Friday, May 1, 2026

Industrial Plot Lease Payments to YEIDA, DDA, HSVP (HUDA), NOIDA and Similar Development Authorities

The Correct Tax Position on TDS, GST, Lease Premium, Amortisation and Tax Audit Implications

A Technical and Jurisprudential Analysis under the Income-tax Act, 1961, the Income-tax Act, 2025 and GST Law

 By CA Surekha Ahuja

Executive Legal Overview

Industrial lease transactions involving statutory development authorities are among the most frequently misclassified tax areas in India. The complexity does not arise from lack of law, but from incorrect characterisation of lease premium, lease rent, GST applicability, and accounting treatment.

This article provides a structured legal analysis covering:

  • TDS applicability on lease rent under Section 194-I
  • Tax character of lease premium (capital vs revenue)
  • GST implications on industrial plot allotments
  • Accounting amortisation vs tax deductibility
  • Audit exposure and compliance risks

The governing principle remains constant:

Taxation depends on legal character, not nomenclature or accounting treatment.Introduction

Industrial plot allotments by statutory development authorities such as Yamuna Expressway Industrial Development Authority, Delhi Development Authority, Haryana Shahari Vikas Pradhikaran and New Okhla Industrial Development Authority continue to generate significant tax uncertainty.

This is not due to absence of law, but due to incorrect classification of composite lease payments.

Industrial allotments typically involve multiple streams—lease premium, annual lease rent, instalment-based premium, extension charges, transfer charges, and infrastructure levies.

Tax law does not recognise composite nomenclature.

It recognises legal character of each component.

Legal Foundation: Premium vs Rent under Property Law

Under Section 105 of the Transfer of Property Act, 1882, lease consideration is divided into:

  • Price paid or promised → Lease Premium (Capital)
  • Periodical payment → Lease Rent (Revenue)

Supreme Court settled principle

In CIT v. Panbari Tea Co. Ltd. (1965), the Court held:

Premium is the price for acquiring lease; rent is consideration for use.

This distinction continues to govern modern tax interpretation.

TDS on Lease Rent: Legal Position

Under:

  • Section 194-I, Income-tax Act, 1961
  • Section 393(1), Income-tax Act, 2025

“Rent” includes any payment under lease for use of land or building.

Thus, annual lease rent and ground rent are subject to TDS where conditions are satisfied.

Revised TDS Threshold (Critical Change)

From 1 April 2025:

  • ₹50,000 per month threshold applies
  • Earlier threshold was annual (₹2,40,000)

Key shift:

Compliance is now monthly, not annual

Even a single month exceeding threshold triggers TDS.

Statutory Authorities and TDS Applicability

Payments to statutory authorities are not exempt from TDS merely due to their status.

Even if income is exempt under Section 10(46) or similar provisions:

  • Exemption applies to recipient taxation
  • Not to deductor’s obligation

Thus, TDS must be deducted unless expressly exempted.

Lease Premium: Capital Character and CBDT Position

One-time lease premium for long-term industrial allotment is:

  • Consideration for acquisition of rights
  • Not consideration for use

CBDT Circular No. 35/2016 clarifies:

  • No TDS under Section 194-I where premium is non-periodic and non-adjustable against rent

Legal position:

Premium = capital expenditure
Rent = revenue expenditure

Instalment Premium: No Change in Tax Character

Payment in instalments does not change nature.

Principle: Substance prevails over form

Deferred payment remains capital in nature.

Deductibility under Section 37(1)

Section 37(1) allows deduction of revenue expenditure only.

Lease premium generally results in:

  • Enduring leasehold benefit
  • Long-term asset creation

Thus: Not deductible as revenue expenditure. 

Business use does not convert capital into revenue.

Depreciation on Leasehold Rights

Depreciation may be available only where:

  • Rights qualify as intangible assets under Section 32(1)(ii)
  • Commercial exploitation rights exist

Judicial guidance:

In Techno Shares and Stocks Ltd. v. CIT, depreciation was allowed only for specific commercial rights.

Practical position:

  • Generally not allowed on land lease premium
  • Allowed only in structured intangible asset cases

Accounting vs Tax Treatment

Under Ind AS 116 / AS 19:

  • Lease premium may be amortised over lease term

However:  Core principle:   Accounting treatment does not determine tax deductibility

Tax law prevails over accounting entries.

GST Implications 

GST and income-tax operate independently.

  • GST applies on supply of service
  • Lease rent is generally taxable
  • Lease premium may also attract GST depending on structure

Core principle:

Capital nature under income-tax does not override GST applicability.

Tax Audit Risks

Common issues:

  • Misclassification of premium as revenue expense
  • Non-deduction of TDS on lease rent
  • Incorrect amortisation claims
  • Improper GST credit treatment
  • Lack of lease deed analysis

Audit decisions depend on documentation, not intent.

Compliance Framework

  • Separate lease premium and lease rent in accounts
  • Review lease deed legal structure
  • Apply monthly TDS threshold
  • Evaluate GST independently
  • Avoid unsupported depreciation claims
  • Maintain complete documentation trail

Core Legal Principle

Tax classification is determined by:

Legal character of payment, not nomenclature or authority identity

  • Acquisition → Capital (Premium)
  • Usage → Revenue (Rent)

Frequently Asked Questions (SEO Optimised)

1. Is lease premium paid to YEIDA or DDA subject to TDS?

No. Lease premium for acquisition of long-term leasehold rights is generally capital in nature and not subject to TDS under Section 194-I, as clarified by CBDT Circular No. 35/2016.

2. Is annual lease rent on industrial plots taxable under TDS?

Yes. Annual lease rent or ground rent is treated as “rent” and is subject to TDS under Section 194-I / Section 393(1) if thresholds are exceeded.

3. Can lease premium be claimed as business expenditure?

Generally no. Lease premium is capital expenditure as it creates an enduring business advantage and is not deductible under Section 37(1).

4. Is GST applicable on industrial plot lease payments?

Yes, GST may apply independently depending on the nature of supply and structure of lease, even if the payment is capital under income-tax law.

5. Can depreciation be claimed on leasehold land rights?

Only in limited cases where rights qualify as intangible assets under Section 32(1)(ii). It is not automatic and is fact-dependent.

Conclusion

Industrial lease arrangements by authorities such as Yamuna Expressway Industrial Development Authority, Delhi Development Authority, Haryana Shahari Vikas Pradhikaran and New Okhla Industrial Development Authority must be evaluated on legal substance rather than nomenclature.

Correct classification determines:

  • TDS compliance
  • GST exposure
  • Deductibility under income-tax
  • Depreciation eligibility
  • Audit defensibility

Incorrect classification leads to systemic tax exposure across multiple statutes.

In lease taxation, precision is not compliance support. It is legal protection.


TDS Due Date for April 2026 (Pay by 7 May 2026): Complete TDS Compliance Update for FY 2026–27

By CA Surekha Ahuja

April Closed. First TDS Due Date Is Here.

Tax deducted during April 2026 must be deposited by 7 May 2026 by all non-government deductors under Rule 218 of the Income-tax Rules, 2026.

This is the first TDS compliance cycle under the new Income-tax Act, 2025.

The law is simpler.

But compliance is stricter.

TDS now depends on getting five things right:

CheckWhy
SectionLegal applicability
ThresholdLiability trigger
RateCorrect deduction
FormCorrect reporting
Due dateValid compliance

A mistake in any one can trigger default.

TDS Framework under the New Law

SectionCoverage
392Salary
393(1)Resident payments
393(2)Non-resident payments
393(3)Specified payments

The structure is simpler.

The responsibility is sharper.

Due Dates to Track

ComplianceDue Date
Regular TDS for April 20267 May 2026
Form 141 casesWithin 30 days from month-end

Not every TDS follows the normal monthly route.

Key TDS Rates for Business Payments

PaymentThresholdRate
SalarySlab basedAs applicable
Interest₹50,000 / ₹1 lakh10%
Contracts₹30,000 / ₹1 lakh aggregate1% / 2%
Commission/Brokerage₹20,0002%
Rent (Plant & Machinery)₹50,000 monthly2%
Professional fees₹50,00010%
Purchase of goods₹50 lakh0.10%
Benefits/Perquisites₹20,00010%
Partner payments₹20,00010%

These cover most routine deductions.

Important: Form 141 Is a Separate Compliance Route

Certain transactions require Form 141 (Challan-cum-Statement), where payment and reporting happen together.

Applicable for 

Transaction
Rent by Individual/HUF
Property purchase
Contractor/professional/commission by Individual/HUF
Virtual Digital Asset transfer

Form 141 is not a simple challan.

It captures:

  • deductor details
  • deductee details
  • PAN
  • transaction value
  • asset details
  • tax deducted

That makes it a transaction-level statutory statement.

Wrong filing can create mismatch and notices.

Correct Form Mapping

NatureForm
Salary TDSForm 138
Resident TDSForm 140
Non-resident TDSForm 144
TCSForm 143
Special casesForm 141

Correct deduction with wrong form is still defective compliance.

Conclusion

For April 2026:

TypeAction
Regular TDSDeposit by 7 May 2026
Form 141 casesFile within 30 days

The new Income-tax Act, 2025 has simplified TDS law.

But compliance is now more process-driven.

The biggest risks are no longer non-deduction.

They are:

  • wrong classification
  • wrong form
  • wrong due date

The first TDS due date of the year sets the compliance discipline for the year ahead