GTE Exemption List of Medical Devices: Govt seeks stakeholder comments by July 15
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The Centre's Department of Pharmaceuticals has invited comments from stakeholders on proposed amendments to the Global Tender Enquiry (GTE) Exemption List of Medical Devices, with a deadline of 15 July for submissions. The move follows a public notice issued on 11 February that sought feedback on the existing list, after which the Department received representations requesting addition, deletion, or modification of entries.
Who Can Submit and How
All concerned stakeholders — including domestic manufacturers, importers, industry associations, procurement agencies, and healthcare institutions — have been asked to send their comments, views, or objections by 15 July via email to usmedicaldevices@pharma-dept.gov.in, with a copy to so-medicaldevices@pharma-dept.gov.in. Submissions must use the subject line: 'Comments/Objections on Proposed Amendments to the GTE Exemption List of Medical Devices' and follow the prescribed format against relevant entries in columns E to I.
What Supporting Information Is Required
Stakeholders submitting comments are required to furnish relevant supporting data, including the availability or non-availability of domestic manufacturing capacity; the number of domestic manufacturers and importers; annual production and supply capacity within India; and import dependence alongside availability of alternative sources.
Additional information sought includes applicable standards, certifications, and regulatory approvals; procurement-related issues; and the likely impact on public procurement, patient access, affordability, and quality of healthcare services. Technical, clinical, regulatory, commercial, or procurement-related justifications may also be submitted. Notably, comments received after the stipulated date or without adequate supporting information may not be considered.
What the GTE Exemption List Does
The GTE Exemption List of Medical Devices is a regulatory framework that allows public hospitals and government procurement agencies to float global tenders and purchase foreign-made medical equipment. Under standard government procurement rules, global tenders for purchases below ₹200 crore are restricted to promote domestic manufacturing under the Make in India and Atmanirbhar Bharat initiatives.
The GTE exemption bypasses these restrictions, permitting foreign suppliers to bid where a specific medical device is not manufactured domestically at the required quality or scale. This ensures that critical care facilities, government hospitals, and research institutes retain uninterrupted access to advanced, life-saving, and specialised medical technologies.
Context and Significance
The consultation process reflects the government's effort to balance two competing policy objectives: strengthening domestic medical device manufacturing on one hand, and ensuring that public healthcare institutions are not denied access to critical equipment unavailable locally on the other. This is the second round of stakeholder engagement on the GTE list in 2025, following the February public notice. The outcome of this exercise will directly influence which foreign medical devices can be procured by government hospitals without restrictions — a decision with direct consequences for patient care quality and healthcare affordability across India.