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    Case ID :

    Legal Framework for TDS on E-commerce in India : Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)] and Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11] of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, Vs. Section 194O of the Income-tax Act, 1961

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    Clause 393 Tax to be deducted at source.

    Income Tax Bill, 2025

    Introduction

    The digital transformation of commerce has necessitated significant changes in tax administration, particularly in the area of tax deduction at source (TDS) for online transactions. The Income Tax Bill, 2025, introduces new provisions addressing the obligations of e-commerce operators in relation to payments made to e-commerce participants. Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)] establishes the primary TDS obligation for e-commerce operators, while Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11] provides for specific exemptions. These provisions must be examined in light of Section 194O of the Income-tax Act, 1961, which was the pioneering legislative framework for TDS on e-commerce transactions in India. This commentary provides a comprehensive analysis of the relevant clauses in the 2025 Bill, their objectives, detailed provisions, practical implications, and a comparative analysis with Section 194O. The aim is to elucidate the continuity, divergence, and evolution in the law, as well as to highlight interpretive issues and practical considerations for stakeholders.

    Objective and Purpose

    The primary objective behind the introduction of TDS provisions for e-commerce transactions is to bring within the tax net the growing volume of digital commerce, which was traditionally outside the purview of conventional TDS mechanisms. The rationale is twofold:

    • Widening the Tax Base: The government aims to minimize tax evasion or avoidance by ensuring that income accruing to e-commerce participants is reported and taxed at the source itself, thereby enhancing transparency and compliance.
    • Level Playing Field: By imposing similar obligations on e-commerce operators as on other intermediaries or payers, the law seeks to create parity between online and offline businesses.

    Section 194O was introduced by the Finance Act, 2020, effective from 1 October 2020, as a response to the exponential growth of e-commerce platforms and the challenges faced in tracking and taxing income generated through such channels. The provision was further fine-tuned in subsequent Finance Acts, including a reduction in TDS rate from 1% to 0.1% (w.e.f. 1 October 2024). The 2025 Bill appears to be a comprehensive recasting of the Income-tax Act, with Clause 393 serving as the central provision for TDS, including digital commerce transactions. The inclusion of detailed tables, threshold limits, and exemptions represents an effort to consolidate, clarify, and modernize the legal framework.

    Detailed Analysis of the Provisions

    Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)] - TDS on E-commerce Transactions

    Text of the Provision:

    Sale of goods or provision of services by an e-commerce participant, facilitated by an e-commerce operator through its digital or electronic facility or platform. Payer: Any e-commerce operator. Rate: 0.1% of gross amount of such sale or services or both. Threshold limit: Nil.

    Key Features:

    • Scope of Application: The provision applies to every sale of goods or provision of services (or both) by a resident e-commerce participant, facilitated by an e-commerce operator via a digital or electronic platform.
    • Person Responsible: The e-commerce operator is deemed the person responsible for deducting TDS, regardless of whether the payment flows through the operator or directly from the buyer to the participant.
    • Rate of Deduction: The TDS rate is 0.1% of the gross amount, with no threshold limit (i.e., deduction applies from the first rupee).
    • Timing: TDS is to be deducted at the earlier of credit or payment to the participant.
    • Inclusion of Direct Payments: Payments made by buyers directly to e-commerce participants are deemed to be payments by the operator and included in the gross amount for TDS purposes.
    • Precedence: The provision takes precedence over other TDS provisions for the same transaction, preventing double deduction.
    • Exclusions: Amounts received by the operator for hosting advertisements or services not related to the sale/provision of goods/services are excluded from this TDS mechanism.

    Interpretative Notes:

    • Definition of E-commerce Operator and Participant: The Bill does not provide explicit definitions within Clause 393, but by analogy to Section 194O, an e-commerce operator is the platform owner/facilitator, and the participant is the seller/service provider using the platform.
    • Deemed Payment: The deeming fiction ensures that all transactions facilitated by the platform, even if payments are routed outside the platform, are subject to TDS.
    • Gross Amount: The deduction is on the gross amount, without netting off any commissions, fees, or other charges.

    Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11] - Exemption from TDS for Small E-commerce Participants

    Text of the Provision:

    Payment by e-commerce operator to e-commerce participant referred to in section 393(1)[Table: Sl. No. 8(v)]. No deduction if the amount is credited or paid or likely to be credited or paid during the tax year to the account of an e-commerce participant, which is: (a) an individual or a Hindu undivided family; and (b) the gross amount of the sales or services or both during the tax year does not exceed Rs. 5,00,000; and (c) the e-commerce participant has furnished the Permanent Account Number or Aadhaar number to the e-commerce operator.

    Key Features:

    • Exemption Criteria: No TDS is required if all three conditions are satisfied:
      • The participant is an individual or HUF.
      • The gross amount of sales/services does not exceed Rs. 5,00,000 in the tax year.
      • PAN or Aadhaar is furnished to the operator.
    • Automatic Application: The exemption is self-operating; if the conditions are met, TDS is not to be deducted.
    • Purpose: The intent is to reduce compliance burden and cash flow impact for small sellers/service providers, thereby encouraging participation in the digital economy.
    • Anti-abuse: Furnishing PAN/Aadhaar is a control mechanism to ensure traceability and prevent misuse of the exemption.

    Key Notes and Interplay with Other Provisions

    • Precedence over Other TDS Provisions: If TDS is deducted under S.No. 8(v), or if the transaction is exempt under S.No. 11, no TDS is required under any other provision for the same transaction (see Note 3(d) to S.No. 8(v)).
    • Exclusion of Platform Service Fees: The exclusion for amounts received by the operator for advertisements or unrelated services ensures that only sales/service facilitation is covered, not ancillary revenues.
    • Overlap with Virtual Digital Assets: In case of overlap with TDS on virtual digital assets (S.No. 8(vi)), the latter takes precedence (Note 4).

    Practical Implications

    1. For E-commerce Operators

    • Compliance Burden: Operators must implement systems to:
      • Track all sales/services facilitated (including direct payments).
      • Deduct TDS at 0.1% on gross amounts.
      • Monitor thresholds and PAN/Aadhaar compliance for exemption eligibility.
      • File TDS returns and issue TDS certificates to participants.
    • Risk of Default: Failure to deduct or deposit TDS exposes operators to disallowance of expenditure, interest, and penalty.
    • System Integration: Operators may need to upgrade their payment and accounting systems to capture direct payments and aggregate participant-wise turnover.

    2. For E-commerce Participants (Sellers/Service Providers)

    • Cash Flow Impact: TDS reduces cash inflow, especially for high-volume, low-margin sellers.
    • Credit Mechanism: TDS is available as credit against final tax liability, but may result in refunds for loss-making or low-margin sellers.
    • Exemption for Small Sellers: Individuals and HUFs with turnover below Rs. 5 lakh and PAN/Aadhaar compliance are spared the cash flow impact of TDS.
    • Reporting and Reconciliation: Participants must reconcile TDS certificates with their reported income to avoid mismatches.

    3. For the Tax Administration

    • Enhanced Visibility: The provision ensures reporting of digital commerce income, aiding in compliance and audit.
    • Administrative Complexity: The tax authorities must process a large volume of low-value TDS transactions, potentially increasing workload.

    4. For Buyers/Customers

    • No Direct Impact: While buyers are not directly affected, the cost of compliance may be passed on to them in the form of higher prices or service charges.

    Comparative Analysis with Section 194O of the Income-tax Act, 1961

     

    1. Scope and Coverage

    • Both provisions apply to e-commerce operators facilitating sales of goods or services by residents through digital or electronic platforms.
    • The definition of e-commerce operator, participant, and the scope of "electronic commerce" remain substantially similar, ensuring continuity in coverage.

    2. TDS Rate

    • Section 194O: Originally prescribed a 1% TDS rate, reduced to 0.1% from 1 October 2024.
    • Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)]: Prescribes a 0.1% TDS rate, aligning with the amended Section 194O.

    The reduction in rate reflects legislative sensitivity to concerns about working capital constraints for small sellers and the need to minimize the compliance burden while maintaining an audit trail.

    3. Threshold and Exemptions

    • Section 194O(2): Exempts individual/HUF participants with annual sales/services up to Rs. 5 lakh, provided PAN/Aadhaar is furnished.
    • Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11]: Mirrors the same exemption criteria and monetary threshold.

    This ensures that micro and small sellers are not unduly affected, and the compliance focus remains on larger participants.

    4. Timing of Deduction

    • Both provisions require TDS at the earlier of credit or payment to the e-commerce participant.

    This prevents deferral of TDS by timing payments and ensures timely tax collection.

    5. Deemed Payment Rule

    • Both the Bill and Section 194O clarify that direct payments from buyers to sellers are deemed payments by the operator for TDS purposes.

    This rule addresses the possibility of operators circumventing TDS by allowing direct settlements, thereby closing a significant loophole.

    6. Precedence and Non-Duplication

    • Section 194O(3): If TDS is deducted u/s 194O or the transaction is exempt under sub-section (2), no TDS is required under other provisions, except for unrelated services/advertisements.
    • Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)], Note 3(d): Contains similar language, ensuring that double deduction does not occur.

    This provision is crucial for clarity and to prevent overlapping TDS obligations.

    7. Exclusions for Advertisements/Other Services

    • Both provisions exclude from the TDS regime amounts received by the operator for hosting advertisements or providing services not connected to the sale/provision of goods/services.

    This distinction ensures that only the core marketplace transactions are subject to TDS, not ancillary revenue streams.

    8. Overlap with Virtual Digital Asset (VDA) TDS

    • The Bill specifically addresses overlap with VDA TDS (S.No. 8(vi)), stipulating that only the VDA provision will apply in such cases.
    • Section 194O does not address this directly, as the VDA TDS regime was introduced later.

    The Bill's clarification ensures seamless coordination between the two TDS regimes and avoids double deduction.

    9. Documentation and Compliance

    • Both regimes require the participant to furnish PAN/Aadhaar to avail the exemption.
    • The operator is responsible for TDS compliance, reporting, and remittance.

    The approach leverages the operator's centralized position and technological capabilities for improved compliance.

    10. Guideline Issuance and Binding Nature

    • Section 194O empowers the Board (CBDT) to issue clarificatory guidelines, which are binding.
    • The Bill does not explicitly mention this, but such powers are generally available under the general administration provisions.

    11. Definitions

    • Both regimes define "e-commerce operator," "e-commerce participant," and "electronic commerce" in similar terms, ensuring interpretive continuity.

    12 Structure and Substance

    Aspect Section 194O of the Income-tax Act, 1961 Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)] and Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11] of the Income Tax Bill, 2025
    Applicability Sale of goods/provision of services by a resident e-commerce participant, facilitated by an e-commerce operator. Identical - sale/provision by participant via operator's digital/electronic facility.
    Person Responsible E-commerce operator. E-commerce operator.
    TDS Rate 0.1% of gross amount (w.e.f. 1 Oct 2024; earlier 1%). 0.1% of gross amount.
    Threshold No threshold - applies on all amounts unless exempted under sub-section (2). No threshold - applies on all amounts unless exempted under Clause 393(4)[11].
    Exemption for Small Sellers No deduction if participant is individual/HUF, turnover <= Rs. 5 lakh, and PAN/Aadhaar furnished. Identical exemption - individual/HUF, turnover <= Rs. 5 lakh, and PAN/Aadhaar furnished.
    Deemed Payment Direct payments by buyer to participant are deemed payments by operator. Same - direct payments are included in operator's TDS obligation.
    Precedence over Other TDS If TDS is deducted or exemption applies, no TDS under other provisions for same transaction; exception for operator's own revenues (ads, other services). Same - S.No. 8(v) takes precedence; exception for ads and unrelated services.
    Definitions Explicit definitions of operator, participant, electronic commerce, etc. Definitions not expressly stated in Clause 393, but implied to be the same.
    Guidelines/Clarifications CBDT empowered to issue guidelines to resolve difficulties. No explicit provision for guidelines, but general powers may exist elsewhere in the Bill.

    12.1 Notable Similarities

    • Both provisions are fundamentally identical in scope, mechanics, and policy rationale.
    • The TDS rate (0.1%), exemption threshold (Rs. 5 lakh for individuals/HUFs), and PAN/Aadhaar requirement are mirrored.
    • Both ensure that TDS is not duplicated under other provisions for the same transaction.
    • Deeming fiction for direct payments is present in both, closing loopholes.

    12.2 Notable Differences

    • Legislative Placement: Section 194O is a standalone section, while Clause 393 consolidates all TDS provisions in a tabular format, potentially aiding clarity and accessibility.
    • Definitions and Interpretive Aids: The explicit definitions in Section 194O are not repeated in Clause 393, which may require cross-referencing or reliance on general definitions elsewhere in the Bill.
    • Guideline Power: Section 194O(4)-(5) gives the CBDT specific authority to issue binding guidelines, which is not expressly replicated in Clause 393.
    • Integration with New Law: Clause 393 is part of a broader recasting of the Income-tax Act, which may affect interpretation, compliance, and administration.

    13. Potential Issues and Ambiguities

    • Definition Gaps: Absence of explicit definitions in Clause 393 could create interpretive uncertainty, especially for new or hybrid digital business models.
    • Overlap with Other Provisions: While precedence rules are clear, the increasing complexity of digital transactions (bundled goods/services, cross-border elements, virtual assets) may lead to disputes over the applicable TDS provision.
    • Administrative Guidance: Lack of explicit guideline power may slow the resolution of practical difficulties unless addressed elsewhere in the Bill.

    Conclusion

    The provisions contained in Clause 393(1)[Table: S.No. 8(v)] and Clause 393(4)[Table: S.No. 11] of the Income Tax Bill, 2025, represent a faithful continuation and consolidation of the policy and mechanics established by Section 194O of the Income-tax Act, 1961. The law aims to ensure tax compliance in the rapidly expanding digital commerce sector by imposing a low-rate, broad-based TDS obligation on e-commerce operators, while providing relief to small sellers and preventing double deduction. The consolidation of TDS provisions in the 2025 Bill, along with detailed tables and notes, reflects an effort to modernize and streamline the law. However, the absence of explicit definitions and guidance mechanisms may create interpretive challenges, especially as digital business models evolve. Stakeholders, including e-commerce operators, participants, and tax authorities, must adapt to the enhanced compliance requirements and monitor for future clarifications or amendments. As the digital economy continues to grow, ongoing legislative and administrative attention will be required to ensure the TDS framework remains robust, equitable, and responsive to emerging trends.


    Full Text:

    Clause 393 Tax to be deducted at source.

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    ActsIncome Tax