You’re looking at a bill and something feels off. The price you expected and the price you’re actually paying don’t match — and somewhere in the middle sits a line labelled GST. For most people, that number appears and disappears without much thought. But when you understand exactly where it comes from, how it’s calculated, and when you don’t have to pay it at all, you start making smarter purchase decisions — whether you’re shopping for yourself or running a business that processes dozens of invoices a week.
This guide covers GST as it applies in both India and Australia, with real numbers, honest examples, and no unnecessary jargon.
What GST Actually Is — And Why It Appears on Every Invoice
GST stands for Goods and Services Tax. It is a consumption-based, multi-stage tax applied at each point in the supply chain — from manufacturer to wholesaler to retailer to end consumer. The critical design feature is that businesses at each stage only pay tax on the value they add, not the full price of the product.
What this means for you as a buyer: you are absorbing the final, accumulated tax burden. You are the end of the chain. Whether or not that tax is shown separately on your receipt, it is baked into what you pay.
The philosophical goal of GST — in both India and Australia — was to replace a patchwork of older indirect taxes (central excise duty, state VAT, service tax, customs duty in India; wholesale sales tax in Australia) with a single, unified framework. In practice, India’s implementation kept the complexity of multiple rate slabs while Australia went with a clean flat rate.
How GST Is Structured: India vs Australia
India’s Multi-Slab GST System
India’s GST framework, introduced on 1 July 2017, operates across five primary tax slabs depending on the category of goods or services:
- 0% — Unprocessed food grains, fresh vegetables, milk, eggs, healthcare services, educational services
- 5% — Packaged foods, economy air travel, small restaurants (annual turnover under ₹1.5 crore), household consumables
- 12% — Processed foods, business-class air travel, certain medicines, mobile phones under a defined value
- 18% — Most manufactured goods, software and IT services, restaurants in hotels, banking and financial services
- 28% — Luxury goods, automobiles, tobacco, aerated drinks, high-end consumer electronics
Additionally, India applies GST as a split between CGST (Central GST) and SGST (State GST) on transactions within a single state, or as IGST (Integrated GST) on interstate supply. If you see 18% on an invoice for software, it’s typically structured as 9% CGST + 9% SGST unless goods crossed state borders.
Australia’s 10% Flat Rate
Australia’s A New Tax System (Goods and Services Tax) Act 1999 established a single, uniform rate of 10% GST across most goods and services. There are no product-based slabs. If something is taxable, it’s taxed at 10%. If it’s not taxable, it falls into the GST-free or input-taxed category.
The Australian Taxation Office (ATO) requires that consumer-facing prices always be displayed as GST-inclusive. This means what you see on a shelf or website in Australia already contains the GST component.
The Two Calculations You Need to Know
The confusion around GST almost always comes from one source: people don’t know whether the price they’re looking at already includes GST or not. The math is completely different depending on the answer.
Adding GST to a Price That Excludes It
This situation is common in B2B invoicing, trade quotes, and professional services. The supplier shows a base price, and GST is added on top.
Formula: GST Amount = Base Price × GST Rate ÷ 100
India example (18% slab): A design agency quotes ₹40,000 for a website project. GST = ₹40,000 × 18% = ₹7,200 Total payable = ₹47,200
Australia example (10%): A plumber quotes $600 + GST. GST = $600 × 10% = $60 Total payable = $660
Extracting GST From a Price That Already Includes It
When a price is advertised as GST-inclusive — mandatory for consumer retail in Australia, and standard in most Indian consumer markets — you extract the tax using a different formula.
Formula: GST Amount = Total Price × GST Rate ÷ (100 + GST Rate)
Australia example: You pay $330 for a product. How much was the GST? GST = $330 × 10 ÷ 110 = $30 Base price = $300
India example (18% slab): A restaurant bill comes to ₹11,800 inclusive. GST = ₹11,800 × 18 ÷ 118 = ₹1,800 Base price = ₹10,000
Need to run these numbers quickly without doing the math yourself? Use our free GST Calculator — enter the price, select your rate, and get the split instantly.
What Does and Doesn’t Attract GST
Knowing the exemptions is as important as knowing the rate.
GST-Exempt and Zero-Rated Items in India
India distinguishes between exempt supplies (outside the GST net entirely) and zero-rated supplies (taxed at 0%, but exporters can still claim Input Tax Credit). Practically, for the end consumer:
- Unbranded staple foods, fresh produce, milk, curd, and natural honey: 0%
- Government healthcare and accredited educational services: 0%
- Petroleum products (petrol, diesel, ATF, crude oil): outside GST, taxed under state excise
- Alcohol for human consumption: outside GST, regulated by state governments
The key practical distinction for businesses: if you’re supplying exempt goods, you cannot claim ITC on your inputs. If you’re supplying zero-rated goods (typically exports), you can.
GST-Free Supplies in Australia
Australia’s exemptions are clearly defined under the GST Act:
- Fresh food: unprocessed and unpackaged food, raw vegetables, fruit, meat, bread. Hot food, restaurant meals, and confectionery are not exempt.
- Medical and health services: most services provided by a registered medical practitioner, dentist, or allied health professional
- Education: most tuition provided by an approved school or higher education provider
- Childcare: provided by a registered childcare provider
- Exports: goods and services exported from Australia are zero-rated, meaning no GST is charged but input tax credits are still claimable
Five Real Purchase Scenarios
| Purchase | Country | Price Shown | Rate | GST Component | Amount Paid |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Restaurant meal | India | ₹1,000 (excl.) | 5% | ₹50 | ₹1,050 |
| 4K Television | India | ₹85,000 (incl.) | 28% | ₹18,594 | ₹85,000 |
| Electrician quote | Australia | $400 + GST | 10% | $40 | $440 |
| Supermarket groceries | Australia | $200 (incl.) | 0% | $0 | $200 |
| IT software subscription | India | ₹25,000 (excl.) | 18% | ₹4,500 | ₹29,500 |
Two purchases at the same price point can carry entirely different tax burdens based on product category, how the price is displayed, and which country you’re buying in.
How Businesses Recover GST: Input Tax Credit
If you are GST-registered and purchasing goods or services for business use, you do not permanently absorb the GST you pay. The Input Tax Credit (ITC) mechanism allows you to offset what you paid in GST against what you collected from your own customers.
Net GST payable = GST collected from sales − GST paid on business purchases
If you collected ₹90,000 in GST from clients this quarter and paid ₹60,000 in GST to your suppliers, your net liability is ₹30,000. The rest has already been recovered.
What Qualifies as a Valid Tax Invoice
This is where many businesses lose money they’re legally entitled to recover. In both India and Australia, claiming ITC requires a valid tax invoice from the supplier. The invoice must include:
- The supplier’s GST registration number (GSTIN in India, ABN with GST registration in Australia)
- The GST amount shown as a separate line item
- The date of the transaction
- A description of the goods or services
An invoice missing any of these elements can void your ITC claim. In India, mismatched invoices on GSTR-2B (the auto-populated input credit statement) are a frequent cause of ITC disallowance during audits.
Four GST Mistakes That Quietly Cost People Money
Applying 10% to an already GST-inclusive Australian price. If a product costs $110 and you want to know the GST, the answer is $10 — not $11. You divide by 11, not multiply by 10%. This is the single most common calculation error in Australian consumer and business contexts.
Assuming all food is GST-free in Australia. Fresh, unprocessed food is exempt. But hot food, restaurant meals, takeaway food, and confectionery all attract GST. The distinction is the state of the food at the point of sale.
Claiming 100% ITC on mixed-use purchases. If you use a vehicle or asset for both business and personal purposes, you can only claim ITC on the business-use proportion. Claiming full credit on a partially personal asset is one of the most common triggers for a GST audit.
Paying GST to an unregistered supplier. In both India and Australia, only businesses registered for GST are permitted to charge it. If a supplier charges you GST but is not registered, you cannot claim the ITC — and the supplier is acting illegally. Always verify a supplier’s GSTIN or Australian ABN before processing an invoice that includes GST.
Bookmark this page — GST rates and thresholds are reviewed annually in both India and Australia. We update this guide each financial year.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is GST the same as VAT?
Conceptually, yes. Both are consumption taxes applied incrementally across the supply chain. India replaced its state VAT and central service tax with GST in 2017. The mechanics differ by country but the underlying logic is identical.
Do imported goods attract GST?
Yes. In India, IGST applies to imports at the point of entry. In Australia, GST applies to imported goods valued above the low-value threshold and to imported digital services from overseas providers.
Can tourists claim a GST refund in Australia?
Yes, through the Tourist Refund Scheme (TRS). Travellers departing Australia can claim the 10% GST back on eligible purchases over $300 (from a single retailer), provided the items are carried out of the country.
What is the HSN code and why does it matter in India?
The Harmonized System of Nomenclature (HSN) code classifies every product under a standardised number that determines its applicable GST rate. Businesses must include the correct HSN code on their tax invoices. An incorrect HSN code can mean charging the wrong rate and creating a compliance liability.
What is the GST threshold for registration?
In India, businesses with annual turnover above ₹40 lakh (₹20 lakh for service providers in most states) must register for GST. In Australia, businesses with a GST turnover of $75,000 or more annually are required to register. Below these thresholds, registration is optional.
Understanding exactly how much GST applies to any purchase — and whether you’re entitled to recover any of it — is one of those things that looks complicated until it isn’t. The rates, the formulas, and the exemptions are all knowable. Once you have them, the calculation is straightforward every time.