India to impose 28% tax on turnover of online gaming firms


Dream11 and MPL logos are displayed in front of the Indian flag in this Illustration taken September 14, 2022. REUTERS/Dado Ruvic/Illustration

NEW DELHI (Reuters) -India on Tuesday decided to impose a 28% indirect tax on the turnover of online gaming companies, a state minister said, in a major setback to the country's $1.5 billion industry.

Foreign investors such as Tiger Global and Sequoia Capital have backed Indian gaming startups like Dream11 and Mobile Premier League, hugely popular for fantasy cricket.

The GST Council, comprised of state finance ministers and chaired by the federal finance minister, had earlier formed a panel to look into taxing casinos, horse racing and online gaming.

It has not previously been able to decide whether to impose a 28% GST on the face value of bets, or gross gaming revenue, or just on platform fees.

Sudhir Mungantiwar, minister from the state of Maharashtra, said the tax on online gaming companies would be imposed without making any differentiation based on whether the games required skill or were based on chance.

"This means that GST will be applicable to gross revenue/total prize pool," said Roland Landers, CEO of The All India Gaming Federation. "We believe this decision by the GST Council is unconstitutional, irrational, and egregious."

(Reporting by Nikunj Ohri; Writing by Aftab AhmedEditing by Mark Potter and Jane Merriman)

Follow us on our official WhatsApp channel for breaking news alerts and key updates!

   

Next In Tech News

Russia fines TikTok 3 million roubles over legal violations, court says
Taiwan's science ministry warns spending cuts could hit chips, AI funding
How they celebrated the holidays 250 miles above Earth
The speed of human thought lags far behind your Internet connection, study finds
The tale of 'Shatter Special', the world's first fully computerised comic book
Opinion: Read your messages closely and don’t click those links
Trump’s 'Made in USA' bitcoin is promise impossible to keep
Why Taiwan’s Foxconn, an iPhone supplier, is investing in Texas and Thailand
Elon Musk’s go-to cost-cutter is working for DOGE
US man used fake Instagram profiles to trick kids for nude images, videos

Others Also Read