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Also in this series: ALP and Methods | Safe Harbour and APA | Documentation and Penalties
- Quick Snapshot: Transfer Pricing in 2 Minutes
- What Is Transfer Pricing?
- Legal Foundation: Old Law Meets New Law
- The Core Rule: Section 161 Including the one-way rule under Section 161(4)
- Who Are Associated Enterprises? (Section 162) All 14 tests, with examples for each
- International Transactions (Section 163) Deemed transactions and the 12 intangible categories
- Specified Domestic Transactions (Section 164)
- Key Definitions: Section 173
- Practical Compliance Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions
Quick SnapshotTransfer Pricing Basics in 2 Minutes
Picture this. BharatSoft Pvt. Ltd. in Bengaluru writes software for its parent company, GlobalSoft Inc. in Delaware, USA. An independent developer would charge $80 per hour for the same work. BharatSoft charges only $20.
BharatSoft records less income. It pays less tax in India. GlobalSoft keeps the extra $60 in the USA, where perhaps the tax rate is lower. The Indian government quietly loses revenue on every invoice raised.
| Topic | Key Detail |
|---|---|
| Governing law | Sections 161 to 173, Income Tax Act 2025 (replaces Sections 92 to 92F, IT Act 1961) |
| Core principle | All income or expense from related-party transactions must reflect the Arm’s Length Price |
| Who triggers TP rules | Any person entering an international transaction or a specified domestic transaction |
| Associated Enterprise definition | Section 162: 14 sub-clauses including 26% voting power, 51% loan, 10% guarantee, IP dependency, raw material control |
| International transaction | Section 163: any transaction between two AEs where at least one is a non-resident |
| Specified Domestic Transaction | Section 164: domestic related-party deals where tax advantage exists and aggregate exceeds Rs. 20 crore |
| One-way rule | Section 161(4): TP adjustments increase income only; they never reduce it |
| Definitions anchor | Section 173 |
Part IWhat Is Transfer Pricing?
Transfer pricing is the price one related company charges another for goods, services, loans, or intellectual property.
The phrase itself is neutral. Every time a company sells anything internally, it sets a transfer price. The tax concern arises because related companies have the flexibility to set any price they choose. That flexibility can be used to move profits from high-tax countries to low-tax ones.
Transfer pricing rules counter this. They require related-party prices to match what unrelated parties would have agreed under normal market conditions. This benchmark price is the Arm’s Length Price (ALP).
Why Does India Specifically Regulate This?
India loses tax revenue when Indian companies:
- Under-price their exports of services or goods to foreign group entities – booking less income in India
- Over-price their imports of services or goods from foreign group entities – inflating Indian deductions
- Shift profits between Indian entities to exploit tax holidays or exemptions domestically
The transfer pricing framework under Sections 161 to 173 of the Income Tax Act 2025 protects against all three.
Part IILegal Foundation: Old Law Meets New Law
The Income Tax Act 2025 has replaced the Income Tax Act 1961. The transfer pricing provisions have been renumbered but the substance largely continues. Here is the complete mapping:
| Subject | IT Act 1961 | IT Act 2025 |
|---|---|---|
| Income computation at ALP | Section 92 | Section 161 |
| Associated Enterprise | Section 92A | Section 162 |
| International Transaction | Section 92B | Section 163 |
| Specified Domestic Transaction | Section 92BA | Section 164 |
| Determination of ALP | Section 92C | Section 165 |
| Transfer Pricing Officer | Section 92CA | Sections 166 and 532 |
| Safe Harbour Rules | Section 92CB | Section 167 |
| Advance Pricing Agreement | Section 92CC | Section 168 |
| Effect of APA | Section 92CD | Section 169 |
| Secondary Adjustment | Section 92CE | Sections 162 and 170 |
| Maintenance of Documents | Section 92D | Section 171 |
| Accountant’s Report | Section 92E | Section 172 |
| Definitions | Section 92F | Sections 2 and 173 |
| Penalty: non-furnishing of TP report | Section 271BA | Section 447 (omitted by Finance Act 2026) |
| Penalty: non-furnishing of documents | Section 271G | Section 457 |
Part IIIThe Core Rule: Section 161
Section 161 is the engine of the entire transfer pricing framework. It lays down three things:
First, any income arising from an international transaction or a specified domestic transaction must be determined with reference to the ALP. So if BharatSoft charges $20 per hour but the ALP is $80, BharatSoft’s income is computed as if it charged $80.
Second, any allowance for expense or interest arising from such a transaction is also subject to the ALP. So if BharatSoft pays a management fee to its parent and the ALP for that service is lower, the excess deduction gets disallowed.
Third, cost-sharing arrangements between AEs are also caught. If three group companies share the cost of a new software platform, each company’s share of that cost must reflect what an independent party would have contributed for that benefit.
The One-Way Rule: Section 161(4)
This is often overlooked, but it matters greatly.
Section 161(4) says that the TP provisions do not apply if computing income at ALP would reduce taxable income or increase a loss.
In plain terms: the arm’s length principle is a government-protection tool, not a taxpayer-benefit tool. It can push your income up, but it will never pull it down.
Part IVWho Are Associated Enterprises? (Section 162)
Two enterprises are ‘associated’ if one participates in the management, control, or capital of the other. Section 162(1) contains 14 sub-clauses in total. Clause (a) itself has three sub-clauses: (i), (ii), and (iii). Any single sub-clause, if satisfied, is sufficient to establish AE status.
The 14 Tests for Associated Enterprise Status
| # | Law Reference | Test | Threshold / Condition |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Section 162(1)(a)(i) | One or more persons participate in management, control, or capital of both enterprises (directly, indirectly, or through intermediaries) | No minimum threshold – common management, control, or capital participation is sufficient |
| 2 | Section 162(1)(a)(ii) | One enterprise holds voting power in the other | 26% or more |
| 3 | Section 162(1)(a)(iii) | A common third person holds voting power in both enterprises | 26% or more in each |
| 4 | Section 162(1)(b) | One has advanced a loan to the other | Loan is 51% or more of total book value of assets of borrower |
| 5 | Section 162(1)(c) | One guarantees borrowings of the other | 10% or more of total borrowings |
| 6 | Section 162(1)(d) | More than half the board (or executive directors) of one enterprise is appointed by the other | Appointment by the other enterprise |
| 7 | Section 162(1)(e) | More than half the board of both enterprises is appointed by the same person or persons | Cross-appointment by same person |
| 8 | Section 162(1)(f) | Manufacturing or business is wholly dependent on IP owned by or exclusively held by the other | Wholly dependent |
| 9 | Section 162(1)(g) | 90% or more of raw materials and consumables are supplied by or through the other enterprise | Supply and pricing influenced by that enterprise |
| 10 | Section 162(1)(h) | Goods or articles manufactured are sold to the other enterprise or persons specified by it | Price and conditions influenced by that enterprise |
| 11 | Section 162(1)(i) | Both enterprises are controlled by the same individual | Including control through relatives |
| 12 | Section 162(1)(j) | One is controlled by an HUF and the other is controlled by a member or relative of that HUF | Or jointly by the member and their relative |
| 13 | Section 162(1)(k) | One is a firm, AOP, or BOI and the other holds 10% or more interest in it | Interest threshold |
| 14 | Section 162(1)(l) | Any relationship of mutual interest as may be prescribed by the CBDT | As prescribed |
Illustrative Examples
Scenario A: AlphaHoldings (UK) holds 30% of the voting shares of BetaIndia Pvt. Ltd. (India). They are associated enterprises because 30% exceeds the 26% voting power threshold under sub-clause (a)(ii).
Scenario B: GammaCorp (USA) holds 28% in both DeltaIndia Pvt. Ltd. and EpsilonIndia Pvt. Ltd. DeltaIndia and EpsilonIndia are associated enterprises with each other because a common third person holds 26% or more in each under sub-clause (a)(iii).
Scenario C: ZetaIndia Pvt. Ltd. (India) manufactures exclusively using patents and know-how licensed from EtaGroup (Netherlands). ZetaIndia is wholly dependent on EtaGroup’s IP. They are associated enterprises even if there is zero equity ownership between them – sub-clause (f) applies.
Scenario D: ThetaIndia Pvt. Ltd. (India) obtains a loan of Rs. 60 crore from IotaUSA Inc. ThetaIndia’s total book assets are Rs. 100 crore. The loan is 60% of total assets – exceeding the 51% threshold under sub-clause (b). They are associated enterprises.
Associated Enterprises for Specified Domestic Transactions (Section 162(2))
For domestic transactions, the definition is extended. ‘Associated enterprise’ also includes:
- Other units or business divisions of the same assessee, where the transaction relates to payments to related parties under Section 122 or to transfers under Section 140(9)
- Any person referred to in Section 140(13) or 205(4) for transactions referred to in those sections
- Other units or enterprises of the assessee or associated persons for transactions under Chapter VIII to which Sections 140(9) or 140(13) apply
Why does this matter? Consider a company with two divisions: Division A (SEZ unit, fully tax-exempt) and Division B (normal tax). If Division B pays an inflated price to Division A for services, Division B claims a large deduction and Division A pays no tax. TP provisions treat these divisions as associated enterprises and require the price to be at arm’s length.
Part VInternational Transactions (Section 163)
An international transaction is a transaction between two or more associated enterprises where at least one is a non-resident. Section 163(1) is deliberately wide.
| Category | What It Includes |
|---|---|
| Tangible property | Sale, purchase, transfer, lease, or use of building, machinery, equipment, vehicles, commodities, goods |
| Intangible property | Transfer or use of copyrights, patents, trademarks, licences, franchises, customer lists, brands, commercial secrets, know-how |
| Capital financing | Long-term or short-term loans, guarantees, purchase or sale of marketable securities, advances, deferred payments, trade receivables |
| Services | Market research, marketing management, administration, technical services, repairs, design, consulting, scientific research, legal or accounting services |
| Business restructuring | Any reorganisation between AEs, regardless of whether it has any immediate impact on profit, income, loss, or assets |
| Cost sharing | Mutual agreements to allocate costs of a benefit, service, or facility provided to one or more group entities |
| Residual category | Any other transaction having a bearing on profits, income, losses, or assets of the AEs |
The Deemed International Transaction (Section 163(2))
This provision is important and often overlooked. Even a transaction with a third party (non-AE) is treated as an international transaction if:
- There is a prior agreement between that third party and an associated enterprise relating to the transaction, or
- The terms of the transaction are determined in substance by the associated enterprise
Provided that either the Indian enterprise or the associated enterprise (or both) is a non-resident.
Intangibles: A Broad Scope (Section 163(3))
Section 163(3) lists 12 categories of intangible property. This matters because intangible transactions are among the most common vehicles for profit shifting.
- Marketing intangibles: trademarks, trade names, brand names, logos
- Technology intangibles: process patents, patent applications, technical documentation, technical know-how
- Artistic intangibles: literary works, copyrights, musical compositions, engravings
- Data processing intangibles: proprietary computer software, automated databases, integrated circuit masters
- Engineering intangibles: industrial designs, product patents, trade secrets, engineering drawings, blueprints
- Customer intangibles: customer lists, customer contracts, customer relationships, open purchase orders
- Contract intangibles: favourable supplier contracts, licence agreements, franchise agreements, non-compete agreements
- Human capital intangibles: trained workforce, employment agreements, union contracts
- Location intangibles: leasehold interests, mineral exploitation rights, air rights, water rights
- Goodwill: institutional goodwill, professional goodwill, personal goodwill, going concern value
- Methods, programmes, systems, customer lists, technical data
- Any other item deriving value from intellectual content rather than physical attributes
Part VISpecified Domestic Transactions (Section 164)
Many assume transfer pricing applies only to international dealings. That is incorrect. Section 164 brings certain purely domestic related-party transactions within the TP framework. These are called Specified Domestic Transactions (SDTs).
| Category | Reference |
|---|---|
| Any transaction with a related party under Section 122 (payments to related parties disallowed if not at ALP) | Section 164(a) |
| Transfer of goods or services between units where one unit claims a deduction under Section 140(9) | Section 164(b) |
| Business transactions with persons referred to in Section 140(13) or 205(4) | Section 164(c) and (e) |
| Transactions under Chapter VIII deductions (tax holidays) to which Section 140(9) or 140(13) applies | Section 164(d) |
| Any other transaction as may be prescribed by the CBDT | Section 164(f) |
The Rs. 20 Crore Threshold
SDT provisions apply only if the aggregate of all such transactions in a tax year exceeds Rs. 20 crore. Below that, the TP framework for domestic transactions does not apply.
Each category is aggregated. If a company has Rs. 12 crore in transactions under Section 122 and Rs. 9 crore in transfers under Section 140(9), the aggregate is Rs. 21 crore, which crosses the threshold.
Part VIIKey Definitions: Section 173
| Term | Definition |
|---|---|
| Arm’s Length Price | A price applied or proposed in a transaction between persons who are not associated enterprises, in uncontrolled conditions |
| Enterprise | Any person (including a PE of such person) engaged in production, storage, supply, distribution, acquisition, know-how, services, loans, investments, or securities dealings – whether through units, divisions, or subsidiaries |
| Permanent Establishment | A fixed place of business through which the enterprise’s business is wholly or partly carried on |
| Specified Date | One month before the due date for filing the return of income under Section 263(1) – this is the date by which documentation must exist |
| Transaction | Includes any arrangement, understanding, or action in concert – whether formal or informal, written or unwritten, and regardless of whether it is enforceable by law |
The definition of ‘transaction’ is notably wide. Even an unwritten, informal understanding between group companies constitutes a transaction for TP purposes.
ChecklistPractical Compliance Checklist
- Run through all 14 sub-clauses in Section 162(1). Even one positive sub-clause makes that foreign entity your associated enterprise.
- List every dealing with that entity: sales, purchases, loans, services, IP licences, guarantees, cost allocations. Each is a potential international transaction.
- Check whether any third-party contracts had their terms effectively set by your AE. If yes, those are deemed international transactions too.
- Add up all related-party transactions within the group. If the aggregate crosses Rs. 20 crore, TP provisions apply to you.
- The AE definition for SDTs covers your own internal divisions, not just separate legal entities.
- Work through each of the 14 sub-clauses methodically. Pay special attention to loan-to-asset ratios, IP dependency, and supply-chain control – these are less obvious than equity thresholds but equally valid.
Wrapping Up
Transfer pricing basics are really the story of one simple idea: if you and your counterparty are not truly independent, the price you agree on needs to be the price strangers would agree on. The Income Tax Act 2025 captures this through a wide net – covering not just equity-linked companies but also IP-dependent and loan-funded relationships, not just cross-border deals but also domestic ones where tax advantages exist.
Once you know whether you have an associated enterprise and whether your transaction qualifies as an international transaction or an SDT, the rest of the transfer pricing journey becomes structured. For the next step – how to actually compute the arm’s length price – read Article 2: ALP and Methods.
Check the ownership threshold. If the overseas investor holds 26% or more of voting power, the startup and that investor are associated enterprises. Even a single cross-border transaction between them triggers TP. The size of the company is irrelevant.
Yes. Look at the loan test (51% of assets), the IP dependency test (sub-clause (f)), the raw material supply test (sub-clause (g)), and the common-control test (sub-clause (a)(i)). Equity is just one of 14 sub-clauses to establish AE status.
Almost certainly, if the price is below the arm’s length price. The intent does not matter. The price is what matters. The AO will compute your income at the ALP regardless of the commercial reason for the lower price.
Yes. Section 173(b) expressly includes a PE in the definition of ‘enterprise.’ Transactions between an Indian company and the PE of its foreign AE are international transactions subject to TP.
Yes, for international transactions, there is no minimum transaction threshold triggering TP. However, the detailed documentation requirement under Rule 84 does not apply if the aggregate of international transactions does not exceed Rs. 1 crore. For specified domestic transactions, the Rs. 20 crore aggregate threshold determines applicability.
No. Section 164 covers only transactions where the benefit of deductions or exemptions under Chapter VIII (or Section 122 or 205(4)) is involved. Ordinary domestic transactions between Indian companies with no tax differential are not covered.
Disclaimer: For informational and educational purposes only. Based on the Income Tax Act 2025 (30 of 2025), Income Tax Rules 2026, and provisions as amended by the Finance Act 2026, current as of June 2026. Does not constitute legal or tax advice.








