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Gifts by employer to employee, Goods and Services Tax - GST |
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Gifts by employer to employee |
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Dear Sir Please clarify the below three queries: 1. Suppose an employer gives 60000/- in cash to his employee as gift. Will it cover in Sch-I? 2. If gifts are given in kind to its employees whether the employer can avail ITC paid at the time of purchase of these gift items? 3. If employer pays incentive to its employees which is not mentioned in the employment contract and not part of his CTC but due to trend in industry he gives some incentive to some of his employees. Whether this will be covered in Schedule-I? Please reply. Regards Archna Gupta Posts / Replies Showing Replies 1 to 11 of 11 Records Page: 1
Madam, According to proviso to Sl. No. 2 of Schedule I of CGST Act, 2017 "Provided that gifts not exceeding fifty thousand rupees in value in a financial year by an employer to an employee shall not be treated as supply of goods or services or both." Therefore if the value of the gift exceeds ₹ 50,000/- it is liable to gst. If gst payable then ITC can be availed by the employer. However if the gift is in the nature of incentive for doing exceptional job/work then it may be considered as compensation for doing good work and the same may be treated as payment made in the course of employment, However, this will lead to legal battles in the Court of Law.
Thanks Rajagopalan Sir. I still have more queries on thi discussion as below: If the employer pays gift in cash then will it be treated as transaction in money and money is neither goods nor service? If it is so then this transaction will not fall in Sch 1? If the gift is given in kind and the value is below 50000/- per employee, in that case can we avail ITC because we are not paying any tax? In furtherance to that we can claim ITC only if the goods/services are used in making outward supply but this is not the case in this situation. Please clarify. Regards
Section 17(5) (h) of CGST Act talks of goods disposed of by way of gift. Gift in cash is not in picture here.Schedule-I does not talk of gift in cash.
Only gifts of value more than ₹ 50,000 made without consideration are subject to GST when made in the course or furtherance of business. This clarification brings clarity that any supply from employer to employee which is part of the CTC (cost-to-company) will not be considered a supply. Gift has not been defined in the GST law. In common parlance, gift is made without consideration is voluntary in nature and is made occasionally. It cannot be demanded as a matter of right by the employee and the employee cannot move a court of law for obtaining a gift.
Comprehensive and crystal clear reply by M/s. Yagay and Sun, Sir. In fact, his reply has enriched my knowledge, it being full of legal force.
1. Not covered in Schedule-I, as it covers matters, where consideration is not received and furthermore supply of goods / services has to be there. Proviso has to be read along with main content which says gift and gift of what, gift of goods/ services. in your issue, cash is given and money is excluded in Sec 2(52) of CGST Act 2017 from definition of "Goods" 2. Call has to be taken by you to charge GST if ITC has been availed. [Refer Point 1 of Sch-1] OR Reversal of ITC as per Sec 17(5)(h) of CGST Act 2017. Levy of GST should always be preferred to as no scope of litigation as arise in case o calculation of reversal amount. [ gifts should be of goods/services] 3. Not covered as employee has to include the same in his Total income. Incentives are rewards and not gifts. In most of the cases, incetives to employees forms part of their salary in Income Tax Act.
Thanks Sanjay ji. My all doubts are cleared on this matter. Thanks once again.
Dear Archna, Please make sure in point No. 3 that incentive should be in form of Cash reward and not in form of goods / services or else will get covered in Sch-1. Thanks.
Understood. Thanks
As per my view 1- no supply as per sch-I because no goods/services involved. 2-If gift purchase and give to employee, itc is not claimable. 3-no incentive is also in form of money, which also not goods., Hence not fit under sch-I.
The replies posted by Sh.Sanjay Malhotra CS is very comprehensive and crystal clear and covers all aspects. Left no doubt at all. Page: 1 Old Query - New Comments are closed. |
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