GST on Restaurant Services

GST on Restaurant Services

With effect from 1st April 2025, the GST rate structure on restaurant services has been revised under Notification No. 05/2025 – Central Tax (Rate) dated 16.01.2025. A major change introduced is the concept of “Specified Premises”, which determines the GST rate applicable and the eligibility for Input Tax Credit (ITC).

This article explains the updated GST treatment in detail using examples, tables, and legal references for professionals and businesses.

🧾 Revised GST Rates on Restaurant Services (Applicable from 1st April 2025)

Type of RestaurantSpecified Premises StatusGST RateITC EligibilityECO Responsibility (u/s 9(5))
Standalone RestaurantNot Applicable5%❌ Not Available✅ Deemed Supplier
Hotel RestaurantNot Specified Premises5%❌ Not Available✅ Deemed Supplier
Hotel RestaurantSpecified Premises18%✅ ITC Allowed❌ ECO Not Deemed Supplier, but collects TCS

📘 What is a “Specified Premises” Under GST?

A restaurant in a hotel is deemed to be located in “Specified Premises” if:

  1. The value of accommodation (room tariff) exceeds ₹7,500 per unit/day in any preceding Financial Year, or
  2. The hotel voluntarily opts to be treated as a Specified Premises by filing Annexure VII.
Hotel TypeDeclared or AutomaticGST Rate on FoodITC Eligibility
Luxury Hotel (e.g., Taj, Oberoi)Automatically Specified18%✅ Yes
Budget Hotel (e.g., ₹6,000 tariff, no Annexure VII)Not Specified5%❌ No
Small Hotel (Opted via Annexure VII)Declared Specified18%✅ Yes

Note: Once opted in, the “Specified Premises” classification continues for the full financial year.

🧠 Practical Scenarios & Tax Implications

✨ Examples

1: Luxury Hotel – Room Above ₹7,500

  • Restaurant located inside Taj Hotel.
  • Always treated as Specified Premises.
  • GST = 18%, ITC = ✅ Available.
  • MakeMyTrip collects TCS, not treated as supplier.

2: Restaurant via Swiggy from Standalone Outlet

  • Restaurant not in hotel.
  • GST = 5%, ITC = ❌ Not Available.
  • Swiggy = Deemed Supplier under Section 9(5).

3: Small Hotel Filed Annexure VII

  • Room tariff = ₹5,800.
  • Hotel opts-in to be “Specified Premises.”
  • GST = 18%, ITC = ✅ Available.

🧩 Role of ECOs (Zomato, Swiggy, OYO, MakeMyTrip)

Supply TypePremisesECO RoleGST RateITC
Food via Swiggy from StandaloneNot Hotel✅ Deemed Supplier5%❌ No
Food at Hyatt via MakeMyTripSpecified Premises❌ Not Deemed Supplier18%✅ Yes (TCS by ECO)
Food via OYO in budget hotelNot Specified✅ Deemed Supplier5%❌ No

Note: In “Specified Premises,” ECO is not liable to pay GST but must collect TCS under Section 52.

📂 How to Declare via Annexure VII

Hotels not automatically covered (i.e., room rates < ₹7,500) can opt-in by filing Annexure VII with the GST department:

  • Submit declaration before the financial year begins.
  • Once opted, the status applies for the full financial year.
  • Allows the restaurant to charge 18% GST with ITC.

🔁 Reverse Charge on Rent – Applicable to Restaurants

If a restaurant (registered under GST) takes commercial premises on rent from an unregistered person, the Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) applies under Section 9(3) of the CGST Act read with Notification No. 13/2017 – Central Tax (Rate).

SituationSupplierRecipientGST ApplicabilityTax Payment
Restaurant renting from registered landlordRegisteredRegistered✅ Forward ChargeLandlord pays GST
Restaurant renting from unregistered landlordUnregisteredRegistered✅ Reverse ChargeRestaurant pays GST under RCM

Example:

ABC Restaurant takes a building on rent from an individual (not registered under GST). Monthly rent is ₹80,000.

  • Since the landlord is unregistered, and restaurant is registered,
  • ABC Restaurant must pay 18% GST under RCM.
  • ITC is available on such RCM paid GST.

ITC on Reverse Charge – When Allowed?

GST Rate on Restaurant ServicesITC on Reverse Charge Rent GST
5% (Without ITC – as per Notification)❌ Not Allowed
18% (With ITC – Specified Premises)✅ Allowed

📌 Explanation: If a restaurant is charging 5% GST under the composition-like scheme (without ITC), then ITC on reverse charge rent is not eligible. However, if the restaurant is in a Specified Premises and charging 18% GST with ITC, the GST paid under RCM on rent becomes eligible for ITC.

Conclusion:

Hotels and restaurants must determine their “Specified Premises” status annually. This decision affects GST rate, ITC eligibility, and e-commerce aggregator treatment. Ensure timely classification and compliance to avoid disputes.

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