Why GST on Prizes & Awards Matters
In India’s evolving Goods and Services Tax (GST) framework, the treatment of prizes and awards has emerged as a critical area of compliance for businesses, event organisers, corporate houses, and even individuals. Whether it is a cash prize at a competition, a trophy awarded at a corporate event, a loyalty reward from a brand, or a government recognition, each type carries distinct GST implications that must be understood carefully.
As of 2026, the GST Council has further clarified several aspects related to prizes, awards, and incentives. Non-compliance can attract notices, interest, and penalties. This comprehensive guide covers every dimension of the topic — from the statutory framework to practical examples — so you are never caught off guard.
Section 1: Understanding the GST Framework in India (2026 Update)
Goods and Services Tax (GST) is a destination-based, multi-stage, comprehensive indirect tax levied on the supply of goods and services in India. It subsumes central excise duty, service tax, VAT, and several other taxes.
1.1 Key GST Components
- CGST (Central GST): Collected by the Central Government on intra-state supply
- SGST (State GST): Collected by the State Government on intra-state supply
- IGST (Integrated GST): Collected by the Central Government on inter-state supply
- UTGST (Union Territory GST): Applied in Union Territories without a legislature
1.2 Taxable Event Under GST
Under Section 7 of the CGST Act, 2017, ‘supply’ is the taxable event under GST. The term ‘supply’ includes all forms of supply of goods or services for a consideration in the course of or in furtherance of business. The definition also extends to certain deemed supplies listed in Schedule I even when made without consideration.
1.3 GST Tax Slabs (2026)
GST Rate | Category | Examples |
0% (Exempt) | Essential goods/services | Fresh food, government services |
5% | Basic necessities | Certain textile goods, processed food |
12% | Standard goods | Business class air travel, processed food |
18% | Most services & goods | Professional services, manufactured goods |
28% | Luxury & sin goods | Luxury cars, tobacco, pan masala |
Section 2: What Are Prizes & Awards Under GST?
Before diving into GST applicability, it is essential to understand what constitutes a ‘prize’ or ‘award’ in the legal and commercial sense under Indian tax law.
2.1 Definition of Prize
A ‘prize’ is a reward given for winning a competition, game, lottery, or any event. Prizes can be in the form of cash, goods, vouchers, travel packages, or experiences.
2.2 Definition of Award
An ‘award’ is generally a recognition or honour given for excellence, achievement, or outstanding performance. Awards may or may not have a monetary component and are often given by government bodies, NGOs, or corporate entities.
2.3 Categories for GST Analysis
Category | Examples |
Cash Prizes | Contest winnings, quiz competitions, sports prizes |
Non-Cash Prizes (Goods) | Trophy, gadgets, vehicles, gold coins |
Non-Cash Prizes (Services) | Free travel, hotel stays, experiences |
Loyalty Rewards | Cashback, points redemption, gift vouchers from brands |
Government Awards | Padma Awards, State bravery awards, national honours |
Corporate Awards | Employee of the Month, annual performance awards |
Sports & Entertainment | IPL prize money, reality TV show winnings |
Academic Awards | Scholarships, merit awards, competition prizes |
Section 3: Is GST Applicable on Prizes & Awards?
The applicability of GST depends on several factors: the nature of the prize (cash vs goods vs services), who gives the prize (government vs private entity), whether it constitutes a ‘supply’ under the GST Act, and whether there is a consideration involved.
3.1 The Core Test: Is it a ‘Supply’?
Under Section 7(1) of the CGST Act, supply must be:
- Made in the course or furtherance of business
- For a consideration (with exceptions under Schedule I)
- By a taxable person registered under GST
If all three conditions are met, GST is applicable. If not, the prize/award may fall outside the GST net.
3.2 When GST is NOT Applicable
- Government awards of honour (e.g., Bharat Ratna, Padma Awards) — exempt under Notification 12/2017-CT(Rate)
- Pure cash prizes when not accompanied by any supply of goods or services
- Prizes given by charitable trusts or NGOs for social causes (subject to conditions)
- Scholarships and educational prizes (when meeting specified conditions)
- Sports prizes given by National Sports Federations recognised by the Government
3.3 When GST IS Applicable
- Prizes in the form of goods supplied by a GST-registered business to winners
- Vouchers or gift cards given as prizes (treated as supply of goods — 18% GST)
- Free travel or hotel stay as prize (service component attracts GST)
- Corporate loyalty rewards and cashback schemes run by businesses
- Prizes or awards where an element of ‘supply’ exists as part of business promotion
Key Insight: Schedule I of CGST Act |
Certain transactions are treated as ‘supply’ even without consideration if made between related parties or distinct persons. |
Example: A parent company giving an award worth ₹1,00,000 in goods to a subsidiary company’s employee may be treated as a deemed supply. |
Businesses must evaluate awards given to employees, agents, dealers, and distributors carefully under this provision. |
Section 4: GST on Different Types of Prizes & Awards — Detailed Analysis
4.1 Cash Prizes
Cash is not a ‘goods’ or ‘service’ under GST law. Therefore, payment of pure cash as a prize does not attract GST per se. However, if the cash prize is linked to a service provided by the winner (e.g., a performance, a business activity), then TDS under Income Tax may apply, and the organiser must evaluate GST implications on the related services.
Example: A competition organiser pays ₹5,00,000 in cash to the winner of a business plan contest. Since cash is not goods or services, no GST is levied on this cash prize. However, the organiser’s services of event management are subject to 18% GST.
4.2 Non-Cash Prizes — Goods
When a prize is given in the form of goods (e.g., a car, smartphone, gold coin, jewellery), the supply of goods is subject to GST. The applicable rate depends on the type of goods:
Goods as Prize | GST Rate | Example Value & GST |
Gold Coins / Jewellery | 3% | ₹1,00,000 prize → ₹3,000 GST |
Smartphones / Electronics | 18% | ₹50,000 prize → ₹9,000 GST |
Passenger Vehicles | 28% + Cess | ₹8,00,000 prize → ₹2,24,000+ GST |
Luxury Watches | 18% | ₹2,00,000 prize → ₹36,000 GST |
Apparel (>₹1,000 MRP) | 12% | ₹5,000 prize → ₹600 GST |
Books / Educational Material | 0% / 5% | ₹2,000 prize → ₹0 to ₹100 GST |
The organisation giving the prize is liable to pay GST at the applicable rate. If the goods are purchased and then given away, Input Tax Credit (ITC) implications must be evaluated.
4.3 Non-Cash Prizes — Services (Travel, Hotel Stays, Experiences)
When a winner receives a holiday package, hotel stay, flight tickets, or experiential rewards as a prize, these constitute a ‘supply of services’. GST is applicable as follows:
Service Type | GST Rate |
Hotel accommodation (Tariff > ₹7,500/night) | 18% |
Hotel accommodation (Tariff ₹1,001–₹7,500/night) | 12% |
Economy class air travel | 5% |
Business class air travel | 12% |
Tour operator services (inclusive packages) | 5% (no ITC) or 18% (with ITC) |
Restaurant / Dining experiences (AC) | 5% |
Event management / Entertainment | 18% |
4.4 Gift Vouchers & Gift Cards
Gift vouchers are one of the most debated areas in GST. Post the AAR rulings and CBIC clarifications in 2022–2025, the position in 2026 is as follows:
- Pre-paid instruments / Gift vouchers redeemable for specific goods: GST applies at the time of issuance at the rate applicable to those goods
- Open-ended vouchers (redeemable for any goods/services): GST applies at the time of redemption
- Vouchers given as prizes in contests: Same treatment as above — the prize organiser may need to account for GST
Example: A retail brand gives a ₹10,000 gift voucher as first prize in a social media contest. This may attract GST at 18% (if the voucher is open-ended), making the effective value ₹8,474 (net) + ₹1,526 GST (if tax is to be borne by the organiser from the ₹10,000).
4.5 Loyalty Rewards and Cashback
Loyalty programmes run by businesses (airlines, banks, e-commerce companies, fuel stations) are subject to detailed GST scrutiny:
- Reward points redeemed for goods/services: GST applies on redemption (treated as consideration)
- Cashback schemes: If cashback is provided by the seller, it reduces the consideration (no additional GST). If provided by a third party (e.g., payment gateway), it may attract GST
- Airline frequent flyer miles: GST at 18% when redeemed for flights or services
CBIC Circular No. 92/11/2019-GST (still operative in 2026) provides clarity that discount/loyalty points given by a manufacturer to dealers must be included in the value of supply.
4.6 Employee Awards
Awards given by employers to employees present unique GST challenges:
- Schedule III of the CGST Act: Services provided by an employee to an employer in the course of employment are not treated as supply. However, the reverse flow (employer to employee) requires analysis
- Gifts up to ₹50,000 per financial year per employee: Not treated as supply under Schedule I Para 2 — NO GST
- Gifts exceeding ₹50,000 per employee per year: Treated as deemed supply — GST applicable at applicable rate. ITC reversal also required if ITC was availed on procurement
Example: Company XYZ gives its best employee a laptop worth ₹85,000 as an annual award. Since this exceeds ₹50,000, it is treated as a deemed supply. GST at 18% = ₹15,300 must be paid by the company. Additionally, ITC on the laptop may need to be reversed.
Important Circular — Employee Gifts 2026 |
Threshold: ₹50,000 per employee per financial year (April to March) |
Below threshold: No GST, but ITC on procurement is blocked under Section 17(5)(h) |
Above threshold: GST payable by employer; treated as outward supply |
Best Practice: Maintain proper employee award registers and reconcile annually |
4.7 Dealer / Distributor Awards & Incentives
Businesses frequently run schemes to reward high-performing dealers or distributors. These are closely scrutinised by GST authorities:
- Cash incentives / discounts: Reduce the value of supply — no separate GST if disclosed on invoice
- Non-cash incentives (goods as gifts to dealers): Treated as supply — GST applicable at applicable goods rate
- Foreign trips / holidays given to dealers: Treated as supply of services — 18% GST
- Free goods given in promotional schemes: GST applicable on free supply if not tied to a principal supply
ITC Note: Businesses giving free goods/services as dealer incentives must carefully evaluate ITC reversal requirements under Section 17(5) and CBIC Circular 92.
4.8 Sports Prizes
India’s growing sports economy has made this a frequently asked area. The key rules in 2026:
- Prize money from government-recognised tournaments: Generally exempt (Notification 12/2017)
- IPL and BCCI prizes: Not exempt — treated as commercial prize money, GST applicable
- State sports prizes (Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna equivalents): Exempt if awarded by government
- Online gaming prizes (Fantasy Sports / E-sports): Subject to 28% GST on the entry fee / contest fee. Prize pay-out itself may not attract direct GST on the winner but the platform pays GST
Online Gaming GST Update 2023–2026: Following the 50th GST Council meeting, all online games (skill or chance) are subject to 28% GST on the full face value of entry fees/deposits. This significantly impacts platforms like Dream11, MPL, etc.
4.9 Academic & Professional Awards
Award Type | GST Treatment |
Government scholarships | Exempt — not a supply |
University merit prizes (cash) | No GST on cash; organiser services taxed |
Professional body awards (non-cash) | GST at applicable rate of goods/services |
Corporate-funded scholarships | No GST if structured as donation |
Book prizes / Educational kits | 0%–5% depending on material |
Section 5: Input Tax Credit (ITC) on Prizes & Awards
One of the most important compliance considerations is whether the GST paid on procuring goods/services for prizes can be claimed as Input Tax Credit (ITC).
5.1 ITC Availability — General Rule
ITC is available on inputs used in the course or furtherance of business (Section 16 of CGST Act). However, Section 17(5) specifically blocks ITC on certain items.
5.2 Blocked ITC under Section 17(5)
- Goods/services used for personal consumption — ITC blocked
- Gifts given to employees exceeding ₹50,000 — ITC blocked [Section 17(5)(h)]
- Food, beverages, health services for employees — ITC blocked unless mandatory under law
- Club memberships, recreational activities — ITC blocked
5.3 ITC Available Scenarios
- Goods purchased for dealer/distributor incentives as part of business promotion — ITC may be available if it qualifies as business expense and is not blocked under 17(5)
- Services procured for running a contest/event where the organiser is registered — ITC available on event management services
- Travel/hotel for business awards programme — ITC available if purpose is business (not personal consumption)
Note: Post the 2023 Finance Act amendments, ITC provisions are interpreted more strictly. Businesses should obtain written legal opinions from qualified Chartered Accountants before claiming ITC on prize-related expenses.
ITC Scenario | Allowed? |
GST on goods purchased as dealer incentive (business use) | Yes — Generally Allowed |
GST on employee gifts (> ₹50,000) | No — Blocked u/s 17(5)(h) |
GST on employee gifts (≤ ₹50,000) | No — Still blocked u/s 17(5)(h) |
GST on event management for award ceremony | Yes — If for business |
GST on hotel stay as prize for dealer (business promotion) | Case-Specific — Seek advice |
GST on vouchers given as customer reward | Partial — Depends on structure |
Section 6: GST and TDS — Intersection on Prize Payments
GST and TDS under Income Tax Act operate on different legal frameworks but intersect frequently in the context of prizes. Understanding both is essential for complete compliance.
6.1 TDS on Winnings (Section 194B — Income Tax)
- TDS is deducted on prize winnings from lotteries, crossword puzzles, card games, and other games of any sort
- Rate: 30% flat on the entire amount if winnings exceed ₹10,000 in aggregate in a financial year
- No deduction of expenses or basic exemption limit is allowed
- Applicable on: cash, goods, or any form of prize
6.2 TDS on Online Gaming (Section 194BA — Income Tax)
Effective from 1 April 2023, Section 194BA specifically deals with TDS on winnings from online games:
- Rate: 30% on net winnings at the time of withdrawal or at year-end
- No minimum threshold — even ₹1 of net winnings is subject to TDS
- Online gaming platforms are required to deduct and deposit TDS on behalf of users
6.3 GST vs TDS — Key Differences
Parameter | GST | TDS (Income Tax) |
Governing Law | CGST Act 2017 | Income Tax Act 1961 |
Who Pays | Supplier / Service Provider | Payer (deducts from payment) |
Basis | Value of supply (goods/services) | Income of recipient |
Rate (Prizes) | Varies (3%–28%) | 30% flat (Sec 194B) |
Filing | GSTR-1, GSTR-3B | TDS Return (Form 26Q) |
Applicability | Registered businesses | Specified payors |
Note: When a prize is given in the form of goods, both GST (on the supply of goods) and TDS (on the fair market value of goods as income of the winner) may be applicable simultaneously. The organiser must handle both obligations.
Section 7: GST Valuation of Prizes & Awards
Correct valuation is critical for correct GST payment. Under Section 15 of the CGST Act, the value of supply is the transaction value. For prizes/awards without consideration, valuation rules under GST Valuation Rules 2017 apply.
7.1 Valuation — Open Market Value Method
When prizes are given free of cost or below market price, the value is determined as the Open Market Value (OMV) — i.e., the price at which such goods/services would ordinarily be sold in the open market.
7.2 Valuation Examples (2026)
Prize | Open Market Value | GST Payable (18%) |
Smartphone (iPhone 15) | ₹89,900 | ₹16,182 |
Laptop (Dell XPS) | ₹1,10,000 | ₹19,800 |
Holiday Package (Maldives 5D) | ₹1,50,000 | ₹27,000 (18%) |
Gold Coin 10g | ₹72,000 (approx.) | ₹2,160 (3%) |
Smart Watch | ₹45,000 | ₹8,100 (18%) |
Automobile (Hatchback) | ₹7,50,000 | ₹2,10,000 (28%) |
Note: GST on goods given as prizes is computed on the open market value even if the organiser purchased them at a discounted price.
Section 8: GST Compliance — What Prize Organisers Must Do
For organisations running contests, award ceremonies, or prize schemes, here is the full GST compliance checklist:
8.1 GST Registration
- Mandatory if aggregate turnover exceeds ₹40 lakh (goods) or ₹20 lakh (services) in a financial year
- For inter-state supplies — mandatory regardless of turnover
- Online contest platforms — always register as they deal with multiple states
8.2 Invoice / Voucher Requirements
- Issue a tax invoice for every taxable supply
- For gifts/prizes, issue a ‘delivery challan’ along with a self-invoice if goods are sent from your own stock
- Maintain a detailed register of all prizes given, including recipient details, value, and GST charged
8.3 GST Returns Filing
Return | Due Date & Frequency |
GSTR-1 (Outward Supplies) | 11th of following month (monthly) / Quarterly (QRMP) |
GSTR-3B (Summary Return) | 20th of following month |
GSTR-9 (Annual Return) | 31st December of following FY |
GSTR-9C (Reconciliation) | 31st December (if turnover > ₹5 Cr) |
8.4 E-Way Bill Requirements
- E-Way Bill mandatory when goods worth ₹50,000 or more are transported (even as prizes)
- Prize goods transported must be accompanied by E-Way Bill generated on the GST portal
- For intra-state: State-specific threshold applies (some states mandate e-way bill from ₹1 lakh)
GST Compliance Checklist for Prize Organisers |
✔ Register for GST if threshold is crossed |
✔ Determine GST rate for each type of prize |
✔ Issue proper tax invoices / delivery challans |
✔ Deduct TDS under Income Tax where applicable |
✔ Generate E-Way Bills for goods in transit |
✔ File GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B on time |
✔ Evaluate ITC eligibility and block as required |
✔ Maintain a Prize Register for audit purposes |
✔ Reconcile GST ledger annually in GSTR-9 |
Section 9: Government Awards & Exemptions Under GST
Not all prizes and awards attract GST. The government has specifically exempted certain categories through Notification 12/2017-Central Tax (Rate) and subsequent amendments.
9.1 Exempt Government Awards
- Bharat Ratna, Padma Vibhushan, Padma Bhushan, Padma Shri — fully exempt
- State gallantry and bravery awards — exempt
- National sports awards (Arjuna Award, Dronacharya Award, Dhyan Chand Award, Rajiv Gandhi Khel Ratna) — exempt
- Presidential medals for civil and defence services — exempt
- Awards given under central/state government welfare schemes — exempt
9.2 Condition for Exemption
The exemption applies when the award is given by the Central or State Government without any commercial element. If a private sponsor is involved, the exemption may not apply to the private component.
9.3 Charitable & Religious Trust Awards
- Awards given by charitable trusts registered under Section 12A/12AA/12AB of the Income Tax Act are generally not subject to GST if the award is in furtherance of charitable objectives
- However, if the trust runs a contest for consideration (entry fee), GST on the entry fee applies at 18%
Section 10: Industry-Specific GST Scenarios
10.1 FMCG & Retail — Consumer Promotions
FMCG companies running ‘buy 3 get 1 free’, spin-the-wheel contests, or collect-and-win promotions must carefully account for GST. Free goods given as part of the same supply (clearly linked) may reduce the consideration but do not separately attract GST. Standalone free gifts attract GST at OMV.
10.2 E-Commerce — Platform Prizes
E-commerce platforms running referral bonuses, first-purchase discounts, or cashback:
- Referral bonus (cash to existing user): Not supply by platform — no GST from platform
- Voucher / discount coupon given to new user: May attract GST on redemption
- Gift cards sold on platform: GST at rate of underlying goods on redemption
10.3 Banking & Finance — Credit Card Rewards
- Reward points earned on credit card spend: No GST at accrual stage
- Points redeemed for flights, hotels, merchandise: GST on the value of goods/services at redemption
- CBIC has clarified that reward point programmes structured as a discount on future purchase do not separately attract GST
10.4 Media & Entertainment — Reality Shows
Reality show prize money (KBC, Big Boss, Indian Idol, etc.):
- Prize money paid to participants: TDS at 30% under Section 194B applies
- The production company giving the prize is not making a supply of goods/services by paying prize money
- However, if the prize is in the form of goods/sponsored products — GST on that supply applies to the brand
- Endorsement fees paid to winners (separate from prize): Taxable at 18% GST as professional services
10.5 Online Gaming — Fantasy Sports & E-Sports (2026 Position)
Following the landmark 50th GST Council meeting in August 2023 and subsequent legislative amendments:
- All online games (skill-based and chance-based) are subject to 28% GST on the total value of bets/entry fees/deposits
- Winning amount paid out to players is not directly subject to GST (it is TDS-covered under Income Tax)
- Platform commission is already included in the 28% GST base
- E-sports tournaments organized as professional events: Prize money treated as sports award — TDS 30% if > ₹10,000
Online Gaming GST — Quick Reference 2026 |
GST Rate: 28% on full face value of deposit/entry fee |
No distinction between skill-based and chance-based games |
TDS on winnings: 30% under Section 194BA (no threshold) |
Platform registration: Mandatory in all states where players are based |
Foreign platforms serving Indian users: IGST applicable; registration mandatory under OIDAR rules |
Section 11: Real-World Case Studies
Case Study 1: Corporate Annual Awards Night
ABC Pharma Ltd. holds its annual awards night and gives the following to employees:
- Best Employee (Cash ₹25,000): No GST [below ₹50,000 threshold; cash not supply]
- Best Team (Domestic holiday package ₹75,000 per person × 5): Exceeds ₹50,000 threshold — treated as deemed supply. GST at 18% on ₹75,000 = ₹13,500 per person to be paid by ABC Pharma. ITC on hotel/travel cannot be claimed.
- Long Service Award (Gold coin 8g worth ₹58,000): Exceeds ₹50,000 — GST at 3% on ₹58,000 = ₹1,740 to be paid by ABC Pharma.
Case Study 2: Paint Company Dealer Contest
Rainbow Paints runs a quarterly sales contest. Top dealer wins a 3-bedroom LED TV worth ₹1,20,000:
- The TV is a supply of goods by Rainbow Paints to the dealer
- GST at 18% on ₹1,20,000 = ₹21,600 payable by Rainbow Paints
- Rainbow Paints issues a tax invoice to the dealer
- The dealer may be required to reverse ITC if the TV is not used in business
- TDS under Income Tax Section 194B: Applicable if the contest qualifies as a ‘game’
Case Study 3: Online Quiz Contest
FinLearn App charges ₹100 entry fee for a daily finance quiz. Prize: ₹10,000 cash to the daily winner.
- GST on ₹100 entry fee at 18% = ₹18 per participant to be charged by the app
- Prize cash paid to winner: TDS 30% if annual winnings exceed ₹10,000 (Section 194B)
- If FinLearn is classified as ‘online gaming’ — 28% GST applies on the full ₹100 entry fee
- FinLearn must file GST returns in every state where participants are located (IGST for inter-state)
Section 12: Common GST Notices & Penalties Related to Prizes
12.1 Common Notices
- ASMT-10: Scrutiny notice asking explanation for mismatch in prize payments and GST returns
- DRC-01: Notice for demand of GST on prizes given without tax payment (especially dealer gifts)
- GSTR-3B vs GSTR-1 mismatch: Notices for inconsistency in reporting of prize-related supplies
12.2 Penalties for Non-Compliance
Offence | Penalty |
Non-payment of GST on prizes (non-fraud) | 10% of tax due, minimum ₹10,000 |
Non-payment with intent to evade | 100% of tax due (equal to tax) |
Failure to issue invoice for prize | ₹10,000 or amount of tax, whichever is higher |
Late filing of returns | ₹50/day (CGST + SGST) = ₹100/day max |
Not generating E-Way Bill for prize goods | ₹10,000 or tax, whichever is higher |
12.3 Interest on Delayed Payment
Under Section 50 of the CGST Act, interest is charged at 18% per annum on delayed GST payments. For fraudulent transactions, the interest rate is 24% per annum. This can significantly inflate the tax burden on prize-related non-compliance.
Section 13: Key AAR & Court Rulings on GST and Prizes
Several Advance Authority Rulings (AARs) and AAAR decisions have shaped the GST treatment of prizes and awards:
13.1 Notable AARs
- In re: Caltech Polymers Pvt Ltd (Kerala AAR): Free gifts to employees above ₹50,000 treated as supply; ITC reversal required
- In re: Spectra Plast India (Gujarat AAR): Promotional gift items given to customers as part of a scheme are a ‘supply’ and attract GST
- In re: Stovec Industries Ltd (Gujarat AAR): Goods given as prizes in dealer contests are taxable supply at applicable rates
- In re: Fantasy Sports Platform (AAAR): Online fantasy sports platforms’ entry fees are subject to 18% GST (pre-2023 amendment); post-2023 now 28% on full value
13.2 Implications for Businesses
These rulings establish that any non-cash prize given in the course of business is a supply and attracts GST. Businesses must not assume that giving away prizes is ‘free’ from a GST perspective. Proactive AAR applications can be filed to seek clarity on novel prize structures.
Section 14: Accounting & Bookkeeping for Prizes & Awards
14.1 Journal Entries for Prizes Given as Goods
When a business gives goods as prizes, the accounting treatment is:
- Debit: Prize/Award Expense Account (with GST component)
- Credit: Stock / Inventory Account
- Credit: GST Payable Account (Output Tax)
Example: Giving a laptop (cost ₹80,000) as prize — GST 18% = ₹14,400:
- Prize Expense A/c ₹94,400
- Inventory A/c ₹80,000
- Output IGST A/c ₹14,400
14.2 Impact on Profit & Loss
The full value of the prize (including GST) is typically charged to the P&L as a marketing/promotional expense. If ITC is blocked, the GST portion cannot be offset against input taxes and becomes a direct cost.
14.3 Disclosure Requirements
Prizes exceeding ₹1 lakh given during the year should be disclosed in the Notes to Accounts under ‘Other Expenses’. For listed companies, SEBI may require disclosure of significant promotional/incentive schemes.
Conclusion: Navigating GST on Prizes & Awards
GST on prizes and awards is far from straightforward. The treatment varies dramatically based on the nature of the prize (cash, goods, services, vouchers), the identity of the giver (government, private, employer, brand), and the relationship between the giver and receiver (business-to-business, employer-to-employee, brand-to-consumer).
Key takeaways for 2026:
- Cash prizes alone are generally not subject to GST but are subject to TDS under Income Tax
- Non-cash prizes (goods/services) attract GST at the applicable rate of those goods/services
- Employee gifts exceeding ₹50,000 per year are treated as deemed supply — GST must be paid
- Online gaming prizes are subject to 28% GST on the full entry fee/deposit value
- Government awards of honour are exempt from GST
- ITC on prize-related expenses is often blocked under Section 17(5) — careful evaluation is necessary
- Dealer/distributor incentives in non-cash form are taxable supplies — proper invoicing is mandatory
Every business running a prize or award programme should conduct a detailed GST review with a qualified Chartered Accountant to ensure complete compliance and avoid costly penalties and interest.