One Time Premium Received On Allotment Of Completed Commercial Units/Building Attracts 18% GST: AAR

Mariya Paliwala

9 April 2023 12:00 PM GMT

  • One Time Premium Received On Allotment Of Completed Commercial Units/Building Attracts 18% GST: AAR

    The Gujarat Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) has held that a one-time premium received by the applicant on allotment of completed commercial units or buildings attracts 18% GST.The two-member bench of Amit Kumar Mishra and Milind Kavatkar has held that the one-time premium received by the applicant on allotment of completed commercial units or buildings is a taxable supply in terms of Section...

    The Gujarat Authority for Advance Ruling (AAR) has held that a one-time premium received by the applicant on allotment of completed commercial units or buildings attracts 18% GST.

    The two-member bench of Amit Kumar Mishra and Milind Kavatkar has held that the one-time premium received by the applicant on allotment of completed commercial units or buildings is a taxable supply in terms of Section 7 of the CGST/GGST Act, 2077.

    The applicant is engaged in a business relating to the construction of immovable properties. The applicant wishes to allot developed units to prospective buyers on a long-term lease basis for a period of 90 years. The applicant in fact has received bookings for certain units before getting BU permission, and he has charged the GST at the applicable rate on the entire amount of the consideration received for the bookings done before BU permission.

    The applicant has sought an advance ruling on the issue of whether the one-time premium received by the applicant on allotment of a completed building would be treated as a taxable supply or not.

    The applicant contended that since this is a sale of a building wherein consideration has been received after the issuance of a completion certificate, in terms of S. No. 5 of Schedule III, the transaction shall be treated neither as a supply of goods nor a supply of service.

    The AAR held that the lease of a plot for 90 years by the applicant is not a "sale of land," but a lease, and therefore does not fall within the ambit of clause 5 of Schedule III of the CGST Act, 2017. Hence, the activity of leasing commercial units on payment of a one-time lease premium and an annual premium is a 'supply' falling within the ambit of section 7(1) of the CGST Act, 2017, which defines supply as all forms of supply of goods or services or both, such as sale, transfer, barter, exchange, license, rental, lease, or disposal, made or agreed to be made for a consideration by a person in the course or furtherance of business, read with clause 2 of Schedule II of the CGST Act, 2017, which specifies that lease of land or building as a supply.

    Applicant’s Name: M/s. Kedaram Trade Centre

    Date: 31/03/2023

    Click Here To Read The Ruling


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