Clarification of ‘Significant Economic Presence’ (SEP) under Section 9(1)(i) – Exclusion for Export-Oriented Purchases
Imagine you’re a global e-commerce giant, collecting clicks and rupees from millions of Indian users—but without ever setting foot in India. Can New Delhi still claim a slice of your profit pie? That’s exactly what “Significant Economic Presence” (SEP) was designed to do under Section 9(1) (i) of the Income-tax Act. Yet, when the Finance Act 2025 dropped its latest tweak, advisors and CFOs alike raised an eyebrow: does buying goods in India for export really count as SEP?
At face value, the old SEP rule looked straightforward. If a non-resident racked up over ₹20 million in payments from Indian sources, or engaged over 300,000 Indian users in a year, it magically gained a “business connection” in India—and a tax bill. Sound fair? Maybe. But what if your only Indian activity was sourcing raw materials for export—say, high-grade leather for your Italian handbag line? Should that haul into a SEP assessment?
Enter the Finance Act 2025’s carve-out: “Mere purchase of goods in India for export” no longer triggers SEP. On paper, that’s simple. But in practice, the devil’s in the details. Suppose you’re a steel trading house. You buy ₹50 million worth of alloy slabs from Mumbai mills, ship them to Korea, and never touch Indian soil again. Previously, you’d have hit the ₹20 million threshold and—boom—SEP. Now? You gather your bills of entry, export declarations, shipping manifests, and the taxman must look the other way.

Why this change? Let’s channel common sense. If non-resident traders were swept into SEP merely for export procurement, they’d face needless compliance headaches—and India’s exporters would beg for treaty relief. Worse, you’d essentially be taxing value that’s created abroad, leading to double taxation disputes. By narrowing SEP to genuine domestic economic engagements—like digital platforms monetizing Indian users—India aligns more closely with OECD’s BEPS framework.
But let’s not sugar-coat the work involved. To prove you’re in the export-only club, you’ll need airtight documentation: purchase orders, bills of lading, and customs clearances— the whole nine yards. Skip a shipping manifest, and the tax officer could argue, “Well, maybe you’re selling locally?” And we all know how that story ends.
Contrast that with a streaming service licensing movies to Indian viewers. There’s no escaping SEP there—viewers are in India, servers deliver content in India, and money flows from India. No carve-out applies, and rightly so.
Looking ahead, this SEP amendment is just one piece of the puzzle. As Pillars One and Two of the OECD’s GloBE initiative loom on the horizon, India’s treaty network and domestic carve-outs will keep shifting. For non-residents, the key takeaway is clear: substance matters more than form. A clause tucked in the fine print won’t save you if reality screams otherwise—and equally, common-sense carve-outs will hold water if backed by facts.
In the end, tax authorities and taxpayers share a goal: numbers on a balance sheet should mirror economic reality, not legal fiction. By exempting pure export procurement from SEP, the Finance Act 2025 nudges India’s international tax landscape closer to that ideal. And for the trading houses, that’s worth more than a few extra rupees saved.

