By CA Surekha Ahuja
A Practical Compliance Note for Companies Using Uber Business and Corporate Wallet (FY 2026–27)
Corporate travel through Uber Business and Uber Corporate Wallet has become a standard operating expense for many businesses. Employee movement, airport transfers, inter-office visits and client travel are now routinely billed through centralized corporate accounts, often aggregating to ₹1 lakh to ₹1.5 lakh per month or more.
But with this operational convenience comes a recurring compliance question:
Should TDS be deducted on the entire Uber invoice or only on Uber’s service fee component?
This is not a small accounting issue.
A wrong approach can affect tax deduction, expense allowability, cash flow and GST input tax credit.
The confusion largely arises because Uber invoices or billing summaries are often viewed as a single consolidated amount, whereas the underlying transaction is commercially split into two different components.
That distinction is the key to correct compliance.
The Real Structure of an Uber Corporate Payment
A typical finance team may receive or process a monthly Uber billing statement like this:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Total Uber Billing (including GST) | ₹1,30,000 |
At first glance, the natural assumption is simple:
Payment is being made to Uber. Therefore, TDS should apply on the full amount.
But commercially, the transaction is not that simple.
Under the aggregator model, Uber facilitates transportation through drivers and earns a service fee for that facilitation.
This means the total invoice generally consists of:
| Component | Approximate Value | Nature |
|---|---|---|
| Driver Fare | ₹97,500 | Transportation value |
| Uber Service Fee | ₹32,500 | Uber’s retained revenue |
This distinction is fundamental.
The total payment may be ₹1,30,000.
But Uber’s own revenue may be only ₹32,500.
And for TDS purposes, identifying the revenue component matters.
Why the Full Invoice Is Not Always the Correct TDS Base
The practical issue is not whether TDS applies.
It is:
What is the correct amount on which TDS should apply?
If the full invoice is treated as Uber’s contractual income, TDS would be deducted on ₹1,30,000.
But if a substantial part of that amount merely represents transportation charges collected under the aggregator structure, then deducting TDS on the gross amount may not reflect the real income element.
Uber’s own business FAQs clarify that TDS under Section 194C applies on Uber’s service fee, while transportation-related payouts are dealt with separately in the Uber-driver ecosystem.
That creates an important compliance distinction.
The practical position can therefore be summarized as follows:
| Particulars | TDS Position |
|---|---|
| Is TDS applicable? | Yes |
| On full invoice value? | Generally No |
| On Uber’s service fee? | Yes |
| On transportation charges? | Normally No |
This approach aligns deduction with the actual service income.
That is the commercially rational approach.
Practical Computation — The Difference Is Significant
Assume the monthly Uber billing is ₹1,30,000.
Economic split:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Driver Fare | ₹97,500 |
| Uber Service Fee | ₹32,500 |
TDS if deducted correctly:
| Basis | Rate | TDS |
|---|---|---|
| Uber Service Fee | 2% | ₹650 |
TDS if deducted on full invoice:
| Basis | Rate | TDS |
|---|---|---|
| Gross Invoice | 2% | ₹2,600 |
Difference:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Excess deduction per month | ₹1,950 |
| Annual excess deduction | ₹23,400 |
This is not a tax saving.
It is simply tax deduction on the correct base.
What If Uber Does Not Clearly Show the Service Fee?
This is the most common practical challenge.
In many cases, companies may receive a consolidated statement or export where Uber’s service fee is not separately visible.
That does not mean the issue can be ignored.
It means the company must build documentary support.
The practical process should be:
| Step | Action |
|---|---|
| 1 | Seek bifurcation from Uber |
| 2 | Preserve written communication |
| 3 | Maintain internal working papers |
| 4 | Apply a reasonable documented basis where split is unavailable |
Where historical billing patterns indicate that Uber’s retained fee generally falls within a consistent range, that pattern may support the internal working.
The objective is not approximation.
The objective is documented approximation.
That distinction matters in scrutiny.
Suggested Internal Documentation Approach
For recurring Uber spends, maintain:
| Document | Importance |
|---|---|
| Uber Invoice/Billing Statement | Primary transaction proof |
| Email requesting breakup | Due diligence support |
| Internal computation sheet | Basis of TDS deduction |
| Challan 281 | Deposit evidence |
| Bank payment proof | Payment trail |
| Form 16A | TDS compliance proof |
| GST reconciliation | ITC substantiation |
In practical tax matters, documentation often determines whether a tax position survives scrutiny.
GST Compliance — The Second Half of the Issue
The Uber invoice issue is not only a TDS issue. It is equally a GST issue.
The same bifurcation that determines the TDS base also determines the GST treatment.
Generally:
| Component | GST Rate |
|---|---|
| Transportation Charges | 5% |
| Uber Service Fee | 18% |
Illustration:
| Component | Value | GST |
|---|---|---|
| Driver Fare | ₹97,500 | ₹4,875 |
| Uber Service Fee | ₹32,500 | ₹5,850 |
| Total GST | — | ₹10,725 |
This directly impacts ITC.
Annual ITC impact:
| Particulars | Amount |
|---|---|
| Monthly ITC | ₹10,725 |
| Annual ITC | ₹1,28,700 |
That is commercially significant.
But claiming ITC is not automatic.
The normal GST conditions must still be satisfied:
| Condition | Importance |
|---|---|
| Valid tax invoice | Mandatory |
| Business use | Necessary |
| Reflection in GSTR-2B | Important |
| Proper accounting | Essential |
Therefore, invoice bifurcation is important for both TDS and GST.
It is not merely a tax deduction issue.
It is a tax reporting issue.
A Simple Monthly Compliance Process
A simple internal process can eliminate recurring confusion:
| Stage | Action |
|---|---|
| Invoice received | Review structure |
| Verify service fee | Identify TDS base |
| Deduct TDS | On service fee |
| Deposit TDS | Within due date |
| File Form 24Q | Quarterly |
| Download Form 16A | Quarterly |
| Reconcile GST ITC | Monthly |
This process takes very little time.
But it prevents avoidable disputes.
Where Businesses Commonly Go Wrong
Three recurring mistakes are seen:
| Mistake | Impact |
|---|---|
| Deducting TDS on full invoice without analysis | Excess deduction and cash blockage |
| Ignoring service fee bifurcation | Weak tax position |
| Claiming GST without reconciliation | ITC mismatch or reversal |
These are avoidable.
Provided the billing structure is understood correctly.
Tax Risk If Mishandled
Improper handling may trigger:
| Issue | Consequence |
|---|---|
| Wrong deduction base | Tax scrutiny |
| Short deduction | Interest exposure |
| Non-deduction | Assessee in default consequences |
| Weak documentation | Explanation difficulty |
Further, where TDS is held applicable and not properly deducted, disallowance under Section 40(a)(ia) may affect the allowability of the expense itself.
That converts a compliance issue into a tax cost.
Conclusion
Uber corporate billing should not be treated like an ordinary vendor invoice.
It is an aggregator-based commercial model.
And aggregator models require understanding the components of the payment.
The critical distinction is simple:
The amount paid to Uber and the amount representing Uber’s income may not be the same.
That distinction affects both:
- TDS under Section 194C
- GST input tax credit
For businesses with recurring Uber spends, the right approach is straightforward:
identify the service fee, deduct tax on that component, maintain documentary support and reconcile GST correctly.
The issue is not whether TDS should be deducted.
The issue is whether TDS is being deducted on the correct amount.
That is what ultimately protects compliance, cash flow and tax efficiency.