipments. Consolidated e-way bill: multiple consignments in one vehicle. Validity: based on distance (1 day per 200 km for regular, 1 day per 200 km for over-dimensional). Exemptions: Specific goods (fruits, vegetables, eggs, meat — unprocessed) exempt from e-way bill. Documents (no goods value): no e-way bill needed. MULTI-STATE COMPLIANCE: Courier companies operating across India: Registration: required in each state where they have a fixed establishment. Inter-state supply: IGST (courier from Delhi to Mumbai office). Intra-state: CGST + SGST. ISD: Input Service Distributor (for head office expenses distributed to branches). Place of supply (courier): Where goods are HANDED OVER to recipient (destination state). So: courier from Mumbai to Delhi = place of supply Delhi = IGST if courier company is in Mumbai. This is different from place of performance (which could be argued as origin).

Courier & Logistics — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Courier service (door-to-door)99681218%Express/standard delivery
Speed Post (India Post)99681218%Premium postal service
Ordinary post (letters/postcards)996811ExemptSovereign postal function
GTA — road freight (default)9965115%Without ITC — consignment note
GTA — road freight (opted)99651112%With ITC — declaration filed
Air cargo/express freight99651118%Air transport of goods
International courier (export)9968120%Zero-rated under LUT
Warehousing (commercial)99721218%Storage/fulfillment
Cold storage (agricultural)997212ExemptAgricultural produce only
Packaging service99854018%Contract packing
Customs brokerage99671918%Clearing agent services
Loading/unloading99671918%Cargo handling

Frequently Asked Questions

We're a courier company. When do we charge 18% (courier) vs 5% (GTA)? Can we offer both?
COURIER vs GTA — CLASSIFICATION & DUAL OPERATION: YES — you can offer BOTH courier (18%) and GTA (5/12%) services. The distinction is based on: SERVICE TYPE + DOCUMENTATION. COURIER SERVICE (18% — SAC 996812): What makes it 'courier'? (1) Individual parcel/document shipment. (2) Door-to-door delivery (pickup from sender, deliver to recipient). (3) Time-definite service (express, next-day, same-day). (4) Track & trace capability. (5) Proof of delivery (POD) to individual. (6) No CONSIGNMENT NOTE (courier receipt/AWB instead). Documents issued: Courier receipt / Airway Bill / Tracking slip. These are NOT consignment notes under GST. Rate: 18% (no option for lower rate). ITC: Available to courier company on all inputs. GTA SERVICE (5% or 12% — SAC 996511): What makes it 'GTA'? (1) CONSIGNMENT NOTE is issued (mandatory — Rule 1 of Goods Transport definition). (2) Goods movement (not documents). (3) Typically bulk/heavy shipments. (4) Full truck load (FTL) or part truck load (PTL). (5) Point-to-point (warehouse to warehouse, factory to distributor). Documents issued: CONSIGNMENT NOTE (specific format — sender, receiver, goods description, weight, freight charges). Rate: 5% without ITC or 12% with ITC (your choice). SAME COMPANY — DUAL CLASSIFICATION: You CAN provide both services: Courier division: individual parcels, express delivery → 18%. Freight/logistics division: bulk goods, FTL/PTL → 5%/12% (GTA). COMPLIANCE FOR DUAL OPERATION: (1) Separate SAC codes on invoices (996812 vs 996511). (2) Separate accounting for each service line. (3) GTA declarations (if opting for forward charge at 12%). (4) RCM implications only on GTA portion (recipients must pay RCM). (5) E-way bills for both (if goods value > ₹50,000). PRACTICAL EXAMPLES: Scenario 1: Customer sends 5 kg parcel (Delhi to Mumbai, next-day delivery). → COURIER: 18% GST. Airway bill issued. No consignment note. Scenario 2: Factory ships 5 tons of goods (Delhi to Mumbai, 3-day transit). → GTA: 5% GST. Consignment note issued with goods description, weight, freight. Scenario 3: E-commerce company (100 individual orders, each 1-2 kg). → COURIER: 18% (individual parcels, tracking, POD). Even though there are 100 — each is individual courier delivery. Scenario 4: E-commerce company (one consolidated pallet of 100 orders to regional hub). → GTA: 5% (bulk goods movement to hub — consignment note for the pallet). Then: individual delivery from hub to customer → COURIER: 18%. THE GREY AREA: Heavy parcel (25 kg single shipment, door-to-door, express): If courier receipt issued: 18%. If consignment note issued: 5%/12%. YOU choose which document to issue → determines classification. Large courier companies: offer both rates to corporate clients (GTA for bulk consolidation, courier for individual shipments). REVENUE DEPARTMENT RISK: If ALL your shipments are classified as GTA (to charge lower 5%): Department may argue: 'You're providing courier service (express, door-to-door) — not GTA.' They'll look at: service characteristics, not just document name. If you issue 'consignment note' but provide courier-like service (express, individual parcel, tracking): Reclassification risk to 18%. SAFE PRACTICE: Genuine GTA: bulk, FTL/PTL, point-to-point, no express promise. Genuine courier: individual, express, door-to-door, tracking + POD. Don't artificially classify courier as GTA just for lower rate.
How does RCM work for GTA services? Who pays — the transporter or the recipient?
GTA REVERSE CHARGE — COMPLETE GUIDE: THE DEFAULT POSITION (Pre-2022): GTA service: RCM on RECIPIENT (not transporter). Transporter issues invoice WITHOUT GST. Recipient (company) pays 5% under RCM. Recipient claims ITC on RCM payment. NET EFFECT to registered company: ZERO (pays 5%, claims 5% ITC). But: compliance burden (must self-assess RCM in GSTR-3B). POST-JANUARY 2022 — THREE OPTIONS: GTA now has THREE options for each financial year: OPTION A — Forward Charge at 5% (No ITC): GTA charges 5% GST on invoice (forward charge). GTA pays to government. GTA CANNOT claim ITC. Recipient: no RCM liability. Recipient: claims ITC on 5% charged by GTA. OPTION B — Forward Charge at 12% (With ITC): GTA charges 12% GST on invoice. GTA pays to government. GTA CAN claim ITC on all inputs. Recipient: no RCM liability. Recipient: claims ITC on 12% charged by GTA. OPTION C — Reverse Charge (5%) — DEFAULT if no option exercised: GTA does NOT charge GST (invoice without GST). Recipient pays 5% under RCM. Recipient claims ITC on RCM paid. GTA: no GST compliance (exempt from payment). HOW TO OPT: For Options A or B (forward charge): GTA must file declaration in ANNEXURE V (Rule 2(l)) to jurisdictional officer. Filed BEFORE start of financial year (or at time of fresh registration). Once opted: applies for ENTIRE financial year. Cannot change mid-year. WHICH RECIPIENTS MUST PAY RCM (Option C): RCM applies when recipient is: (a) Any factory registered under Factories Act. (b) Any society registered under Societies Registration Act. (c) Any cooperative society. (d) Any body corporate (company, LLP, OPC). (e) Any partnership firm (including LLP). (f) Any casual taxable person. (g) Any person registered under GST (in taxable territory). (h) Any registered association or body of individuals. RCM does NOT apply when recipient is: Unregistered individual (non-business). HUF (not for business). Government department (mostly). In practice: Almost ALL businesses fall under RCM categories. PRACTICAL RCM COMPLIANCE: Step 1: Receive GTA invoice (without GST — just freight charge). Step 2: Self-assess: 5% GST on freight value. Step 3: Report in GSTR-3B: Table 3.1(d) — inward supplies under RCM. Step 4: Pay 5% GST (through electronic cash ledger). Step 5: Claim ITC in same GSTR-3B: Table 4(A)(3) — ITC on inward supplies from RCM. Net cash effect: ZERO (pay ₹5,000 RCM + claim ₹5,000 ITC). EXEMPTIONS FROM GTA (No RCM needed): Transport of: agricultural produce, milk, salt, food grains, organic manure, newspaper/magazines, relief cargo, defence/military. Single consignment ≤ ₹750. All consignments in vehicle ≤ ₹1,500. If exempt: no RCM regardless of recipient category. MULTI-MODAL (GTA + rail/air): If GTA sub-contracts rail leg: GTA's invoice: GTA rate (5/12%). Rail company bills GTA separately (5% — rail freight). GTA claims ITC on rail freight (if opted for 12%). Recipient: pays GTA rate only (GTA handles the multi-modal logistics). If single multimodal transport operator (MTO): Rate: 12% WITH ITC (not 5% GTA rate). Different SAC: 996521 (multimodal transport). RCM: NOT applicable for MTO (forward charge only). THE TRANSPORTER'S DILEMMA — WHICH OPTION TO CHOOSE: Small owner-operator (1-2 trucks, fuel is biggest cost): Fuel: NO GST currently → no ITC available. Other inputs: tyres (₹50K/year), maintenance (₹30K/year). ITC potential: maybe ₹15-20K/year. Rate difference (5% vs 12%): on ₹50L revenue = ₹3.5L extra tax at 12%. CHOOSE: 5% without ITC (or RCM — let recipient handle). Large fleet operator (50+ trucks, significant capital): Trucks: 28% GST (₹15L per truck × 50 = massive ITC). Tyres: ₹25L/year × 28% = ₹7L ITC. Maintenance: ₹50L/year × 18% = ₹9L ITC. Total ITC: ₹16L+ per year. Rate difference: 12% - 5% = 7% × revenue ₹10Cr = ₹70L extra output. But ITC: ₹16L+ offsets this. CHOOSE: 12% with ITC (especially in truck purchase years). RECOMMENDATION: Turnover < ₹2 Cr with minimal assets: 5% or RCM (Option A/C). Turnover > ₹2 Cr with fleet ownership: 12% (Option B). New fleet purchase year: definitely 12% (recover vehicle ITC).
We're an e-commerce company using multiple courier partners. How do we handle GST on shipping charges we pass to customers?
E-COMMERCE — GST ON SHIPPING/DELIVERY CHARGES: YOUR SITUATION: You sell products online (let's say electronics at 18%). You use courier partners (Delhivery, Blue Dart, etc.) → they charge you 18%. You charge 'delivery fee' or 'shipping charges' to customers. QUESTION: What GST on shipping charges to customer? THE ANSWER — COMPOSITE SUPPLY: If shipping is part of the product sale (cannot be separated): COMPOSITE SUPPLY — product is principal supply. Shipping charge: taxed at SAME rate as the product. Product at 18%: shipping charge also 18%. Product at 5% (food): shipping charge also 5%. Product at 12% (apparel): shipping charge also 12%. REASON: Shipping is naturally bundled with online sale (cannot buy product without delivery). Principal supply: the product. Ancillary supply: shipping. Rate: principal supply's rate applies to entire composite supply. PRACTICAL IMPLEMENTATION: Invoice to customer: Product: ₹1,000 (18% GST = ₹180). Shipping: ₹100 (18% GST = ₹18). Total: ₹1,100 + ₹198 GST = ₹1,298. The shipping follows product rate (18% in this example). WHAT IF MULTIPLE PRODUCTS (DIFFERENT RATES) IN ONE ORDER? Order: Book (0% GST) + Electronics (18% GST). Shipping: ₹150. How to split shipping GST? Option 1 — Proportional allocation: Allocate shipping proportional to item value. Book (₹500): ₹75 shipping → 0% GST on ₹75. Electronics (₹500): ₹75 shipping → 18% GST on ₹75. Option 2 — Apply highest rate: Charge 18% on entire shipping (conservative — safe). Most e-commerce companies: Option 2 (simpler, no dispute). FREE SHIPPING: 'Free delivery' (shipping absorbed by seller): No charge to customer → no GST on shipping (no consideration). Your cost: courier partner charges you 18% → you bear this. ITC: You claim ITC on courier charges (18%). No output GST on 'free' shipping. Net: ITC benefit reduces your cost. This is legitimate tax planning (not evasion). COURIER PARTNER → YOU (B2B): Delhivery/Blue Dart bills your company: Freight + surcharges: 18% GST. This is INPUT for your business. ITC: Fully claimable (business input for making taxable supplies). Accounting: Courier expense (debit) + ITC (GST input credit). PLATFORM MODEL (Marketplace — Amazon, Flipkart): If YOU are the platform (marketplace model): Seller ships via your logistics. You charge seller: commission (18%) + shipping fee (18%). You charge buyer: delivery fee (composite with product). TCS: You collect 1% TCS on total value (including shipping). Seller's responsibility: GST on product + shipping (their sale). Your responsibility: GST on commission + shipping service to seller. If seller uses YOUR logistics (FBA-equivalent): You provide logistics service to seller: 18%. Seller includes shipping in their product invoice to buyer. Multiple taxable events: logistics service (B2B to seller) + product sale (seller to buyer). SEPARATE DELIVERY ENTITY (Own logistics arm): Some e-commerce companies have SEPARATE logistics subsidiary: Main company (e-commerce): sells products. Logistics subsidiary: provides delivery. Inter-company: logistics charges 18% to main company. Main company: includes in composite supply to customer. ITC: Main company claims 18% ITC on logistics subsidiary bills. Transfer pricing: arm's length (if related party). GST: legitimate structure — no anti-avoidance issue. CASH ON DELIVERY (COD): COD handling charge (charged by courier partner): 18% (additional service). COD amount collected: not YOUR supply (you receive product payment through courier). Courier partner's COD fee: 18% → ITC available. If you charge customer 'COD fee': Same as shipping — composite with product rate. Or: if separately identified — could argue 18% (financial intermediation). Most companies: include in shipping/product (composite supply).
How are international courier imports (goods received via courier from abroad) taxed?
INTERNATIONAL COURIER IMPORTS — CUSTOMS + GST: WHAT HAPPENS WHEN YOU RECEIVE A COURIER FROM ABROAD: Every international courier shipment entering India goes through CUSTOMS clearance. The courier company (DHL, FedEx, Blue Dart International) handles customs on your behalf. DUTIES APPLICABLE: (1) Basic Customs Duty (BCD): Rate varies by product (0-100% — based on HS code). Applied on: Assessable Value (CIF — Cost + Insurance + Freight). (2) IGST (Integrated GST): Rate: same as domestic GST rate for that product (5%, 12%, 18%, 28%). Applied on: Assessable Value + BCD + any other duty. (3) Social Welfare Surcharge (SWS): 10% of BCD (not on IGST). (4) Compensation Cess (if applicable): On luxury/sin goods (cars, tobacco, aerated drinks). CALCULATION EXAMPLE: You receive electronics (HSN 8517 — 18% GST) worth $500: CIF value (in INR): $500 × ₹84 = ₹42,000. BCD (20% for electronics): ₹42,000 × 20% = ₹8,400. SWS (10% of BCD): ₹8,400 × 10% = ₹840. Assessable value for IGST: ₹42,000 + ₹8,400 + ₹840 = ₹51,240. IGST (18%): ₹51,240 × 18% = ₹9,223. Total duty: ₹8,400 + ₹840 + ₹9,223 = ₹18,463. Effective rate: ~44% of product value. Landing cost: ₹42,000 + ₹18,463 = ₹60,463. DE MINIMIS EXEMPTION: GIFTS: Value ≤ ₹5,000: Exempt from BCD. But: IGST still applies (no IGST exemption for gifts). Personal imports (non-commercial): BCD exemption up to ₹5,000 (for bona fide gifts). Commercial imports: NO de minimis exemption (all commercial courier imports attract full duty regardless of value). Note: India does NOT have a general de minimis like USA ($800) or EU (€150). COURIER BILL OF ENTRY (CBE): For shipments ≤ ₹50,000: Simplified Courier Bill of Entry (CBE) filed by courier company. No separate importer registration needed. Courier company handles customs clearance. You pay duties to courier company (they remit to customs). For shipments > ₹50,000: Regular Bill of Entry required. Importer must have: IEC (Import Export Code) + GSTIN. Can file through: courier company's customs broker or own CHA. Processing time: typically 24-48 hours for courier clearance. ITC ON IGST PAID AT IMPORT: If you're GST registered and import is for business: IGST paid at customs: FULLY creditable as ITC. Reflected in: GSTR-2B (based on Bill of Entry filed with ICEGATE). Claim in: GSTR-3B, Table 4(A)(1) — import of goods. Document required: Bill of Entry (not courier receipt). For courier imports < ₹50,000 (CBE): ITC based on Courier Bill of Entry (available on ICEGATE portal). Ensure: your GSTIN is mentioned on the CBE. PERSONAL IMPORTS (Not for business): IGST paid: NOT claimable as ITC (personal consumption). This is just a cost (like domestic GST on personal purchases). No refund mechanism for individuals. COURIER COMPANY'S CHARGES (Separate from customs duty): DHL/FedEx charges for customs handling: Customs clearance fee: ₹500-₹2,000 (varies). Advance payment fee (they pay customs on your behalf): varies. Warehousing (if held at customs): per day charge. All these charges: 18% GST (courier company's service). ITC: Available (if business import). SAMPLES / RETURNS: Free samples received via courier: Customs: Still assessable (even if free — value determined by customs). IGST: On assessed value. ITC: Available if for business use. Returns from export (goods coming back): Re-import: BCD may be exempt (under duty drawback/re-import provisions). IGST: May apply (claim ITC). Time limit: must be re-imported within specified period for duty exemption. FREQUENT IMPORTER (E-commerce seller importing via courier): If you regularly import goods for resale via courier: Get: IEC code + authorized courier as CHA. Maintain: all Courier Bills of Entry (for ITC). Reconcile: IGST paid at import with GSTR-2B. Volume discounts: negotiate with courier for bulk customs handling. Consider: AEO (Authorized Economic Operator) status for faster clearance.

Courier & Logistics GST — GTA RCM, ITC & E-way Bill

Laabam.One handles courier & logistics GST: courier vs GTA classification, RCM compliance for freight recipients, international courier customs + IGST, e-way bill automation, vehicle ITC for transport businesses, and multi-state logistics GST registration.

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