Tech
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30th October 2025, 5:40 AM

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The Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT) has delivered a major relief to Netflix Entertainment Services India LLP (Netflix India) by rejecting the income-tax department's attempt to treat it as a full-fledged content and technology provider. Consequently, a transfer pricing adjustment of ₹444.93 crore for the fiscal year 2021-22 has been deleted.
The Mumbai bench of the ITAT ruled that Netflix India functions merely as a limited-risk distributor, offering access to the Netflix streaming service, and does not own intellectual property (IP) or control content or technology. The tribunal found that Netflix India's cost-plus remuneration, determined using the Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM), was at arm's length. The ITAT criticized the revenue department's case as inconsistent and outcome-driven, emphasizing that taxation must align with economic substance and contractual reality.
This decision provides crucial clarity for multinational digital and Over-The-Top (OTT) platforms operating in India, ensuring that genuine distribution arrangements are not misclassified, especially in the absence of key functions related to IP ownership and risk control.
Impact This ruling offers significant relief and clarity for multinational digital and Over-The-Top (OTT) platforms operating in India. It reinforces the principle that taxation should align with the economic substance and contractual agreements, rather than hypothetical scenarios. This could lead to fewer aggressive tax assessments for similar entities, potentially improving their operating environment and profitability in India. It might also influence future tax policies and interpretations concerning digital services. Rating: 7/10.
Difficult Terms * **Income Tax Appellate Tribunal (ITAT)**: An independent quasi-judicial body in India that hears appeals against the decisions of the Income Tax Appellate Authority. * **Transfer Pricing**: A set of rules and methods used to determine the price of goods, services, and intangible assets transferred between related entities (e.g., parent company and its subsidiary) within a multinational enterprise. The goal is to ensure these prices are equivalent to what unrelated parties would charge (arm's length principle). * **Intellectual Property (IP)**: Creations of the mind, such as inventions; literary and artistic works; designs; and symbols, names and images used in commerce. * **Limited-Risk Distributor**: A business entity that distributes products or services but has its risks and rewards capped, with most significant risks borne by associated companies. * **Cost-Plus Remuneration**: A pricing method where the price is determined by adding a markup to the cost of producing a good or service. * **Transactional Net Margin Method (TNMM)**: A transfer pricing method that compares the net profit margin earned in a controlled transaction to the net profit margin earned in comparable uncontrolled transactions. * **Arm's Length**: A principle that requires parties in a transaction to act independently, without any undue influence from each other, and to negotiate terms as if they were unrelated parties. * **Associated Enterprises (AEs)**: Two or more enterprises that are related to each other through ownership, control, or common management, often within the same multinational group. * **Dispute Resolution Panel (DRP)**: A panel constituted under the Income Tax Act in India to resolve disputes between taxpayers and the tax administration concerning certain assessment orders.