Budget 2026 Boosts 'Make in India' with Customs Duty Cuts, Aims for Ease of Living

Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman presented the Union Budget 2026-27 with a focus on rationalising the customs duty structure to support domestic manufacturing and export competitiveness. Key proposals include removing certain exemptions, extending duty-free import benefits for sectors like seafood and footwear, and providing customs duty relief for critical sectors like renewable energy, aviation, and electronics. The budget also aims for ease of living by reducing the tariff rate on personal imports and exempting duties on drugs for cancer and rare diseases. This comes alongside the Economic Survey projecting India's GDP growth for 2026-27 in the range of 6.8-7.2 percent.

Key Points: Budget 2026 Customs Duty Rationalised for Manufacturing, Exports

  • Customs duty exemptions rationalised
  • Boost for domestic manufacturing & exports
  • Duty relief for medical drugs & rare diseases
  • Tariff cut on goods for personal use
3 min read

Budget 2026: Customs duty rationalised on key items with focus on domestic manufacturing, Ease of Living

FM Sitharaman's Budget 2026 rationalises customs duties to boost domestic manufacturing, exports, and provides duty relief on medicines and consumer goods.

"It is proposed to exempt basic customs duty on raw materials imported for the manufacture of parts of aircraft... - Finance Minister"

New Delhi, February 1

Presenting the Budget, Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman announced a set of indirect tax measures in the Union Budget 2026-27, aimed at further simplifying the tariff structure, supporting domestic manufacturing, promoting export competitiveness, and correcting inversion in duty.

A key element of the Budget proposals is the continued rationalisation of customs duty exemptions.

To continue weeding out long-standing customs duty exemptions, she proposed removing certain exemptions for items manufactured in India or for which imports are negligible.

She proposed to increase the limit for duty-free imports of specified inputs used for processing seafood products for export, from the current 1 per cent to 3 per cent of the FOB value of the previous year's export turnover.

She also proposed allowing duty-free imports of specified inputs, currently available for exports of leather or synthetic footwear, for exports of Shoe Uppers as well.

The finance minister also proposed extending the export period for final products from the existing 6 months to 1 year for exporters of leather or textile garments, leather or synthetic footwear, and other leather products.

She extended the basic customs duty exemption given to capital goods used for manufacturing Lithium-Ion Cells for batteries to those used for manufacturing Lithium-Ion Cells for battery energy storage systems, too.

Exemption on basic customs duty on import of sodium antimonate for use in manufacture of solar glass has been announced.

Further, she proposed extending the existing basic customs duty exemption on imports of goods required for Nuclear Power Projects until 2035 and expanding it to all nuclear plants, irrespective of capacity.

For critical minerals, it is proposed to provide a basic customs duty exemption on imports of capital goods required for their processing in India.

In civil and defence aviation, she proposed exempting basic customs duty on components and parts required for the manufacture of civilian, training, and other aircraft. "It is proposed to exempt basic customs duty on raw materials imported for the manufacture of parts of aircraft to be used in maintenance, repair, or overhaul requirements by Units in the Defence sector."

To deepen value addition in the consumer electronics sector, she further proposed to exempt basic customs duty on specified parts used in the manufacture of microwave ovens.

To rationalise the customs duty structure for goods imported for personal use, the finance minister proposed reducing the tariff rate on all dutiable goods from 20 per cent to 10 per cent.

To provide relief to patients, particularly those with cancer, she proposed exempting basic customs duty on 17 drugs. "I also propose to add 7 more rare diseases for the purposes of exempting import duties on personal imports of drugs, medicines and Food for Special Medical Purposes (FSMP) used in their treatment."

Finance Minister Sitharaman presented her record ninth consecutive Union budget today in the Parliament.

On Thursday, Union Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman tabled the Economic Survey of India in Parliament for the financial year 2025-26.

The tabling of the Economic Survey ahead of the Budget follows the long-standing tradition of outlining the state of the economy before detailing future fiscal plans. The document provided a comprehensive, data-backed review of the economy's performance over the previous year and offers a broad roadmap for future policy direction. As the government's flagship annual report, it reviews key economic developments over the past 12 months.

India's real GDP growth for 2026-27 is projected in the range of 6.8-7.2 per cent, reflecting sustained medium-term growth capacity amid a challenging global environment.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rahul R
The duty reduction on personal imports from 20% to 10% is a welcome move for the common man. It will make many gadgets and items more affordable. However, I hope this doesn't negatively impact small local sellers.
S
Sarah B
As someone who works in the export sector, the extension of the export period to 1 year for leather and textiles is a huge relief. It gives us much-needed breathing room for production and logistics. Great step for ease of doing business.
A
Aman W
The duty exemption on drugs for cancer and rare diseases is the most humane part of this budget. No family should have to choose between treatment and financial ruin. This is a pro-people policy. 🙏
K
Karthik V
While the focus on manufacturing and exports is good, I'm concerned about the long-term plan. We need to ensure these duty exemptions for capital goods translate into actual high-quality production in India, not just assembly. The 'Make in India' vision needs depth.
M
Meera T
Supporting the seafood and footwear sectors is smart. These are labour-intensive industries that employ millions, especially in coastal and tier-2/3 cities. Increasing the duty-free import limit will help our exporters compete better globally.

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