HealthcarePharmaceuticals

GST on Healthcare & Pharma — Services Exempt, Medicines 5-12%, Devices 12%

Complete GST guide for healthcare sector: hospital services (exempt), medicines (5%/12%), medical devices, life-saving drugs, cosmetic procedures (18%), health insurance, pharma manufacturing, and telemedicine taxation.

Exempt

Hospital Services

12%

Medicines (general)

5%

Life-Saving Drugs

12%

Medical Devices

18%

Health Insurance

Exempt

Diagnostic Services

18%

Cosmetic Surgery

Exempt

Ayush/Homeopathy

Healthcare & Pharma — GST Framework

Hospital & Clinical Services — Exempt

Healthcare services by clinical establishment: EXEMPT from GST. Covers: consultation, diagnosis, treatment, surgery, OPD, IPD, emergency care, ICU, pathology, radiology, physiotherapy — when provided by hospital/clinic/nursing home. Key condition: must be 'authorized medical practitioner' or 'paramedics' in 'clinical establishment'. Room charges (all categories including deluxe suites): exempt IF part of healthcare. Food served to in-patients: exempt (composite supply with healthcare). Ambulance services: exempt. Blood bank: exempt. Organ transplant services: exempt.

Medicines & Pharmaceuticals

Formulations (tablets, syrups, injections): mostly 12% GST. Life-saving/essential drugs (NLEM listed, anti-cancer, anti-HIV, anti-TB, vaccines): 5%. Ayurvedic/Unani medicines: 12%. Homeopathic medicines: 12%. OTC medicines (Crocin, Combiflam): 12%. Surgical consumables (syringes, bandages, gloves): 12%. Blood bags: 5%. Contraceptives (oral): 0%. Sanitary napkins: 0% (since July 2018 — 28th Council). Insulin: 5%. Diagnostic kits/reagents: 12%. API (Active Pharmaceutical Ingredients — bulk drugs): 18%. Oxygen (medical): 12% (reduced from 18% during COVID).

Medical Devices & Equipment

Medical devices (general): 12% GST. Hearing aids: 12%. Wheelchairs: 5%. Artificial limbs/prosthetics: 5%. Pacemakers, stents: 5% (reduced from 12% after major outcry). Surgical instruments: 12%. Diagnostic equipment (CT scan machine, MRI, X-ray): 18%. Ventilators: 12% (reduced during COVID from 18%). Oximeters: 12%. PPE kits: 5% (COVID concession, was 12%). Hospital furniture (OT table, ICU bed): 18%. Dental equipment: 18%. Optical lenses/frames: 12%. Contact lenses: 12%. Spectacles: 12%.

Cosmetic & Elective Procedures — Taxable

Cosmetic/plastic surgery (elective — not medically necessary): 18% GST. Hair transplant: 18%. Teeth whitening/cosmetic dentistry: 18%. LASIK (debated — many treat as healthcare exempt, but some states say cosmetic). IVF/fertility treatment: exempt (healthcare). Dermatology (medical skin treatment): exempt. Dermatology (cosmetic — botox, fillers): 18%. Key test: 'Is the procedure for treatment of disease/illness or for cosmetic enhancement?' If disease/illness → exempt. If purely cosmetic/elective → 18%. Reconstructive surgery post-accident: exempt (healthcare). Gender reassignment surgery: exempt (medical necessity).

Pharma Manufacturing & R&D

Contract manufacturing (loan license): 18% GST on manufacturing charges. Drug R&D services (CRO — Contract Research Organization): 18%. Clinical trial services: 18%. Bioequivalence studies: 18%. API manufacturing: 18% on service charges. Packaging services (pharma): 18%. Cold chain logistics (pharma): 18% (not exempt — agri exemption doesn't apply to pharma cold storage). Export of pharma products: 0% (zero-rated). Export of R&D services: 0% (if recipient outside India). PLI scheme (Production Linked Incentive) for pharma: incentive received is NOT supply — no GST on PLI amount. Technology transfer/royalty from foreign pharma: 18% under RCM.

Telemedicine & Digital Health

Telemedicine consultation (by doctor via app/video): exempt — same as in-person healthcare. Online pharmacy (1mg, PharmEasy, Netmeds): 12% on medicines + 18% on delivery charges (if separately charged). Health-tech platform fee (Practo, DocPrime listing): 18%. AI-based diagnostics (SaaS platform): 18%. Wearable health devices (smartwatch with health monitor): 18%. Digital therapeutics (prescription digital apps): 18% (treated as software, not healthcare). Health data analytics services: 18%. E-pharmacy license and compliance: regulatory — no GST impact. Key: the DOCTOR's service is exempt regardless of medium; the PLATFORM's service is taxable.

Healthcare & Pharma — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN/SACGST RateNotes
Hospital/clinical servicesSAC 99930%Exempt — authorized practitioners
Medicines (general formulations)3003-300412%Tablets, syrups, injections
Life-saving drugs (NLEM)3003-30045%Cancer, HIV, TB drugs
Surgical consumables3005-300612%Bandages, sutures, gloves
Medical devices (general)9018-902212%Instruments, equipment
Stents/pacemakers90215%Implants concessional
Wheelchairs/prosthetics8713/90215%Assistive devices
Cosmetic surgerySAC 999318%Non-medical, elective
Health insurance premiumSAC 997118%GoM reviewing reduction
Sanitary napkins96190%Exempt since July 2018
Contraceptives30060%Exempt
Pharma R&D/CRO servicesSAC 998118%Contract research

Frequently Asked Questions

Is GST charged on hospital bills — room charges, surgery, medicines?
NO GST on healthcare services provided by a clinical establishment (hospital, nursing home, clinic). This covers: (1) Doctor consultation. (2) Surgery/operation charges. (3) Room rent (general ward, semi-private, private, ICU — ALL exempt). (4) Medicines consumed during treatment (administered in hospital). (5) Diagnostic tests (pathology, radiology, scans). (6) Nursing charges. (7) OT charges. (8) Physiotherapy. HOWEVER: (a) Medicines PURCHASED from hospital pharmacy (take-home): 12% GST (retail sale of goods, not service). (b) Food from hospital canteen for visitors: 5% GST. (c) Hospital ambulance for commercial hire: debated. (d) Room upgrade as 'luxury' — still exempt if part of healthcare. The exemption is for the SERVICE of healthcare — not goods sold retail by hospital.
Why is health insurance taxed at 18% — will it be reduced?
Health insurance premiums attract 18% GST — one of the most criticized GST rates. The 55th GST Council (December 2024) discussed the Group of Ministers (GoM) recommendation: (1) Term life insurance: exempt for individual policies. (2) Health insurance for seniors (>60 years): exempt (or 5% — under consideration). (3) Health insurance premium ≤₹5 lakh sum insured: possibly 5%. (4) Health insurance premium >₹5 lakh: continue at 18%. No final decision yet — deferred for further analysis. Industry argument: 18% GST discourages health insurance penetration (currently only 3-4% of Indians have private health insurance). Government concern: insurance constitutes ₹2,400 Cr+ in GST revenue — reduction has fiscal impact. Employee group health insurance (paid by employer): 18% GST, ITC available to employer.
What is the GST on medicines — why do some drugs have 5% and others 12%?
Classification is based on HSN 3003 (medicaments not in dosage form) at 12% and HSN 3004 (medicaments in measured doses/retail packing) at 12%. BUT specific exemptions/concessions: (1) NLEM drugs (National List of Essential Medicines — ~384 drugs): 5% if specifically notified. (2) Life-saving drugs: anti-cancer, anti-HIV/AIDS (ARV), anti-TB, anti-malarial, anti-diabetic insulin → 5%. (3) Vaccines (all): 5%. (4) Oral Rehydration Salts: 5%. (5) Blood/blood components: exempt. (6) Human blood for therapeutic use: exempt. General branded formulations (Crocin, Dolo, Augmentin): 12%. The 5% vs 12% distinction is NOT based on necessity perception alone — it's based on specific notification entries. Many 'essential' drugs are still at 12% because they weren't specifically notified for 5%.
Does a doctor running a private clinic need GST registration?
Generally NO — because healthcare services are EXEMPT from GST, and exempt supplies don't count toward the ₹20 lakh registration threshold. A doctor providing only clinical/medical services (consultation, treatment) has 100% exempt turnover → no registration required regardless of income. HOWEVER, registration becomes necessary if: (1) Doctor sells medicines from attached pharmacy (retail sale — taxable supply). If pharmacy sales >₹20 lakh: register. (2) Doctor provides cosmetic procedures (taxable at 18%). (3) Doctor provides services inter-state (e.g., telemedicine to patients in other states — exempt but may need registration for tracking). (4) Doctor rents commercial property (receiving RCM supply). In practice: Most solo practitioners don't register. Multi-specialty hospitals with pharmacy + canteen + parking: usually register due to taxable components.

Healthcare Billing — Exempt/Taxable Service Segregation

Laabam.One auto-segregates exempt healthcare services from taxable pharmacy sales, handles medical device HSN classification, pharma contract manufacturing invoicing, and health insurance GST computation.

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