India-UK CETA takes effect July 15: 99% of exports get duty-free access
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
The India-UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA) is set to come into force on 15 July 2026, with official rules now notified by the Finance Ministry, granting duty-free access to 99 per cent of India's exports to the United Kingdom. The notification marks the final regulatory step before the landmark bilateral trade pact becomes operational.
What the Origin Rules Establish
The rules, issued by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), lay out the framework for determining whether goods qualify for preferential tariff treatment under the agreement. A product will be considered 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 that meet product-specific origin requirements prescribed under the pact.
The framework also permits cumulative treatment of originating materials — meaning inputs from one partner country can be treated as originating in the other when used in further production. This provision is particularly significant for manufacturers operating across integrated supply chains.
What Will Not Qualify as 'Made in India or UK'
The notification draws a clear line on activities that will not confer originating status. Simple repackaging, relabelling, washing, sorting, polishing, basic assembly, and other minor operations are explicitly excluded. Customs authorities will hold powers to verify origin claims and deny preferential tariff treatment where goods fail to meet the prescribed conditions.
Importers who miss claiming tariff benefits at the time of import are also provided some flexibility under the rules — a practical safeguard for businesses navigating the new compliance landscape.
What the Government Said
Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal recently described the India-UK CETA as a pact that will 'further deepen collaboration across trade, investment, and innovation, contributing to shared prosperity for both nations.' Addressing the 'India-UK: Partners in Progress Business Plenary' in London, Goyal urged Indian companies to translate the opportunities under the agreement into sustained business growth and stronger bilateral ties across technology partnerships and resilient supply chains.
Why This Agreement Matters
The India-UK CETA is among the most significant trade deals India has concluded in recent years, coming after negotiations that spanned several years and multiple political transitions in the UK. For Indian exporters — particularly in textiles, pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, and IT services — duty-free access to one of Europe's largest consumer markets represents a material competitive advantage.
This comes amid a broader Indian push to diversify trade partnerships, with free trade agreements also concluded or under negotiation with the UAE, Australia, and the European Union. The CETA's entry into force on 15 July 2026 will be closely watched by industry bodies as a test of whether negotiated gains translate into measurable export growth.