Held on 7 October 2023 in New Delhi (Sushma Swaraj Bhawan), the 52nd Meeting delivered landmark decisions on 28% online gaming tax, molasses rate cut to 5%, corporate guarantee taxation, and amnesty for annual return non-filers.
Millet flour with ≥70% millets — 0% if sold loose, 5% if pre-packaged & labelled
Health/AgricultureENA used for manufacture of alcoholic liquor for human consumption — outside GST ambit entirely
Liquor industry clarityGST rate reduced from 28% to 5% — benefits sugar mills and distilleries
Sugar sector18% → 5% when sold in bulk (not pre-packaged)
Food industryLate fee capped at ₹20,000 (CGST+SGST) for FY 2017-18 to 2021-22 if filed by 31 March 2024
Annual return complianceLate fee for final return reduced/capped — conditional amnesty for cancelled registrations
Cancelled GSTINsRelaxation for QRMP scheme — quarterly filers can report B2B invoices monthly using IFF
Small taxpayersExtended timeline for filing revocation application — within 90 days of cancellation order
Registration relief28% GST on full face value of bets placed — applicable from 1 October 2023. Covers online gaming, horse racing, casinos
Gaming industryGST applicable on corporate guarantee provided by holding company to subsidiary — taxable value = 1% of guarantee amount or actual consideration, whichever is higher
Corporate sectorNot treated as separate supply — maintenance charges covering electricity reimbursement at actual are exempt
Real estateNo GST when director provides personal guarantee to bank for company loan — treated as employee service
Director clarityPilot approved for high-risk applicants — Aadhaar-based biometric verification at GST Suvidha Kendras in Gujarat and Puducherry
Fake GSTIN preventionAuto-suspension of GSTIN where significant deviations found between GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B
Revenue protectionEnhanced validation against income tax data to prevent fraudulent registrations
Data integrity| Item/Service | Old Rate | New Rate | Effective |
|---|---|---|---|
| Molasses | 28% | 5% | Notified later |
| Millet flour (≥70% millets, loose) | 0% | 0% | Clarified |
| Millet flour (pre-packaged/labelled) | 5% | 5% | Clarified |
| Online gaming (full face value) | 18% on GGR | 28% on bet value | 1 Oct 2023 |
| Corporate guarantee (holding to subsidiary) | Disputed | 18% on 1% of guarantee | Notified later |
| Food prep of millet (bulk) | 18% | 5% | Notified later |
The 52nd GST Council Meeting was held on 7 October 2023 at Sushma Swaraj Bhawan, New Delhi. It was chaired by Union Finance Minister Smt. Nirmala Sitharaman and attended by State/UT Finance Ministers. This meeting was significant for its decisions on online gaming taxation (28% on full bet value), molasses rate reduction, and the amnesty scheme for annual return non-filers.
The 52nd Council confirmed that online gaming, horse racing, and casinos will attract 28% GST on the full face value of bets/wagers placed (not just the platform fee/GGR). This took effect from 1 October 2023. The law was amended to include online gaming platforms as taxable entities. A review was planned after 6 months (later done in 53rd meeting). This significantly increased the effective tax burden on gaming companies.
The Council decided that when a holding company provides a corporate guarantee to a bank/financial institution on behalf of its subsidiary, it is a taxable supply of service. The taxable value is 1% of the guarantee amount per annum, or the actual consideration received, whichever is higher. GST at 18% applies on this value. This was a major clarification that affected group company structures across India.
Molasses GST rate was reduced from 28% to 5%, a dramatic reduction benefiting the sugar industry and ethanol manufacturers. Molasses is a byproduct of sugar manufacturing and the primary raw material for ethanol/alcohol production. The high 28% rate was making Indian sugar mills uncompetitive and hindering the government's ethanol blending program. The reduction to 5% aligned with the biofuel policy.
The Council recommended capping late fees for GSTR-9/9C (Annual Return/Reconciliation Statement) non-filing at ₹20,000 (₹10,000 CGST + ₹10,000 SGST) for FY 2017-18 to 2021-22, provided returns are filed by 31 March 2024. This was a significant relief — without amnesty, late fees could accumulate to ₹2 lakhs+. Additionally, GSTR-10 (Final Return for cancelled registrations) was also given amnesty with capped late fees.
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