Profession Guide|GST

GST for Online Tutors in India — Registration, LUT & Compliance

Last updated: March 2025 · Reviewed by TaxTap CA team

If aggregate turnover crosses the applicable threshold (commonly ₹20L, or ₹10L in notified special-category states), GST registration is required. For online tutors serving overseas clients, export-of-service treatment and zero-rating can apply where legal conditions and LUT/bond compliance are satisfied.

Who this applies to

  • Online Tutors with annual turnover above ₹20L
  • Online Tutors working with international clients
  • Freelance online tutors confused about GST on foreign income
  • Online Tutors wanting to claim Input Tax Credit on tools and software
Typical Income Model
Hourly rates, package deals, course sales
Client Mix
25% foreign, 75% domestic

How this works for Online Tutors

1

GST registration is mandatory when aggregate turnover crosses ₹20L (₹10L for special category states).

2

Services to foreign clients may qualify as export of services where statutory conditions are met; zero-rating is generally used through LUT/bond compliance.

3

File LUT (Form GST RFD-11) at the start of each financial year. Without it, you'd charge IGST and file for refund.

4

For domestic clients, charge 18% GST. For foreign clients with LUT, charge 0%.

5

File GSTR-1 (outward supplies) and GSTR-3B (summary return) monthly or quarterly.

6

Keep FIRC/BRC (or equivalent remittance evidence) to support export-realization documentation.

7

This section covers common search intent: 'GST for freelancers India', 'GST on foreign clients', and 'LUT for export of services'.

8

Create a monthly GST control cycle: turnover tracker, domestic/export split, invoice review, LUT status, return preparation, and books-vs-returns reconciliation.

9

For export-heavy freelancers, maintain a per-invoice export evidence chain (contract, invoice, remittance proof, LUT reference, return disclosure).

10

Where services are bundled (strategy + execution + reimbursements), define value components in contracts to reduce classification disputes.

Common deductible tools for Online Tutors

ZoomGoogle MeetUnacademyTeachableGoogle Classroom

Commonly missed expenses

ZoomDigital whiteboardCourse platform feesLaptopInternetStudy materials

Real examples

Online Tutor under ₹20L turnover

A online tutor earning below the GST threshold with only domestic clients.

Annual Income
₹12L
Estimated Savings
Compliance cost saved
Without TaxTap
GST registration not mandatory
With TaxTap
No GST liability, voluntary registration possible

Online Tutor with foreign clients

A online tutor earning from export of services, registered under GST with LUT.

Annual Income
₹20L
Estimated Savings
Full GST saved on exports
Without TaxTap
18% GST if treated as domestic
With TaxTap
0% GST with LUT (zero-rated export)

What should you do?

Under ₹20L with only domestic clients? GST registration is optional.

Have foreign clients? Register voluntarily and file LUT — even if under ₹20L. Cleaner invoicing.

Crossing ₹20L? Don't delay registration. Late registration means penalties.

GST-registered? Claim ITC on software subscriptions, coworking, and business tools.

Use location-neutral, intent-led phrasing (registration threshold, LUT workflow, return cadence) to match informational and transactional query variants.

Choose compliance workflow early (monthly vs quarterly return cadence as applicable) and keep a fixed close calendar.

Use a dedicated business bank account and invoice series to reduce reconciliation and notice response time.

Mistakes to avoid

Charging 18% GST on foreign invoices instead of zero-rating with LUT.

Not filing LUT at the start of the financial year.

Forgetting that ₹20L threshold counts all supplies — not just taxable ones.

Not collecting FIRC/BRC from bank for export proof.

Mixing personal and business bank accounts making GST reconciliation difficult.

Applying education exemption broadly to private/commercial tutoring without checking specific eligibility conditions.

Preparing returns from payment-platform totals without invoice-level validation.

Not documenting place-of-supply logic for cross-border services where recipient/location details matter.

Documents you need

  • GST registration certificate
  • LUT filing acknowledgment (Form RFD-11)
  • FIRC or e-BRC for foreign remittances
  • All invoices with correct SAC codes
  • Bank statements reconciled with GSTR returns
  • LUT acknowledgement (Form GST RFD-11) for zero-rated export of services
  • FIRC/e-BRC and bank advice as export realization proof
  • GSTR-1 and GSTR-3B working papers/reconciliations
  • GST close checklist (invoice validation, tax-position review, return filing, reconciliation sign-off)
  • Domestic vs export invoice master with tax treatment column
  • Quarterly books-vs-GSTR variance tracker and explanation log

GST giving you a headache?

Whether you need to register, file LUT, or figure out export of services — we handle it all. Talk to a real CA.

FAQs: GST for Online Tutors

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