
India’s online gaming sector has moved into a fresh legal phase after major gaming companies approached the Supreme Court seeking a review of its May 27 judgment on the 28% Goods and Services Tax levy. Review petitions have been filed by companies including Play Games24x7, Junglee Games, Sachiko Gaming and Head Digital Works, the parent company of A23. The petitions ask the court to reconsider a ruling that upheld the constitutional validity of the levy and validated retrospective tax demands that exceed Rs 1.5 lakh crore.
The May 27 verdict held that online gaming, fantasy sports and other real-money games involving pooled stakes qualify as taxable actionable claims arising from betting and gambling under the GST framework. The court also held that platforms are suppliers of actionable claims and that GST is payable on the full face value of bets or entry amounts, rather than only on platform fees or gross gaming revenue. The ruling accepted the Centre’s position that the 2023 GST amendments were clarificatory, allowing demands to apply retrospectively.
The industry’s review effort is procedurally narrow but commercially material. A review petition is not a full appeal. It asks the Supreme Court to revisit its own judgment only where there is an apparent error or significant new ground. Head Digital Works is reported to have argued that the case raised substantial constitutional questions that should have been referred to a larger Constitution Bench. The company has also argued that the judgment did not adequately distinguish between games of skill and games of chance, a long-running legal fault line for the sector.
The tax dispute began after the Directorate General of GST Intelligence issued notices to online gaming companies alleging that they had paid GST on platform commissions rather than the total value of user deposits or bets. Gaming firms had argued that the 28% GST levy on full face value should apply prospectively from October 1, 2023, when the amended provisions took effect, rather than retrospectively.
The outcome will be closely watched by gaming founders, investors, payment partners and digital consumer platforms because it bears directly on business viability, historical liabilities and capital allocation. If the review petitions are dismissed, the May 27 ruling remains binding and companies will have to deal with the tax demand framework as settled law. If the court agrees to revisit the matter, the sector could get another opportunity to contest the scope, timing and legal classification underlying one of India’s largest indirect tax disputes in digital business.




