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India offers 20-year tax holidays to foreign companies using local data centers

India announced on Sunday that foreign companies who use?data?centres in the country for providing services to clients around the world will not be taxed for doing so for at least 20 years. This is to allay fears about possible tax liabilities for the sector.

In recent years, scores of data centres were built in India. However, lawyers have told us that foreign companies are concerned that New Delhi may impose a tax on their global income if they use a data centre located in India.

In her speech on the 2026-27 budget, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman put to rest these concerns, saying that India would "provide (a tax holiday) until 2047 to any foreign companies who provide 'cloud services' to their global customers by using India data centre services."

Vaibhav gupta, partner of tax firm Dhruva Advisors said that the announcement brings clarity to foreign firms and gives stability in their tax position in India until 2047. He noted foreign companies will no longer have to worry about possible taxes on global income if they use a Indian data centre.

Google announced in October that it would invest $15 billion into an AI data center project in Andhra Pradesh, while Microsoft and Amazon invested billions in data centres in India. Indian conglomerates such as Adani and Reliance have also invested.

Amazon, Microsoft and Google didn't immediately respond to requests for comment regarding the tax measure.

Ashwini Vaishnav, IT minister told reporters that data centres would be India's major strength. Aditi Sharma in New Delhi; Dhwani Paandya, Mumbai; Aditya Kahra, New Delhi; Haripriya Suresh in Bengaluru, Sai Ishwar in Bengaluru, Abhirami Ga in Bengaluru, and David Holmes, editing.

(source: Reuters)