CENVAT Credit Rules, 2002
4. Conditions for allowing CENVAT credit
(1). The CENVAT credit in respect of inputs may be taken immediately on receipt of the inputs in the factory of the manufacturer:
Provided that in respect of the final products, namely, yarns or fabrics falling under Chapter 50, 51, 52, 53, 54, 55, 58 or 60, readymade garments falling under Chapter 61 or 62 or made up textile articles falling under Chapter 63 of First Schedule to the Tariff Act, the CENVAT credit of duty paid on inputs may be taken immediately on receipt of such inputs in the registered premises of the person who gets such final products manufactured on his account on job work subject to condition that the inputs are used in the manufacture of such final product by the job worker. (vide notification no. 25/2003 dated 25-3-2003).
(2)
(a) The CENVAT credit in respect of capital goods
received in a factory at any point of time in a given financial year
shall be taken only for an amount not exceeding fifty per cent. of the duty
paid on such capital goods in the same financial year:
Provided
that the CENVAT credit in respect of capital goods
shall be allowed for the whole
amount of the duty paid
on such capital goods in the same financial year if the said capital goods are
cleared as such in the same financial year.
(b)
The balance of CENVAT credit may be taken in any financial year subsequent to
the financial year in which the capital goods were received in the factory of
the manufacturer, if the capital goods, other than components, spares and
accessories, refractories and
refractory materials, 1moulds and dies
and goods falling under heading No. 68.02 and sub-heading No. 6801.10 of the
First Schedule to the Tariff Act, are in the possession and use of the
manufacturer of final products in such subsequent years.
Illustration.-
A manufacturer received machinery on April 16, 2002 in his factory. CENVAT of two lakh rupees is paid on this machinery. The manufacturer can take credit upto a maximum of one lakh rupees in the financial year 2002-2003, and the balance in subsequent years.
(3) The CENVAT credit in respect of the capital goods shall be allowed to a manufacturer even if the capital goods are acquired by him on lease, hire purchase or loan agreement, from a financing company.
(4) The CENVAT credit in respect of capital goods shall not be allowed in respect of that part of the value of capital goods which represents the amount of duty on such capital goods, which the manufacturer claims as depreciation under section 32 of the Income-tax Act, 1961( 43 of 1961).
(5)
(a) The CENVAT credit shall be allowed even if any inputs or capital
goods as such or after being partially processed are sent to a job worker for
further processing, testing, repair, re-conditioning or any other purpose, and
it is established from the records, challans or memos or any other document
produced by the assessee taking the CENVAT credit that the goods are received
back in the factory within one hundred and eighty days of their being sent to a
job worker and if the inputs or the capital goods are not received back within
one hundred eighty days, the manufacturer shall pay an amount equivalent to the
CENVAT credit attributable to the inputs or capital goods by debiting the CENVAT
credit or otherwise, but the manufacturer can take the CENVAT credit again when
the inputs or capital goods are received back in his factory.
(b)
The CENVAT credit shall also be allowed in respect of jigs, fixtures, moulds and
dies sent by a manufacturer of final products to a job worker for the production
of goods on his behalf and according to his specifications.
(6)
The Commissioner of Central Excise having jurisdiction over the factory
of the manufacturer of the final products who has sent the inputs or partially
processed inputs outside his factory to a job-worker may, by an order, which
shall be valid for a financial year,
in respect of removal of such inputs or partially processed inputs, and
subject to such conditions as he may impose in the interest of revenue including
the manner in which duty, if leviable, is to be paid, allow final products to be
cleared from the premises of the job-worker.
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