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Customs valuation of intellectual property in India has moved to the top of the compliance agenda for importers in 2026, as customs authorities across major ports intensify scrutiny of royalty payments, licence fees and technical-assistance charges embedded in import transactions. The Directorate General of Valuation and field formations, including high-volume commissionerates, have issued a renewed wave of Show Cause Notices (SCNs) seeking to add IP-related payments to assessable value under the Customs Valuation (Determination of Value of Imported Goods) Rules, 2007, read with Section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962.
For in-house tax teams, CFOs and trade counsel, the operational question is no longer theoretical: it is whether to accept an adjustment, seek an advance ruling or prepare a tribunal-ready defence. This article provides a litigation-oriented playbook, mapping the legal framework, evidence strategy and step-by-step SCN response process that importers need right now.
Executive action checklist, first 7 days after receiving an SCN or valuation query:
India’s customs valuation architecture rests on three pillars: Section 14 of the Customs Act, 1962, the Customs Valuation (Determination of Value of Imported Goods) Rules, 2007 (which replaced the 1988 Rules), and India’s obligations under the WTO Agreement on Customs Valuation. Together, these instruments establish that the assessable value of imported goods is ordinarily the transaction value, the price actually paid or payable, adjusted for specified additions and deductions. When intellectual property payments enter the picture, the key question becomes whether those payments must be added to the transaction value under the adjustment provisions.
Understanding the precise statutory definitions is essential before evaluating any valuation adjustment. Transaction value (Rule 3 of the 2007 Rules) is the price actually paid or payable for goods when sold for export to India, adjusted in accordance with Rule 10. Related parties are defined in Rule 2(2), mirroring the WTO standard, encompassing entities with ownership, control or management links. Royalties and licence fees, though not exhaustively defined in the Rules, cover payments for the use of patents, trademarks, copyrights, industrial designs and technical know-how when such payments relate to the imported goods and constitute a condition of sale.
| Rule / Source | Practical Requirement | Importer Action |
|---|---|---|
| Rule 3 (Transaction value) | Assessable value equals price actually paid or payable, provided buyer and seller are not related or the relationship did not influence price | Ensure contracts and invoices reflect the genuine price paid; document the absence of price-influencing conditions |
| Rule 10(1)(c) & (e) (Additions to transaction value) | Royalties and licence fees related to imported goods and paid as a condition of sale must be added to transaction value | Maintain royalty agreements and contemporaneous proof of independent negotiation; demonstrate lack of direct connection to imported goods where applicable |
| Rules 4–9 (Sequential alternative methods) | If transaction value is not acceptable, customs must apply identical goods, similar goods, deductive, computed and residual methods, in sequence | Prepare comparable import data and cost build-ups in case customs rejects transaction value |
| WTO Customs Valuation Agreement (Article 8.1(c)) | Royalties/licence fees shall be added to price actually paid only where they are related to the goods being valued and are a condition of sale | Use international benchmarks, WTO interpretive notes and TP studies to support the argument that payments are not a condition of sale |
The Directorate General of Valuation has issued guidance emphasising that additions under Rule 10(1)(c) are not automatic, the customs officer must establish both the nexus between the royalty and the imported goods, and the conditionality of the payment to the sale. This two-pronged test is the foundation of every defence strategy discussed in this article. Importers who protect their intellectual property across borders through structured licensing arrangements must ensure that the documentation trail supports independent commercial rationale for each payment stream.
The central question in customs IP valuation disputes is whether a royalty or licence fee paid by the importer to the foreign supplier (or a related licensor) must be folded into the assessable value of the imported goods. Rule 10(1)(c) of the 2007 Rules requires an addition only when two conditions are both satisfied: first, the royalty or licence fee relates to the imported goods; and second, the payment is a condition of sale of the goods. Where either element is absent, the addition is impermissible.
In practice, customs authorities apply these tests by examining contract language, payment flows, and the commercial relationship between licensor and supplier. The conditionality limb asks whether the buyer could purchase the goods without making the IP payment. The nexus limb asks whether the IP payment is for the right to use the intellectual property embodied in, or applied to, the imported goods specifically, rather than for broader post-import manufacturing, distribution or marketing rights.
Three common scenarios illustrate how the legal tests apply in practice and how importers should frame their defence arguments:
In each scenario, the strength of the defence depends on the quality and contemporaneity of the documentary evidence. Customs authorities reviewing international commercial contracts will look beyond label descriptions to the economic substance of the arrangement.
India’s customs valuation rules prescribe a sequential hierarchy of six methods, aligned with the WTO Agreement on Customs Valuation. The transaction value method under Rule 3 is the default and the most commonly applied. When customs rejects the declared transaction value, typically by arguing that undisclosed royalties inflate the true cost, the alternative methods in Rules 4 through 9 are engaged in strict order.
Consider an importer that declares a CIF value of ₹10,00,000 for branded components and separately pays a 5 % royalty on net resale revenue of ₹15,00,000 (i.e., ₹75,000) to the foreign licensor/supplier. If customs determines the royalty is both related to the imported goods and a condition of sale, the assessable value becomes ₹10,75,000. At an effective duty rate of 28.5 %, the additional duty exposure is approximately ₹21,375 per consignment, material when annualised across hundreds of shipments.
Industry observers note that customs officers are more likely to reject transaction value and resort to alternative methods when: (a) the import price is significantly below prices for comparable goods; (b) the importer and supplier are related and the relationship appears to have influenced the price; (c) royalty or licence payments are discovered during a post-clearance audit that were not declared at import; or (d) inconsistencies exist between transfer-pricing documentation and customs declarations. Importers should treat each of these triggers as a proactive compliance priority.
Success in customs valuation intellectual property disputes hinges on the documentary record. Customs adjudicators and appellate tribunals consistently emphasise that contemporaneous, internally consistent evidence is the most persuasive material an importer can produce. The following evidence matrix maps the key categories of documents, their purpose, and their relative weight before customs authorities and tribunals.
| Evidence Type | Purpose | Weight Before Customs / Tribunals |
|---|---|---|
| Royalty / licence agreement (full text) | Establishes contractual terms, payment triggers and whether IP payment is a condition of sale | High, primary document; absence or inconsistency weakens defence significantly |
| Transfer-pricing study (contemporaneous) | Demonstrates arm’s-length character of intercompany pricing, including IP component | High, especially when reconciled to import invoices and customs declarations |
| Advance Pricing Agreement (APA) | Pre-agreed TP methodology accepted by tax authority, indirect support for customs position | Medium-High, persuasive but not binding on customs; must be contextualised |
| Import invoices and purchase orders | Shows price actually paid or payable; basis of transaction value | High, must be complete, sequential and consistent with contracts |
| Expert valuation report (independent) | Apportions lump-sum payments between goods-related and non-goods-related IP components | Medium-High, more persuasive when prepared by a recognised valuation firm |
| Correspondence / emails showing negotiation | Demonstrates independent negotiation of IP payments separate from goods purchase | Medium, useful corroboration; not decisive alone |
| Board resolutions and cost allocation certificates | Supports unbundling of composite payments into goods-related and service-related portions | Medium, stronger when supported by external expert certification |
| Benchmarking analysis (comparable licensing arrangements) | Shows that arm’s-length royalty rates in the industry are consistent with declared rates | Medium, helpful contextual evidence; source quality matters |
Transfer-pricing reports prepared for income-tax purposes are not automatically fit for customs use. Customs adjudicators focus on the relationship between the IP payment and the imported goods, not the broader intercompany pricing of services, management fees or profit allocation. When submitting TP evidence in a customs context, importers should prepare a summary cover page that: (a) identifies the specific IP payment at issue; (b) maps the TP methodology to the customs valuation question; (c) reconciles TP figures to customs declarations, invoices and accounting ledgers; and (d) explicitly addresses the “condition of sale” and “nexus to imported goods” tests.
Tribunals consistently discount evidence that appears to have been created after a dispute arose. The strongest defence packages comprise documents that existed at the time of import: executed contracts, contemporaneous TP studies, board minutes approving licensing terms, and sequentially numbered invoices. Importers should institute a standing documentation protocol, reviewed quarterly, that ensures every IP-linked payment can be traced to a contract clause, a ledger entry and a customs declaration. Detailed guidance on structuring IP payments to reduce customs risk is available in our international intellectual property guide.
Receiving an SCN alleging that royalties or licence fees should be added to assessable value triggers a structured response process with statutory deadlines. A disciplined, step-by-step approach, rather than ad hoc replies, materially improves outcomes at the adjudication and appellate stages. The following playbook outlines the critical timeline and actions for defending a customs valuation SCN.
A model SCN response on the nexus issue might include language along the following lines:
“The royalty payment under the Technology Licence Agreement dated [date] is made for the right to use the patented manufacturing process in India, which is applied to raw materials sourced both domestically and internationally. The payment is calculated on net sales of the finished product, not on the import price or volume of imported goods. The Technology Licence Agreement and the Purchase Agreement are separate, independently negotiated instruments with distinct counterparties. The royalty is neither a condition of the sale of the imported goods nor related to the imported goods within the meaning of Rule 10(1)(c). Accordingly, no addition to the transaction value is warranted.”
Settlement is worth considering where the duty differential is small relative to litigation costs, where the documentary record has gaps that weaken the defence, or where customs has issued multiple SCNs across ports and the importer wants to resolve the broader valuation methodology through a negotiated framework. Early engagement with the Directorate General of Valuation, before adjudication proceeds, can sometimes yield a practical resolution that sets a precedent for future consignments.
Transfer-pricing reports and Advance Pricing Agreements sit at the intersection of direct tax and indirect tax, and their utility in customs valuation disputes has grown substantially as enforcement widens. A contemporaneous TP study demonstrating arm’s-length pricing for IP payments can be powerfully persuasive before customs, provided the importer bridges the conceptual gap between the TP framework (which analyses intercompany profitability) and the customs framework (which asks whether a specific payment is a condition of sale related to imported goods).
APAs carry additional weight because they represent a methodology pre-approved by the income-tax authority. While an APA is not formally binding on customs, industry observers expect adjudicators and tribunals to give significant deference to an APA that directly addresses the royalty or licence fee in dispute, particularly where the APA’s factual matrix aligns with the customs valuation question.
When filing APA or TP evidence in a customs proceeding, importers should submit certified extracts (not the full APA or TP report, which may contain commercially sensitive information unrelated to the customs dispute). The extract should include: the identity of the transactions covered, the methodology applied, the arm’s-length range or rate determined, and a reconciliation table mapping the TP outcome to the import price declared. Cross-reference this evidence to the import invoices and customs declarations for the relevant assessment period.
Where adjudication at the Commissioner level goes against the importer, the appellate path in customs IP valuation disputes follows a well-established hierarchy:
Tribunal decisions on royalty inclusion have produced a nuanced body of case law. The likely practical effect of recent enforcement trends will be a fresh round of CESTAT hearings that refine the boundaries of the “condition of sale” and “nexus” tests. Importers preparing for litigation should ensure their evidence package is finalised at the adjudication stage, appellate tribunals are reluctant to admit evidence that should have been produced earlier.
The following audit checklist is designed for immediate use. Importers should complete it quarterly and before any customs valuation review or SCN response. Each document should be in the possession of the designated owner, current, and reconciled to related records.
| Document | Minimum Content | Owner |
|---|---|---|
| Royalty / licence agreement | Payment triggers, IP scope, territory, exclusivity, termination clauses | Legal / IP team |
| Import purchase contracts | Pricing terms, Incoterms, delivery and payment conditions | Procurement |
| Transfer-pricing study (current year) | Arm’s-length analysis for all intercompany IP payments; reconciliation to customs declarations | Tax / Finance |
| APA documentation (if applicable) | Covered transactions, methodology, arm’s-length range, validity period | Tax |
| Import invoices (full series) | Sequential numbering, CIF breakdown, description matching purchase order | Customs / logistics |
| Customs declarations (Bills of Entry) | Declared value, classification, duty paid, reconciled to invoices and TP | Customs broker / in-house |
| Expert valuation report | Apportionment of composite payments; methodology and assumptions stated | External valuer / Finance |
| Board resolutions on licensing terms | Approval of royalty rate, independent negotiation record | Company Secretary |
| Correspondence with licensor / supplier | Negotiation trail, amendments, pricing discussions | Legal / Procurement |
| Payment records (royalty remittances) | RBI forms, bank advices, withholding tax certificates, matched to agreements | Finance / Treasury |
The full 30-point checklist, including additional categories for technical-service agreements, benchmarking data, post-import cost allocations and customs audit trail documents, is available as a downloadable resource. To request the PDF audit toolkit or the editable SCN response template, contact Global Law Experts or use the lawyer directory to connect with a specialist in India customs and tax law.
The 2026 enforcement environment has made customs valuation of intellectual property in India an urgent compliance and litigation priority for every importer with cross-border IP payment flows. The core legal tests, condition of sale and nexus to imported goods, are well established, but their application to specific fact patterns demands rigorous contract structuring, contemporaneous documentation and a methodical evidence strategy. Importers who invest now in quarterly documentation audits, TP-to-customs reconciliations and pre-prepared SCN response frameworks will be materially better positioned to defend against valuation adjustments, or to resolve disputes efficiently through negotiation or advance rulings. Those facing active SCNs or audit queries should engage specialist customs and IP valuation counsel without delay.
To find a qualified practitioner, visit the Global Law Experts lawyer directory or contact us directly for a referral to India-based customs valuation and transfer-pricing specialists.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact DServe Legal at DServe Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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