Article 14

Article 14 - Independent Personal Services

Article 14 of the India-United Kingdom DTAA governs independent personal services.

Article 14 deals with income from professional services (lawyers, doctors, architects, engineers, accountants, consultants) and other activities of an independent character. Modern treaties (post-2000) have absorbed Article 14 into Article 7 (Business Profits) following the OECD's 2000 reform, but it survives in many India treaties - especially with developing countries.

Source-State taxation triggers: India-United Kingdom permits the source State to tax independent personal services where the professional has (a) a fixed base regularly available in the source State (akin to a PE), or (b) is present in the source State for more than 90 / 120 / 183 days in the fiscal year (threshold varies by treaty), or (c) remuneration is paid by a resident of the source State (in some older treaties).

Practical compliance: Indian professionals working remotely for foreign clients without a fixed base abroad are taxed only in India. Foreign consultants visiting India for short engagements (under the threshold) escape Indian tax. Where source taxation applies, the foreign-side TDS rate is the treaty rate (often capped at 10-15%), claimed back via Form 67 / 26A.

Modern treaties: If the India-United Kingdom treaty has migrated Article 14 into Article 7 (Business Profits), the PE test alone determines source taxation. Check the current ratified text - older protocols may have preserved the Article 14 distinction.