This article has been written by Avinash Kumar , a 3rd-year law student pursuing B.com LLB from School of law, UPES Dehradun. This article discusses the concept of taxation on income from royalty. In this article, I have described the meaning of royalty, deduction in respect of royalty income of author, deduction in respect of royalty on patents.
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Income Tax Act itself provides many ways to save the tax. Just you need to apply tax planning to save the tax. Income from royalty is one of the ways to save the tax. In India tax planning is legal. The income from royalty can be claimed as a deduction under the Income Tax Act, 1961. If an individual earns income by royalties then they can take advantage of tax deduction. If you have created music, invented new medicines, written a book then in those situations you can take the benefit of tax deduction under the Income Tax Act 1961. It doesn’t matter that from where are you getting the royalty, the government will treat those royalty as an income and expect you to report that income on your taxes.
Section 9 of the Income Tax Act 1961 talks about income deemed to accrue or arise in India. When we use the originally created asset of an individual or proprietor then the amount paid to them for using their asset is termed as the royalty. It is a legally binding payment to an individual till the date the benefit of their assets is availed.
If anyone uses the copyright, trademark, patent, procedural knowledge of an individual then he is legally bound to pay the royalty. Basically, it is a contract between the proprietor and the individual who is doing the contract for the use of their intellectual property rights.
For example: when you use the patent of an individual then the amount you paid to the patentee for using their patent is considered as royalty. In the same way, if an author writes a book and gives its copyright to the publisher then the publisher is legally bound to pay the royalty according to the number of books sold. Sometimes, when the owner sells the product he is entitled to a one-time payment and not the royalty, in a consequence of which he loses the ownership over it. For example, A discovered new software and after that A sold his software to B. Then in this situation he will not get any royalty for his software. When he sells his software he gets a one-time payment instead of royalty after that, he will not have any right over the software.
To determine the exact nature of the payment made, the type of information passed on needs to be verified. If someone gives the payment for passing the information then, in that case, these payments will not come under the category of royalty income. In the case of CIT vs Heg India 130 Taxman 72 , an Indian company wants to take some technical information from the US Company. In this regard, an Indian Company paid some amount of money to the US Company. In this case, the Madras High Court held that if anyone is paying the money for obtaining the information, data or a calculation sheet, such money will not be treated like royalty payment.
An author earns income by publishing their book. The publisher publishes the author’s book and the author gets the profit against the total number of books sold. The profit earned by the author will be a royalty income for the author. An author is someone who uses his skill, knowledge to write something. Nowadays the writer writes books, articles and publishes their write up on many platforms. An author creates a contract with the publisher for selling his books, whereas the writer creates a contract with the director for casting his story in the film. After that writer gets the money from the publisher will be royalty income for the author. Against such type of royalty income, the author can claim the deductions under Section 80QQB of Income Tax Act 1961.
For availing the benefit of tax deduction under Section 80QQB of Income Tax Act, Gross total income of an individual includes:
Following conditions which are mentioned under the Income Tax Act, 1961 says that if an assessee wants to claim deductions under Section 80QQB they have to fulfill the following conditions:
Let’s understand deduction through an example of deduction under Section 80QQB . Suppose Ajit Bharti has written a book named “Gharwapsi”. He is a resident of India. In a financial year, he earns Rs. 2,00,000 as a royalty income from publishers. He also has a business from which he earns Rs. 4,00,000. Now if he wants to take the tax benefit under section 80QQB then he has to deduct the income of royalty from the gross total income. So Ajit Bharti will have to pay the tax on Rs. 4,00,000 because he can take the tax deduction on Rs. 2,00,000 under 80QQB of Income Tax Act, 1961.
The patent is a right granted to an inventor by the government that permits the inventor to exclude others from making, selling or using the invention for a period of time. A Patent is also termed as the intellectual property right that ensures the innovator that innovator invention is secured. If an individual gets the patent then it excludes others from making, selling, or using the invention for a particular period of time. By inventing something unique an innovator can earn a regular income. The payment which the innovator gets from inventing something will be termed as royalty income for the innovator. The examples of patentable items are like chemical formulas, computer software, and hardware, drugs, medical equipment, musical instruments, etc.
For example, let’s take an example, Rohan invented a medicine which cures the diseases of cancer and he applies for the patent and he gets the patent then he has a right over these medicines.
An individual whose source of income is in the form of royalty paid on the work which pertains to art, patents, inventions can claim the deductions under Section 80RRB of the Income Tax Act, 1961.
If an individual wants to claim a deduction under Section 80RRB of Income Tax Act 1961 then he will have to satisfy the following criteria:
Income earned from Royalty is eligible for deduction under the Income Tax Act 1961. These are the following points that an individual has to keep in mind while claiming the deductions under Section 80RRB.
Section 44DA of Income Tax Act, 1961 deals with the Special provision of Income by way of royalties in the case of a non-resident.
According to Section 6 of the Income Tax Act 1961, an assessee will be qualified as a non-resident if they satisfy any one of the following conditions:
Section 44DA of Income Tax Act, 1961 talks about the provision for computing income by way of royalties in the case of the non-resident. If a non-resident receives an amount in pursuance of an agreement made before the 1st April 2003 it will be governed by Section 44DA of the Income Tax Act 1961. If a foreign company or a non-resident is earning the fee for technical service or royalty income from India through a permanent establishment in India then such fee for technical service or royalty shall be computed under the head “profits and gains of business or profession”.
The Income Tax charges tax on all the five heads and it also provides a deduction on the same that can be claimed by the assessee to save the tax. There are many provisions under the Income Tax Act which talks about the deduction of tax when an individual is earning the income from royalty. An author has a right to claim a tax deduction under section 80QQB of Income Tax Act. The patentee can take the benefit of tax deduction under section 80RRB of Income Tax Act, 1961. However, If an individual is sharing the information and taking the royalty then that will not come under the royalty income.
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