Scholarships for Foreign Studies Paid in India Are Domestic Application; Registration Cannot Be Denied.
The Dispute: Indian Students, Foreign Degrees, and Section 11(1)(c)
The Conflict: The assessee-trust applied for registration under Section 12AB. During the enquiry, the CIT(Exemption) found that the trust had granted scholarships to Indian students to study abroad.
The Revenue’s Objection: The CIT(E) rejected the registration, arguing this violated Section 11(1)(c). Under this section, income applied outside India is generally not exempt unless it promotes an “international welfare in which India is interested” and has prior CBDT approval.
The Assessee’s Stance: The scholarship was granted to an Indian citizen and paid in Indian currency. Therefore, the “application” of income happened within India, even if the student used that knowledge abroad.
The Judicial Verdict: The “Situs” of Expenditure
The Tribunal ruled in favour of the Assessee, setting aside the CIT(E)’s rejection based on the landmark J.N. Tata Endowment precedent:
1. Application in India vs. Outside India
The Tribunal clarified that the “Situs” (location) of the expenditure is what matters. When a trust gives a scholarship to an Indian student in India, the transaction is complete within the domestic territory.
Precedent: In ITO (E) v. J. N. Tata Endowment for Higher Education of Indians [2024], it was held that disbursing loan scholarships to Indians for overseas study constitutes an application of income in India.
Reasoning: The benefit eventually accrues to the nation through the advancement of its citizens’ skills and knowledge.
2. Registration vs. Assessment (Section 12AB Scope)
The Court emphasized that at the stage of registration (Section 12AB/332), the Commissioner should only focus on:
The genuineness of the activities.
The charitable nature of the objects.
Whether a specific expense violates Section 11(1)(c) is a matter for the Assessment stage, not a ground to deny the very existence of the trust as a registered entity.
2026 Context: Section 332 of the Income-tax Act, 2025
Under the new Act:
Section 332 (Registration): Continues the requirement to satisfy the Commissioner about the objects and activities.
Digital Verification: The 2025 Act places a higher burden on trusts to report the PAN and Aadhaar of scholarship recipients. Since the student in this case was an Indian national, the digital trail would confirm the “domestic” nature of the grant.
International Welfare: If a trust explicitly wants to apply funds outside India (e.g., building a school in another country), it still needs approval. However, supporting an Indian student’s journey is now firmly established as a domestic charitable activity.
Strategic Takeaways for Educational Trusts in 2026
Drafting the Objects Clause: Ensure your trust deed specifies that scholarships are for “Indian nationals” or “students residing in India.” This prevents the AO from claiming the trust is “Non-Indian” in character.
Payment Mode: Always pay scholarships to the student’s Indian bank account in INR. Do not remit directly to the foreign university if you do not have Section 11(1)(c) approval, as that may be viewed as an application of funds outside India.
Follow the “Tata” Precedent: If a CIT(E) challenges your foreign scholarship program during registration, cite J.N. Tata Endowment [2024] and K.M. & S.K. Trivedi Charitable Trust [2025]. These cases have settled the law that “utilisation” abroad by the student is not “application” abroad by the trust.
Audit Trail: Maintain copies of the student’s Indian Passport and Aadhaar Card to prove their Indian citizenship, ensuring the “benefit to India” argument remains strong.
and Jagadish, Accountant Member
“6.2.1 The appellant in its reply has reiterated the stand taken before the AO and has also relied on the judgment of the Hon’ble ITAT in the case of the Jamsetji Tata Trust v. Joint Director of Income-tax (Exemption) Range-II, (Mumbai) wherein the hon’ble ITAT has held that the education grant given to the Indian Students in India for education/higher education abroad fulfills the conditions of application of money for such purpose in India. The appellant has also submitted that the Hon’ble ITAT while delivering this judgment has clearly held that the facts in the case of National Association of Software and Services Companies which was relied upon by the AO were distinguishable. The relevant part of the Judgment of the Hon’ble ITAT is as under:
10.5 We have considered the rival submissions and perused the relevant material. The assessee has given grant to 97 scholars studying in various institutions and universities outside India and the total amount of grant is Rs. 1,53,50,000/. The assessee paid the grant in India and for the purpose of education of Indian students/persons, thus the charitable purpose of the grant is education of Indian persons. The application of income of the assessee completes at the point when the assessee released the grant which took place in India. The decision relied upon by the revenue is not applicable in the facts of the present case as the application of income took place in India and for the purpose of education of Indian students/persons. Therefore, for taking education by beneficiary from abroad would not amount to application of income of the assessee outside India. In the case of Bharata Kalajni (supra) the Chennai Bench of this Tribunal while deciding a question arising from the payment of Rs. 1.55 lakh made to a travel corporation of Indian for sending a troop on tour. The AO treated the expenditure as application of income of the trust for charitable purpose. However CIT revised the assessment and was of the opinion that this expenditure was prohibited and was not applied for purpose of trust in India and, therefore, not eligible for exemption u/s 11. The main object of the trust was to advance, propagate, increase and promotion of Indian classical and Folk arts and Indian music etc. The trust was invited by the Government of Nigeria to give certain dance performance abroad. Accordingly the trust sends a troop and paid a sum of Rs. 1.55 lakh being the passage money to the Travel Corporation of India. The Tribunal held in para 6 as under:
“6. The crucial question is only whether the conditions in section 11 are complied with. That section states that the income derived from property held under trust wholly for charitable purposes shall not be included in the total income to the extent to which such income is applied to such purposes in India. The question is whether this section requires the application of money in India or the carrying out of the purposes in India or both. The contention of the revenue is that apart from the money being spent in India even the purpose must be carried out in India. The section itself contradicts this contention. Section 11(1)(c)(ii) provides that income applied to such purposes outside India is exempt in the case of trust created before 1-4-1952 subject to the approval of the Board. This underlines the principle that Governments do not forego their revenue in favour of charges paid outside their countries and hence the relevant consideration is whether the situs of the application of the money and not the place in which the objects of the trust may become effective. It may be pertinent to refer to section 10(16) which exempts scholarships granted to meet the cost of education where also the CBDT itself does not consider scholarship granted for education abroad as money spent outside India. Similarly in the present case of such a wide object of exemption u/s 11 of Rs. 3,47,50,026/-as income applied to charitable purpose in India. The grounds of appeal 1,2 and 3 are allowed.”
