Exclusive-India accuses Kia of evading taxes of $155 million in VW-like dispute

Compare
Payout Min deposit Promo code Win rate(%) Welcome bonus Rating
Gama
60 min. 20 $ RUBYSKYE 60 % 500 + FS
PLAY NOW
1win
2 hr. 20 $ RUBYSKYE 60 % 500 + FS
PLAY NOW
Promo
Catcasino
60 min. 40 $ RUBYSKYE 60 % 500$ +150 FS
PLAY NOW
Better
60 min. 20 $ RUBYSKYE 60 % 500 + FS
PLAY NOW

By Nikunj Ohri, Aditya Kalra and Aditi Shah

NEW DELHI (Reuters) – India has accused South Korea’s Kia of evading taxes of $155 million by misclassifying component imports but the carmaker has denied wrongdoing, the latest fight by a foreign automaker with New Delhi over tariffs, according to a document and two sources.

Kia competes with Hyundai and Maruti Suzuki in the world’s third-largest auto market, where it has a share of 6% of roughly 4 million units a year, and its Kia Seltos and Sonet SUVs are among the top sellers.

Foreign companies in India face headaches from high taxes and long-drawn-out investigations.

For example, Tesla has publicly complained about high taxes on imported EVs and Volkswagen last week sued over a demand for a record $1.4 billion in back taxes that it called “impossibly enormous”.

Tax officers sent a confidential notice to Kia’s Indian unit in April 2024, flagging alleged tax evasion of 13.5 billion rupees, according to a government notice Reuters is reporting for the first time.

The offence centred on incorrect declaration of imports of components for the assembly of the carmaker’s luxury Carnival minivan, the notice showed.

In a statement to Reuters, Kia India said it made “a detailed response, supported by comprehensive evidence and documentation to substantiate” its stand and the authorities were still reviewing the matter.

Kia India is committed to complying with all regulations and has “consistently cooperated with” authorities, it added.

See also  Palantir CEO's 10 Words About AI That Should Help You Invest Better in 2025 and Beyond

India’s finance ministry and customs officials did not respond to Reuters queries.

In its 432-page notice, the government said tax authorities found Kia’s Carnival “car model was being imported in parts or components in separate lots” via different ports, with the “intent to discharge lesser customs duty”.

Kia devised the strategy to ensure the imports “could not (be) detected by customs,” it added in the notice, issued by a customs commissioner in the southern city of Chennai.

Two sources said Kia’s case was similar to that of Volkswagen, accused of evading a higher tax of 30% to 35% applicable on parts imported in “completely knocked down” or CKD form in a single shipment, instead shipping separate parts over days, making them eligible for a tax rate of just 10% to 15%.

During the investigation, Kia’s website showed the Carnival model sold in India as being in “CKD” form, with retail sales of 9,887 units between 2020 and 2022, the tax notice said.

Translate »