Budget 2026-27 Lures Global Cloud Giants with Tax Holiday Till 2047

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman's Budget 2026-27 introduces a major tax holiday until 2047 to attract foreign companies providing global cloud services through Indian data centres. The proposal mandates that services to Indian customers be routed through an Indian reseller entity. Additional measures include safe harbour provisions for component warehousing and tax exemptions to boost toll manufacturing and attract global talent. The budget aims to position India as a competitive hub for cutting-edge technology and infrastructure.

Key Points: Budget 2026-27: Tax Holiday for Global Cloud Services from India

  • Tax holiday till 2047 for global cloud services
  • Boost for data centre investment & infrastructure
  • Safe harbour for related-party data centre costs
  • Incentives for component warehousing & toll manufacturing
  • Exemption for global income of non-resident experts
2 min read

Budget 2026-27 rolls out tax holiday for foreign firms offering global cloud services

FM Nirmala Sitharaman announces a tax holiday till 2047 for foreign firms offering global cloud services via Indian data centres in Union Budget 2026-27.

"cutting edge technologies, including AI, which can serve as growth multipliers - Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman"

New Delhi, Feb 1

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman on Sunday announced a tax holiday till 2047 to any foreign company that provides cloud services to customers globally by using data centre services from India as part of the proposals in the Union Budget 2026-27 presented in the Parliament on Sunday.

The move is aimed at developing critical infrastructure and boosting investment in data centres. Those availing of the incentive will have to provide services to Indian customers through an Indian reseller entity, the Finance Minister said.

The Union Budget also provides for a safe harbour of 15 per cent on cost in case the company providing data centre services from India is a related entity.

To harness the efficiency of just-in-time logistics for electronic manufacturing, the Finance Minister proposed in the budget to provide a safe harbour to non-residents for component warehousing in a bonded warehouse at a profit margin of 2 per cent of the invoice value. The resultant tax of about 0.7 per cent will be much lower than in competing jurisdictions.

Besides, in order to give a fillip to toll manufacturing in India, the Finance Minister has proposed to provide exemption from income tax for 5 years, to any non-resident who provides capital goods, equipment or tooling, to any toll manufacturer in a bonded zone.

The Budget proposals also provide an exemption to the global (non-India-sourced) income of a non-resident expert, for a stay period of 5 years under the notified schemes. This is intended to encourage a vast pool of global talent to work in India for a longer period of time

It also proposes to provide an exemption from Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) to all non-residents who pay tax on a presumptive basis.

The Finance Minister in her speech stated that the Budget aims to sustain the moment of structural reforms, continuous, adaptive and forward-looking and for "cutting edge technologies, including AI, which can serve as growth multipliers".

- IANS

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Good step for 'Make in India' in the digital space. But I hope there are strong data privacy and security laws in place. We don't want our data to be vulnerable just because the servers are physically here.
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Rohit P
Tax holiday till 2047? That's a very long-term commitment. Will this benefit trickle down to smaller Indian tech companies and startups, or will only the big foreign players gain? Need to see the fine print.
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Sarah B
The incentives for global talent are excellent. Making it easier for experts to work here for 5 years without tax on their foreign income could really help bridge the skill gap in AI and cutting-edge tech. Smart move for the knowledge economy.
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Vikram M
The focus on electronic manufacturing logistics and toll manufacturing is crucial. Lower costs will make India a more competitive hub compared to Vietnam or Mexico. This could bring a lot of investment to our industrial corridors.
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Karthik V
While the intent is good, I have a respectful criticism. Such massive tax breaks for foreign companies should be matched with equal support for domestic data centre players. We need to build our own champions, not just become a hosting ground for others.
A
Ananya R
Hope this leads to better and cheaper cloud

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