Blitz Bureau
India is a week away from a landmark opening. The India–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement enters into force on July 15, and the last piece of plumbing is now in place: on July 3 the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs notified the rules of origin that exporters will use to claim their new, duty-free access.
Under the pact, Britain removes tariffs on 99% of India’s export lines, covering nearly the entire trade basket. The immediate winners are the labour-intensive sectors that employ millions — textiles, marine products, leather and footwear, sports goods, toys, and gems and jewellery — alongside faster-growing lines such as engineering goods, auto components and organic chemicals.
The exporters — especially smaller firms — that get their certificates of origin in order early will be first to capture the gains.
At a Glance
- Live from: July 15, 2026
- Access: Duty-free on 99% of India’s export lines
- To claim: Certificate of origin; records kept 5 years by exporters
- Winners: Textiles, marine, leather, footwear, gems & jewellery
The new rules do two things at once: they let genuine Indian goods qualify for preferential tariffs, and they guard against products merely trans-shipped through India from claiming benefits they have not earned. Exporters and manufacturers must keep origin documents for at least five years, and importers their supporting records for four — ordinary paperwork that turns a signed treaty into a working system.
The constructive task this fortnight is readiness. Trade bodies and state governments are running awareness drives so that first-time exporters understand the certification process, because the firms that prepare early will translate the opening into orders — and orders into jobs — from day one.













