HP India GST Case: The classification of supplies under GST as composite supply or mixed supply has been a recurring issue for businesses dealing with bundled products and services. The distinction is critical:
- Composite supply is taxed at the rate of the principal supply.
- Mixed supply is taxed at the highest rate applicable to any item in the bundle.
In the case of In Re: M/s HP India Sales Pvt. Ltd. [2019 (8) TMI 30 – AAAR, Maharashtra], the dispute revolved around whether the supply of ElectroInk along with consumables used in HP Indigo printers should be treated as a composite supply (principal supply = ink) or a mixed supply (all items taxed equally).
Facts of the HP India GST Case
- Assessee: HP India Sales Pvt. Ltd. (“HP India”), engaged in supplying HP Indigo printers and related consumables.
- Business Model:
- Printers sold upfront to resellers/customers.
- ElectroInk and consumables (oil, binary ink developer, blanket, print imaging plate, etc.) supplied for continued functioning of printers.
- Spare parts supplied to resellers for maintenance services.
- Supply Process:
- ElectroInk and consumables imported, cleared on payment of customs duty + IGST, stored at Maharashtra warehouse.
- Resellers appointed across India to supply goods to customers.
- Supplies remained HP India’s property until customers used them for printing.
- AAR Maharashtra Ruling:
- Held that the supply of ElectroInk with consumables constituted a mixed supply, not composite supply.
- Reason: Items were not naturally bundled, could be supplied independently, and did not depend on each other.
- HP India appealed before AAAR Maharashtra.
Point of Dispute
Whether the supply of ElectroInk along with consumables (binary ink developer, blanket, plates, etc.) should be classified as:
- Composite supply with ElectroInk as the principal supply, or
- Mixed supply taxable at the highest GST rate applicable.
Submissions by the Assessee
- The predominant element in the supply bundle is ElectroInk.
- Other consumables are supportive in nature, ensuring proper use of ink.
- Without ElectroInk, consumables have no standalone value; hence, they are naturally bundled.
- Supply pattern, based on “per click” consumption cycle, indicates that the principal supply is ink, making it a composite supply.
Findings of the AAAR (Maharashtra)
The Appellate Authority rejected the assessee’s arguments and upheld AAR’s view:
- Composite supply definition: Requires two or more supplies that are naturally bundled in the ordinary course of business, one being the principal supply.
- Not naturally bundled: Printing requires all products (ink + consumables). Each product is equally essential; no principal supply exists.
- No industry practice shown: HP India failed to prove that such bundled supply is an industry-wide practice. Simply offering customers a tiered program does not establish natural bundling.
Held:
- Supply of ElectroInk with consumables does not qualify as composite supply.
- It is treated as mixed supply, taxable at the highest GST rate applicable to any bundled item.
Practical Impact on Businesses
- Higher tax liability: Mixed supply attracts the highest rate among bundled items, increasing GST burden.
- Industry practice critical: To qualify as composite supply, taxpayers must show natural bundling in industry practice.
- Documentation importance: Agreements and invoicing must clearly establish the principal supply if composite supply treatment is intended.
- Risk for bundled supply models: Companies selling machines + consumables or software + support must carefully evaluate GST classification.
Key Takeaways
- Composite supply requires natural bundling – not just a business design but also recognition in industry practice.
- Mixed supply = higher tax rate – businesses must assess GST impact while structuring bundled offers.
- Burden of proof on taxpayer – failure to demonstrate industry practice and predominant supply leads to mixed supply classification.
- Consumables treated equally important – where multiple items are essential, no principal supply exists.
Why This Case Matters
The HP India ruling is a significant precedent for businesses offering machines bundled with consumables or ancillary items. It clarifies that simply labeling one item as “principal supply” does not make a bundle composite.
For industries like printing, electronics, pharma, and IT, this ruling highlights the importance of:
- Structuring contracts carefully
- Evidencing industry practices
- Aligning invoicing and pricing to reflect composite supply
Failure to do so could result in classification as mixed supply, leading to higher GST outflow and compliance risks.
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