Living in a Housing Society will be expensive due to GST
It is being anticipated that
post July 1, 2017, homebuyers will pay a uniform rate on their purchase under
the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime. Experts feel that the move will bring
down property prices in the country. While buying a house may or may not become
cheaper, living in a housing society is surely going to burn a big hole in your
pocket in the coming months, courtesy GST.
Higher maintenance charges
If you stay in a housing society where your monthly
maintenance charges are in excess of Rs 5,000 then brace up to shell out GST at
18%. Although the existing rate stands at 15.55%, which includes 15% service
tax, 0.5% Swachh Bharat cess and 0.05% non-agriculture tax, the change post-GST
will lead to an additional burden of 2.5% on residents.
"In the GST era, it appears that any unregistered dealer purchase
made by any cooperative housing society (CHS) will attract GST on reverse
charge mechanism (RCM) basis. This means that the liability to pay tax is cast
upon the receiver and not the seller.
Expenses such as legal fees, security expenses, transport charges,
labour charges might attract GST on RCM irrespective of whether the CHS billing
exceeds Rs 20 lakh or not in the previous year. "Housing societies are not
business entities. It is unfair on the part of the government to levy
taxes," says Dayanand Nene a housing activist in Mumbai - Thane's Saket
area. This major issue requires a serious rethinking on the part of the
government.
Property
tax not subsumed
The government has not subsumed the property tax in the new tax regime.
This means that a property owner will continue to pay property tax on a yearly
basis as per the state law concerned apart from the GST. There cannot be GST on
property tax since, there cannot be double taxation under GST.
Additional
charges
Apart from the annual maintenance charges, utility bills such as water
charges too, will be taxed under a separate head in the new tax regime.
"CHS does not act as a supplier of services of water or power supply and,
thus, it would not attract GST," says Satish. But, like in the past,
residents would have to pay tax on water and power usage.
Repair work
to cost dearer
In case a housing society carries out maintenance or renovation work and
buys commodities such as cement, paint or steel, it can get deducted the tax
paid on the purchase of these commodities from the total amount paid under GST.
Housing
societies with a bigger purse to be hit
Housing societies that have an annual corpus of over Rs 20 lakh will
have to compulsorily take registration in the GST era. Even if a housing
society's monthly maintenance charge is less than Rs 5,000 per flat, if its
membership base is large and the annual collection is in excess of Rs 20 lakh,
it would be liable to pay GST..
The current tax exemption of Rs 5,000 per member per month may not be
applicable in the GST era since the billing in totality for the CHS will be
taken into account. "Overall, GST shall be a big disappointment from a CHS
point of view.
Courtesy:
Inputs from ET
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