India Weighs Extending Import Duty Exemption on 40 Products Beyond June 30: Official

The decision will depend on West Asia developments, Strait of Hormuz cargo movement and revenue implications.

India Weighs Extending Import Duty Exemption on 40 Products Beyond June 30: Official
info_icon
  • The government is considering whether to extend the duty exemption on about 40 products beyond June 30.

  • The relief covers critical petrochemical imports such as methanol, toluene, styrene and vinyl chloride monomer.

  • Officials said revenue implications and supply disruptions caused by West Asia tensions will factor into the decision.

The government is likely to take a call on extending import duty exemption on about 40 products beyond June 30, after analysing the evolving situation in West Asia and associated revenue implications, an official said on Thursday.

To safeguard the domestic industry from supply chain disruptions, the government in a "temporary and targeted relief" had exempted import of critical petrochemical products from customs duty effective April 2.

Customs duty was cut to 'nil' across 40 different products, including Anhydrous Ammonia, Toluene, Styrene, Vinyl chloride monomer, and others.

The Problem Of Rupee

1 June 2026

Get the latest issue of Outlook Business

amazon

The duty exemption, which is valid till June 30, was intended to benefit sectors dependent on petrochemical feedstock and intermediates such as plastics, packaging, textiles, pharmaceuticals, chemicals, automotive components, other manufacturing segments.

Officials said associated revenue consideration will have to be considered while deciding on whether the import duty exemption would be extended.

"A decision would be taken after analysing the evolving situation around West Asia and cargo movement via Strait of Hormuz," the official told PTI.

The goods on which the customs duty have been exempted include Methanol, Anhydrous ammonia, Toluene, Styrene, Dichloromethane (methylene chloride), Vinyl chloride monomer, Poly butadiene, Styrene butadiene and Unsaturated polyester resins.

The government has set a customs revenue target of ₹2.71 trillion in the current fiscal, compared to ₹2.64 trillion in FY26.

The war in West Asia and the effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz has raised prices of crude oil and food, fertiliser imports. Also, supplies of raw materials have been impacted as movement of cargoes via the Strait has fallen significantly.

SUBSCRIBE
Tags

Click/Scan to Subscribe

qr-code

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

Advertisement

×