Furnishing of Statement [Section 167]

Section 167 of the Finance Act, 2016 (Chapter VIII) governs the furnishing of statements for the Equalisation Levy in India, applicable to both the 6% levy on specified services (under Section 165) and the 2% levy on e-commerce supply or services (under Section 165A). Below is a concise and comprehensive explanation of the provisions for furnishing statements under Section 167.

1. Overview of Section 167

Section 167 mandates that assessees (Indian residents or non-residents with a Permanent Establishment in India) and e-commerce operators (non-residents without a PE in India) must file an annual Equalisation Levy Statement in Form 1. This statement summarizes all specified services or e-commerce transactions subject to EL during the financial year .

2. Key Requirements

A. Who Must File?

  • Assessees: Entities deducting EL under Section 166 (6% levy)for specified services (e.g., online ads).
  • E-commerce Operators: Non-residents liable for Section 166A (2% levy)on e-commerce supplies/services .

B. Filing Deadline

  • The statement must be filed by June 30of the financial year immediately following the relevant FY (e.g., FY 2024-25’s statement is due by June 30, 2025) .

C. Late/Revised Submissions

  • revised statementcan be filed within 2 years from the end of the FY in which the transaction occurred.
  • If the Assessing Officer (AO) issues a notice for non-filing, the statement must be submitted within the prescribed time.

3. Form and Content of the Statement

  • Form 1: Includes details such as:
    • Gross consideration paid/received.
    • EL deducted/deposited.
    • Interest/penalties, if applicable.
  • Verification: Must be digitally signed and verified as per prescribed rules.

4. Centralized Processing Scheme (2023)

The Centralized Processing of Equalisation Levy Statement Scheme, 2023 streamlines EL statement processing:

  • Automated Adjustments: Corrects arithmetic errors and computes interest automatically.
  • Refunds/Demands: Determines payable sums or refunds within 1 yearof filing.
  • Invalid Statements: The Commissioner may reject statements for:
    • Use of unapproved software.
    • Incomplete information.

5. Penalties for Non-Compliance

  • Late Filing: ₹100/day until compliance.
  • False Statements: Prosecution with fines or imprisonment up to 3 years.
  • Non-Deduction: Disallowance of expenses + penalty equal to the unpaid levy.

6. Key Exemptions

No statement is required if:

  • Transactions are linked to a Permanent Establishmentin India.
  • Payments are for personal use(non-business).

7. Practical Example

Scenario: An Indian company pays ₹30 lakh to Google (non-resident) for ads in FY 2024-25.

  • Action: Deduct 6% EL (₹1.8 lakh) and file Form 1 by June 30, 2025.

8. Recent Updates

  • The 6% levy on online adsmay be abolished from April 2025, but the 2% e-commerce levy remains.

Key Takeaways

  • File Form 1 by June 30
  • Use the Centralized Processing Schemefor faster resolution.
  • Penalties apply for delays or inaccuracies.
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