India-UK FTA signed: EVs, whisky, cosmetics, and more — here’s what gets cheaper for each side

India-UK FTA signed: EVs, whisky, cosmetics, and more — here’s what gets cheaper for each side

India and the United Kingdom on July 24 signed the Comprehensive Economic Trade Partnership, giving zero-duty access to key Indian exports including electronics, textiles, chemicals, pharmaceuticals, toys, and gems and jewellery. The deal is expected to boost annual bilateral trade by $34 billion. It also lowers import duties on British products like electric vehicles, Scotch whisky, and cosmetics in India.

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India is the fourth-largest supplier of textile and apparel products to the UK, accounting for 6.6% of its total imports, which reached around $27 billion in 2024. India is the fourth-largest supplier of textile and apparel products to the UK, accounting for 6.6% of its total imports, which reached around $27 billion in 2024.
Business Today Desk
  • Jul 24, 2025,
  • Updated Jul 24, 2025 6:10 PM IST

India’s newly signed Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the United Kingdom is poised to make premium British products like electric vehicles, Scotch whisky, cosmetics, and chocolates significantly more affordable for Indian consumers, while opening up duty-free access for Indian exports across key sectors such as engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, processed foods, and electronics.

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Signed during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to London, the deal is expected to increase annual bilateral trade by $34 billion.

The FTA includes tariff reductions, improved mobility for Indian professionals, and market access across critical sectors. While Indian consumers will see a drop in prices for luxury British imports like Scotch whisky and electric vehicles, Indian exporters will gain duty-free access to high-value UK markets for pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, and food products.

What gets cheaper in India (UK to India)

India will eliminate or reduce tariffs on 90% of British goods, significantly lowering the cost of premium UK products:

Scotch whisky: One of the most high-profile items in the deal, its import duty will drop from 150% to 75% immediately, and further to 40% over 10 years, making it more affordable for Indian consumers.

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Electric vehicles (EVs): Customs duty on EVs will fall from 110% to 10% within a quota, bringing down the price of premium UK-made EVs such as those by Jaguar Land Rover.

Cosmetics and personal care products: Popular British brands will become more competitively priced as tariffs are slashed.

Chocolates, biscuits, and soft drinks: These will also become cheaper, giving a boost to UK FMCG players in the Indian market.

Medical devices and health tech equipment: With import duties reduced, advanced British healthcare products will now be more accessible.

The average tariff on UK imports will drop from 15% to just 3%, opening the door to wider availability of British goods in India.

What gets cheaper in the UK (India to UK)

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In return, the UK will offer zero-duty access to 99% of Indian exports, providing a major boost across several sectors:

Engineering goods: With 1,659 tariff lines included, Indian exports of machinery, auto components, and equipment will benefit from cost advantages.

Chemicals and petrochemicals: Covering 1,206 products, this sector is expected to grow by up to 40% with duty-free UK access.

Pharmaceuticals: India can now target the UK’s $30 billion import market for generics, with zero tariffs on 56 key pharma lines.

Processed foods and agri-products: Tariffs of up to 70% on items like tea, coffee, and spices will be eliminated, giving Indian producers a level playing field with European competitors.

Marine exports: Duties of up to 20% will be removed on seafood exports, unlocking a $5.4 billion UK market for Indian fishermen.

Gems and jewellery: India’s exports to the UK, currently worth $941 million, are expected to double as duties are removed.

Electronics: Smartphones, fibre-optic cables, and inverters will now be exported at zero duty.

Software and IT services: With mobility provisions included, this $32 billion sector could grow 15–20% annually, benefiting over 60,000 Indian tech workers.

 

This table highlights India’s sectoral export gains under the India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). With near-total tariff elimination on key Indian exports—including textiles, leather, processed food, and machinery—the agreement boosts India's competitiveness and supports employment-intensive sectors aligned with its 'Make in India' and PLI goals. 

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India–UK FTA: Sector-wise Gains for India

Textiles & ClothingApparel, garments, home textilesUp to 12%Zero duty
Leather & FootwearShoes, belts, bagsUp to 16%Zero duty
Gems & JewelleryDiamonds, gold jewellery, imitation ornamentsUp to 4%Zero duty
Furniture/Sports GoodsHandcrafted furniture, sports equipmentUp to 4%Zero duty
Processed FoodPackaged foods, ready-to-eat mealsUp to 70%99.7% tariff lines at zero duty
Marine & Animal ProductsSeafood, dairy, meatUp to 20%99.3% tariff lines at zero duty
Fruits & VegetablesTea, coffee, spices, cereals, oilsUp to 20%Zero duty (except rice)
ChemicalsOrganic, inorganic, misc. chemicalsUp to 8%Zero duty
Electrical MachineryCables, switchgear, electronicsUp to 14%Zero duty
Mechanical MachineryEngines, pumps, toolsUp to 8%Zero duty
Plastics/RubberPipes, containers, auto componentsUp to 6%Zero duty
Base MetalsAluminium, copper, iron & steelUp to 10%Zero duty
Transport/AutoAuto parts, EV componentsUp to 18%Zero duty
Wood/PaperFurniture wood, industrial paperUp to 10%Zero duty
Instruments & ClocksPrecision tools, watchesUp to 6%Zero duty
Glass/Ceramics/HeadgearGlassware, tiles, helmetsUp to 12%Zero duty

India is the fourth-largest supplier of textile and apparel products to the UK, accounting for 6.6% of its total imports, which reached around $27 billion in 2024. China topped the list with a 25% share, followed by Bangladesh (15%) and Türkiye (8.5%). Despite this position, India’s share in the top 20 textile and apparel items imported by the UK is just 4%, indicating significant room for growth under the new trade agreement.

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With deep concessions on both sides, the India-UK FTA is one of the most comprehensive and forward-looking trade deals signed by India, expected to reshape the trade landscape between the two nations.

India’s newly signed Free Trade Agreement (FTA) with the United Kingdom is poised to make premium British products like electric vehicles, Scotch whisky, cosmetics, and chocolates significantly more affordable for Indian consumers, while opening up duty-free access for Indian exports across key sectors such as engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, processed foods, and electronics.

Advertisement

Related Articles

Signed during Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s visit to London, the deal is expected to increase annual bilateral trade by $34 billion.

The FTA includes tariff reductions, improved mobility for Indian professionals, and market access across critical sectors. While Indian consumers will see a drop in prices for luxury British imports like Scotch whisky and electric vehicles, Indian exporters will gain duty-free access to high-value UK markets for pharmaceuticals, engineering goods, and food products.

What gets cheaper in India (UK to India)

India will eliminate or reduce tariffs on 90% of British goods, significantly lowering the cost of premium UK products:

Scotch whisky: One of the most high-profile items in the deal, its import duty will drop from 150% to 75% immediately, and further to 40% over 10 years, making it more affordable for Indian consumers.

Advertisement

Electric vehicles (EVs): Customs duty on EVs will fall from 110% to 10% within a quota, bringing down the price of premium UK-made EVs such as those by Jaguar Land Rover.

Cosmetics and personal care products: Popular British brands will become more competitively priced as tariffs are slashed.

Chocolates, biscuits, and soft drinks: These will also become cheaper, giving a boost to UK FMCG players in the Indian market.

Medical devices and health tech equipment: With import duties reduced, advanced British healthcare products will now be more accessible.

The average tariff on UK imports will drop from 15% to just 3%, opening the door to wider availability of British goods in India.

What gets cheaper in the UK (India to UK)

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In return, the UK will offer zero-duty access to 99% of Indian exports, providing a major boost across several sectors:

Engineering goods: With 1,659 tariff lines included, Indian exports of machinery, auto components, and equipment will benefit from cost advantages.

Chemicals and petrochemicals: Covering 1,206 products, this sector is expected to grow by up to 40% with duty-free UK access.

Pharmaceuticals: India can now target the UK’s $30 billion import market for generics, with zero tariffs on 56 key pharma lines.

Processed foods and agri-products: Tariffs of up to 70% on items like tea, coffee, and spices will be eliminated, giving Indian producers a level playing field with European competitors.

Marine exports: Duties of up to 20% will be removed on seafood exports, unlocking a $5.4 billion UK market for Indian fishermen.

Gems and jewellery: India’s exports to the UK, currently worth $941 million, are expected to double as duties are removed.

Electronics: Smartphones, fibre-optic cables, and inverters will now be exported at zero duty.

Software and IT services: With mobility provisions included, this $32 billion sector could grow 15–20% annually, benefiting over 60,000 Indian tech workers.

 

This table highlights India’s sectoral export gains under the India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA). With near-total tariff elimination on key Indian exports—including textiles, leather, processed food, and machinery—the agreement boosts India's competitiveness and supports employment-intensive sectors aligned with its 'Make in India' and PLI goals. 

Advertisement

India–UK FTA: Sector-wise Gains for India

Textiles & ClothingApparel, garments, home textilesUp to 12%Zero duty
Leather & FootwearShoes, belts, bagsUp to 16%Zero duty
Gems & JewelleryDiamonds, gold jewellery, imitation ornamentsUp to 4%Zero duty
Furniture/Sports GoodsHandcrafted furniture, sports equipmentUp to 4%Zero duty
Processed FoodPackaged foods, ready-to-eat mealsUp to 70%99.7% tariff lines at zero duty
Marine & Animal ProductsSeafood, dairy, meatUp to 20%99.3% tariff lines at zero duty
Fruits & VegetablesTea, coffee, spices, cereals, oilsUp to 20%Zero duty (except rice)
ChemicalsOrganic, inorganic, misc. chemicalsUp to 8%Zero duty
Electrical MachineryCables, switchgear, electronicsUp to 14%Zero duty
Mechanical MachineryEngines, pumps, toolsUp to 8%Zero duty
Plastics/RubberPipes, containers, auto componentsUp to 6%Zero duty
Base MetalsAluminium, copper, iron & steelUp to 10%Zero duty
Transport/AutoAuto parts, EV componentsUp to 18%Zero duty
Wood/PaperFurniture wood, industrial paperUp to 10%Zero duty
Instruments & ClocksPrecision tools, watchesUp to 6%Zero duty
Glass/Ceramics/HeadgearGlassware, tiles, helmetsUp to 12%Zero duty

India is the fourth-largest supplier of textile and apparel products to the UK, accounting for 6.6% of its total imports, which reached around $27 billion in 2024. China topped the list with a 25% share, followed by Bangladesh (15%) and Türkiye (8.5%). Despite this position, India’s share in the top 20 textile and apparel items imported by the UK is just 4%, indicating significant room for growth under the new trade agreement.

Advertisement

With deep concessions on both sides, the India-UK FTA is one of the most comprehensive and forward-looking trade deals signed by India, expected to reshape the trade landscape between the two nations.

Read more!
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