Blitz India Business
On July 15, the India–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement takes effect, delivering duty-free access on 99% of India’s exports to Britain — and, crucially for exporters, day-one tariff elimination across the lines that matter most.
The schedule is specific. The UK removes duties of up to 70% on processed foods, 21.5% on marine products, 18% on engineering goods and auto components, 16% on leather and footwear, 12% on textiles and clothing, and 8% on chemicals and pharmaceuticals. A companion Double Contribution Convention spares Indian professionals on short UK stints from paying social security twice.
This is a margin story as much as a volume story — a 12-16% tariff removed on textiles and leather drops almost straight to the bottom line.
By the Numbers
- Live: July 15, 2026 (signed London, July 2025)
- Coverage: 99% of India’s export lines duty-free
- Cuts: Food up to 70%, marine 21.5%, engineering 18%
- Also live: Social-security (Double Contribution) pact
The pact lands as India’s trade diplomacy widens on other fronts too: a US bilateral deal is reported to be nearing, with negotiators working to lower reciprocal tariffs, while talks with New Zealand advance during the Prime Minister’s current tour. For exporters, a diversified set of preferential markets is the best hedge against any single trading partner’s policy swings.
The constructive priority is execution at the firm level: securing certificates of origin, meeting value-addition thresholds, and helping MSMEs with the paperwork so the tariff advantage translates into orders. The treaty creates the opening; readiness decides who captures it first.


