What Is the Equalisation Levy under Finance Act 2016?

Have you ever heard of equalisation levy? Equaliation levy is a direct tax levied on online transactions/ payment made to non-residents for providing specified Services to a resident in India. The government introduced this tax to help Indian service providers to compete with foreign service providers and provide fair competition. This article will explain everything about equalisation levy in detail.

Contents

What is Equalisation Levy?

Equalisation Levy is a direct tax levied on online transactions made to non-resident or consideration received by a non-resident for specific services. This tax is not a part of the Income tax act of India but was introduced in Chapter VIII of the Finance Act 2016.

What are the specified services?

  1. Online Advertisement
  2. Provide digital advertising space or any other facility for the purpose of online advertisement.
  3. any other service as may be notified by the Central Government in this behalf.

What is the background and relevance of Equalisation Levy?

The IT sector has explosively expanded over the last decade, and the supply and demand for digital services have increased.

IT growth and expansion led to new business models depending on digital communication networks.

New business models were facing tax challenges in terms of the characterization of data and protection and needed a new Tax system. Keeping that in mind, the finance ministry of India introduced equalisation levy in the Budget 2016 under Finance Act 2016.

What is the applicability of Equalisation Levy?

Equalisation Levy is a direct tax imposed by the Indian government on digital transactions involving non-residens. The applicability of Equalisation Levy depends on the following factors:

When Equalisation Levy is not applicable?

What are the Consequences of Delayed Payments?

Rate of Equalisation levy tax

The tax rate under equalisation levy depends on the type of service or transaction. For specified digital services, such as online advertising, the rate is 6% of the gross consideration. For e-commerce transactions, such as online sale of goods or services, the rate is 2% of the gross consideration. The equalisation levy aims to ensure a fair share of digital economy tax and avoid double taxation.

For example, if a non-resident e-commerce operator sells goods worth ₹ 10 lakh to residents in India, an equalisation levy of ₹ 20,000 (2% of ₹ 10 lakh) would be levied on the operator.

Another example is if a non-resident entity provides online advertising services worth ₹ 5 lakh to an Indian resident, an equalisation levy of ₹ 30,000 (6% of ₹ 5 lakh) would be levied on the service provider.

Due Dates for Compliance

Date of Ending Quarter Due Date
30th June 7th July
30th September 7th October
31st December 7th January
31st March 31st March