Noticias de ultima
  • 12.00 Great debut: Zitro's "FANTASY" achieves a shocking success in the United States
  • 12.00 Atlaslive Shortlisted for Best iGaming Platform Provider and Sports Betting Provider at the GamingTECH Awards
  • 12.00 Amusnet Celebrates 10 Years, Strengthens Focus on Brazil at SBC Summit Rio
  • 12.00 Professional Fighters League Expands Global Strategy Through New Sportradar Partnership
  • 12.00 Washington Moves to Ban College Player Prop Bets with New Sports Wagering Integrity Act
  • 12.00 Macau collected US$11.8 billion in gaming tax revenue in 2025
  • 12.00 EGT Digital partners with Sunbet to expand its gaming portfolio in South Africa
  • 12.00 Florida House sends illegal gambling bill back to Senate
  • 12.00 Structured Growth and Regulatory Alignment: Why CP Games Fits Argentina’s iGaming Maturity Cycle
  • 12.00 CT Interactive launches Easter Bird: A Delightful Easter Adventure
Legislation

India: GST Council Maintains Stance, Enforces 28% Tax on Online Gaming

Tuesday 10 de September 2024 / 12:00

2 minutos de lectura

(India).- GST Council keeps 28% levy on online gaming, casinos, horse racing; Centre hopes to start implementation from October 1.

India: GST Council Maintains Stance, Enforces 28% Tax on Online Gaming

The GST Council on August 2 blinked a little on technicalities and kept the door open for a review down the road, but stuck to its earlier decision to impose a 28% levy on the full face value of bets placed on online gaming, casinos and horse racing, with an eye on implementing it from October 1.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who chaired the Council’s meeting, said the Centre would now strive to amend the Goods and Services Tax (GST) law in Parliament’s current session itself to enable the implementation of the levy, despite dissent from Sikkim and Goa over the modalities of the tax for casino users.

Tamil Nadu Finance Minister Thangam Thennarasu raised concerns about the levy’s impact on the State-wide ban on online gaming, which Ms. Sitharaman said would be addressed in the language of the new norms to explicitly state the tax cannot be levied where a ban is in place.

Delhi government’s representative sought a fresh review for the online gaming sector, but most other States leaned towards sticking to the Council’s decision last month which had been taken after three years of deliberations, the Finance Minister conveyed after the virtual meeting.

The online gaming industry, which had termed the Council’s decision a death knell endangering billions of dollars of investments and thousands of jobs in the sunrise sector, remained anxious but appreciated a critical clarification on the valuation rules for the 28% levy, approved by the Council on Wednesday.

Simply put, if someone enters a casino by buying chips worth ₹1,000, plays a round and wins ₹300, the tax will not be levied on ₹1,300, but on the entry amount of ₹1,000 alone, Ms. Sitharaman explained. In a joint statement, the E Gaming Federation and Federation of Indian Fantasy Sports welcomed this would address their concerns of “repeat taxation”.

“The new tax framework, while clarifying and resolving uncertainty, will lead to a very burdensome 350% increase in GST and set the Indian online gaming industry back several years. However, it will allow gaming companies a fighting chance to innovate and rebuild the foundation of gaming in India,” they added.

…Because Goa and Sikkim [who wanted the 28% levy on casino bets to apply on gross gaming revenue and not the entire face value] kept appealing that they were small States and needed consideration, the Council agreed to come back after six months after implementation to review the way in which this is getting implemented,”

The GST Council on August 2 blinked a little on technicalities and kept the door open for a review down the road, but stuck to its earlier decision to impose a 28% levy on the full face value of bets placed on online gaming, casinos and horse racing, with an eye on implementing it from October 1.

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, who chaired the Council’s meeting, said the Centre would now strive to amend the Goods and Services Tax (GST) law in Parliament’s current session itself to enable the implementation of the levy, despite dissent from Sikkim and Goa over the modalities of the tax for casino users.

Tamil Nadu Finance Minister Thangam Thennarasu raised concerns about the levy’s impact on the State-wide ban on online gaming, which Ms. Sitharaman said would be addressed in the language of the new norms to explicitly state the tax cannot be levied where a ban is in place.

Delhi government’s representative sought a fresh review for the online gaming sector, but most other States leaned towards sticking to the Council’s decision last month which had been taken after three years of deliberations, the Finance Minister conveyed after the virtual meeting.

The online gaming industry, which had termed the Council’s decision a death knell endangering billions of dollars of investments and thousands of jobs in the sunrise sector, remained anxious but appreciated a critical clarification on the valuation rules for the 28% levy, approved by the Council on Wednesday.

Simply put, if someone enters a casino by buying chips worth ₹1,000, plays a round and wins ₹300, the tax will not be levied on ₹1,300, but on the entry amount of ₹1,000 alone, Ms. Sitharaman explained. In a joint statement, the E Gaming Federation and Federation of Indian Fantasy Sports welcomed this would address their concerns of “repeat taxation”.

“The new tax framework, while clarifying and resolving uncertainty, will lead to a very burdensome 350% increase in GST and set the Indian online gaming industry back several years. However, it will allow gaming companies a fighting chance to innovate and rebuild the foundation of gaming in India,” they added.

…Because Goa and Sikkim [who wanted the 28% levy on casino bets to apply on gross gaming revenue and not the entire face value] kept appealing that they were small States and needed consideration, the Council agreed to come back after six months after implementation to review the way in which this is getting implemented,”

Gaming and gambling: On the Centre’s move to regulate online gaming

Revenue Secretary Sanjay Malhotra hinted the scope of the review will likely be limited to issues about valuation and the tax rates, which can be tweaked through notifications and rules, while the GST law changes will be broader “enabling provisions”.

Apart from the central GST law amendments, States will also have to amend their GST laws for the new tax to kick in, but Ms. Sitharaman expressed hope it can be implemented from October 1.

While the changes will not be retrospective per se, Mr. Malhotra emphasised they are more in the nature of a clarification because betting, gambling and lottery are already included as actionable activities under the GST law.

The Revenue Department believes online gaming, horse racing and casinos are also in the nature of betting only, he said. The High Court of Karnataka has not upheld that stand, dismissing a ₹21,000 crore tax demand against Gameskraft Technologies. “We have filed a special leave petition on the matter yesterday [Tuesday] and whatever the Supreme Court decides, will prevail,” the Revenue Secretary said.

Categoría:Legislation

Tags: Sin tags

País: India

Región: Asia

Event

SBC Summit Rio 2026

03 de March 2026

Digital infrastructure strengthens trust in Brazil’s regulated betting market

(Rio de Janeiro).- The development of a robust technological infrastructure was highlighted as one of the key pillars for the functioning of Brazil’s regulated betting market during the panel “Building the Digital Infrastructure in Brazil’s Regulated Market,” held at the SBC Summit Rio event. The debate brought together representatives from the government, operators, and technology companies to discuss data monitoring, digital security, and consumer protection.

Friday 06 Mar 2026 / 12:00

SBC Boosts Responsible Gaming Standards in Brazil with ABJR and ABC-Bet

(Rio de Janeiro).- SBC has announced new partnerships with two of Brazil’s responsible gaming and compliance organisations, the Associação Brasileira de Jogo Responsável (ABJR) and the Brazilian Association for Compliance, Best Practices, Ethics and Transparency in Betting (ABC-Bet).

Monday 02 Mar 2026 / 12:00

Atlaslive to Join SBC Summit Rio 2026: Reinforcing Industry Collaboration in LATAM

(Lisboa).- Atlaslive will attend SBC Summit Rio 2026 to engage with operators, regulators, and industry leaders, reinforcing its commitment to scalable iGaming infrastructure and long-term growth across the LATAM market.

Friday 27 Feb 2026 / 12:00

SUSCRIBIRSE

Para suscribirse a nuestro newsletter, complete sus datos

Reciba todo el contenido más reciente en su correo electrónico varias veces al mes.

MÁS CONTENIDO RELACIONADO