Business Standard

Hotels seek clarity on applicabil­ity of new tax on their rates

No clarity if GST will apply on published ones for rooms or price at which it is sold to consumers

- AJAY MODI New Delhi, 21 May

The domestic hotel sector, which follows a dynamic pricing policy to sell rooms and offer discounts from time to time, is not clear whether the goods and services tax (GST) rates will apply on published rates of rooms or that at which it is sold to consumers.

“Room rates are dynamic and have an element of seasonalit­y. Ideally, tax should be chargeable on the rate at which consumptio­n takes place. We hope the industry associatio­ns will get clarity from the authoritie­s,” said Raj Rana, chief executive officer (South Asia) at Carlson Rezidor, which operates hotels under brands Radisson and Park Plaza.

Under the existing taxation system, a customer pays taxes on the actual rate charged, which is often lower than the published rates. In certain internatio­nal markets, tax gets levied on the published tariffs though sales might be at a lower price. Rattan Keswani, deputy managing director, Lemon Tree Hotels, said the company is looking forward to more clarity on the issue.

Rana said some Indian cities such as New Delhi and Hyderabad charge luxury tax on published rates. In case of Delhi, this is levied on published tariffs while service tax is imposed on the consumptio­n price.

Rahul Pandit, managing director and chief executive officer at Ginger Hotels, said the current norm in most states provide for taxes on actual tariff paid. “We need to get clarity on this but the understand­ing is that it should get levied on the applied rate and not the published rate,” said Pandit.

Rana is also worried about the imposition of 28 per cent GST on hotel tariffs above ~5,000. He said it would be a challenge to attract visitors from abroad as India competes with several other destinatio­ns, which could be more competitiv­e on prices. For such luxury hotels, the internatio­nal clientele forms a large part of bookings.

Restaurant­s housed inside five-star hotels will now have to pay GST of 28 per cent against the rate of 18 per cent by standalone air conditione­d restaurant­s. Along with the recent ban that restricts highway hotels from serving alcohol, the GST decisions could put businesses in substantia­l hardship, explained Rana.

 ??  ?? Restaurant­s housed inside five-star hotels will now have to pay GST of 28 per cent against the rate of 18 per cent by standalone air conditione­d restaurant­s
Restaurant­s housed inside five-star hotels will now have to pay GST of 28 per cent against the rate of 18 per cent by standalone air conditione­d restaurant­s

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