Deccan Chronicle

City gears up for hotel bandh over GST today

- DC CORRESPOND­ENT

Nearly 40,000 hotels and restaurant­s will stay closed on Tuesday to protest the higher tax slab prescribed under the new GST regime, which will come into force from July 1. Star hotels will not support the bandh.

About 40 per cent of messes, tiffin centres and other eateries that have an annual turnover of over `20 lakh will observe the bandh. The remaining 60 per cent of establishm­ents that have a turnover of less than `20 lakh and so do not fall under the ambit of GST will continue to function as usual.

Bakeries and sweet shops with an annual turnover of over `20 lakh have also extended support to the bandh.

The GST Council has fixed 12 per cent and 18 per cent tax slabs under GST on hotels and restaurant­s. The hotels and restaurant­s industry wants the tax to be a uniform 5 per cent.

South Indian States Hotels Associatio­n (SISHA) will participat­e in the bandh on May 30 while the Federation of Hotels and Restaurant­s Associatio­n of India has given a call to hold a dharna on June 1 at Jantar Mantar in Delhi. The TS Hotels Associatio­n has extended support to the agitation programmes of SISHA.

40 PER CENT of eateries with turnover of over `20 lakh will observe bandh.

60 PER CENT of eateries with less than `20 lakh turnover will be open.

Nearly 40,000 hotels and restaurant­s will stay closed on Tuesday to protest the higher tax slab prescribed under the new GST regime. TS Hotels' Associatio­n president S Venkata Reddy said, “We have submitted repeated representa­tions to the Centre and state government seeking uniform tax rate of 5 per cent in the GST regime. But the GST Council fixed differenti­al tax rates based on turnover. We strongly oppose this as it will adversely affect the hotel and hospitalit­y industry.” The GST Council had prescribed 5 per cent tax for businesses with a turnover of below `20 lakh per annum, 12 per cent tax for those with a turnover between `20 lakh and `50 lakh and non-AC restaurant­s and 18 per cent tax for all AC restaurant­s. At present, 5 per cent VAT is imposed on hotels with a turnover below `1.50 crore per month and 14.5 per cent for those with a turnover above `1.50 crore. All hotels collect uniform 5.6 per cent service tax. Mr Reddy said due to lowering of turnover, a majority of hotels in the state will fall in the 12 per cent and 18 per cent tax categories, unlike at present where they fall in the under 5 per cent tax category.

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