GST on Legal Services: Complete Guide for Lawyers, Law Firms & Businesses

GST on Legal Services: Complete Guide for Lawyers, Law Firms & Businesses

1. Introduction

Legal services play an essential role in business operations—whether related to drafting agreements, litigation, arbitration, representation, or advisory. Under GST, legal services have a distinct tax treatment due to their coverage under the Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM).

Taxpayers often face confusion regarding:

  • Whether advocates/law firms must charge GST
  • When RCM is applicable
  • GST exemptions available
  • Eligibility of Input Tax Credit (ITC)
  • Documentation and compliance
  • GST on arbitration and drafting services

This Handout explains the complete GST applicability on legal services in a simple and detailed manner.

2. Nature of Service under GST

Under GST, legal services are categorized as services as per Section 2(102) of the CGST Act.

Legal services include:

  • Legal consultancy
  • Representation before courts/tribunals
  • Arbitration and conciliation
  • Drafting of petitions, agreements, and contracts
  • Legal documentation and advisory

These are treated as pure services, not goods. Most legal services fall under RCM, meaning GST is paid by the recipient (business entity), not the advocate.

3. HSN / SAC Codes for Legal Services

Activity / ServiceSAC CodeRemarks
Legal consultancy998213Main category under legal services
Arbitration / conciliation998215Covered as arbitration services
Litigation / court representation998216Representation services
Drafting & documentation998218Legal support services

4. GST Rates Applicable on Legal Services

Nature of SupplyGST RateNotes
Legal services provided by advocate/law firm to business entity18%Paid under RCM by the recipient
Legal services to other advocatesExemptNo GST
Legal services to non-business individualsExemptNo GST
Services by senior advocate18%Also under RCM

Relevant Notifications

  • Notification No. 12/2017 – Exemptions
  • Notification No. 13/2017 – RCM
  • Notification No. 11/2017 – GST Rates

5. GST Exemptions for Legal Services

Legal services are exempt in the following cases:

  • Services by an advocate to another advocate
  • Services to non-business entities (e.g., individuals)
  • Services to unregistered business entities whose turnover is below ₹40/20 lakh (₹20/10 lakh for specified states)
  • Arbitration services to non-business individuals
  • Legal services to small unregistered business entities

Example

If a lawyer advises a salaried employee, no GST is applicable.

6. Input Tax Credit (ITC) on Legal Services

ITC Allowed

Businesses can claim ITC on RCM-paid GST for:

  • Legal consultancy
  • Arbitration charges
  • Litigation fees
  • Drafting & documentation fees

ITC Not Allowed

ITC is restricted only when:

  • Services are used for exempt supplies
  • Services relate to personal consumption

Special Conditions

  • RCM tax must be paid in cash (not through ITC).
  • ITC can be claimed only after payment of RCM.
  • If legal services relate to both taxable and exempt supplies, Rule 42 applies (proportionate reversal).

7. Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM)

RCM is the core of GST on legal services.

SupplierRecipientRCM Applicable?
Individual AdvocateRegistered Business EntityYes
Senior AdvocateRegistered Business EntityYes
Law Firm (Partnership/LLP)Registered Business EntityYes
AdvocateNon-business IndividualNo
AdvocateOther AdvocateNo

GST Rate under RCM: 18%

8. Place of Supply Rules for Legal Services

Domestic Transactions

  • If the recipient is registered → Place of supply = location of the recipient
  • If the recipient is unregistered → Place of supply = location of the supplier

Export of Legal Services

Legal services qualify as export if:

  • Recipient is located outside India
  • Payment received in foreign currency
  • Supplier is located in India
  • Place of supply is outside India

Exports are zero-rated.

9. GST Registration for Advocates & Law Firms

Advocates / Law Firms

  • Registration not mandatory when providing services covered under RCM.
  • Required only if they provide services on forward charge, which is rare.

Business Recipients

Must register if:

  • Liable to pay RCM
  • Turnover exceeds threshold
  • Required under Section 24

10. Compliance Requirements

For Business Entities

  • Pay GST under RCM in GSTR-3B {Table 3.1(d)}.
  • Claim ITC in GSTR-3B {Table 4A(3)}.
  • Maintain legal invoices from advocates.
  • Keep proof of RCM payment.

For Advocates

  • Not required to file GST returns if providing only RCM-based services.
  • If registered, must file monthly/quarterly returns.

11. Practical Issues & Common Mistakes

Common errors include:

  • Not paying RCM on legal invoices
  • Wrong SAC classification
  • Not claiming ITC after RCM payment
  • Misinterpreting exports of legal services
  • Advocates issuing GST invoices unnecessarily

12. Case Studies & Examples

Example 1: RCM Liability

Invoice value: ₹50,000
GST @ 18% = ₹9,000
Company pays ₹9,000 under RCM and claims ITC of ₹9,000.

Example 2: Exempt Service

Legal advice to a salaried person → GST exempt.

Example 3: Export of Service

An Indian advocate drafts a contract for a US client.
Payment in USD → Zero-rated export.

Example 4: Arbitration Service

Law firm provides arbitration services to a registered company → RCM applies.

13. Quick Summary Table

TopicSummary
SAC Code998213, 998215, 998216
GST Rate18%
ExemptionsFor non-business individuals & small unregistered entities
ITCAllowed to recipient
RCMApplicable
ComplianceGSTR-3B, RCM payment, ITC claim

14. Conclusion

GST on legal services primarily uses the Reverse Charge Mechanism, shifting compliance burden from advocates to business recipients. To avoid disputes and tax mismatches, businesses must ensure correct RCM payment, maintain documentation, and timely claim ITC.

Legal services often involve complex interpretations; therefore, professional guidance is advisable in doubtful cases.

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