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Updated Jul 5, 2026 · 10:15
India News Updated Jul 5, 2026

India-UK Trade Pact to Boost Exports with 99% Duty-Free Access from July 15

The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) will come into force on July 15, 2026, providing duty-free access for 99% of India's exports to the UK. The Finance Ministry has notified rules defining product origin criteria for preferential tariff treatment, including provisions for cumulative treatment of materials and exclusions for minor operations. Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal emphasized the pact will deepen collaboration in trade, investment, and innovation. The agreement also offers new opportunities for professionals and aims to strengthen resilient supply chains between the two nations.

India-UK trade agreement set to come into force on July 15, rules notified

New Delhi, July 5

The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement, set to come into force on July 15, provides duty-free access for 99 per cent of India's exports to the UK.

According to the latest notification from Finance Ministry that set out the rules, a product will qualify as originating in India or the UK if it is wholly obtained in either country, produced entirely from originating materials, or manufactured using non-originating inputs while meeting the product-specific origin requirements prescribed under the agreement.

The rules, issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), establish the framework for determining whether goods qualify for preferential tariff treatment under the agreement and lay down compliance requirements for exporters and importers.

According to the notification, "these rules may be called the Customs Tariff (Determination of Origin of Goods under Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement between India and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Northern Ireland) Rules, 2026. They shall come into force on the 15th July, 2026".

The framework allows cumulative treatment of originating materials, enabling inputs originating in one partner country to be treated as originating in the other when used in further production.

It also specifies that activities such as simple repackaging, relabelling, washing, sorting, polishing, simple assembly and other minor operations will not be sufficient to confer originating status on a product. Customs authorities will have powers to verify origin claims and deny preferential treatment where products fail to meet the prescribed conditions.

The rules also provide flexibility for importers who fail to claim tariff benefits at the time of import.

Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said recently that the India-UK CETA will further deepen collaboration across trade, investment, and innovation, contributing to shared prosperity for both nations.

The CETA will create new avenues for professionals. In London, Goyal urged Indian companies to deepen engagement with their UK counterparts and translate opportunities under the CETA into sustained business growth.

Addressing the 'India-UK: Partners in Progress Business Plenary' in London, Goyal said the landmark trade pact offers significant opportunities to strengthen bilateral trade, investment, technology partnerships, innovation and resilient supply chains.

— IANS

Reader Comments

Michael C

As someone working in trade logistics, these origin rules are critical. The cumulation provision is particularly smart—allowing Indian inputs to count as UK-originating in further production will streamline supply chains for British companies. This isn't just about tariffs; it's about real economic integration. But I hope Indian SMEs get the compliance support they need—these rules are complex for smaller businesses.

Kavya N

Chalta hai attitude won't work here. The rule about simple operations not conferring origin status is a strict one—can't just repackage Chinese goods and call them Indian. That's good for genuine manufacturers. But I'm worried about the verification powers given to customs—we need efficient clearance, not more harassment of exporters. Piyush Goyal ji needs to ensure this doesn't become another paperwork nightmare. 💼

James A

A well-crafted deal, but let's watch the devil in the details. Rule 5's allowance for late claims is a good safety valve, but importers shouldn't rely on it. From what I've seen of similar UK deals (like with Australia), the opportunities are real but take time to materialize. The real test will be whether Indian professional services—IT, accounting, legal—actually get meaningful access to the UK market, not just goods. Otherwise this is half a loaf.

Siddharth J

Good step, but I'm cautiously optimistic. The UK has been dragging its feet on this for years, and now suddenly it's happening? Maybe Brexit finally forced their hand. Hope our exporters are ready to meet the stringent quality and compliance standards the UK will demand. Also, let's not forget—while we get duty-free access, UK goods will also flood our market. Will our MSMEs survive the competition? That's the million-rupee question. 🤔

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

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