Tuesday, May 12, 2026

No TDS on Liquor in Event Management & Hotel Invoices under Section 194C

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

Legal & Compliance Guide for FY 2025–26 & FY 2026–27

Where a hotel, banquet operator, caterer or event management company raises a composite invoice including:

  • Accommodation
  • Banquet charges
  • Catering / food
  • Event execution services
  • Liquor supply

the liquor component is not liable for TDS under Section 194C.

TDS under Section 194C applies only on the non-liquor portion of the invoice.

Statutory Basis — Section 194C

Section 194C(1) applies to payments made to a contractor for carrying out any “work”.

Threshold Limits

ParticularsLimit
Single payment₹50,000
Annual aggregate₹1,00,000

TDS Rates

Payee CategoryRate
Individual / HUF1%
Others2%

Most Critical Provision — Explanation (iii) to Section 194C

Explanation (iii) includes within “work”:

  • Catering
  • Advertising
  • Broadcasting
  • Carriage contracts
  • Manufacturing/supply as per customer specification

However, the Legislature specifically excludes:

“manufacturing or supply of liquor”

from the scope of “work”.

Legal Impact of the Exclusion

The exclusion is statutory and unconditional.

Therefore:

ComponentTDS u/s 194C
Banquet/event servicesApplicable
Catering/foodApplicable
Staffing & coordinationApplicable
Liquor supplyNot Applicable

Why Composite Invoicing Does Not Change the Position

Composite billing cannot override statutory exclusion because:

  1. Section 194C applies only to “work”.
  2. Liquor supply is expressly excluded from “work”.
  3. Charging provisions must be interpreted strictly.
  4. Invoice structure cannot expand the scope of the law.

Thus, liquor value remains outside the TDS base even in bundled contracts.

Applicability Across Hospitality & Event Industry
ScenarioLiquor Excludible?
Event management contractsYes
Hotel banquet invoicesYes
Corporate conferencesYes
Wedding packagesYes
Event company paying hotelYes
Separate liquor invoiceCompletely outside 194C

Correct TDS Computation

Composite Invoice Example — ₹25,00,000

ParticularsAmountTDS Applicability
Accommodation & banquet₹12,00,000Yes
Food & catering₹8,00,000Yes
Liquor supply₹5,00,000No
TDS Base₹20,00,000
TDS @2%₹40,000

CBDT Circular No. 13/2006 — Correct Reading

CBDT clarified that execution contracts and labour supply fall under Section 194C.

However, the Circular does not override the statutory exclusion relating to liquor supply.

Accordingly:

Nature of PaymentPosition
Event execution servicesCovered
Catering servicesCovered
Liquor product valueSpecifically excluded

Important Distinction — Product vs Service
ComponentTDS Position
Liquor product costNo TDS
Bartender/service chargesTDS applicable
Event staffingTDS applicable
Bar setup/management servicesTDS applicable

The exclusion applies only to liquor supplied as product and not to independent service components.

Compliance Framework

Step 1 — Identify Liquor Component

Where separately disclosed:

  • adopt actual value.

Where composite billing exists:

  • prepare reasonable bifurcation based on:
    • package structure,
    • guest count,
    • menu composition,
    • industry standards.

Step 2 — Maintain Documentation

  • Vendor invoices
  • Quotations/package details
  • Internal working sheets
  • Event agreements
  • Menu/liquor details

Step 3 — Deduct TDS Only on Eligible Portion

Computation Principle

TDS Base=Total InvoiceLiquor Value\text{TDS Base} = \text{Total Invoice} - \text{Liquor Value}

Important Practical Clarifications

IssuePosition
Separate liquor invoice mandatory?No
Estimated bifurcation allowed?Yes, if reasonable
GST impacts exclusion?No
Small liquor value ignored?No
Form 26Q reportingReport taxable portion

Final Legal Position

On a combined reading of:

  • Section 194C(1),
  • Explanation (iii) to Section 194C,
  • the statutory exclusion relating to liquor supply,
  • and settled principles of strict interpretation of TDS provisions,

the legally sustainable position is:

the liquor component embedded in composite hotel, banquet, catering or event management invoices does not form part of the amount liable for TDS under Section 194C.

Accordingly:

  • TDS is deductible only on the non-liquor component;
  • composite invoicing does not nullify statutory exclusion;
  • and reasonable bifurcation with documentation should be maintained


Charitable Trust Formation, Registration, Public Donation Governance & Welfare Compliance in India

 From Seed Funding to Public Trust

By CA Surekha Ahuja

“A charitable institution is not built merely by registration papers or donations received.
It is built by public trust, fiduciary discipline, lawful governance, and transparent welfare utilisation.”

Vision & Legal Philosophy of a Charitable Institution

A genuine charitable institution is not merely a legal registration structure. It is a fiduciary public welfare mechanism where:

  • founders contribute seed capital,
  • trustees administer funds in fiduciary capacity,
  • society contributes donations and public trust,
  • funds are utilised exclusively for charitable purposes,
  • and the institution remains accountable to beneficiaries, donors, regulators, auditors, and law.

The institution must therefore ensure:

Core PrincipleGovernance ObjectiveTax ObjectivePublic Objective
Public benefitFiduciary disciplineExemption continuityWelfare delivery
TransparencyAudit trailSection 11 protectionDonor confidence
No private enrichmentSection 13 safeguards80G sustainabilityEthical governance
Controlled utilisationFinancial integrityCompliance continuityLong-term credibility

Governing Legal Framework
ProvisionSubject MatterPractical Relevance
Section 2(15)Charitable purposeObject qualification
Sections 11 & 12Income exemptionCore exemption framework
Section 12AConditions for exemptionAudit/books/return filing
Section 12ABRegistration mechanismMandatory registration
Section 13Violations & denialMost critical risk provision
Section 80GDonor deduction approvalDonation ecosystem
Section 115BBCAnonymous donationsDonor identity control
Section 115BBISpecified income taxationViolation taxation
Section 115TDAccreted income taxExit/restructuring risk
Rule 17ADocumentation frameworkFiling compliance

Lifecycle of a Charitable Institution
PhaseObjectiveKey Compliance
IFounder seed structuringTrust deed
IILegal constitutionRegistration
IIITax activation12AB & 80G
IVDonation mobilisationDonor controls
VWelfare utilisationSection 11 application
VIAudit & reportingAudit & ITR
VIILong-term governanceOngoing compliance

PHASE I — FOUNDERS’ SEED FUNDING & INITIAL STRUCTURING

Seed Money by Founders

The initial contribution by founders generally constitutes:

  • initial corpus,
  • settlement contribution,
  • or institutional seed funding.

This establishes:

  • institutional credibility,
  • banking capability,
  • operational readiness,
  • charitable intent.

SOP for Founder Funding
ParticularsSOP RequirementDocumentationCritical Caution
Mode of contributionBanking channels onlyBank proofAvoid cash-heavy funding
Nature of contributionCorpus/general donation clarityFounder declarationMisclassification risky
Accounting treatmentSeparate corpus ledgerCorpus registerIncorrect accounting may trigger dispute
Trustee approvalResolution/minutesGovernance recordsImportant for transparency
Utilisation controlsWelfare-only useInternal SOPNo personal usage
Founder KYCPAN/Aadhaar/address proofKYC fileRequired for audit trail

Founder Funding — High-Risk Areas

Risk AreaExposureConsequence
Personal expenses through trustSection 13 violationExemption denial
Cash introduction without explanationSource scrutinyAudit issues
Founder-controlled vendorsRelated-party exposureSpecified person violation
Unsupported reimbursementsGovernance failureLitigation risk
Excessive founder controlGenuineness challengeRegistration scrutiny

PHASE II — FORMATION & LEGAL CONSTITUTION

Choice of Structure
StructureSuitable ForGovernance Strength
Public Charitable TrustWelfare/social activitiesStrong
SocietyMembership NGOsModerate
Section 8 CompanyInstitutional/CSR organisationsVery strong

Trust Deed — Constitutional Backbone

The trust deed is the:

most critical legal and tax document.

Weak drafting is one of the biggest reasons for:

  • rejection of 12AB,
  • 80G objections,
  • Section 13 disputes,
  • donor mistrust,
  • and governance litigation.

Mandatory Trust Deed Clauses
ClausePurposeTax RelevanceDrafting Caution
Object clauseCharitable qualificationSection 2(15)Avoid commercial wording
Application clauseWelfare-only utilisationSection 11No private diversion
Non-profit clausePublic character80GMandatory
Investment clauseSection 11(5) complianceSection 13Critical
Dissolution clauseAsset continuity115TD mitigationNo return to founders
Trustee restriction clauseRelated-party safeguardsSection 13Arm’s-length basis
Amendment clauseRegistration continuityFuture complianceRestrict arbitrary changes
Irrevocability clauseInstitutional stabilityStronger defenceStrongly advisable

Formation Documentation Checklist
CategoryDocuments RequiredMandatory / Conditional
Trust deedExecuted deedMandatory
Settlor KYCPAN/Aadhaar/address proofMandatory
Trustee KYCPAN/Aadhaar/photosMandatory
Witness proofIdentity/address proofMandatory in many states
Office proofUtility bill/rent deed/NOCMandatory
Property papersTitle documentsConditional
Trustee resolutionsGovernance recordsStrongly advisable

Registration Timeline Matrix
StageAuthorityProcessIndicative Timeline
Stamp duty & executionState authorityDeed execution1–3 days
Trust registrationSub-RegistrarRegistration of deed2–10 days
PAN allotmentIncome-tax DepartmentPAN application3–10 days
Bank account openingScheduled bankInstitutional KYC2–7 days
12AB processingCIT(E)/PCITForm 10A/10ABUp to 6 months
80G approvalIncome-tax DepartmentLinked processingParallel/combined

PHASE III — TAX ACTIVATION & REGISTRATION

Registration Forms Framework (FY 2026–27)
FormPurposeApplicability
Form 10AFresh/provisional registrationNew trusts
Form 10ABRegular registration/renewal/modificationExisting trusts
Form 10BAudit reportSpecified cases
Form 10BBAudit reportCertain institutions
Form 10Accumulation under Section 11(2)Income accumulation
Form 9ADeemed application optionIncome timing mismatch
Form 10BDDonation statement80G reporting
Form 10BEDonor certificateDonor deduction
ITR-7Income-tax returnAnnual filing

Correct Form Selection Matrix
SituationApplicable FormTimelineCritical Point
New trust/no activitiesForm 10AImmediately after formationProvisional registration
Activities commencedForm 10ABWithin prescribed timelineActivity evidence required
RenewalForm 10ABAt least 6 months before expiryDelay may lapse registration
Modification of objectsForm 10ABWithin 30 daysMandatory trigger

Rule 17A Documentation Matrix
SegmentDocuments RequiredCommon Defect
ConstitutionTrust deed/registration certificateIncomplete scan
PAN recordsPAN copyName mismatch
Trustee recordsPAN/Aadhaar/address proofMissing KYC
Office proofUtility bill/NOCExpired proof
Banking proofCancelled cheque/passbookWrong account details
Activity noteWelfare activity reportGeneric drafting
Financial recordsAccounts/bank statementsUnreconciled entries
Governance documentsResolutions/authorisationsInvalid signatory

Priority Sequence to Avoid Rejection or Delay
PriorityActivityPractical Purpose
1Deed vettingPrevent future objections
2PAN consistency checkAvoid portal mismatch
3Trustee KYC verificationPrevent defects
4Office proof validationCommon rejection area
5Bank activationDonation readiness
6Activity note draftingGenuineness support
7Upload verificationAvoid defective filing
8ARN preservationTracking & response
9Notice monitoringTimely compliance
10Compliance calendarLong-term governance

PHASE IV — PUBLIC DONATIONS & FUND GOVERNANCE

Public Donations — Fiduciary Responsibility

Once public donations commence:

the institution becomes a public accountability entity.

Every rupee received:

  • must be traceable,
  • properly accounted,
  • lawfully utilised,
  • and capable of audit verification.

Donation Source Matrix
SourcePermissibleAdditional ComplianceRisk Area
FoundersYesRelated-party disclosureSection 13 scrutiny
TrusteesYesGovernance transparencyBenefit monitoring
Public donorsYesReceipt & donor recordsAnonymous donation risk
VolunteersYesCampaign reconciliationCash handling risk
CorporatesYesCSR documentationUtilisation reporting
NGOsYesGrant agreementsLayered funding scrutiny
Foreign donorsSubject to FCRAFCRA approval mandatoryFEMA/FCRA exposure

Donation Acceptance SOP
Compliance AreaRequirementCritical Caution
Donation receiptsSerially numberedMandatory audit trail
Donor identityPAN/address/mobile/emailSection 115BBC exposure
Banking channelsStrongly advisableAvoid informal cash receipts
Corpus donationsWritten donor directionOtherwise general donation
Donation registerDigital + physicalReconciliation essential
Segregation of fundsCorpus/general/project-wiseUtilisation tracking

High-Risk Donation Areas
Risk AreaConsequence
Anonymous donationsSection 115BBC taxation
Accommodation entriesRegistration cancellation exposure
Cash-heavy collectionsSource scrutiny
Founder-linked routingSection 13 investigation
Improper utilisationLitigation & cancellation risk

PHASE V — UTILISATION OF PUBLIC MONEY

Core Welfare Utilisation Principle

Public money:

must move from donation to documented public benefit.

Every expenditure should:

  • align with charitable objects,
  • have supporting evidence,
  • receive internal approval,
  • and withstand audit scrutiny.

Welfare Utilisation Matrix
Welfare AreaDocumentation RequiredAudit Evidence
Educational aidStudent recordsFee receipts
Medical reliefMedical documentsBills & beneficiary proof
Food distributionBeneficiary sheetsDistribution evidence
Skill developmentAttendance/program recordsCertificates/reports
Women welfareBeneficiary registerUtilisation records
Rural welfareProject reportsField documentation

Fund Utilisation SOP
AreaMandatory ControlKey Risk
Expense approvalsResolution/authorisationUnauthorised spending
Budget monitoringBudget vs actual reviewExcessive admin expenses
Vendor verificationIndependent reviewRelated-party exposure
Banking controlsDual authorisation preferableMisappropriation
Supporting vouchersMandatoryAudit qualification
Welfare linkage verificationObject mappingNon-charitable application

Administrative Expense Governance
Expense TypePositionProfessional Caution
Genuine salariesPermissibleMust be reasonable
Rent & utilitiesPermissibleObject linkage required
Welfare travelPermissibleEvidence required
Founder luxury expenditureNot permissibleSerious violation
Personal benefitsProhibitedSection 13 exposure
Excessive trustee remunerationHigh-riskBenchmarking advisable

PHASE VI — STATUTORY COMPLIANCE & REPORTING

Annual Compliance Calendar — FY 2026–27

ComplianceFormDue Date / TimelinePractical Note
Registration applicationForm 10AUpon formationFor provisional registration
Regular registration/renewalForm 10AB6 months before expiry / within 30 days of object changeCritical timeline
Audit reportForm 10B/10BBAt least 1 month before ITR due dateMandatory where applicable
Income-tax returnITR-7Due date under Section 139(4A)Timely filing critical
Donation statementForm 10BDGenerally by 31 May following FY80G reporting
Donor certificateForm 10BEGenerally by 31 May following FYDonor deduction support
Accumulation filingForm 10Before ITR due dateSection 11(2)
Deemed application optionForm 9ABefore ITR due dateTiming relief

85% Application Rule — Monitoring Framework
ParticularsCompliance RequirementMonitoring Strategy
Minimum utilisation85% applicationQuarterly review
Shortfall managementForm 9A/Form 10Advance planning
InvestmentsSection 11(5) modes onlyMonthly review
Welfare deploymentObject-linked spendingProgram mapping

Internal Governance & Public Accountability SOP
Governance AreaBest PracticeObjective
Trustee meetingsQuarterly minutesTransparency
Internal auditQuarterly reviewRisk mitigation
Donation reconciliationMonthlyReporting accuracy
Utilisation verificationProject-wise reviewPublic trust
Investment reviewMonthlySection 11(5) compliance
Legal reviewAnnualRegistration continuity

Section 13 — Most Critical Risk Matrix
ViolationExampleConsequence
Benefit to specified personsFounder enrichmentExemption denial
Non-11(5) investmentsSpeculative deploymentTax exposure
Personal use of trust assetsPrivate usageSerious scrutiny
Diversion of donationsNon-object expenditureCancellation risk
Excessive related-party transactionsFounder-linked vendorsSection 13 trigger

Top Reasons for Rejection or Cancellation
Default AreaImmediate ExposureLong-Term Consequence
Weak object clauseRegistration objectionLitigation
No activity evidenceGenuineness challengeRejection risk
PAN/deed mismatchDefective filingProcessing delay
Poor donor records115BBC exposurePenal taxation
CommercialisationGPU challengeExemption denial
Excessive founder controlGovernance concernCancellation exposure
Weak accounting systemAudit issuesCredibility loss
Delayed filingsCompliance defaultRegistration lapse
Non-11(5) investmentsSection 13 violationTax exposure
Weak utilisation evidencePublic accountability concernAdverse scrutiny

Ultimate Governance & Compliance Framework
Structural IntegrityFinancial IntegrityGovernance IntegrityWelfare Integrity
Proper deed draftingTransparent accountingTrustee disciplineGenuine public benefit
Section 2(15) alignmentBanking traceabilityResolution-based approvalsBeneficiary documentation
Section 11(5) complianceDonation reconciliationRelated-party safeguardsWelfare evidence
Dissolution safeguardsAudit readinessTimely statutory filingsLong-term public trust

Final Professional Conclusion

A charitable institution may begin with:

seed funding by founders,

but thereafter evolves into:

a fiduciary public welfare institution accountable to law, donors, beneficiaries, regulators, auditors, and society.

Its sustainability depends not merely upon registration under Sections 12AB or 80G, but upon:

  • disciplined governance,
  • lawful fund mobilisation,
  • transparent accounting,
  • documented charitable utilisation,
  • continuous statutory compliance,
  • strong internal controls,
  • and complete avoidance of private benefit or Section 13 violations.

An institution with:

  • proper constitutional drafting,
  • compliant registrations,
  • transparent donation systems,
  • disciplined fund utilisation,
  • robust donor accountability,
  • timely filings,
  • and continuous audit readiness,

is best positioned to:

  • sustain tax exemptions,
  • attract institutional and public donations,
  • withstand regulatory scrutiny,
  • preserve public trust,
  • and create durable lawful social welfare impact in India.


Saturday, May 9, 2026

Buying Property from an NRI in India FY 2026–27: Complete Tax, TDS & DTAA Guide

By CA Surekha Ahuja

FY 2026–27 brings major procedural and compliance changes for buyers purchasing property from NRIs in India, including PAN-based TDS simplification from 1 October 2026 and revised compliance forms under the Income Tax Act, 2025.

This guide explains the complete tax, TDS, DTAA, repatriation and compliance framework applicable to property purchases from NRI sellers in India during FY 2026–27.

Key Change in FY 2026–27

1 April 2026 – 30 September 2026

  • Buyer generally required to obtain TAN
  • TDS governed by Section 393(2)(a)

From 1 October 2026

  • PAN-based simplified TDS mechanism introduced
  • No TAN requirement in eligible cases
  • Section 393(2)(b)

Old vs New Section Mapping

Income Tax Act, 1961Income Tax Act, 2025Purpose
Section 194-IASection 394Resident property TDS
Section 195Section 393(2)TDS on payments to NRIs
Section 195(8A)Section 393(2)(b)PAN-based simplified TDS
Section 206AASection 402Higher TDS for no PAN
Section 197Section 395Lower/nil deduction certificate
Form 13Form 128Lower/nil TDS application
Form 15CAForm 145Foreign remittance declaration
Form 15CBForm 146CA remittance certificate
Form 26ASForm 168Tax credit statement
Form 16AForm 131TDS certificate
Form 27QForm 144NRI TDS return
Section 54Section 123Residential reinvestment exemption
Section 54FSection 124LTCG reinvestment into residential house
Section 54ECSection 125Investment in specified bonds

Correct Tax, TDS & Surcharge Rates – FY 2026–27
CategoryFinal Tax RatePractical TDS Rate*
LTCG (holding ≥24 months)12.5% + surcharge + 4% cess12.5% + surcharge + 4% cess
STCG (holding <24 months)Slab ratesGenerally 30% + surcharge + 4% cess

*Subject to lower/nil deduction certificate under Section 395.

Correct Surcharge Position for Property LTCG

LTCG Taxable Under Section 112

Total IncomeApplicable Surcharge
₹50 lakh – ₹1 crore10%
₹1 crore – ₹2 crore15%
Above ₹2 crore15% cap continues

Cess: 4% on tax plus surcharge.

Enhanced surcharge rates of 25% and 37% do not apply to LTCG taxable under Section 112. Effective surcharge on such gains remains capped at 15%.

Most Important Rule

In NRI property transactions, TDS is generally deducted on the full sale consideration unless the seller obtains a lower deduction certificate.

Although tax is legally deductible on the sum chargeable to tax, buyers commonly deduct on gross consideration to avoid exposure and litigation risk.

Essential Due Diligence Before Purchase

Before payment or registration, verify:

  • Encumbrance Certificate
  • Complete title chain
  • Mutation records
  • Seller PAN
  • Passport / OCI / PIO documents
  • Tax Residency Certificate (TRC)
  • Form 10F in DTAA cases

Maintain:

  • Agreements
  • TDS records
  • Bank trail
  • Capital gains computation
  • Registration documents

for at least 7 years.

Most Important Tax Planning Tool

Section 395 – Form 128

Lower/Nil TDS Certificate.

Why It Matters

Without Form 128:

  • TDS may substantially exceed actual capital gains liability
  • Seller refund may remain blocked for months

With Form 128:

  • TDS aligns closer to actual taxable gains
  • Significant cash-flow relief possible

Best Practice

Apply 45–60 days before registration.

TDS Compliance – Before 1 October 2026

Buyer generally must:

  • Obtain TAN through Form 49B
  • Deposit TDS through ITNS 281
  • File TDS return in Form 144
  • Issue TDS certificate in Form 131

TDS Compliance – From 1 October 2026

Simplified PAN-based process expected:

  • No TAN requirement in eligible cases
  • PAN-based compliance
  • Challan-cum-statement mechanism
  • Simplified certificate generation

Capital Gains Exemptions – FY 2026–27

New SectionEarlier SectionBenefitLimit
Section 123Section 54Residential reinvestment₹10 crore
Section 124Section 54FLTCG reinvestment into residential house₹10 crore
Section 125Section 54ECNHAI / REC bonds₹50 lakh

DTAA Position – No Direct TDS Relief

India generally retains taxation rights over immovable property situated in India.

Therefore:

  • TDS continues to apply in India
  • DTAA usually provides foreign tax credit relief later in country of residence

Repatriation Rules

NRI sellers may generally repatriate:

Up to USD 1 million per financial year

subject to:

  • Payment of taxes
  • FEMA compliance
  • Form 145 / Form 146 compliance
  • Banking documentation

Key Compliance Risks

IssueConsequence
Delay in TDS deductionInterest liability
Delay in TDS depositInterest + penalty
Short deductionBuyer may be treated as assessee in default
No/invalid PANHigher TDS exposure
Incorrect filingsPenalty exposure

Interest under Section 401(1A):

  • 1% per month for non-deduction
  • 1.5% per month for delayed deposit

Final Takeaways

  • PAN verification should happen first
  • Form 128 is the single most important tax planning tool
  • Post-1 October 2026 transactions are procedurally simpler
  • LTCG surcharge on property gains is effectively capped at 15%
  • DTAA does not remove Indian TDS
  • Maintain complete tax and TDS documentation
  • High-value transactions should always be CA-reviewed before payment

Final Practical Strategy

Form 128 filed early + PAN verified upfront + post-1 October 2026 execution (where feasible) = the most efficient structure for buying property from an NRI in India during FY 2026–27.