Coaching centres providing tuition to prepare students for entrance
examination are liable to pay 18 per cent GST, according to the
Authority for Advance Rulings (AAR).
An application was filed
before the Maharashtra bench of the AAR to seek advance ruling on
whether the services related to providing the coaching for entrance
examination will come under the ambit of the Goods and Services Tax
(GST).
’Simmple Shukla Tutorials’ is engaged in providing the
service of teaching to the students of class XI and XII and helps the
students prepare for entrance examinations related to MBBS, engineering
and other science related examinations.
Hence, ’Simmple Shukla
Tutorials’ is "in no way covered" in the definition of educational
institution, as has been notified under the GST laws, the AAR said.
"The
private institution does not have any specific curriculum and does not
conduct any examination or award any qualification or award any
qualification recognised by any law ... We find that the education
service provided in the case is taxable at the rate of 9 per cent under
CGST Act and 9 per cent under SGST Act," the AAR said.
Under the
Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime, the tax is shared equally between
the Centre and the states. Hence the total GST on the services provided
by tuition or coaching classes for entrance examination would be liable
to 18 per cent GST.
The applicant had argued that the coaching centres too are educational institution and hence are exempt from GST.
Under GST, services provided by an educational institution to its students, faculty, staff are exempt from the levy.
The
GST law defines educational institutions as those imparting pre-school
or education up to higher secondary level or those which are part of an
approved vocational education course.
The definition also includes
those which provides education as a part of a curriculum for obtaining a
qualification recognised by any law.
AMRG & Associates
Partner Rajat Mohan said the ruling has made it clear that exemption
from indirect taxes was neither available under erstwhile tax regime nor
would be available under GST regime to private institutions rendering
coaching classes for entrance examination.
"Private coaching
classes were earlier taxable at 15 per cent (service tax) and now would
be taxable at 18 per cent (GST), but this does not mean an increase in
cost for students, such institutions are eligible for much higher input
tax credit which should be passed on to students so as to keep the total
fee same," Mohan said.