MSME Udyam Registered G C A GUPTA CHANDAN & ASSOCIATES Professional Firm · New Delhi · Pan India MSME Benefits 2026 Udyam · Loans · 45-Day Rule · Tax &…
India’s MSME Backbone – May 2026: 6.3 crore+ registered MSMEs contribute 30% to India’s GDP, 45% of exports, and employ 11 crore+ workers. Yet millions of eligible businesses remain unregistered – missing out on collateral-free loans, 25% government procurement reservation, the legally-enforceable 45-day payment rule (Section 15, MSMED Act), tax deductions under §44(h), ITA 2025 (= §43B(h)), presumptive taxation under §58, ITA 2025, and dozens of central and state subsidies. Budget 2025 doubled the MSME classification limits and enhanced credit guarantees. If you own any small or medium business – this guide tells you exactly what you are entitled to and how to claim it.
One-Year Grace Period – Losing MSME Status:
If an MSME’s investment or turnover crosses the applicable limits in any financial year – it does not immediately lose MSME status. The enterprise retains its Udyam classification for one additional year (grace period) from the year of exceeding the limit. After the grace year, if limits are still exceeded – Udyam registration must be cancelled/updated. This prevents abrupt loss of ongoing loan benefits, government contracts, and scheme memberships mid-way through a project.
Export turnover exclusion – practical impact: A manufacturing company with ₹95 crore domestic turnover and ₹40 crore export turnover = ₹95 crore for MSME classification purposes (not ₹135 crore). It qualifies as a Small Enterprise (≤₹100 crore). This significantly benefits export-oriented businesses who can scale export revenue without losing MSME status.
2. Udyam Registration – Free, Aadhaar-Based, Minutes to Complete
Udyam Registration is the official MSME registration system (replaced Udyog Aadhaar in July 2020). It is completely free, paperless, and self-declaratory – based on Aadhaar and PAN/GSTIN auto-linkage. The Udyam Registration Number (URN) and certificate are issued instantly upon verified submission at udyamregistration.gov.in.
Udyam Registration Process – Step by Step
1
Visit: udyamregistration.gov.in → Click “For New Entrepreneurs / Not registered as MSME”
2
Aadhaar verification: Enter Aadhaar number of proprietor / managing partner / authorised signatory → OTP verification
3
PAN verification: Enter PAN → system auto-fills investment (from ITR) and turnover (from GSTN) data automatically
Certificate issued: Udyam Registration Certificate with unique URN issued instantly; downloadable as PDF; valid permanently (no renewal needed)
Who Should Register?
Entity Type
Can Register?
Notes
Proprietorship / Individual business
✅ Yes
Aadhaar of proprietor used; most common category
Private Limited Company
✅ Yes
Authorised signatory’s Aadhaar; company PAN linked
LLP / Partnership Firm
✅ Yes
Managing partner’s Aadhaar; firm PAN
Hindu Undivided Family (HUF)
✅ Yes
Karta’s Aadhaar; HUF PAN
Trading businesses
✅ Yes (PSL benefit)
Can register for Priority Sector Lending; some non-credit schemes may not apply
Micro-enterprise without GSTIN (street vendor / artisan)
✅ Via Udyam Assist Platform (UAP)
Special UAP portal; through approved support agencies; no GSTIN needed
New business (day 1)
✅ Yes
Register from incorporation day; turnover = ₹0 initially is fine
⚠️ Udyam is not mandatory by statute – but it is the only way to access MSME benefits. An enterprise that meets the classification limits but does not register on Udyam cannot claim: priority sector lending benefits, the 45-day payment legal protection, government procurement reservation, CGTMSE guarantee, CLCSS subsidy, or any other scheme. Register on Day 1 – it’s free and takes 10 minutes.
This is arguably the most powerful legal protection that Udyam registration provides. Section 15 of the MSMED Act, 2006 creates a legally enforceable right for MSMEs to receive payment within 45 days.
Section 15, MSMED Act 2006 – Mandatory 45-Day Payment Window:
Any buyer (large or small, government or private) who purchases goods or services from a Udyam-registered MSME must make payment within:
– 45 days of the day of acceptance of goods/services (if no written agreement exists); OR
– 45 days from the date of agreement (if a written agreement exists between buyer and MSME supplier); but
– The agreement cannot extend the payment period beyond 45 days – any contractual clause extending beyond 45 days is void.
Section
Provision
Penalty for Buyer
Section 15
Buyer must pay within 45 days of acceptance; agreement cannot exceed 45 days
Any unpaid amount triggers interest liability
Section 16
If payment not made within 45 days – buyer liable to pay compound interest at 3 times the RBI bank rate (monthly compounding)
Current RBI bank rate 6% → MSME interest rate = 18% compound monthly on overdue amount
Section 17
MSME supplier can recover principal + compound interest through MSME Facilitation Council
Buyer must pay all dues + interest; council awards enforceable decree
Section 18
Dispute resolution mechanism – reference to Micro and Small Enterprises Facilitation Council (MSEFC)
The 45-day rule changed business dynamics for MSMEs:
Before MSMED Act, large companies routinely delayed payments to small suppliers by 90–180 days – using the MSME’s desperate need for orders as leverage. Now, any delay beyond 45 days automatically accrues 18% compound interest on the overdue amount. Large companies have begun paying MSMEs faster simply to avoid this liability. An MSME owed ₹10 lakh for 6 months overdue accumulates ₹90,000+ in interest automatically — without any litigation.
4. §44(h), ITA 2025 – Tax Disallowance on Late MSME Payments (Buyer’s Penalty)
§ 43B(h), ITA 1961 → § 44(h), ITA 2025 (introduced Finance Act 2023; now in ITA 2025):
Any payment due to a micro or small enterprise (registered under Udyam) by a buyer is allowed as a business deduction ONLY when actually paid within the time limit prescribed under Section 15 of the MSMED Act (45 days).
If not paid by 31 March of the Tax Year (ITA 2025) or before the due date of ITR filing – the deduction is disallowed for that Tax Year and allowed only in the year of actual payment.
Parameter
ITA 1961
ITA 2025
Section
§ 43B(h)
§ 44(h), ITA 2025
Applies to
All persons paying for goods/services to Udyam-registered micro/small enterprises
Same – all payers
NOT applicable to
Medium enterprises (only micro and small covered)
Same restriction
Disallowance if payment not made by
31 March of PY OR date of filing ITR (whichever earlier)
31 March of Tax Year OR date of filing ITR under § 263, ITA 2025 (whichever earlier)
Treatment in next year
Allowed as deduction in year of actual payment
Same – deduction in TY of actual payment
Combined with Section 16 MSMED interest
Disallowance + MSMED 18% compound interest payable to MSME
Same double burden under ITA 2025
§44(h), ITA 2025 – Tax Impact Example
TechCorp Pvt. Ltd. purchases goods worth ₹50 lakh from MicroManufacturers (Udyam-registered micro enterprise) in December 2026. Payment not made by 31 March 2027 (TY 2026-27 under ITA 2025).
Item
Without §44(h) compliance
With §44(h) compliance
Tax deduction in TY 2026-27
₹50L purchase DISALLOWED; TechCorp’s taxable profit increases by ₹50L → extra tax ₹12.5L at 25%
₹50L fully deductible in TY 2026-27
MSMED Act interest (18% compound on ₹50L for 6 months)
₹4.5L+ interest owed to MicroManufacturers
No interest – paid within 45 days
Total financial impact of delay
₹12.5L extra tax + ₹4.5L+ MSMED interest = ₹17L+ cost of delay
₹0 additional cost
⚠️ §44(h) ITA 2025 applies to ALL buyers – not just large companies: A ₹2 crore turnover Pvt Ltd company that buys from a Udyam-registered micro-enterprise must also comply with the 45-day rule. Failure disallows the deduction — increasing taxable profit proportionately. This provision has fundamentally changed working capital and accounts payable practices across India.
5. Priority Sector Lending – Banks Must Lend to MSMEs
The RBI’s Priority Sector Lending (PSL) guidelines mandate that all scheduled commercial banks (public, private, foreign) allocate specific portions of their advances to MSMEs:
PSL Category
Mandatory Allocation
Benefit to MSME
Micro enterprises
7.5% of total bank advances
Banks actively seek out and approve micro enterprise loans to meet their regulatory targets
MSMEs overall
10% of total bank advances
Preferential treatment in loan processing; faster approvals
Export credit from MSMEs
Counted under both PSL and export credit
Double PSL credit for banks; MSMEs get best terms on export financing
Women-owned MSMEs
Specific sub-target being considered
Additional focus from banks on women MSME lending
Practical benefits of PSL status for Udyam-registered MSMEs:
Interest rates: 1–2% below base rate on working capital loans and term loans
Faster credit appraisal and sanction
Reduced collateral requirements (especially with CGTMSE guarantee)
Working capital loans without mortgage security in many schemes
Access to SIDBI refinance products at concessional rates
6. Credit Guarantee Schemes – CGTMSE & Stand-Up India
CGTMSE (Credit Guarantee Fund Trust for Micro and Small Enterprises)
Parameter
Details
Guarantee cover
Up to ₹2 crore (collateral-free) — doubled in Budget 2025 from ₹1 crore
Coverage percentage
75% for general; 80% for micro enterprises up to ₹5 lakh;85% for women/NE/hilly areas;90% for SC/ST/women entrepreneurs
Annual guarantee fee
0.37% to 1.35% of loan amount per year (paid by bank, partially passed to borrower)
Eligible borrowers
Udyam-registered micro and small enterprises only (not medium)
What CGTMSE does
If borrower defaults – CGTMSE pays the bank up to the guarantee percentage; MSME gets loan without collateral or third-party guarantee
Budget 2025 enhancement
Cover doubled from ₹1 crore to ₹2 crore; additional ₹10,000 crore corpus infused; more MSMEs eligible
How to apply
Apply for loan at any scheduled commercial bank / NBFC; bank applies to CGTMSE for guarantee; no separate application by MSME needed
Stand-Up India
Bank loans ₹10 lakh to ₹1 crore for SC/ST or women entrepreneurs setting up greenfield enterprises
One borrower per bank branch (SC/ST) + one woman borrower per branch
Covers manufacturing, services, and trading businesses
Repayment: Up to 7 years with 18-month moratorium
Apply via standupmitra.in portal or directly at bank branch
7. PMEGP – Prime Minister’s Employment Generation Programme
8th pass for ₹10L+; no qualification for below ₹10L
Same
How to apply
Through approved KVIC/state boards/NSIC/banks on kviconline.gov.in or via Jansamarth.in platform
PMEGP is for new businesses only – existing businesses cannot apply for PMEGP for expansion (there is a separate upgrade scheme). One beneficiary can receive PMEGP only once in a lifetime. The margin money subsidy is a government grant towards the project cost – it is not repayable. Only the bank loan portion is repaid.
8. CLCSS – Technology Upgradation Subsidy (15%)
The Credit Linked Capital Subsidy Scheme (CLCSS) provides upfront capital subsidy to eligible micro and small enterprises for technology upgradation – replacing obsolete plant, machinery, or equipment with modern technology.
Subsidy rate: 15% of institutional credit (bank/NBFC loan) taken for technology upgradation
Maximum subsidy: ₹15 lakh per eligible MSME
Eligible activities: 51 specified sub-sectors including food processing, agro-based industries, textiles, ceramics, glass, electronics, rubber, chemicals, and more
Technology requirement: Must be on the approved technology list; new/improved technology replacing old machinery
How to apply: Through Primary Lending Institution (bank/NBFC) → channelled through SIDBI or NABARD
Subsidy disbursement: Directly credited to borrower’s loan account after verification
9. Mudra / PMMY Loans – Complete Guide
Category
Loan Limit
Typical Use
Collateral?
Shishu
Up to ₹50,000
Starting capital, micro-traders, street vendors, artisans
None required
Kishor
₹50,001 – ₹5 lakh
Working capital, equipment, small shop expansion
None / minimal
Tarun
₹5 lakh – ₹10 lakh
Business expansion, new machinery
Minimal
Tarun PlusNew 2026
₹10 lakh – ₹20 lakh
Scaling operations; for existing Mudra borrowers with good track record
CGTMSE backed
Available from: All public sector banks, private sector banks, RRBs, cooperative banks, MFIs, NBFCs
Interest rate: Market-determined; no fixed government rate but generally lower due to PSL classification
Mudra Card: Pre-approved revolving credit for working capital needs
Apply: Via bank directly, Jansamarth.in portal, or udyamregistration.gov.in linked application
Udyam registration not mandatory for Shishu/Kishor but strongly recommended to get better terms
10. MSME Credit Card Scheme (2025)
🆕 MSME Credit Card – Launched Budget 2025:
Budget 2025 announced a dedicated MSME Credit Card for registered micro and small enterprises with a pre-approved credit limit of up to ₹5 lakh for working capital requirements. Key features:
Pre-approved revolving credit facility for Udyam-registered MSMEs with satisfactory banking history
Contactless card for business purchases; integrated with GST/Udyam data for faster credit assessment
Interest only on amount used (revolving credit – not a term loan)
Target: 1 crore MSME credit cards to be issued by March 2026
Available through participating public sector banks; apply via PSB loan portal or directly at bank branch
Replaces need for small working capital overdraft accounts with paperwork
11. Income Tax Benefits – §58 ITA 2025 (Presumptive), §63 Audit, §44(h) Protection
11.1 Presumptive Taxation – §58, ITA 2025 (= §44AD/44ADA/44AE, ITA 1961)
§ 58, ITA 2025 (= § 44AD / 44ADA / 44AE, ITA 1961):
Small MSMEs below the audit threshold can opt for presumptive taxation – declare a flat percentage of turnover as income, without maintaining detailed profit/loss accounts.
Scheme
ITA 1961
ITA 2025
Eligible Entity
Deemed Income
Turnover Limit
Business (general)
§ 44AD
§ 58, ITA 2025
Individual / HUF / Firm (excl. LLP) carrying on any business
8% of turnover (6% for digital receipts)
≤ ₹2 crore (₹3 crore if 95%+ digital transactions)
Zero-rated exports; accumulated ITC refundable; quick refund for MSMEs via LUT route
All MSME exporters; LUT filing required
Exemptions for agri-related MSMEs
Agricultural produce, food grains, processed food at 5%; significant GST savings for agri-based micro enterprises
Agri / food processing MSMEs
13. Government Procurement – 25% Reservation & EMD Exemption
Public Procurement Policy for MSEs (amended 2023):
All central government ministries, CPSEs (Central Public Sector Enterprises), and autonomous bodies must procure at least 25% of their annual purchases from Udyam-registered Micro and Small Enterprises (MSEs). Of this 25%: 4% is reserved for SC/ST-owned MSEs and 3% for women-owned MSEs.
Procurement Benefit
Details
25% procurement reservation
All central govt departments must buy 25% from Udyam-registered MSEs; tracked annually; CPSEs fined for non-compliance
EMD (Earnest Money Deposit) exemption
Udyam MSEs exempt from depositing Earnest Money in government tenders – frees up working capital; applies to all central procurement
Performance Security deposit
Reduced from standard 5-10% to 3% for MSEs in government contracts
Price preference
Udyam MSEs get 15% price preference in government tenders – if L1 is a large company, MSE quoting within 15% gets the order at L1 price
GeM portal access
MSMEs onboard easily on GeM (Government e-Marketplace); ₹4 lakh crore+ annual government purchases; MSME sellers get promoted listing and dedicated procurement events
Local supplier preference
Make in India policy: preference for domestic MSMEs in government procurement; imported goods face higher scrutiny
GeM is transformational for MSMEs: The Government e-Marketplace processed ₹4 lakh crore+ in orders in FY 2024-25 – and 40%+ of sellers are MSMEs. A Udyam-registered MSME can register on GeM within 1 day and immediately start receiving government purchase orders – no prior experience, no bid bonds required, no complex tender processes for smaller orders. This is one of the most underutilised benefits for small businesses in India.
When a buyer refuses to pay within 45 days despite MSMED Act requirements, MSMEs can file a complaint on the MSME Samadhaan portal (samadhaan.msme.gov.in):
1
File application on samadhaan.msme.gov.in with Udyam number, buyer details, invoice copies, delivery proof, amount outstanding
2
Reference to MSEFC (Micro and Small Enterprises Facilitation Council) – set up in every state; also at district level
3
Conciliation attempt – MSEFC calls both parties; 45-day conciliation window; most cases resolve here with full payment + interest
4
Arbitration (if conciliation fails) – MSEFC proceeds as arbitral tribunal under Arbitration & Conciliation Act, 1996
5
Arbitral Award – enforceable as court decree; recovery action against buyer for principal + compound interest
MSME Samadhaan statistics (2026): Over 1.2 lakh applications filed; ₹12,000+ crore disputed amount tracked; Government CPSEs and state PSUs are the largest category of delayed payers. The Ministry of MSME publishes a monthly “MSME Delayed Payment Monitor” showing top defaulting companies – creating reputational pressure even before legal proceedings.
15. ZED Certification, ISO Reimbursement & Other Operational Benefits
Benefit
Details
ZED (Zero Effect Zero Defect) Certification
Government quality certification for MSMEs; subsidy up to 80% (for micro) / 60% (small) on ZED certification cost; certified MSMEs get preference in public procurement
ISO/Quality Certification reimbursement
Udyam-registered MSMEs reimbursed for ISO 9001/14001/45001 and BIS certification costs – up to ₹75,000 per certification; apply via NSIC portal
Trademark/Patent fee rebate
50% rebate on trademark registration fees; 80% rebate on patent filing fees (same as DPIIT startups)
Industrial Cluster Development
MSME clusters get infrastructure development funding (roads, power, water, common facility centres) – apply via DC-MSME portal
NSIC (National Small Industries Corporation)
Single Point Registration (SPRC) for government stores purchase; performance and credit rating; raw material assistance; marketing support
Credit Rating subsidy
50% subsidy on credit rating fees for MSMEs for the first year – better credit rating improves loan terms
Electricity duty exemption
State-specific; many states offer 50-100% electricity duty exemption for new MSMEs for 5-7 years; check state industrial policy
Industrial land preference
State industrial development corporations (RIICO, MIDC, KIADB etc.) reserve industrial plots and sheds for MSMEs at subsidised rates
Digital MSME scheme
Cloud computing, cybersecurity, and digital services subsidy for MSMEs transitioning to digital platforms – state-by-state availability
16. Labour Code Compliance for MSMEs
The 4 Labour Codes (effective 21 November 2025) apply differently to MSMEs based on employee count:
Labour Code
MSME Threshold
Key Impact
Code on Wages, 2019
All workers from Day 1
Minimum wages mandatory; 50% basic wage rule; bonus for workers earning ≤₹21,000/month; equal pay for equal work
Code on Social Security, 2020
ESIC: 10+ employees; EPF: 20+ employees
ESIC registration at 10+ employees; EPF at 20+; gratuity after 5 years; maternity benefits; gig worker social security
OSH Code, 2020
Factories: 10+ with power / 20+ without; Contract Labour: 50+ principal employer
Appointment letters mandatory for all; working hours max 48/week; overtime 2×; annual leave entitlements
Industrial Relations Code, 2020
Standing orders: 300+ employees
Most MSMEs below 300 employees exempt from standing orders; retrenchment without permission up to 300 workers
Most critical Labour Code compliance for micro enterprises: Even with 2-5 workers, the Code on Wages applies – you must pay minimum wages and issue appointment letters. Appointment letters are now mandatory for ALL workers under OSH Code – this is one of the most universally applicable and commonly missed requirements. Issue written appointment letters to all staff including domestic-scale operations.
Capital subsidy up to 30%; SGST benefit; interest subsidy 5-7% on term loans; stamp duty exemption
Tamil Nadu
Tamil Nadu MSME Policy 2021; TIDCO / SIPCOT industrial parks
25% capital subsidy (micro); SGST refund; water supply at concessional rates; employment subsidy
Uttar Pradesh
UP MSME Policy 2017 (updated); ONE District ONE Product (ODOP)
ODOP product MSMEs get brand, packaging, market access support; SGST refund; low-cost industrial land in YEIDA/UPEIDA
Telangana
TS-iPASS (single window); T-Works for hardware MSMEs
Fast clearance (within 15 days guaranteed); T-Works maker space for hardware MSMEs; TSIIC industrial parks
Punjab
Punjab State MSME Policy; PSIEC industrial estates
Capital subsidy 10-25%; power tariff rebate; SGST reimbursement; stamp duty exemption
18. MSME vs Startup India – Can You Have Both?
A common question: can a business register as both a DPIIT-recognised startup AND a Udyam-registered MSME simultaneously?
Parameter
MSME (Udyam)
Startup (DPIIT)
Both?
Entity type
Any (proprietorship, Pvt Ltd, LLP, HUF, partnership)
Only Pvt Ltd, LLP, or Registered Partnership
✅ If entity qualifies for both (Pvt Ltd/LLP)
Turnover limit
≤ ₹500 crore (medium)
≤ ₹100 crore (startup)
Both apply – the lower startup limit is the binding constraint
Age limit
No age limit
≤ 10 years from incorporation
✅ Within 10 years
Nature test
Any manufacturing/service/trading
Innovation/scalable model required
Both if innovative business
§44(h) ITA 2025 – 45-day rule benefit
✅ Available as MSME supplier
❌ Not automatic from startup status
✅ Register Udyam to get this protection
§140 ITA 2025 (80-IAC) – 3-year holiday
❌ Not from MSME status
✅ With IMB certification
✅ Register both; get both benefits
CGTMSE / Mudra loans
✅ Via Udyam
❌ Not from startup status alone
✅ Register Udyam for credit access
DPIIT ESOP deferral §17
❌ Not from MSME status
✅ From DPIIT recognition
✅ Both registrations together
The verdict: Register BOTH — they complement each other perfectly. Udyam gives you credit access, 45-day legal protection, and procurement benefits. DPIIT gives you tax holiday (§140), ESOP deferral, and startup-specific schemes. A Pvt Ltd company with an innovative product or service should register on BOTH portals within the first month of incorporation. Combined, they provide the most comprehensive government support ecosystem available to any business in India.
19. Common MSME Mistakes
Mistake
Consequence
Prevention
Not registering on Udyam despite being eligible
Miss all MSME benefits – no PSL, no CGTMSE, no 45-day protection, no procurement preference
Register on udyamregistration.gov.in – it’s free and takes 10 minutes
Registering as wrong category (e.g., Medium when qualifying as Small)
Miss Micro/Small-specific benefits (CGTMSE covers only micro & small; 80% EMD exemption only for MSEs)
Recalculate investment and turnover accurately; exclude land/buildings and export turnover
Not claiming 45-day protection from large buyers
Large companies continue paying in 90-120 days; MSME faces cash flow stress without claiming its legal right
Clearly state in all purchase orders and invoices: “Udyam-registered MSME – payment due within 45 days per MSMED Act”; file on Samadhaan if delayed
Buyer ignoring §44(h) ITA 2025 disallowance risk
MSME payment outstanding at year-end → buyer’s deduction disallowed → extra tax liability
Buyers must track all Udyam-registered vendor invoices; ensure payment within 45 days before 31 March of Tax Year
Not migrating from Udyog Aadhaar to Udyam
Udyog Aadhaar is being phased out; old certificate may not be accepted for newer schemes
Migrate at udyamregistration.gov.in → “For those already having Udyog Aadhaar” – free migration
Crossing classification limits without updating Udyam
Accessing benefits on wrong category; legal exposure
Monitor turnover and investment annually; update Udyam certificate if category changes; remember 1-year grace period
Not using GeM portal for B2G sales
Missing ₹4 lakh crore+ government procurement market accessible to MSMEs without complex tendering
Register on gem.gov.in; list all products/services; update catalogue regularly; participate in buyer-directed events
20. Practical Case Studies
Case 1: Manufacturer – CGTMSE + §44(h) Combined Benefit
PrintMax (sole proprietorship, Delhi NCR) – Udyam micro-enterprise. Annual turnover ₹45 lakh. Needs ₹15 lakh loan for new printing machine. Large client (₹2 crore company) owes ₹8 lakh for 65 days.
CGTMSE loan: PrintMax applies via their bank for ₹15 lakh term loan; bank gets CGTMSE guarantee (80% coverage for micro enterprise); PrintMax gets loan without collateral at PSL interest rate (2% below standard)
§44(h) ITA 2025 – large client’s risk: ₹8 lakh outstanding for 65 days (20 days overdue past 45-day limit); client’s deduction on this ₹8 lakh is DISALLOWED in their TY 2026-27; they face extra tax of ₹2 lakh (at 25%). Plus compound interest at 18% running on ₹8 lakh.
PrintMax’s action: Send legal notice citing Section 15-17 MSMED Act + MSME Samadhaan complaint; client pays within 10 days to avoid further interest and tax disallowance
Presumptive taxation (§58 ITA 2025): PrintMax’s ₹45 lakh turnover at 6% digital (all UPI receipts) = ₹2.7 lakh deemed income; no books maintained; ITR filed simply
Case 2: Service Startup with Both DPIIT + Udyam Registrations
45-day protection for ₹15L receivables from large clients
Udyam (MSMED Act §15)
Faster collection; 18% compound interest if delayed by clients
ESOP deferral for CTO (§17 ITA 2025)
DPIIT
CTO exercises ₹20L perquisite – deferred 48 months; no cash tax at exercise
§119 ITA 2025 – ₹15L losses preserved through Seed Round
DPIIT (§119)
₹3.75L future tax saving when offset against profits
21. Frequently Asked Questions
Q1. I have a small trading shop with ₹25 lakh annual turnover. Can I register as an MSME? What will I get?
Yes – a trading business with ₹25 lakh annual turnover qualifies as a Micro Enterprise (turnover ≤₹10 crore; investment ≤₹2.5 crore). Register free at udyamregistration.gov.in with your Aadhaar. Key benefits: (1) Any large buyer must pay you within 45 days – if they delay, compound interest at 18% accrues automatically; (2) You qualify for Priority Sector Lending – banks must consider your loan application preferentially; (3) CGTMSE collateral-free guarantee up to ₹2 crore; (4) Mudra loans (Kishor/Tarun) at lower interest rates; (5) GeM portal registration for government procurement; (6) 50% rebate on trademark registration fees. Note: Trading businesses have access to PSL benefits but some MSME subsidies (CLCSS, PMEGP) are specifically for manufacturing or services entities – not pure trading.
Q2. My company pays a Udyam-registered vendor after 60 days. What is the tax impact under ITA 2025?
Under §44(h) of ITA 2025 (= §43B(h), ITA 1961), your company’s deduction for the payment to a Udyam-registered Micro or Small Enterprise is disallowed if not paid within 45 days. If the payment of, say, ₹5 lakh is due in December 2026 but paid in February 2027 – it crosses 45 days (assuming acceptance in December). If it remains unpaid on 31 March 2027 (end of Tax Year 2026-27), the ₹5 lakh is disallowed as deduction in TY 2026-27. Your taxable profit increases by ₹5 lakh → extra tax ₹1.25 lakh (at 25%). The deduction will be allowed in TY 2027-28 when actually paid. Additionally, the vendor is entitled to compound interest at 3× RBI bank rate (~18%) from day 46 onwards under Section 16, MSMED Act. Pay Udyam-registered vendors within 45 days – the combined cost of delay (tax disallowance + MSMED interest) far exceeds any working capital benefit.
Q3. What is the difference between Udyog Aadhaar and Udyam Registration?
Udyog Aadhaar was the old MSME registration system phased out in July 2020. Udyam Registration is the current official system. Key differences: Udyam is linked directly to Aadhaar + PAN + GSTN, auto-fills investment (from ITR) and turnover (from GSTN), and provides a permanent Udyam Registration Number (URN). Udyog Aadhaar was self-declared without data verification. If you have an old Udyog Aadhaar certificate, you should migrate to Udyam at udyamregistration.gov.in → “For those already having Udyog Aadhaar” – free migration process. Old Udyog Aadhaar certificates are being phased out and may not be accepted for newer MSME schemes and bank loan applications.
Q4. How does the MSME Classification work after Budget 2025 – what are the new limits?
Budget 2025 (effective April 2025) significantly enhanced MSME classification limits: Micro Enterprise: Investment ≤₹2.5 crore AND Turnover ≤₹10 crore (was ₹1 crore/₹5 crore); Small Enterprise: Investment ≤₹25 crore AND Turnover ≤₹100 crore (was ₹10 crore/₹50 crore); Medium Enterprise: Investment ≤₹125 crore AND Turnover ≤₹500 crore (was ₹50 crore/₹250 crore). Both conditions must be satisfied simultaneously. Export turnover is excluded from the turnover calculation. Land and buildings are excluded from investment. If you cross limits, you get a 1-year grace period before losing MSME status. Many businesses that previously “graduated out” of MSME status are now eligible again with the enhanced limits – re-register on Udyam if you previously lost MSME status.
Q5. Can my MSME simultaneously claim §58 ITA 2025 (presumptive tax) and MSME Udyam benefits?
Yes – Udyam registration and presumptive taxation under §58 ITA 2025 (= §44AD/44ADA) are completely independent. An MSME proprietorship with ₹80 lakh turnover can: (1) Register on Udyam for MSME benefits (payment protection, PSL, procurement); (2) Opt for §58 (= §44AD) presumptive taxation – declare 8% (or 6% for digital) of ₹80 lakh = ₹4.8–6.4 lakh as income; pay tax on this without maintaining full books of accounts; (3) Claim Mudra loans using Udyam certificate; (4) Enforce the 45-day rule on defaulting clients. There is no conflict between presumptive taxation and MSME registration – they address different compliance areas (income tax and government recognition respectively).
GCA helps MSMEs register on Udyam, structure loan applications for CGTMSE/Mudra/PMEGP, ensure §44(h) ITA 2025 compliance for buyers, file Samadhaan complaints for delayed payments, apply §58 presumptive taxation, and plan GST composition or QRMP registration. We also assist in combining MSME and DPIIT startup benefits for innovative businesses. Pan-India, 100% digital.
Disclaimer: Educational purposes only. Based on MSMED Act 2006, Union Budget 2025-26 revised MSME classification (effective April 2025), ITA 1961, ITA 2025 (effective 1 April 2026), Income-tax Rules 2026, CGST/IGST Act 2017, Code on Wages 2019, Code on Social Security 2020, OSH Code 2020, and Industrial Relations Code 2020 (all effective 21 November 2025), as available up to May 2026. Scheme amounts, eligibility, and deadlines change – verify current parameters at udyamregistration.gov.in, msme.gov.in, and respective scheme portals before applying. Consult a qualified professional before any loan application, tax filing, or compliance decision.
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