

“The air is crowded, but the financial horizon has never been clearer. For global aircraft lessors, India is no longer just a destination for flight paths; it is the ultimate destination for capital restructuring.”
For over a decade, cross-border aircraft leasing into India felt like navigating through a persistent patch of economic turbulence. Global lessors, particularly those operating out of established hubs like the UAE, routinely grappled with a complex web of gross-basis withholding taxes, intricate Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA) limitations, and volatile indirect tax interpretations.
However, the modern regulatory landscape has undergone a profound shift. With the operationalization of the Income-tax Act, 2025 and the aggressive promotional frameworks designed by the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA), the financial dynamics of aircraft leasing have been entirely re-architected.
This case study analyses a high-stakes, real-world deployment scenario for an aviation leasing conglomerate structured between the UAE and India. By examining the precise tax, regulatory, and operational mechanisms governing a split-fleet arrangement — contrasting 3 aircraft leased directly from the UAE against 5 aircraft routed through a newly formed IFSC (GIFT City) subsidiary — this paper provides a corporate blueprint for minimizing tax leakage, optimizing asset depreciation, and maximizing investor returns.
To ground our structural analysis, we examine a prominent cross-border aviation structure involving a UAE-based parent lessor and a premier domestic Indian airline. The lease structure is explicitly executed as a Financial Lease (essentially an asset-backed financing or hire-purchase arrangement) rather than an operating lease.
Under standard accounting and legal principles, this financial characterization splits all incoming lease cash flows cleanly into two distinct buckets: a Principal Component (a balance-sheet item representing the repayment of capital, carrying no direct income-tax impact) and an Interest Component (treated as top-line revenue representing the financing profit).
The consolidated fleet consists of eight next-generation narrow-body aircraft deployed across a hybrid network of intermittent domestic and international routes:
While operational utilization is seamless across the fleet, the financial, regulatory, and tax architectures are radically split between the two jurisdictions.
Executing a direct lease from a foreign jurisdiction like the UAE introduces immediate exposure to Indian domestic tax sovereignty, governed by the interaction between the Indian Income-tax Act and the India-UAE Double Taxation Avoidance Agreement (DTAA).
Because the financial lease functions as a financing mechanism, the Interest Component paid by the domestic Indian airline constitutes Indian-sourced income under Section 9(1)(v) of the domestic tax framework. Consequently, the Indian airline is legally mandated to intercept this cash stream at the border and deduct tax at source (TDS).
Under Article 11 of the India-UAE DTAA, the withholding tax rate on interest income is generally capped at 12.5%. While certain structured banking arrangements or approved financial institutions may occasionally access a concessional 5% treaty rate, standard corporate leasing vehicles face the full 12.5% exposure on every dollar of gross interest remitted.
A frequent point of confusion among global operators is the presumed blanket protection of Article 8 (Shipping & Air Transport) of the India-UAE DTAA.
Critical Legal Reality: Article 8 of the India-UAE DTAA strictly exempts profits derived only from the actual operation of aircraft in international traffic by an enterprise. It does not cover pure asset leasing or financing income earned by a passive lessor. Because the UAE parent company is not operating the airline flights itself, it cannot claim blanket treaty immunity.
To access even the capped 12.5% treaty rate — rather than facing the higher domestic residual non-resident corporate tax rates — the UAE lessor must navigate intensive annual compliance protocols. This includes obtaining and executing:
Any operational slip in maintaining these documents results in an immediate escalation of the withholding tax rate, freezing vital cash flows at the border.
By establishing a wholly owned leasing subsidiary inside the GIFT City IFSC, the lessor fundamentally resets the rules of engagement. India has intentionally designed the IFSC as a highly competitive, ring-fenced financial jurisdiction that mirrors international leasing hubs like Dublin and Singapore.
The crown jewel of the Income-tax Act, 2025 is the dramatic expansion of the sovereign tax holiday under Section 147.
While legacy regulations historically restricted the corporate income tax holiday to a 10-year block, the current 2025/2026 framework has officially doubled the incentive to a 20-consecutive-year tax holiday out of a 25-year flexible block. For twenty years, the corporate tax rate on all core business and financing profits generated by the IFSC subsidiary is exactly 0%.
When the domestic Indian airline remits the lease payment to the IFSC subsidiary, it does not deduct the standard withholding tax. Under specialized administrative rules, the IFSC subsidiary issues a Form 1 (Statement-cum-Declaration) directly to the domestic airline. This statutory declaration certifies its eligibility under the holiday regime, allowing the airline to pay 100% of the gross interest completely free of TDS.
A tax holiday at the intermediary level is meaningless if capital is trapped or taxed heavily upon repatriation to the parent company. To ensure an unhindered outbound corridor, Section 10(4F) of the Income-tax Act provides a complete exemption from tax for any income earned by a non-resident (the UAE Parent) via interest or royalties paid out by an IFSC unit.
Consequently, the cash flows seamlessly from the domestic airline, through the IFSC accumulation hub, and back to the UAE parent with zero withholding tax leakage at either border.
One of the most persistent financial misconceptions among corporate treasurers is the belief that India’s Minimum Alternate Tax (MAT) neutralizes the advantages of an IFSC subsidiary. The argument often goes:
“If the IFSC unit faces a 9% MAT on book profits, and the direct UAE treaty rate is 12.5%, the actual mathematical spread is too narrow to justify the compliance overhead.”
This logic is fundamentally flawed because it conflates a Tax Rate with a Tax Base. They target completely different stages of the financial statement and cash flow lifecycle.
Under Indian domestic tax schedules applicable to the IFSC, aircraft, engines, and critical components qualify for an aggressive 40% depreciation rate on a Written Down Value (WDV) basis.
Because aircraft are capital-intensive, multi-million-dollar assets, this accelerated depreciation creates a substantial non-cash expense on the IFSC subsidiary’s profit and loss statement. The mathematical impact on the tax base is straightforward:
Gross Interest Income − Administrative Costs − Funding Costs − 40% Depreciation = Book Profit
In the early and mid-lifecycle years of the fleet deployment, this heavy depreciation write-down routinely drives the accounting Book Profit down to zero or a net tax loss. Since the calculated Book Profit is zero, applying the 9% MAT results in an actual tax liability of exactly $0.
If any exposure to the 9% MAT remains a concern during hyper-profitable later years, the Income-tax Act provides a built-in statutory escape hatch.
Under Sections 115BAA and 115BAB, an IFSC leasing entity can formally elect to opt into India’s New Tax Regime. By making this regulatory election:
During the 20-year Section 147 tax holiday, the regular corporate income tax is 0%. Because the entity has opted into the New Tax Regime, its MAT rate is also 0%. This dual-layer structure eliminates income tax obligations within India for two decades.
A common operational concern is whether shifting aircraft between international routes and domestic legs alters the underlying income tax liability.
Core Aviation Principle: Income tax and withholding obligations are tied strictly to the legal residency and jurisdiction of the lessor, never to the real-time flight path or physical coordinates of the asset.
However, the physical deployment of the fleet across mixed routes creates distinct indirect tax (GST and Customs) obligations that must be carefully managed:
For lessors with existing direct UAE-to-India lease contracts, transitioning those assets into a newly formed IFSC subsidiary requires a precise, legally compliant migration path that satisfies both the International Financial Services Centres Authority (IFSCA) and anti-avoidance regulators.
Because migrating a contract involves related entities, the Indian Income Tax Department evaluates the transaction under the General Anti-Avoidance Rules (GAAR) and Transfer Pricing (TP) provisions.
To ensure the transaction is not characterized as an artificial arrangement designed solely to evade the 12.5% withholding tax, the move must be executed at Fair Market Value (FMV). The UAE parent must inject real equity capital or formal debt into the IFSC subsidiary, which the subsidiary then utilizes to legally acquire the financial rights or title to the aircraft. A comprehensive independent transfer pricing study must be maintained to defend the arm’s-length nature of the assignment.
Section 147 of the Income-tax Act, 2025 explicitly mandates that the 20-year tax holiday applies to newly set up units in the IFSC. It expressly disallows units formed by the “splitting up or reconstruction of an existing domestic business”.
Because the original contracts were held by a foreign entity (UAE) and not an existing Indian domestic unit, a clean asset migration satisfies the legal criteria, provided it is structured as a fresh deployment of international capital by the IFSC subsidiary.
To conclude our analysis, we contrast the definitive tax and structural parameters governing the split-fleet strategy under the active 2025/2026 regulations:
The numbers and legal frameworks point to a clear conclusion: maintaining a direct, cross-border financial lease from the UAE into India incurs a permanent, non-recoverable top-line tax leakage of 12.5% on interest profits.
By contrast, the IFSC Subsidiary framework transforms the transaction. By combining a 20-year tax holiday, a 0% MAT architecture, and a 40% accelerated depreciation shield, global lessors can substantially reduce Indian income tax exposure while enabling unrestricted, tax-free repatriation of capital back to global hubs.
For institutional lessors, asset managers, and aviation financiers, restructuring fleet portfolios through GIFT City is fast becoming a core element of fiscal efficiency and market leadership in global aviation.