gst on printing & publishing

 Why GST on Printing & Publishing Matters

The printing and publishing industry is one of the oldest and most diverse sectors in India, encompassing everything from packaging cartons and visiting cards to school textbooks, newspapers, and luxury coffee-table books. With an estimated market size of over ₹80,000 crore and millions of small printers, large publishing houses, job-work contractors, and self-publishers operating pan-India, the GST treatment of this industry is a subject of immense practical significance.

Since the rollout of GST on 1st July 2017, the printing and publishing industry has experienced one of the most nuanced GST frameworks — with some items attracting zero GST, others taxed at 5%, 12%, or 18%, and composite/job-work transactions requiring careful classification. Confusion around whether a printing transaction qualifies as a ‘service’, a ‘supply of goods’, or a ‘composite supply’ has led to widespread ITC disputes, litigation, and demand notices across the country.

In this comprehensive 2026 guide, the CleverCoins team breaks down every angle — HSN codes, GST rates, ITC eligibility, place of supply, job-work provisions, and key GST Council decisions — so that you never have to second-guess your GST filings again.

📌 Who Should Read This?

This guide is essential for: commercial printers, offset & digital printing press owners, book/magazine publishers, packaging manufacturers, stationery suppliers, advertising agencies that procure printing, and CAs/tax professionals advising the print sector.

Section 1: Understanding the Printing & Publishing Landscape Under GST

1.1 What Activities Fall Under Printing & Publishing?

The print industry spans both goods and services, and GST treats them differently. Broadly, activities include:

  • Manufacturing of printed products: books, brochures, visiting cards, packaging, labels, stationery
  • Printing as a job-work service: printing on materials supplied by the customer
  • Newspaper and periodical publishing
  • Digital content publishing (e-books, online newspapers)
  • Advertising material printing: flex banners, hoardings, pamphlets
  • Educational content printing: textbooks, question papers, answer books
  • Packaging printing: corrugated boxes, cartons, wrappers, labels
1.2 The Critical Distinction: Goods vs. Services in Printing

This is where most GST disputes originate. The Supreme Court and various AAR/AAAR rulings have consistently held that:

⚖️ Key Legal Principle

If a printer procures raw material (paper, ink) at its own cost and delivers a printed product → it is SUPPLY OF GOODS. If the customer provides the paper/material and the printer only provides the printing activity → it is SUPPLY OF SERVICES (job-work). The dominant element determines GST treatment under Section 8 of the CGST Act.

Section 2: HSN Codes for Printing & Publishing Industry

2.1 HSN Codes for Printed Goods (Chapter 49)

Chapter 49 of the HSN schedule covers printed books, newspapers, pictures, and other products of the printing industry. The key HSN codes are:

HSN Code

Description

GST Rate

4901

Printed books, brochures, leaflets — educational/general

NIL

4902

Newspapers, journals, periodicals (even illustrated)

NIL

4903

Children’s picture, drawing or colouring books

NIL

4904

Music (printed or in manuscript form)

12%

4905

Maps, hydrographic charts, globes (printed)

12%

4906

Plans and drawings for architectural/engineering/industrial use

12%

4907

Unused postage/revenue stamps, cheque forms, banknotes

NIL

4908

Transfers / Decalcomanias

12%

4909

Printed postcards, greeting cards

12%

4910

Calendars of any kind (printed)

12%

4911

Other printed matter (trade catalogues, commercial labels, etc.)

18%

4901 10

Dictionaries and encyclopaedias

NIL

4901 91

Textbooks for school/college (NCERT/State board)

NIL

2.2 HSN Codes for Printing Services (SAC Codes)

SAC Code

Service Description

GST Rate

9988 21

Printing services where physical inputs are not supplied by client

18%

9988 22

Job-work printing: client supplies content, printer only prints

18%

9988 23

Screen printing, digital printing services

18%

9988 29

Other manufacturing job-work services including printing

12% / 18%

9983 99

Advertising and related services including print media

18%

9962 13

Publishing of newspapers, books, directories (services)

NIL / 5%

💡 Pro Tip

Always verify the dominant supply element before assigning HSN vs SAC. Wrong classification can lead to GST demand + interest + penalty under Section 73/74 of CGST Act.

Section 3: GST Rates on Printing & Publishing — Detailed 2026 Chart

3.1 GST Rate Summary Table

Item / Activity

HSN/SAC

GST Rate

Remarks

Printed books (excl. cheque books)

4901

NIL

Fully exempt

Newspapers & periodicals

4902

NIL

Exempt

Children’s picture books

4903

NIL

Exempt

Blank diaries/notebooks/registers

4820

12%

Not exempt

Calendars (printed)

4910

12%

Taxable

Greeting cards

4909

12%

Taxable

Maps & charts

4905

12%

Taxable

Trade catalogues, labels (other printed matter)

4911

18%

Taxable

Flex banners / hoardings

4911

18%

Taxable

Packaging boxes / cartons (paper)

4819

18%

Taxable

Printing services (job-work)

9988 22

18%

Service

Printing on customer-supplied paper

9988 22

18%

Job-work service

Book printing (job-work on behalf of publisher)

9988 22

18%

See Note below

E-books (downloaded online)

9984

18%

Digital service

Newspaper advertising space

9983

5%

Print ad space

Lottery tickets (printed)

4911

28%

Lottery supply

Sachet / packaging labels (self-adhesive)

4821

18%

Taxable

📋 Important Note — Book Printing Job Work

As clarified by Circular No. 126/45/2019-GST and subsequent AAR rulings (reaffirmed in 2024-25), job-work printing of books on paper supplied by the publisher attracts 18% GST as a service. However, if the printer procures the paper and sells the finished printed book, then the supply takes the character of NIL-rated goods (HSN 4901) and no GST is applicable. This distinction is critical and has been the basis of many demand notices.

3.2 GST on Packaging Printing — A Special Category

The packaging industry is a major consumer of printing services. GST on packaging items depends on the material and end use:

Packaging Item

HSN Code

GST Rate

Corrugated paper boxes

4819

18%

Folding cartons (paper/paperboard)

4819

18%

Woven sacks / polythene bags

3923

18%

Printed aluminium foil packaging

7607

18%

Self-adhesive labels

4821

18%

Paper bags / kraft bags

4819

12%/18%

Section 4: Composite Supply & Mixed Supply in Printing Transactions

4.1 What is Composite Supply?

Under Section 2(30) of the CGST Act, a composite supply means two or more taxable supplies made together in the normal course of business, where one is a principal supply. The entire composite supply is taxed at the rate of the principal supply.

In the printing context, a common composite supply scenario is:

  • A printer provides design + printing + packaging + delivery as a bundled offering
  • The principal supply is ‘printing’ — so the entire bundle is taxed at the printing rate
  • If printing is the principal supply (say 18%), even if the paper cost is NIL-rated, the entire supply attracts 18%

📌 Example

A commercial printer in Mumbai charges ₹1,00,000 for a job that includes: graphic design (₹10,000) + printing (₹70,000) + packaging (₹20,000). Since printing is the principal supply, GST @ 18% will apply on the full ₹1,00,000 = ₹18,000 GST. The design and packaging components cannot be separately taxed.

4.2 Mixed Supply in Printing

If a printer sells a ‘gift hamper’ containing printed items (calendar, greeting card, notebook) for a single price, and these can be sold independently, it becomes a mixed supply. The entire supply is taxed at the highest rate among individual items — i.e., 18% (rate of the highest-taxed item in the basket).

Section 5: Input Tax Credit (ITC) for Printers & Publishers

5.1 ITC Eligibility for Printers

Printers who are registered under GST and make taxable supplies can claim ITC on inputs and input services. Key ITC-eligible expenses for a printing press:

  • Paper, ink, toner, chemicals, aluminium plates — directly used in production
  • Printing machinery, photocopiers, binding machines (capital goods)
  • Electricity (if a separate metered connection is used for manufacturing)
  • Graphic design services procured for client jobs
  • Transportation of finished goods (GTA services)
  • Accounting, legal, and professional services
  • IT services — ERP, billing software
5.2 ITC Blocked for Printers

The following ITC is not available under Section 17(5) of the CGST Act, 2017:

  • Motor vehicles used for conveyance of employees (unless in the business of transport)
  • Food, beverages, and outdoor catering for staff
  • Works contract services for construction of the factory/press building
  • Personal expenses of directors/owners
5.3 ITC for Publishers — Special Scenarios

⚠️ Critical Issue for Publishers

If a publisher publishes BOTH exempt items (NIL-rated books) AND taxable items (e-books, calendars, catalogues), they must apply the proportionate ITC reversal rule under Rule 42 of CGST Rules. ITC attributable to exempt supplies must be reversed monthly in GSTR-3B and annually reconciled via GSTR-9.

The formula for ITC reversal on common inputs (Rule 42):

Common ITC to be reversed (D1)

= Total Common ITC × (Exempt Turnover / Total Turnover)

Example: Total Common ITC

₹5,00,000

Exempt (NIL-rated book) turnover

₹40,00,000

Total turnover

₹1,00,00,000

ITC reversal required

₹5,00,000 × 40% = ₹2,00,000

Section 6: GST on Printing — Job-Work Special Provisions

6.1 Job-Work Framework Under GST (Section 143)

The GST law provides a special procedure for job-work under Section 143 and Rule 45 of the CGST Rules. This is particularly relevant for publishers who send raw materials (paper, boards) to a printing press for converting into finished books.

Key conditions for the job-work procedure:

  1. The principal (publisher) must be GST registered
  2. Goods sent for job-work must be under a delivery challan (not a tax invoice)
  3. Job-work goods must be brought back or directly supplied within prescribed time limits: 1 year for inputs, 3 years for capital goods
  4. Failure to comply = supply deemed to have been made on the day goods were sent out
  5. E-way bill required if goods value exceeds ₹50,000 during transit
6.2 GST Rate on Job-Work Printing Services

Type of Job-Work

GST Rate

Job-work for manufacture of goods (SAC 9988 22)

12%

Job-work for products classified as ‘other’ in Chapter 99

18%

Printing for textiles (screen printing, garment printing)

5%

Job-work for printing of books/educational material

18%

Printing for pharma labelling (job-work)

18%

📋 2024-25 Clarification

As per Notification No. 20/2019-Central Tax (Rate) amended in 2023-24, job-work services in relation to manufacture of goods falling under Chapters 1 to 22 of the HSN attract 5% GST. For printing items under Chapter 48-49, the applicable rate for job-work is 18% unless specifically lower rated. Always refer to the latest rate notification before filing.

Section 7: Place of Supply for Printing Services
7.1 Place of Supply — B2B Printing Transactions

For Business-to-Business (B2B) printing supply where the recipient is GST registered, the place of supply is the location of the recipient (Section 12(2) of IGST Act). This determines whether CGST+SGST or IGST applies:

  • Printer in Mumbai (Maharashtra) → Customer in Delhi (registered) = IGST applicable
  • Printer in Mumbai → Customer in Thane (Maharashtra, registered) = CGST + SGST applicable
7.2 Place of Supply — B2C Printing Transactions

For Business-to-Consumer (B2C) transactions where the recipient is unregistered:

  • Place of supply = Location of the supplier (printer) for most cases
  • If the printer physically delivers the goods to a different state address provided by the customer, place of supply = location of delivery
  • For online printing orders, the address provided by the customer becomes the place of supply
7.3 Cross-Border Printing: Export & Import

Exports of printed goods (e.g., books, calendars, packaging exported) are zero-rated under Section 16 of IGST Act. The exporter can either:

  • Export under LUT (Letter of Undertaking) without payment of IGST and claim refund of accumulated ITC
  • Export with payment of IGST and claim refund of IGST paid

Import of printing services (e.g., a foreign publisher hiring an Indian designer/typesetter) attracts GST under the Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM) under Section 5(3) of IGST Act.

Section 8: GST on Newspapers & Media Advertising — A Special Focus

8.1 GST on Newspaper Publishing

Newspapers and periodicals sold to subscribers or at kiosks are NIL-rated under GST (HSN 4902). This means:

  • No GST on cover price of newspaper / magazine
  • No GST on subscription fees for print newspapers or periodicals
  • Publishers CANNOT charge GST on the retail or subscription price

⚠️ Important

While the newspaper/magazine itself is NIL-rated, the publisher is not exempt from GST on inputs. They pay 18% GST on printing services, newsprint, ink, etc., but since their output is exempt, they CANNOT claim ITC on these inputs — ITC must be reversed under Rule 42. This creates an embedded cost for newspaper publishers.

8.2 GST on Advertising in Print Media

Advertising revenue is where print media publishers earn significant taxable income:

Advertising Revenue Type

GST Rate

Sale of advertising space in newspapers

5%

Sale of advertising space in magazines/journals

5%

Printing + designing of ads (composite service)

18%

Insert advertising (loose inserts in newspaper)

18%

Digital advertising on newspaper website

18%

Advertising agency commission on print ads

18%

Section 9: GST Registration & Compliance for Printers/Publishers

9.1 Who Must Register?

GST registration is mandatory if:

  • Annual aggregate turnover exceeds ₹20 lakh (₹10 lakh for special category states)
  • Engaged in inter-state supply of printed goods (regardless of turnover)
  • You are an e-commerce seller of printed products on platforms like Amazon, Flipkart
  • You undertake job-work printing for a principal manufacturer
9.2 Filing Requirements for Printing Businesses — 2026

Return

Frequency

Who Files

GSTR-1

Monthly (11th) or Quarterly (QRMP)

All registered suppliers

GSTR-3B

Monthly or Quarterly

All regular taxpayers

GSTR-9

Annual (31st Dec)

Turnover > ₹2 crore

GSTR-9C

Annual (31st Dec)

Turnover > ₹5 crore

ITC-04

Half-yearly (30 Apr, 31 Oct)

Principals sending goods for job-work

RCM (in 3B)

Monthly

If RCM applicable on services

9.3 ITC-04: Mandatory for Publishers Sending Goods to Printers

Publishers who send paper/raw materials to printing presses for job-work MUST file Form ITC-04 every half-year. Non-filing attracts a late fee of ₹50 per day (₹25 CGST + ₹25 SGST), capped at ₹5,000. ITC-04 captures details of goods sent for job-work and the goods returned after processing.

Section 10: Common GST Issues & Dispute Areas in Print Industry

10.1 Classification Disputes: Goods vs. Services

The single biggest issue in the printing industry is whether a transaction is a supply of goods or services. Courts and AARs have held:

  • In-house printing where printer arranges everything = goods (NIL or taxable depending on item)
  • Job-work printing on customer’s raw material = services @ 18%
  • Composite supply including both = classified by principal supply element
  • Wrong classification = potential 18% GST demand + 18% interest + 100-200% penalty under Section 74
10.2 E-Way Bill Compliance for Print Goods

Printed goods transported exceeding ₹50,000 in value require an e-way bill under Rule 138 of CGST Rules. Common mistakes:

  • Generating e-way bill with wrong HSN — attracts penalty under Section 129 (detention)
  • Not generating e-way bill for exempt goods — even NIL-rated goods need e-way bill if value > ₹50,000 (state-specific rules apply)
  • Mismatch between e-way bill and tax invoice (HSN, qty, value) — leads to scrutiny
10.3 RCM on Import of Services for Publishers

Publishers who use foreign services — foreign authors, typesetting companies, DTP/layout firms abroad, or foreign stock image libraries — must pay GST under Reverse Charge Mechanism (RCM):

  • No foreign supplier will charge Indian GST — Indian recipient must self-assess and pay
  • RCM is payable in cash (cannot use ITC balance)
  • After payment, ITC can be claimed in the same return period (for eligible businesses)
  • Failure to pay RCM = tax demand + interest @ 18% + penalty

💡 CleverCoins Tip

If you are a publisher or printer in Mumbra/Thane and you’re unsure about your ITC reversal, job-work compliance, or RCM obligations, reach out to us at clevercoins.org for a complimentary GST health check.

Section 11: Practical GST Examples for Print Businesses

Example 1: Commercial Printer — Job-Work

Scenario

Details

Transaction

Publisher sends 5,000 reams of paper to printer. Printer prints 1,00,000 books and returns them.

Classification

Job-work service (SAC 9988 22)

GST Rate

18% on job-work charges

Job-work charges

₹5,00,000

GST @ 18%

₹90,000

Total invoice

₹5,90,000

ITC available to Publisher?

Yes — can claim ₹90,000 ITC if books are taxable; NO ITC if books are NIL-rated

Example 2: Printer Purchasing Paper and Printing Books (Own Account)

Scenario

Details

Transaction

Printer buys paper and ink, prints 10,000 copies of a novel, sells to distributor

Classification

Supply of goods — printed books (HSN 4901)

GST Rate

NIL — books are exempt

ITC on inputs?

NO — since output (books) is NIL-rated, ITC on paper/ink must be reversed

Revenue to printer

₹8,00,000 (no GST charged)

Example 3: Calendar Printing for Corporate Client

Scenario

Details

Transaction

Design + print + deliver 2,000 branded calendars for a corporate client

Classification

Composite supply — principal supply is printing of calendars (HSN 4910)

GST Rate

12% on total invoice value

Invoice value

₹2,00,000

GST @ 12%

₹24,000

Total invoice

₹2,24,000

ITC to client?

Yes — full ₹24,000 ITC available

Section 12: Recent GST Notifications & Council Decisions Affecting Print Industry (2023-2026)

12.1 Key Recent Developments
  • GST Council 52nd Meeting (Oct 2023): Reaffirmed NIL rate on printed books and educational material. No change in basic rates.
  • Notification No. 2/2024-CT(R): Clarified HSN classification for paper-based packaging to be treated as goods, not services, when sold as manufactured products.
  • AAAR Ruling (Maharashtra, 2024): Printing of wedding cards by a printer using own paper = supply of goods (12% GST under HSN 4909), not a service.
  • Circular 211/5/2024-GST (July 2024): E-way bill mandatory for paper and paper products even when transported by railways/air for commercial purposes.
  • Budget 2025-26 (Interim): No changes proposed to Chapter 48-49 GST rates. Rates remain stable for 2025-26 and into 2026.
  • GST Amnesty Scheme 2024: Printers with pending ITC reversal demands from 2017-2020 got the benefit of waiver of interest and penalty under Section 128A — deadline was 31st March 2025.

📢 Stay Updated with CleverCoins

GST laws are updated frequently. Subscribe to our newsletter at clevercoins.org and follow us on Instagram @clevercoins_official to receive real-time GST updates for the printing and publishing sector.

Section 13: Compliance Checklist for Printers & Publishers in 2026

Monthly Compliance Tasks
  • File GSTR-1 by 11th (monthly filers) — report all B2B invoices, B2C summaries
  • File GSTR-3B by 20th — pay GST liability including RCM (if any)
  • Reconcile GSTR-2B with purchase register — identify ITC mismatches
  • Apply proportionate ITC reversal (Rule 42) if you have exempt output supplies
  • Generate & retain e-way bills for all consignments > ₹50,000
Half-Yearly Compliance Tasks
  • File ITC-04 if you are a principal sending goods for job-work (due 30 April and 31 October)
  • Reconcile job-work challan register with goods returned/utilized
Annual Compliance Tasks
  • File GSTR-9 by 31st December (mandatory for turnover > ₹2 crore)
  • File GSTR-9C (reconciliation statement) if turnover > ₹5 crore
  • Reconcile ITC reversed (Rule 42) with annual computation and adjust in GSTR-9
  • Audit books if applicable under Section 44 (turnover > ₹5 crore)

Conclusion: Getting GST Right in the Printing & Publishing Business

The printing and publishing industry occupies a unique space under GST — it straddles goods and services, taxable and exempt supplies, job-work provisions, and complex ITC rules. Getting it wrong can mean unrecovered GST costs, demand notices, or missed ITC opportunities.

Whether you run a small neighbourhood printing press in Mumbra or manage a large publishing house supplying textbooks pan-India, the fundamentals remain the same: correctly classify your supply, apply the right HSN/SAC, file on time, and manage your ITC prudently.

CleverCoins, based in Mumbra, Thane, specialises in GST compliance for small businesses, printers, publishers, and MSMEs across the Mumbai Metropolitan Region. If you need help with GST registration, GSTR-9 filing, ITC reversal, job-work compliance, or responding to a GST demand notice — we’re just a call away.

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