NISHITH.TV
  • Mumbai
  • Silicon Valley
  • Bengaluru
  • Singapore
  • Mumbai BKC
  • New Delhi
  • Munich
  • New York

Locations

  • Mumbai
  • Silicon Valley
  • Bengaluru
  • Singapore
  • Mumbai BKC
  • New Delhi
  • Munich
  • New York
  • Content
  • Home
  • ABOUT US
  • NDA in the Media
  • Areas of Service
  • Research and Articles
  • Opportunities
  • Contact
  • NDACloud
  • Client Access
  • Member Access
  • Events and Calender
  • How we perform
  • Knowledge anywhere, anytime
  • See our recent deals
  • Up to date legal developments
  • Case studies in M&A

Research and Articles

HTMLPDF

  • Research at NDA
  • Research Papers
  • Research Articles
  • NDA Think Tanks
  • NDA Hotline
  • New Ali Gunjan
  • Japan Desk ジャパンデスク

NDA-Hotline


  • Debt Funding in India Series
  • Private Equity Corner
  • The Startups Series
  • Court Corner
  • Investment Funds: Monthly Digest
  • Insolvency and Bankruptcy Hotline
  • Deal Destination
  • New Publication
  • M&A Interactive
  • Lit Corner
  • Private Debt Hotline
  • Food & Beverages Hotline
  • Companies Act Series
  • Gaming Law Wrap
  • Private Client Wrap
  • GIFT City Express
  • Regulatory Hotline
  • Capital Markets Hotline
  • Tax Hotline
  • Corpsec Hotline
  • Dispute Resolution Hotline
  • M&A Hotline
  • Pharma & Healthcare Update
  • Competition Law Hotline
  • HR Law Hotline
  • IP Hotline
  • Telecom Hotline
  • FEMA Hotline
  • Social Sector Hotline
  • iCe Hotline
  • SEZ Hotline
  • Media Hotline
  • Funds Hotline
  • Education Sector Hotline
  • International Trade Hotlines
  • Other Hotline
  • Real Estate Update
  • Realty Check
  • White Collar and Investigations Practice
  • Legal Update
  • IP Lab
  • Cross Examination
  • Technology & Tax Series
  • Technology Law Analysis
  • Yes, Governance Matters.
  • Financial Service Update
  • Japan Desk ジャパンデスク

Tax Hotline

September 5, 2006

Withholding tax on purchase of software

The Authority for Advance Rulings ("Authority") has recently held that in the case of an Indian company there exists a legal obligation to withhold taxes while making payments for the software purchased from a foreign company.

The applicant, Headstart Business Solutions Pvt. Ltd. (‘Headstart’), an Indian company had entered into a Solution Provider Agreement with Microsoft Sales Corporation, Singapore ('Microsoft') for the purchase of business software solutions. It had sought a ruling from the Authority on whether it was required to withhold taxes while making payments for the purchase of such software from the foreign company.

The applicant contended that the payments for software would be taxable as royalty only if the software imported was accompanied by copyright thereby enabling the applicant to replicate the software. In the present case, as the imported software did not confer any copyright on the applicant, the remittance made by the applicant to the foreign company for the purchase of software did not entail deduction of taxes. Further, the income arising in India to the foreign company from the sale of such software is business income and in the absence of any linkage to a ‘permanent establishment’ of the foreign company in India, the same is not liable to tax.

For the purposes of determining the obligation to withhold taxes, the Authority did not take the nature of payment into consideration and did not find it necessary to deliberate over the issue as to whether any copyright had been conferred on the applicant. The Authority said: “The arguments advanced by the learned counsel for the applicant with regard to there being no royalty income or the statement that MRSC has no PE (Permanent Establishment) in India are beyond the scope of consideration and subject matter of this application.” The Authority solely relied on Section 195 (1) of the Income Tax Act, 1961 (“ITA”), holding that the expression “any other sum chargeable under the provisions of this Act” brings within its ambit not only the amounts, the whole of which are taxable without deduction, but also amounts of a mixed composition, where only a part of it may be liable to tax, as well as other disbursements which are of the nature of gross revenue receipts.

Thus, the Authority ruled that there was indeed a legal obligation to withhold taxes when making payment for the purchase of software from a foreign company, as such a payment falls within the scope of section 195 (1) of the ITA.

Impact: The rulings of the AAR are private and binding only on the applicant and tax authorities, in the case of the applicant. However, they do have persuasive value. This ruling will have an impact on many Indian companies, which buy off-the-shelf software products from abroad. The ruling does not discuss the India-Singapore tax treaty provisions and their overriding effect on the ITA.

 

-  Bijal Ajinkya & Archana Rajaram

 
 

Source: AAR/103/2005-06/349

Mission and Vision


Distinctly Different

What's New


Credit Default Swap: Grooming the Infamous Device
Debt Funding in India Series: July 05,2022
Enforcement of Arbitral Awards and Decrees in India
New Publication : July 05,2022

Events


Webinars

Sustainable Mobility: Opportunities and Challenges
June 09,2022 - June 09,2022

This event is over. For event material please click here


Seminar

Navigating Disputes in India
February 26,2020 - February 26,2020

This event is over. For event material please click here


Round Table

Investing In Net Zero
July 14,2022 - July 14,2022

News Roundup


News Articles

Impact of Supreme Court’s new covidvaccination ruling on India’s employers
May 13,2022

Quotes

Are you a social media influencer or doctor? Here's how the new TDS rules will impact you
June 26,2022

Newsletters


Debt Funding in India Series

Credit Default Swap: Grooming the Infamous Device
July 05,2022

New Publication

Enforcement of Arbitral Awards and Decrees in India
July 05,2022

Legal Update

RBI Master Direction on Variation Margin in NCCDs – Analysis
July 04,2022

  • Disclaimer
  • Content
  • Feedback
  • Walkthrough
  • Subscribe
Nishith Desai Associates@2016 All rights reserved.