You are currently viewing GST Council to clarify on TCS liability of ecommerce suppliers on ONDC

GST Council to clarify on TCS liability of ecommerce suppliers on ONDC


The GST Council on July 11 is expected to clarify on the TCS liability of suppliers engaged in ecommerce trading through Open Network Digital Commerce in cases where multiple operators are involved in a transaction.

ONDC or Open Network for Digital Commerce is a new initiative of the Department for Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT). So far, there is no clarity on who should be liable for TCS compliance under GST laws.

Under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) law, every ecommerce operator is required to collect TCS at the rate of 1% of the taxable value of goods/services sold through its platform.

Sources said the Law Committee, comprising Centre and state tax officers, has recommended to the Council that in a situation where multiple ecommerce operators (ECOs) are involved in a single transaction through the ECO platform, the TCS compliance is to be done by the supplier-side, who finally releases the payment to the supplier.

ONDC’s open network operates in two models—the inventory model and the marketplace model.

Under the inventory model, a buyer places an order with an ecommerce platform, which then pays the supplier of the goods or services. Here, TCS is deducted by the ecommerce platform while making a payment to the seller.

The confusion regarding the liability of TCS deduction arises in the case of the marketplace model—where two intermediaries are involved in a single transaction.

@media (max-width: 769px)
.thumbnailWrapper
width:6.62rem !important;

.alsoReadTitleImage
min-width: 81px !important;
min-height: 81px !important;

.alsoReadMainTitleText
font-size: 14px !important;
line-height: 20px !important;

.alsoReadHeadText
font-size: 24px !important;
line-height: 20px !important;

Also Read

ONDC revises incentive structure, slashes discounts

Here, a buyer places an order on an ecommerce platform (buyer app) which then sources it from another ecommerce entity (seller app). The seller app then procures the goods from the actual supplier.

Since several entities are involved, the DPIIT has sought clarity as to whether the buyer ecommerce operator or the seller ecommerce company would be required to deduct the Tax Collected at Source (TCS).

Sources said in this case, TCS would be required to be deducted by the seller app while making payment to the supplier. A clarification to this effect is likely to be issued by the GST Council on Tuesday.

Incorporated on December 31, 2021, ONDC is a Section 8 company.

It is an initiative of the DPIIT to create a facilitative model to help small retailers take advantage of digital commerce. It is not an application, platform, intermediary, or software but a set of specifications designed to foster open, unbundled, and interoperable open networks.

The GST Council had last year waived mandatory registration for suppliers to ecommerce platforms in case of intra-state supplies, provided that the annual turnover of the supplier is less than the GST registration threshold, which is Rs 40 lakh for goods and Rs 20 lakh for services). This provision will come into effect from October 1.


Edited by Kanishk Singh



Source link

Leave a Reply