Flipkart, the Walmart-owned e-commerce giant, is under a preliminary investigation by the Directorate General of Goods and Services Tax Intelligence (DGGI). Authorities are examining whether Flipkart reclassified marketplace commissions as transport charges to benefit from lower GST rates meant for goods transport agencies.
The complaint was triggered by a Madras High Court advocate’s letter to the Finance Minister, which was echoed in a press release by the Federation of International Trade Investor Gunodaya Association. Investigators may send a show-cause notice if evidence supports deliberate misclassification.
Why It Matters
- GST Compliance Under Scrutiny
Marketplace services—including listings, commissions, and payment facilitation—are typically taxed at 18% GST. Recasting these as transportation services, which attract lower or exempt rates for small road operators, could result in significant tax savings.mint - Potential Financial Fallout
If authorities conclude the restructuring was intentional, Flipkart may face GST recovery, interest, and penalties. - Regulatory Precedent for E-Commerce
Experts caution that transportation is only ancillary and cannot override the principal nature of marketplace facilitation—meaning tax immunity for core services won’t stick. This case may redefine e-commerce billing norms. - Flipkart Remains Silent
So far, the company has not issued any public response to the allegations—even as authorities move toward formal proceedings.
Summary Table
| Element | Detail |
|---|---|
| Who | Flipkart (Walmart-owned e-commerce platform) |
| What | GST probe for possible billing misclassification |
| When | Investigation sparked in August 2025; ongoing |
| How | Allegedly recast marketplace commissions as transport charges to lower GST liability |
| Potential Outcome | Show-cause notice, GST recovery, interest, penalties |


