Cabinet approves Revision in guidelines for providing Direct to Home (DTH) Services in India
Rajan Nath
December 23rd 2020 07:35 PM --
Updated:
December 23rd 2020 07:43 PM

DTH Services in India: Union Cabinet chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi on Wednesday approved the proposal for revision of the guidelines for obtaining a license for providing Direct-To-Home (DTH) broadcasting service in India.
The salient features of the decision regarding Direct-To-Home (DTH) broadcasting service in India are:
- License for the DTH will be issued for a period of 20 years in place of the present 10 years. Further the period of License may be renewed by 10 years at a time.
- The license fee has been revised from 10 percent of GR to 8 percent of AGR. AGR will be calculated by deduction of GST from GR.

- License Fee will be collected on a quarterly basis in lieu of the present annual basis.
- DTH operators shall be permitted to operate .to a maximum of 5 percent of its total channel carrying capacity as permitted platform channels. A one-time non-refundable registration fee of Rs.10,000 per PS channel shall be charged from a DTH operator.
- Sharing of Infrastructure between DTH operators. DTH operators, willing to share the DTH platform and transport stream of TV channels, on a voluntary basis, will be allowed.
- Distributors of TV channels will be permitted to share the common hardware for their Subscriber Management System (SMS) and Conditional Access System (CAS) applications.

- The cap of 49 percent FDl in the existing DTH guidelines will be aligned with the extant Government (DPIIT's) policy on FDl as amended from time to time.
- The decision will come into effect as per revised DTH guidelines are issued by the Ministry of Information and Broadcasting.
