Security & SurveillanceManpower & Guarding

GST on Security Services — 18% GST + RCM on Guard Supply

Complete GST guide for security services: security guard supply 18% (RCM if non-corporate supplier), CCTV/surveillance systems 18%, manpower supply 18%, cash-in-transit 18%, private investigation 18%, facility management 18%, and integrated security solutions classification.

18%

Security Guard Supply

18%

CCTV Installation

18%

Private Detective

18%

Manpower Supply

18%

Electronic Surveillance

18%

Cash-in-Transit

18%

Fire Safety Service

18%

Cybersecurity Service

Security Services — GST Framework

Security Guard Services — 18% GST (RCM Applicable)

SECURITY GUARD / MANPOWER SUPPLY — 18% GST: Security guard deployment: 18% (SAC 998529). Armed guard services: 18%. Unarmed guard services: 18%. Bouncer services: 18%. Event security: 18%. VIP protection (PSO): 18%. Corporate security: 18%. Residential society security: 18%. Industrial/factory security: 18%. Hospital security: 18%. Bank/ATM security: 18%. Mall/retail security: 18%. REVERSE CHARGE MECHANISM (RCM) — SECURITY SERVICES: W.e.f. January 1, 2019 — Notification 29/2018: Security services (supply of security personnel) provided by: ANY person to a REGISTERED person: RCM applies. The RECIPIENT (registered person) pays 18% GST under RCM. The security agency: bills WITHOUT GST (if supplying to registered person). EXCEPTION to RCM: If security agency is a BODY CORPORATE (company/LLP): Forward charge applies (agency charges 18% normally). RCM only when: security supplier is individual/partnership/proprietorship/HUF → supplying to registered person. WHY RCM? To bring informal security sector into GST net. Many small security agencies (proprietor-run) were evading GST. RCM ensures: recipient (large company) pays GST — compliance guaranteed. BODY CORPORATE SUPPLIERS (No RCM): G4S India (company), SIS Group (company), Securitas (company): These are body corporates → they charge 18% on forward charge. Recipient: pays 18% to agency + claims ITC. No RCM complication. SMALL AGENCY (Proprietor/Partnership): Proprietor-run security agency → supplying guards to Infosys (registered): Agency invoice: ₹1,00,000 (WITHOUT GST — RCM applies). Infosys pays: ₹1,00,000 to agency. Infosys also pays: 18% RCM = ₹18,000 to government. Infosys claims: ₹18,000 ITC (net effect: zero). Agency: no GST liability (but must be registered if turnover > ₹20L). WHAT QUALIFIES AS 'SECURITY SERVICE': Supply of security PERSONNEL — humans deployed at client site. Includes: guards, watchmen, patrol staff, supervisors. Does NOT include: CCTV installation (goods + service — not 'security personnel'). Alarm monitoring (technology service — not 'personnel supply'). Cybersecurity (IT service — not 'personnel supply'). RCM applies ONLY to personnel supply (human deployment).

CCTV, Surveillance & Electronic Security — 18% GST

CCTV & SURVEILLANCE SYSTEMS: CCTV camera (goods — sale): 18% (HSN 8525). DVR/NVR (recording device): 18% (HSN 8521). Monitor/display: 18%. Cables/connectors: 18%. Hard disk (for recording): 18%. CCTV installation service: 18% (works contract if mounted to building). Annual maintenance (AMC): 18%. Remote monitoring service: 18%. Cloud storage for CCTV footage: 18%. IMPORTANT — WORKS CONTRACT: If CCTV is EMBEDDED in building (wiring through walls, fixed mounting): Works contract: 18% (immovable property). Recipient: ITC BLOCKED if for own use (Section 17(5)(c) — construction). If CCTV is STANDALONE (plug-and-play, temporary): Supply of goods + installation: 18%. Recipient: ITC AVAILABLE (movable property — not construction). PRACTICAL DISTINCTION: Builder installing CCTV in new building: Works contract (part of construction) — ITC blocked for builder's own property. Company installing CCTV in existing office: Goods supply + installation — ITC available (not construction of new building). ELECTRONIC SECURITY SYSTEMS: Access control systems (biometric, card): 18%. Intruder alarm systems: 18%. Fire alarm systems: 18%. Intercom systems: 18%. Metal detectors (DFMD/HHMD): 18%. Baggage scanners: 18%. Vehicle barriers/bollards: 18%. Video door phone: 18%. Motion sensors: 18%. All electronic security goods: uniformly 18% GST. MONITORING & CONTROL ROOM: Central monitoring station (CMS): 18% (monitoring service). Alarm response service: 18%. Video verification: 18%. Remote access management: 18%. 24/7 surveillance monitoring: 18%. DATA SECURITY (Digital): Cybersecurity services: 18% (IT service — SAC 998314). Penetration testing: 18%. Vulnerability assessment: 18%. SOC (Security Operations Center): 18%. Data encryption services: 18%. DLP (Data Loss Prevention): 18%. Firewall management: 18%. All cybersecurity: 18% with full ITC for recipient.

Manpower Supply & Labour Hire — 18% GST

MANPOWER SUPPLY — 18%: Supply of manpower (temporary staffing): 18% (SAC 998512). Contract labour supply: 18%. Housekeeping staff supply: 18%. Driver supply: 18%. Office boy/peon supply: 18%. Receptionist supply: 18%. Loading/unloading labour: 18%. Factory labour supply: 18%. IT staff augmentation: 18%. MANPOWER vs WORKS CONTRACT vs PURE SERVICE: (1) MANPOWER SUPPLY: Agency deploys staff at client's premises. Client supervises/controls the staff. Agency handles: salary, PF, ESI compliance. Billing: per-person per-month (or per-shift). Rate: 18% GST on total billing (including salary pass-through). (2) WORKS CONTRACT: Agency provides service with defined deliverable. Agency supervises own staff. Billing: per-unit or per-deliverable. Rate: 18% (if immovable property) or 18% (other). (3) PURE SERVICE (outsourced): Agency provides end-to-end service (client doesn't control HOW). e.g., 'Keep premises clean' (not 'provide 5 cleaners'). Billing: per-area or per-task. Rate: 18%. RCM ON MANPOWER SUPPLY: Same as security services (Notification 29/2018): Supply of manpower by non-body-corporate → to registered person: RCM. This covers ALL manpower supply, not just security. So: temp staffing agency (proprietor) → supplying to company: RCM. But: Randstad India (company), TeamLease (company), Quess Corp (company): Body corporate → forward charge (they charge 18%). VALUATION — MANPOWER SUPPLY: CRITICAL ISSUE: What is the taxable value? Option 1 (Gross billing): Total invoice to client (salary + margin + statutory): ₹50,000. GST: 18% × ₹50,000 = ₹9,000. Option 2 (Commission/margin only): If treated as PURE AGENT: Salary: ₹45,000 (pass-through — not taxable). Margin: ₹5,000 (agency's service charge). GST: 18% × ₹5,000 = ₹900. PURE AGENT CONDITIONS (Rule 33): (1) Client authorizes agency to pay salary on client's behalf. (2) Payment is separately indicated on invoice. (3) Agency doesn't hold title to the salary amount. (4) Client provides salary amount separately. In PRACTICE: Most staffing agencies charge 18% on FULL billing (safer — less dispute). Pure agent model: contested by department (requires robust documentation). Revenue department's position: if control of workers is with client, but contract is with agency → full billing is taxable value. COURT RULINGS: Several tribunals have allowed pure agent model for manpower supply. But: requires strict compliance with Rule 33 conditions. SAFE APPROACH: Charge 18% on full invoice amount (include salary component). Don't risk pure agent disputes.

Cash-in-Transit & Armoured Services — 18% GST

CASH-IN-TRANSIT (CIT) — 18%: Cash van services: 18% (SAC 998529). ATM cash replenishment: 18%. Bank cash pick-up: 18%. Retail cash collection: 18%. Bullion transport: 18%. CIT + insurance bundle: 18% (composite — security dominant). MAJOR CIT COMPANIES: SIS Prosegur (JV), CMS Info Systems, Writer Safeguard, AGS Transact: All body corporates → forward charge at 18%. Banks (recipients): claim full ITC (financial services input). ARMOURED CAR SERVICES: Armoured vehicle hire: 18%. Armed escort: 18%. Secure document transport: 18%. Evidence transport (legal): 18%. VAULT / SAFE DEPOSIT: Bank locker rent: 18% (immovable property rental — or financial service). Safe deposit vault (private): 18%. Document storage (secure): 18%. PRIVATE INVESTIGATION — 18%: Private detective/investigation: 18% (SAC 998529). Background verification: 18%. Due diligence investigation: 18%. Corporate espionage detection: 18%. Insurance fraud investigation: 18%. Matrimonial investigation: 18%. PSARA (Private Security Agencies Regulation Act) COMPLIANCE: All security agencies must have PSARA license. GST registration: mandatory if turnover > ₹20 lakh. RCM: based on legal form of entity (body corporate or not). PSARA compliance: separate from GST — but license required for legal operation. FIRE SAFETY — 18%: Fire safety audit: 18%. Fire fighting equipment (goods): 18% (HSN 8424). Fire extinguisher: 18%. Smoke detector: 18%. Sprinkler system: 18% (works contract if integrated in building). Fire safety training: 18%. Fire NOC consultancy: 18%. Annual fire safety maintenance: 18%. DISASTER MANAGEMENT: Emergency response services: 18%. Evacuation planning: 18%. Crisis management consulting: 18%. Business continuity planning: 18%. All disaster/emergency services: 18% (professional/consulting). EXEMPT — GOVERNMENT SERVICES: Police protection (government — sovereign): NOT GST (not a 'service' — sovereign function). Fire brigade (government): EXEMPT (government local authority). Civil defence: EXEMPT. Military/paramilitary: EXEMPT (government). These are NOT supplies — sovereign/governmental functions.

Facility Management & Integrated Security — 18% GST

INTEGRATED FACILITY MANAGEMENT (IFM) — 18%: Complete facility management: 18% (SAC 998512/998599). Includes: security + housekeeping + maintenance + landscaping. Single contract covering multiple services: 18%. CLASSIFICATION — COMPOSITE OR MIXED? If single contract (one price for all FM services): COMPOSITE SUPPLY: Principal supply determines rate. Usually: facility management = 18% (dominant element). All components (security, cleaning, maintenance): 18%. If separately priced components in one contract: Each component: 18% (all happen to be 18% anyway). No rate difference issue (unlike hotel restaurant case). IFM PROVIDERS (Large companies): JLL (Jones Lang LaSalle), CBRE, Cushman & Wakefield, Sodexo, ISS: All body corporates → forward charge at 18%. Full ITC available to commercial tenants. RESIDENTIAL WELFARE ASSOCIATIONS (RWA): RWA hires security agency for society: If RWA is registered under GST (monthly contribution > ₹7,500 per member): RWA pays: 18% to security agency (or RCM if non-corporate agency). RWA charges members: exempt up to ₹7,500/month (Notification 12/2017 Entry 77). If member contribution ≤ ₹7,500/month: RWA's supply to members: EXEMPT. RWA can still claim ITC? NO — if output is exempt, ITC is reversed. If member contribution > ₹7,500/month: RWA's supply: 18% GST on FULL amount (not just excess). Members with home office (registered): can claim ITC (proportionate). COMMERCIAL COMPLEX — SECURITY: Building owner (landlord) provides security to tenants: If bundled in rent: part of composite supply (18% — rent is principal). If separately charged (CAM — Common Area Maintenance): 18% GST on CAM charges. Tenants: claim ITC on CAM (business input). CAM CHARGES: Typically include: security, housekeeping, lift maintenance, generator, water. All at: 18% (facility services). ITC for tenants: available (commercial rent + CAM = business inputs). GOVERNMENT / PSU — SECURITY: Government department hiring private security: Government is registered → RCM applies (if agency is non-corporate). But: government departments not always claiming ITC (affects their budget). PSU (Public Sector Undertaking) — registered: Same as corporate — RCM or forward charge based on agency type. ITC: available (PSU is body corporate). HOSPITAL / SCHOOL — SECURITY: Hospital hiring security: Hospital is registered → RCM (if non-corporate agency). Hospital's supply (healthcare): mostly EXEMPT. So: ITC on security charges → REVERSED (Rule 42/43 — exempt output). Net cost to hospital: 18% (no ITC benefit). School/educational institution: Same issue — education exempt → security ITC reversed. Exception: if school also has taxable activities (commercial coaching, hostel > ₹7,500): Proportionate ITC available. SECURITY EQUIPMENT LEASING: Leasing CCTV equipment: 18% (rental of goods). Leasing metal detectors: 18%. Leasing fire safety equipment: 18%. Buy-back / upgrade schemes: If exchange (old for new): GST on differential value (if margin scheme applicable). Normal sale of old security equipment: 18% (or 12% if second-hand goods margin scheme under Rule 32(5)).

Security Services — ITC, Compliance & Labour Law

SECURITY AGENCY — ITC FRAMEWORK: Output: Security services at 18%. Available ITC: Uniforms: 12% → ITC ✓ (if provided by agency to guards). Shoes/boots: 18% → ITC ✓. Torches/flashlights: 18% → ITC ✓. Communication devices (walkie-talkie): 18% → ITC ✓. CCTV (if agency owns): 18% → ITC ✓. Weapons (licensed): 18% → ITC ✓ (used in business). Training expenses: 18% → ITC ✓. Office rent: 18% → ITC ✓. Vehicles (patrol): ITC BLOCKED (motor vehicle — Section 17(5)). Exception: if vehicle used for security patrol as GOODS TRANSPORT: argue ITC available. Generally: patrol vehicles = BLOCKED (not goods transport). Insurance (professional liability): 18% → ITC ✓. BLOCKED ITC FOR SECURITY AGENCY: Motor vehicles (patrol cars): BLOCKED (unless goods transport argument works). Food/beverages for guards: BLOCKED (Section 17(5)(b)). Personal gifts to staff: BLOCKED. Club memberships: BLOCKED. EMPLOYEE vs CONTRACTOR (Guards): Guards employed by agency: Salary: not GST (employment — Schedule III). PF/ESI: not GST (statutory — employer obligation). Agency bills client: 18% on full billing. Guards as independent contractors: Rare in security — most are employees. If contractor: guard charges agency (if above threshold). Agency charges client: 18%. RCM COMPLIANCE CHECKLIST: For recipient (company hiring security from non-corporate agency): (1) Verify: Is supplier a body corporate? YES → no RCM (pay 18% to agency). NO → RCM applies. (2) Receive: invoice without GST from agency. (3) Self-assess: 18% GST on invoice value. (4) Report: GSTR-3B Table 3.1(d) — inward supplies under RCM. (5) Pay: 18% through electronic cash ledger (cannot use ITC for RCM payment). (6) Claim: ITC on RCM paid — Table 4(A)(3). (7) GSTR-2B: auto-populated from agency's GSTR-1 (if they report). For agency (non-corporate — proprietor/partnership): (1) Invoice: issue WITHOUT GST (mention 'tax payable under RCM by recipient'). (2) GSTR-1: report supply under RCM column. (3) No output tax payment (recipient pays). (4) ITC: can still claim ITC on own inputs (uniform, training, etc.). (5) But: if output is under RCM (they don't collect tax), ITC use is limited. Actually: even under RCM, agency's ITC can be used for OTHER forward charge supplies. If agency has NO forward charge supplies: ITC accumulates → apply for refund (inverted duty). LABOUR LAW INTERSECTION: Minimum wages: Must be paid to guards (state-specific). PF/ESI: Mandatory if 20+ employees. PSARA license: Required for security agency operation. Contract Labour Act: If 20+ contract workers deployed at single site. Service tax era disputes (now under GST): Exclusion of salary component from service value? STILL DEBATED under GST. Pure agent argument for salary? CONTESTED. Most agencies: charge 18% on ENTIRE billing (inclusive of salary component). SERVICE LEVEL AGREEMENTS (SLA): SLA breach penalty (security agency fails to deploy sufficient guards): If client charges penalty to agency: NOT taxable (considered discount/deduction). If agency deducts from own payment to client: reduces taxable value (GST on net). Performance incentive (bonus for zero-incident month): Additional consideration: included in taxable value. GST: 18% on incentive amount.

Security Services — GST Rate Table

ItemHSN / SACGST RateNotes
Security guard services99852918%RCM if non-corporate supplier
CCTV camera (goods)852518%Surveillance equipment
CCTV installation service99872918%Works contract if embedded
Manpower/staff supply99851218%RCM if non-corporate supplier
Cash-in-transit99852918%Armoured vehicle services
Private investigation99852918%Detective/verification
Fire safety equipment842418%Extinguishers, alarms
Electronic access control854318%Biometric, card systems
Cybersecurity services99831418%IT security consulting
Facility management (IFM)99859918%Integrated FM contract
Alarm monitoring service99852918%Remote monitoring
Security training99929318%Guard training programs

Frequently Asked Questions

When does RCM apply on security services? How do we determine if our security agency is a 'body corporate'?
RCM ON SECURITY SERVICES — DETERMINATION: THE RULE (Notification 13/2017 as amended by 29/2018): Security services (supply of security personnel/guard) by ANY PERSON (other than body corporate) to a REGISTERED PERSON: RCM applies. So RCM kicks in ONLY when: (1) Service is: supply of security personnel (not CCTV, not cybersecurity — only HUMAN deployment). (2) Supplier is: NOT a body corporate. (3) Recipient is: registered under GST. WHAT IS 'BODY CORPORATE'? Definition under Companies Act 2013, Section 2(11): (a) Company incorporated under Companies Act (Pvt Ltd, Ltd, OPC). (b) Body corporate under any other law (LLP, statutory corporation). (c) Company incorporated outside India. LLP = Body Corporate (LLP Act 2008 says LLP is body corporate). NOT body corporate: (a) Sole proprietorship (individual). (b) Partnership firm (not LLP — general partnership). (c) Hindu Undivided Family (HUF). (d) Association of Persons (AOP). (e) Trust. HOW TO VERIFY: Ask security agency: 'Are you a company (Pvt Ltd/Ltd) or LLP?' YES → Body corporate → Forward charge (they charge 18%). NO (proprietor/partnership/trust) → RCM applies. DOCUMENTATION: Check: agency's PAN type (P = individual, F = firm, C = company). Check: GST certificate (constitution of business). Check: PSARA license (mentions legal form). PRACTICAL SCENARIOS: Scenario 1: ABC Security Pvt Ltd (body corporate) → Your Company (registered): Forward charge. ABC charges 18% GST. You pay ₹1,18,000 (₹1L + ₹18K GST). You claim ₹18K ITC. NO RCM. Scenario 2: Rajesh Security Services (proprietorship) → Your Company (registered): RCM applies. Rajesh bills ₹1,00,000 (NO GST). You pay Rajesh: ₹1,00,000. You pay RCM to government: ₹18,000. You claim ITC: ₹18,000. Net cost: ₹1,00,000 (same as Scenario 1). Scenario 3: Any agency → Unregistered recipient (small shop below ₹40L): NO RCM (recipient is not registered). Agency charges 18% forward charge (if agency is registered). If agency is also unregistered: no GST at all. Scenario 4: Security services to RWA (residential welfare association): If RWA is registered under GST: RCM applies (if agency is non-corporate). If RWA is unregistered: no RCM. WHAT SERVICES TRIGGER RCM: ONLY 'supply of security personnel' (humans deployed). NOT: CCTV monitoring (technology service). NOT: cybersecurity (IT service). NOT: alarm monitoring (electronic service). NOT: cash-in-transit (transport/logistics). NOT: background verification (investigation). ONLY: deployment of human security guards/watchmen at client premises. GREY AREAS: Bouncer at event: Yes — security personnel deployment → RCM. Dog squad (with handler): Yes — handler is security personnel → RCM (dog is ancillary). Drone surveillance with operator: Debatable — if operator deploys at site: arguably yes. If remote: probably no (technology service). Armed guard + armoured vehicle: Guard deployment: yes → RCM. Armoured vehicle component: could argue separately (no RCM on vehicle). Practice: treat as composite (security personnel dominant) → RCM on entire value.
Our company has both employed security staff and contracted security agency staff. What's the GST treatment?
EMPLOYED vs CONTRACTED SECURITY — GST TREATMENT: SCENARIO 1: YOUR OWN EMPLOYEES (In-house security): Security guards on YOUR payroll (salary, PF, ESI through you): GST implication: NONE. Employment is NOT a supply under GST (Schedule III, Para 1). Salary paid: not taxable. PF/ESI: not taxable. Uniform provided: not taxable (given in course of employment). This is the most tax-efficient model — ZERO GST. BUT: you bear full employment liability (gratuity, bonus, leave, termination). SCENARIO 2: CONTRACTED AGENCY (Outsourced): Agency deploys guards at your premises: If body corporate agency: 18% forward charge. If non-corporate agency: 18% RCM. Your cost: service charges + 18% GST (offset by ITC if your output is taxable). Less employment liability (agency bears PF/ESI/gratuity). COST COMPARISON: Own employees (10 guards): Salary: ₹20,000 × 10 = ₹2,00,000/month. PF (employer): 13% = ₹26,000. ESI (employer): 3.25% = ₹6,500. Bonus/gratuity provision: ~₹15,000. Admin/HR cost: ₹10,000. Total: ~₹2,57,500/month. GST: ₹0 (no supply). Contracted agency (10 guards): Agency billing: ₹3,00,000/month (includes margin + statutory). GST: 18% = ₹54,000. ITC credit: ₹54,000 (if your output is taxable). Net GST cost: ₹0 (ITC offsets). Net cost: ₹3,00,000/month. BUT: if your output is EXEMPT (hospital, school): No ITC available. GST becomes a COST: ₹54,000/month. In that case: own employees are cheaper by ₹54,000/month + agency margin. HYBRID MODEL (Some employed + some contracted): Common for large corporates: Core security team: employed (supervisors, specialized). Flexible staff: contracted (general guards, event security). GST: Only on contracted portion. ITC: Only on agency invoices. IMPORTANT — 'DEEMED EMPLOYMENT' RISK: If you control guards (work hours, duties, supervision): Even if through agency — labour law may treat as YOUR employees. GST classification: still 'security services from agency' (GST follows contract). But: labour law liability could shift to YOU (principal employer). This doesn't change GST treatment — agency still charges 18%. SECONDMENT / DEPUTATION: Your employee seconded FROM another group company: If seconded WITH salary reimbursement: Taxable? LANDMARK CASE: Northern Operating Systems (Supreme Court 2022): Ruled: secondment/deputation IS a taxable supply (manpower supply). The sending company: provides service of making employees available. The receiving company: pays consideration (salary reimbursement). Rate: 18% GST on reimbursement amount. This means: intra-group secondment = 18% GST. ITC: available to receiving company (if taxable output). Impact: groups with shared security teams across entities — GST applies on cross-charge. PRACTICAL ADVICE: (1) If your output is TAXABLE (manufacturing, IT, trading): Contract agency OR own employees — net cost similar (ITC offsets GST). Choose based on flexibility needs. (2) If your output is EXEMPT (hospital, school, charitable): Own employees: no GST (cheaper). If agency needed: factor 18% as COST (no ITC available). (3) Mixed output (part taxable, part exempt): Proportionate ITC only (Rule 42/43). Optimize: employ security for exempt activities, contract for taxable. (4) Large group company: Shared services model → 18% GST on cross-charge (Northern Operating Systems). Consider: each entity employs own security (avoids inter-company GST).
We provide integrated security solutions (guards + CCTV + monitoring). How is GST applied — single rate or multiple?
INTEGRATED SECURITY — COMPOSITE vs MIXED SUPPLY: YOUR OFFERING: Guards deployed at client site + CCTV system installed + Remote monitoring service. QUESTION: One rate (18%) or different rates for each? ANSWER: Everything is 18% — but the classification matters for ITC and RCM. ANALYSIS — SUPPLY CLASSIFICATION: Option 1 — COMPOSITE SUPPLY (Section 2(30)): Two or more supplies naturally bundled in ordinary course of business. Principal supply: the dominant element. Rate: principal supply's rate applies to all. For integrated security: All elements are 18% anyway. Principal supply: security personnel (usually highest value). Ancillary: CCTV + monitoring. Rate: 18% on total value. Advantage: simple — one invoice, one SAC, one rate. Option 2 — MIXED SUPPLY (Section 2(74)): Two or more supplies NOT naturally bundled. Each can be supplied independently. Highest rate applies. For integrated security: Guards: 18%. CCTV: 18%. Monitoring: 18%. Highest: 18% — same result. Option 3 — SEPARATE SUPPLIES: If each is independently identifiable and separately priced in contract: Each is a separate supply — invoiced separately. Guards: 18% (SAC 998529) — RCM may apply if non-corporate. CCTV sale: 18% (HSN 8525) — goods supply (no RCM). Monitoring: 18% (SAC 998529) — RCM not applicable (not 'security personnel'). THE RCM COMPLICATION: THIS is where classification MATTERS: If COMPOSITE (single supply — guards as principal): Entire supply = 'security service' → RCM applies (if non-corporate to registered). Client pays RCM on ₹5,00,000 total (guards + CCTV + monitoring). If SEPARATE SUPPLIES (individually identified): Guards (₹3,00,000): RCM applies (security personnel). CCTV (₹1,50,000): NO RCM (goods supply — not security personnel). Monitoring (₹50,000): NO RCM (technology service — not personnel). Client pays RCM only on ₹3,00,000 (not entire ₹5,00,000). SAVING: ₹2,00,000 × 18% = ₹36,000 less RCM (which is timing benefit). WHAT'S THE BETTER APPROACH? For body corporate agencies: No RCM anyway → composite is simpler. For non-corporate agencies: Separate invoicing → reduces RCM burden on client. Separate contracts per service → clearly establishes separate supplies. DEPARTMENT'S VIEW: If artificially split to avoid RCM: Department may treat as composite (substance over form). Genuine separate contracts with separate pricing, separately negotiable: Valid as separate supplies. Single contract with itemized breakdown: May still be treated as composite (bundled offering). EVIDENCE OF SEPARATE SUPPLY: Separate contracts (signed independently, different dates OK). Separate invoices (different SAC codes). Each can be terminated independently. Different delivery/deployment timelines. Market evidence: these are sold separately by others. YOUR PRACTICAL OPTIONS: (1) Single integrated contract: Charge 18% on everything. If non-corporate: RCM on entire value. Simpler compliance for both parties. (2) Separate contracts (guards / CCTV / monitoring): Guards: 18% — RCM (if non-corporate). CCTV sale: 18% — no RCM (goods). Monitoring: 18% — no RCM (tech service). More paperwork but potentially beneficial for client (RCM only on personnel). RECOMMENDATION: If you're a BODY CORPORATE: Doesn't matter (no RCM either way) → composite is simpler. If you're NON-CORPORATE: Client may request separate contracts (to reduce RCM scope). Accommodate if possible — it's legitimate (different services with different SAC). Ensure: genuinely separate agreements, separate invoicing, separate terms.
What are the place of supply rules for security services provided across multiple states?
SECURITY SERVICES — PLACE OF SUPPLY (Multi-State): THE RULE FOR SECURITY SERVICES: Security guard deployed at CLIENT'S LOCATION: Place of supply = where the security personnel are deployed (performance-based). Section 12(4) IGST Act: Services in relation to immovable property → place where property is located. Argument: security at a building = service in relation to that building = immovable property rule. Section 12(2)(a): General rule (registered recipient) → location of recipient. WHICH RULE APPLIES? DOMINANT VIEW: Security is 'supply of manpower' — general rule applies (Section 12(2)). For B2B (registered recipient): place of supply = location of RECIPIENT (their GSTIN state). Not where guards are deployed. For B2C (unregistered recipient): place of supply = location of SUPPLIER. ALTERNATIVE VIEW (contested): Security 'at a premises' = service related to immovable property → location of property. If this applies: place of supply = where guards are deployed. PRACTICAL IMPLICATIONS: Scenario 1 — Same state (clear): Mumbai security agency → guards deployed at Mumbai office of Mumbai company. Intra-state: CGST + SGST (Maharashtra). No confusion. Scenario 2 — Interstate (registered recipient — general rule): Delhi security agency (GSTIN DL) → guards deployed at Mumbai office of company (registered in Maharashtra GSTIN MH). General rule (B2B): place of supply = Maharashtra (recipient's location). Result: IGST (Delhi to Maharashtra). Scenario 3 — Interstate (immovable property rule — if applied): Same facts as above. Immovable property rule: place of supply = Mumbai (where guards deployed). Result: same — IGST (Delhi to Maharashtra). In this case: BOTH rules give same answer. Scenario 4 — CONFLICT case: Delhi security agency → guards deployed at Mumbai office of company registered in DELHI. General rule: place of supply = Delhi (recipient's GSTIN state). Result: CGST + Delhi SGST (intra-state — both in Delhi). Immovable property rule: place of supply = Mumbai (where guards physically deployed). Result: IGST (Delhi to Maharashtra). WHICH IS CORRECT FOR SCENARIO 4? Department's dominant interpretation: General rule (Section 12(2)) — B2B → recipient's location. Unless clearly 'immovable property' service (like construction, renting). Security = supply of personnel (not clearly 'immovable property service'). SAFE APPROACH: Treat as general B2B supply: place of supply = recipient's registered state. MULTI-STATE DEPLOYMENT (Single client): Company (registered in Karnataka) has offices in: Karnataka, Maharashtra, Tamil Nadu, Telangana. Security agency (Karnataka) deploys guards at ALL four offices. OPTION A — Single GSTIN of client (Karnataka): All billing to Karnataka GSTIN. Place of supply: Karnataka. CGST + Karnataka SGST (intra-state). OPTION B — Client has multiple GSTINs (state-wise): If company has GSTIN in each state: Bill to respective state GSTIN. Maharashtra office: IGST (Karnataka agency to Maharashtra GSTIN). Tamil Nadu office: IGST (Karnataka agency to TN GSTIN). This is more accurate but complex (multiple invoices). MOST COMPANIES: Use single GSTIN billing (HQ) → simpler. Unless: Input Service Distributor (ISD) mechanism distributes credit to branches. ISD (Input Service Distributor): If company receives security at HQ but guards deployed at branches: HQ receives invoice → claims ITC. Distributes ITC to branches via ISD. This is legitimate for common services used across branches. SECURITY AGENCY — MULTI-STATE REGISTRATION: If you (agency) have offices in multiple states: Register in each state where you have 'fixed establishment'. Deploy guards from local state office → intra-state to local clients. Cross-state deployment: from registered state → IGST. If you only have ONE office but deploy guards across India: All billing from one state. Interstate clients: IGST. Intrastate clients: CGST + SGST. You may accumulate ITC in your state (IGST paid on interstate inputs). Use: for paying output IGST or claim refund (if ITC accumulation issue).

Security Services GST — RCM, Manpower & Integrated Solutions

Laabam.One handles security GST: RCM determination for guard supply, body corporate vs non-corporate classification, CCTV works contract vs goods supply, manpower valuation (gross vs pure agent), integrated security composite supply analysis, and multi-state deployment place of supply.

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