Food served in hotel rooms from their air conditioned restaurants with liquor licences will not attract service tax, the revenue department said on Tuesday.
"When the food is served in the room, service tax cannot be charged under the restaurant service as the service is not provided in the premises of the air-conditioned restaurant with a licence to serve liquor," a Central Board of Excise and Customs circular said.
While clarifying the provisions of service tax to be levied on services provided by air conditioned restaurants with licence to serve liquor, the CBEC said the value added tax excluded from the taxable value.
Similarly, luxury tax would be excluded in case of short term accommodation service.
Presenting the Budget for 2011-12, Finance Minister Pranab Mukherjee had announced that a 10 per cent tax on services provided by air-conditioned restaurants that have licence to serve liquor, with an abatement of 70 per cent.
Thus, the effective burden will be 3 per cent of the bill.
Besides, bills for short-term accommodation provided by hotels, inns, guest houses, clubs or campsites went up by 5 per cent.
The clarification comes a week after the new provisions on Service Tax came into effect from May 1.
In the circular, CBEC said the tax also cannot be charged under the provision of short-term accommodation if the bill for the food is raised separately and does not form part of the declared tariff.
Regarding value added tax, it said: "For the purpose of service tax, state VAT has to be excluded from the taxable value".
In its circular, the department said service tax is leviable on services provided by a restaurant if it has facility of air-conditioning