By CA Surekha Ahuja
Whether Retention of Earnest Money Constitutes a Taxable Supply Under GST
A landlord forfeits a token deposit when a proposed lease falls through. Is that GST?
It's a scenario that plays out constantly in commercial real estate: a prospective tenant pays a token amount during negotiations, the deal collapses before the lease is ever signed, and the landlord keeps the money. The tenant's accountant asks the obvious question — does GST apply to this forfeiture? The landlord's accountant, unsure, often defaults to caution and charges GST "just to be safe."
That caution is frequently misplaced. The answer, in most such cases, is no. GST is a tax on supply, not on every rupee that changes hands or every commercial disappointment. Whether a forfeited token amount attracts GST depends entirely on what that money actually represents — and the answer can differ sharply depending on a handful of factual details that are easy to overlook.
Executive Summary
One of the most misunderstood areas under GST is the taxability of forfeited advances, token money, earnest money deposits, and cancellation-related receipts.
Where no lease deed is executed, possession is never handed over, tenancy never commences, and the amount represents forfeited earnest money due to failure of the proposed transaction, the stronger legal position is that such forfeiture falls outside the scope of GST.
However, where the amount instead represents a cancellation charge, termination fee, or consideration for permitting withdrawal from an existing arrangement, GST implications can arise. The distinction is subtle but extremely important — and it turns on facts and drafting, not on labels.
Understanding the GST Trigger: Section 7
Before examining forfeiture, one must first determine whether a taxable supply exists at all. Section 7 of the CGST Act, 2017 provides that GST applies only where three elements are simultaneously present:
| Requirement | Meaning |
|---|---|
| Supply | Goods or services must actually be supplied |
| Consideration | The supply must be made against consideration |
| Business Nexus | The supply must be in the course or furtherance of business |
If any one of these elements fails, GST cannot arise. So the real question is never "was money retained?" It is: was money retained as consideration for a supply?
What Counts as Consideration: Section 2(31)
Section 2(31) of the CGST Act defines "consideration" to include payments made for a supply, payments made in response to a supply, and payments made to induce a supply. The retained amount must therefore have a direct nexus with an identifiable supply — a mere commercial loss, compensation, damages award, or forfeiture does not automatically qualify as consideration just because money moved from one party to another.
The Most Misused Provision: Schedule II, Entry 5(e)
Tax authorities frequently reach for Entry 5(e) of Schedule II, which deems certain acts to be a supply of services: agreeing to refrain from an act, to tolerate an act or situation, or to do an act. This is the provision invoked to argue that a cancellation charge, exit fee, or "compensation" is really payment for a service — the service of letting someone off the hook. It covers situations such as cancellation facilities, early-exit arrangements, non-compete agreements, contractual permissions, and tolerance arrangements specifically agreed between the parties.
But the provision cannot be stretched to cover every contractual breach. If every breach were treated as a taxable supply, virtually every damages claim in commercial life would become liable to GST — an interpretation the legislature never intended. Many forfeitures are simply compensatory: money kept because a deal failed, not because a service was rendered.
CBIC's Clarification: Circular No. 178/10/2022-GST
The clearest official guidance on this point is CBIC Circular No. 178/10/2022-GST, dated August 3, 2022, which addresses the taxability of liquidated damages, penalties, compensation, and forfeitures. The Circular draws a clear line between two categories of receipt that look similar on the surface but are treated very differently.
Category A — amounts received as consideration for a facility or benefit. Examples include cancellation charges, early-termination charges, exit fees, and postponement charges. These are generally taxable, because the supplier is providing an independent contractual facility in exchange for the payment.
Category B — amounts received as compensation for breach or non-performance. Examples include liquidated damages, contractual penalties, earnest money forfeiture, and bid security forfeiture. These generally do not constitute consideration for any supply.
Crucially, the Circular specifically recognizes that earnest money may be forfeited to discourage non-serious participants, and that such forfeiture does not automatically amount to a taxable supply. This significantly weakens any argument that every forfeiture represents "toleration of an act."
Supreme Court Principles: Satish Batra v. Sudhir Rawal
Although decided under contract law rather than GST law, the Supreme Court's reasoning in Satish Batra v. Sudhir Rawal remains highly relevant. The Court held that earnest money serves as security for performance, that forfeiture is permissible where contractual conditions are satisfied, and — importantly — that earnest money is distinct from an ordinary advance payment toward price.
That distinction carries over neatly into the GST analysis:
| Feature | Earnest Money | Advance / Part-Payment |
|---|---|---|
| Security for performance | Yes | No |
| Paid as commitment to complete the transaction | Yes | Often |
| Forms part of the eventual transaction value | No | Yes |
| Can be forfeited upon default | Yes | Rarely framed this way |
| Adjusted against rent or price once supply occurs | No | Yes |
| Generally consideration for a service | No | Potentially yes |
Money paid as a pledge of performance, and forfeited because the deal fell apart, looks like compensation for breach. Money that forms part of the transaction value, or is paid as a fee for the privilege of walking away, looks far more like consideration for a supply.
Applying This to a Real Lease Negotiation
Consider a common fact pattern:
| Particulars | Position |
|---|---|
| Token money paid | ₹50,000 |
| Lease deed executed | No |
| Possession handed over | No |
| Tenancy commenced | No |
| Rent became payable | No |
| Amount retained | Yes |
On these facts, no renting service ever came into existence. There was no transfer of possessory rights, no right to occupy, no enjoyment of premises, and no supply of renting services — and therefore no principal supply on which GST could be levied. The ₹50,000 is best read as earnest money or a token advance, forfeited because the proposed transaction itself failed, not as a fee charged for a cancellation facility on an otherwise live lease. The forfeiture simply reflects the commercial consequences of a failed negotiation.
Seven Scenarios, Seven Different Answers
The same word — "forfeiture" — can describe transactions with very different GST consequences.
1. Negotiation stage only — no deed, no possession. The strongest case for non-taxability. The transaction never matured into a supply of renting services.
2. Lease deed signed, but possession never handed over. Fact-sensitive. If the amount is clearly earnest money forfeited for default, non-taxability remains defensible; if the agreement creates a separate, standalone obligation to pay for cancellation, risk arises under Schedule II, entry 5(e).
3. Lease commenced, then terminated early. Once possession has been handed over and the lease is operational, early-termination charges or exit fees look much more like consideration for tolerating a situation — and are more likely to be taxable.
4. Token amount adjusted against rent. Once applied against rent or lease consideration, it simply becomes part of the taxable value of the renting supply.
5. Purely refundable security deposit. Generally not consideration at all, unless and until it is adjusted, appropriated, or forfeited in a way that ties it to a supply.
6. An express cancellation fee. If the documentation explicitly labels the amount a cancellation fee, termination fee, or charge for permitting withdrawal, it's much harder to argue non-taxability.
7. Liquidated damages or compensation clauses. Not automatically taxable merely because they sit in a contract clause — the real test is whether the payment is genuinely compensatory or a disguised charge for an agreed facility.
Scenario Matrix at a Glance
| Situation | GST Position |
|---|---|
| Negotiations fail before lease execution | Generally outside GST |
| Token money forfeited before possession | Generally outside GST |
| Earnest money forfeited due to default | Generally outside GST |
| Lease operational and exit charges collected | Likely taxable |
| Cancellation fee specifically agreed | Likely taxable |
| Amount adjusted against rent | Taxable |
| Refundable security deposit merely held | Not taxable |
| Deposit appropriated towards supply | Taxable |
Why This Is Different From a Cancellation Charge
A common error is treating forfeiture and cancellation charges as the same thing. They are legally distinct.
With a cancellation charge, the supplier provides a contractual facility allowing the customer to cancel, and the payment is consideration for that facility — GST generally applies.
With earnest money forfeiture, no facility is supplied, no benefit is granted, and no service is rendered. The amount merely compensates the affected party for failure of the transaction, so GST generally does not apply.
Substance Prevails Over Accounting Treatment
Crediting the amount to "Other Income," "Miscellaneous Income," or "Forfeiture Income" in the books does not, by itself, determine GST liability. Authorities examine commercial substance (what was the purpose of the payment, why was it retained, was any service actually supplied), contractual language (was cancellation permitted for a fee, was breach tolerated for consideration, was it described as earnest money), and conduct of the parties (was possession delivered, did tenancy commence, did any lease rights arise). Substance always overrides nomenclature.
Advance Ruling Trends
Various advance rulings examining forfeiture of earnest money and security deposits have generally adopted the principle that mere forfeiture does not create a taxable supply unless a distinct supply can be identified. The consistent theme is that GST applies to supplies, not to every flow of money between contracting parties — the existence of consideration alone is insufficient; there must first be an identifiable supply.
Documentation That Strengthens the Non-Taxable Position
From a litigation perspective, documentation is often more decisive than legal argument. Useful records include:
| Document | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Negotiation correspondence | Establishes the failed transaction |
| Non-execution confirmation | Shows the lease never materialized |
| Possession records | Demonstrates no occupation rights were transferred |
| Settlement communication | Clarifies the basis of forfeiture |
| Accounting note | Records the amount as earnest money forfeiture |
| Internal approval note | Justifies retention of the amount |
| Legal memorandum | Supports the GST position taken |
Drafting Mistakes That Can Create GST Exposure
Avoid language such as "fee for cancellation," "amount charged for withdrawal," "payment for allowing exit," "consideration for terminating negotiations," or "charge for tolerating breach." Such wording can hand the department exactly what it needs to invoke Schedule II, entry 5(e).
Prefer expressions such as "earnest money forfeiture," "forfeiture due to non-performance," "compensation for failure to complete transaction," or "retention of security against contractual default." The wording chosen should accurately reflect commercial substance — not just hedge for convenience.
Compliance and GST Return Reporting
Where forfeiture genuinely falls outside GST: no reporting is required as taxable outward supply in GSTR-1, and no liability arises in GSTR-3B. In the books of account, the amount may still be recognized as Forfeiture Income or Other Income. For audit documentation, maintain a legal note explaining the absence of supply, the absence of consideration for any service, and the applicability of CBIC Circular No. 178/10/2022-GST — this becomes valuable during departmental scrutiny and GSTR-9C reconciliation.
The key compliance discipline is internal consistency: if the books record forfeiture income but the GST returns show nothing, the file should contain a clear, contemporaneous note explaining why Section 7 doesn't apply.
Key Legal Principles at a Glance
| Principle | Position |
|---|---|
| GST is a tax on supply | Correct |
| Every forfeiture is taxable | Incorrect |
| Earnest money forfeiture automatically attracts GST | Incorrect |
| Cancellation fee may attract GST | Correct |
| Failed lease negotiations create a renting service | Incorrect |
| No possession + no lease + no tenancy | Strong non-taxable case |
| Contract wording influences the GST outcome | Correct |
| Substance prevails over nomenclature | Correct |
The Bottom Line
GST taxes supply, not every commercial loss. A token amount forfeited because a prospective tenant backed out before a lease was ever executed is compensation for a failed transaction, not consideration for a service — and compensation is not the same thing as consideration for supply. The moment a business starts charging a price for a facility — cancellation, early exit, postponement, or tolerating a breach — that price becomes consideration, and GST follows.
On facts where the lease was never executed, possession was never handed over, and the tenancy never began, the stronger and more defensible position is that the forfeited amount sits outside GST. That conclusion can flip entirely if the documentation instead points to an express cancellation charge or a standalone arrangement to tolerate breach for a price. The decisive test is not whether money changed hands — it is whether the money was received for a supply. In GST, as in most tax questions, substance and paperwork decide the outcome, not the label sitting in the ledger.


