Budget 2026: Cheaper Travel, Costlier Stocks & Sin Goods

The Union Budget 2026-27 introduces significant consumer relief by reducing Tax Collected at Source on foreign tour packages and education remittances. It also provides customs duty exemptions for critical illness drugs and components for solar and aviation manufacturing. On the revenue side, the budget hikes Securities Transaction Tax on derivatives and increases levies on sin products like tobacco and liquor. These measures aim to ease household expenses, boost strategic sectors, and generate additional government income.

Key Points: Budget 2026: What Gets Cheaper & Costlier

  • Lower TCS on overseas travel & education remittances
  • Customs duty cuts on cancer drugs & solar glass inputs
  • STT hike on futures & options trading
  • Higher taxes on tobacco, liquor & scrap sales
3 min read

Budget 2026: What gets cheaper, what gets costlier

Union Budget 2026 cuts TCS on travel & education, slashes customs duty on medicines & solar parts, but hikes STT & sin taxes. Full analysis.

"To rationalise the customs duty structure for goods imported for personal use, I propose to reduce the tariff rate... - the Finance Minister"

New Delhi, February 1

The Union Budget 2026-27 has delivered targeted relief for consumers, exporters and strategic industries, while tightening taxes and select goods or assets. The proposals aim to improve the quality of life, support domestic manufacturing and exports, and generate additional revenue from financial markets and sin products.

Among the most consumer-facing measures, the government, in the Budget, has sharply reduced the tax collected at source (TCS) on overseas tour packages to 2 per cent, down from the earlier 5-20 per cent structure, without any minimum amount.

Similarly, TCS on foreign remittances for education and medical treatment under the Liberalised Remittance Scheme (LRS) has been cut from 5 per cent to 2 per cent, easing cash-flow pressures on households sending money abroad.

Healthcare has also received a boost, with basic customs duty (BCD) fully exempted on 17 cancer and critical illness drugs.

In addition, seven additional rare diseases have been added to the list of conditions eligible for duty-free personal imports of medicines and food for special medical purposes.

To support clean energy and self-reliance, the Budget exempts customs duty on sodium antimonate, a key ingredient in solar glass manufacturing.

Customs duty exemptions have been extended for nuclear power projects till 2035, regardless of plant size, reinforcing the government's long-term energy security strategy.

In a move to strengthen domestic aviation manufacturing, the Budget provides BCD exemption on components and parts, including engines, used in the manufacture of civilian aircraft.

Specified parts used in the manufacture of microwave ovens have also been exempted from customs duty, supporting value addition in consumer electronics.

International travellers will benefit from a simplified baggage regime, with customs duty on all dutiable personal-use imports cut from 20 per cent to 10 per cent.

"To rationalise the customs duty structure for goods imported for personal use, I propose to reduce the tariff rate on all dutiable goods imported for personal use from 20 per cent to 10 per cent," the Finance Minister said.

Exporters in the textile and leather sectors have been given more time to fulfil export obligations. The export realisation period has been extended from six months to one year, a move expected to ease working capital constraints.

"I propose to extend the time period for export of final product from the existing 6 months to 1 year, for exporters of leather or textile garments, leather or synthetic footwear and other leather products," she said.

On the revenue side, the government has raised the Securities Transaction Tax (STT) on futures trading from 0.02 per cent to 0.05 per cent. STT on options premium and exercise has been increased to 0.15 per cent.

Tax collection at source on the sale of alcoholic liquor, minerals and scrap has been increased from 1 per cent to 2 per cent. On tendu leaves, TCS will be reduced from 5 per cent to 2 per cent.

For tobacco products, the National Calamity Contingent Duty (NCCD) on chewing tobacco, gutkha and similar products has been increased from 25 per cent to 60 per cent. However, the government clarified that the effective duty incidence will be maintained at 25 per cent through notification, limiting the immediate price impact.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
The customs duty exemption on cancer drugs is the most important part of this budget for me. My mother is undergoing treatment and the cost of medicines is crippling. This will save lives. Thank you for focusing on healthcare.
A
Aman W
As a small textile exporter, the extension of the export realisation period from 6 months to 1 year is a game-changer. It eases so much working capital pressure. This shows the government is listening to actual business challenges. Well done!
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Michael C
The STT hike on futures and options is a direct hit on retail traders. While I understand the need for revenue, this feels like the common investor is always the easy target. The market volatility is already high, and this adds to the cost. Could have been more balanced.
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Shreya B
Support for solar manufacturing and nuclear power is excellent for our long-term energy security. Making sodium antimonate duty-free is a smart move to boost 'Make in India' for renewable energy. Hoping this translates to cheaper solar panels for homes soon! 🌞
K
Karthik V
The hike in NCCD on tobacco products to 60% is a strong public health message, even if the price impact is moderated. Discouraging gutkha and chewing tobacco is crucial. Hopefully, the revenue generated is used for cancer care and awareness programs.

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