Tripura Becomes First Indian State to Complete All Deregulation Reforms

Tripura has become the first Indian state to complete all Priority Areas under both Phase I and Phase II of the national Compliance Reduction and Deregulation initiative. The reforms, launched in January 2026, focused on simplifying land governance, industrial approvals, and citizen services through self-certification and digital systems. Key measures include strengthening the Single Window Approval Agency, removing dual licensing, and introducing inspection exemptions for businesses. The state also partnered with NLU Tripura and IIM Calcutta for legal review and impact assessment of the reforms.

Key Points: Tripura First State to Complete All Deregulation Reforms

  • Tripura completes all 51 Priority Areas under Phase I & II
  • Focus on land, industry, and digital governance reforms
  • Self-certification and single window systems introduced
  • Collaboration with NLU Tripura and IIM Calcutta
  • Expected to boost investor confidence and reduce compliance costs
3 min read

Tripura becomes first state in India to complete all deregulation priority areas under Phase I and Phase II

Tripura becomes India's first state to complete all 51 Priority Areas under Phase I & II of national deregulation, boosting ease of doing business.

"Tripura has created history by becoming the first state in India to complete all Priority Areas under Deregulation Phase-II - Government of Tripura"

Agartala Ma, y 15

Tripura has created history by becoming the first state in India to complete all Priority Areas under Deregulation Phase-II of the national Compliance Reduction and Deregulation initiative led by the Cabinet Secretariat of the Government of India.

With this achievement, the state has also become the first in the country to complete all 51 Priority Areas under both Phase-I and Phase-II of the reform programme, strengthening its position as a leader in regulatory reforms, Ease of Doing Business, and technology-driven governance.

The reforms, launched in January 2026, focused on reducing compliance burdens, removing unnecessary procedures, digitising approvals, and building a transparent and investor-friendly administrative system across sectors, including Revenue, Urban Development, Industries, Labour, Environment, Tourism, Health, Education, and Digital Governance.

A major focus of the initiative was simplifying land and urban governance processes. The state introduced self-certification-based Change of Land Use in areas aligned with Master Plans and environmental safeguards, significantly reducing delays in approvals. The Single Window Approval Agency (SWAAT) was strengthened, overlapping No Objection Certificates were rationalised, and several low-risk approvals were automated through self-certification mechanisms. The government also removed dual licensing requirements to eliminate regulatory duplication.

In the industrial sector, investor-friendly reforms were introduced to allow businesses to begin operations through self-declaration systems, along with inspection exemptions for up to three years in certain categories. Environmental governance and infrastructure services were also streamlined through faster environmental clearance processes and simplified procedures for electricity connections, including the removal of mandatory field inspections within prescribed limits.

Several citizen-centric reforms were implemented in the social sector as well. In education, land and endowment requirements for establishing institutions were rationalised. In the health sector, a single nodal mechanism was introduced to facilitate seamless interstate registration and practice for medical professionals. Tourism reforms simplified homestay regulations by removing multiple NOC requirements and enabling online self-renewal systems to encourage local tourism entrepreneurship.

As part of its digital governance push, the Government of Tripura launched a centralised e-Gazette system for unified digital access to Acts, Rules, Regulations, and Government Notifications. An auto-appeal mechanism under the Right to Services framework was also introduced to improve accountability and ensure timely service delivery. The SWAGAAT Single Window System was further strengthened to improve transparency and ease of access for businesses and citizens.

The state has also collaborated with premier national institutions to support the reform process. The government partnered with the National Law University Tripura for a principle-based review of State laws and regulations, while the Indian Institute of Management Calcutta has been empanelled to conduct a ground-level impact assessment study of reforms implemented under Deregulation Phase-I.

The completion of all Priority Areas reflects the state government's strong focus on reform-driven governance, administrative coordination, and technology-enabled public service delivery. The reforms are expected to boost investor confidence, reduce compliance costs, improve service delivery, and further establish Tripura as a model state for future-ready governance in India.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
This is impressive but I hope the reforms actually help small businesses and citizens, not just big corporates. Self-certification sounds good on paper, but we need proper monitoring to prevent misuse. Otherwise, it's just another paper tiger
V
Vikram M
As someone from the Northeast, I'm genuinely proud of this development. We often hear about reforms in bigger states like Gujarat or Maharashtra, but seeing a smaller state like Tripura lead the way is heartening. The collaboration with IIM Calcutta for impact assessment is a smart move 👏
A
Ananya R
Wait, these reforms were launched in January 2026? That's barely a few months ago and they've completed all priority areas already? Either this is really efficient or the targets were too easy. Need to see ground-level impact before celebrating too much.
S
Sarah B
Interesting to see a smaller state leading on regulatory reform. In the US, we often see similar initiatives in states like Delaware or Texas. The homestay regulation simplification is particularly smart – could really boost local tourism and generate employment in remote areas.
R
Rohit P
Am I the only one who's skeptical? Inspections exempted for three years? That sounds like a recipe for labour law violations and unsafe working conditions. Yes, we need ease of doing business, but not at the cost of workers' rights and safety 😤
K
<

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

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50