80,000 start-ups exempt from angel tax, says govt

80,000 start-ups exempt from angel tax, says govt

Start-ups “registered” with the Department of Promotion of Industry and Internal Trade (DPIIT) are exempt from the “angel tax” extended to them in the Budget, Revenue Secretary Sanjay Malhotra told.

He said the tax provision would apply to all forms of foreign resident investors, including those structured as funds and institutional investors.

“Over 80,000 DPIIT-registered start-ups will not come within the tax purview,” he said, adding that “registered” should not be mistaken to be “certified”.The certified ones will have to pay additional tax.

The Budget proposed extending the angel tax provisions to transactions involving foreign investors. Till now these provisions are applicable only to local resident investors, but the ambit has been expanded as part of the government’s anti-tax avoidance move.

According to the rule, excess premium received on sales of shares by an Indian unlisted company to a foreign investor will be construed as “income from other sources” and taxed.

Malhotra said the Budget addressed the disparity and the loophole in the provision.

“The provision is already there for residents. If local residents invest, there is a tax, so why not tax non-residents? If companies are selling shares at a premium to foreign investors at (a price) over and above the actual price/rate and it makes profit, we are taxing that profit.”

DPIIT Secretary Anurag Jain said start-ups recognised by the DPIIT under government’s “Startup India” initiative were eligible for exemption under Section 56(2)(viib) of the I-T Act, commonly known as “angel tax”.

“Section 56(2) (viib) used to have two provisos. One was preferential treatment of foreign players. That has done away with. But there’s no change for start-ups. Start-ups recognised by the DPIIT will not attract angel tax if investment is made in them (by foreign or domestic investors),” Jain said during a post-Budget interaction with reporters.

The Section says if the amount raised by a start-up (during a funding round) is more than its fair market value, it would be deemed income from other sources and taxed at 30 per cent.

 

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