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JASMINE KAUR HUDA

Chartered Accountant

Published on: Apr 21, 2026

Equalisation Levy Abolished in India – What It Means for Businesses

India’s digital taxation landscape has undergone a major shift with the abolition of Equalisation Levy (EL). This change significantly impacts businesses making payments to foreign digital platforms such as Google, Meta, Amazon, SaaS providers, and global marketplaces.

 What was Equalisation Levy?

Equalisation Levy was introduced to tax digital transactions involving non-resident companies earning income from Indian users without having a physical presence in India.

It mainly covered two categories:

1. 6% Levy on Online Advertising (introduced in 2016)

  • Applicable on payments for digital advertising services provided by non-residents

2. 2% Levy on E-commerce Operators (introduced in 2020)

  • Applicable on foreign e-commerce platforms earning revenue from Indian users

 Key Change: EL has been abolished

As per the Finance Act, 2025, the government has withdrawn the Equalisation Levy provisions in a phased manner:

  •  2% E-commerce levy removed from 1 August 2024
  •  6% advertising levy removed from 1 April 2025

 Effectively, Equalisation Levy no longer applies for FY 2025–26 onwards

Why was it abolished?

The government aligned this decision with global tax reforms and trade considerations:

  • Move towards OECD global tax framework (Pillar 1 & Pillar 2)
  • Avoiding double taxation and trade disputes (especially with the US)
  • Simplifying digital taxation structure in India
  • Shifting focus to Income-tax Act based taxation

What replaces Equalisation Levy now?

There is no direct replacement tax, but transactions are now governed under:

✔ Section 195 – TDS on payments to non-residents

Businesses must now evaluate:

  • Whether the payment is Royalty
  • Whether it is Fees for Technical Services (FTS)
  • Whether it is Business Income (and if PE exists)

Tax is now determined under the Income-tax Act + DTAA, not a separate levy.

Practical impact on businesses

Before (EL regime):

  • Flat 2% or 6% tax
  • No DTAA benefit
  • No PE analysis required

Now (post EL abolition):

  • No fixed levy
  • Tax depends on classification of income
  • DTAA benefit available
  • TDS compliance under Section 195 required

 Key compliance shift

Businesses must now:

  • Review all foreign vendor payments
  • Classify income correctly (royalty / FTS / business income)
  • Apply DTAA wherever applicable
  • Deduct TDS under Section 195 if taxable
  • Maintain documentation (TRC, Form 10F, PE declaration)

Example: Digital advertising payments

Earlier:

  • Google Ads → 6% Equalisation Levy

Now:

  • Google Ads → evaluate under Section 195 → may be treated as royalty → TDS applicable depending on DTAA

Conclusion

The abolition of Equalisation Levy marks a major shift in India’s digital tax regime. While it simplifies one layer of taxation, it increases the importance of correct income classification and DTAA analysis under Section 195Businesses must now move from a flat-tax mindset to a legal-tax classification approach.  

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