Blitz Bureau
NEW DELHI:On July 15 the India–UK Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement takes effect, opening duty-free access for close to 99% of India’s exports to Britain. Alongside it, a companion social-security pact — the Double Contribution Convention — comes into force, sparing Indian professionals on short UK postings from paying into two systems at once.
With the customs tariff and rules-of-origin regulations now notified by the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs, exporters who meet the origin conditions can claim zero tariffs from day one. The gains concentrate in labour-intensive and engineering sectors — textiles, leather and footwear, marine products, gems and jewellery, sports goods, alongside engineering goods, auto components and organic chemicals. Tariffs of up to 70% on some processed foods, up to 21.5% on marine products, up to 18% on engineering and auto parts and up to 16% on leather and footwear fall away.
A trade deal only pays if exporters can use it — the rules of origin are the fine print that turns a headline tariff cut into an actual zero-duty shipment.
At a Glance
- Live: India–UK CETA and Double Contribution Convention from July 15
- Coverage: Duty-free for ~99% of India’s exports to the UK
- Winners: Textiles, leather, marine, gems, engineering, auto parts
- The catch: Certificates of origin; minor processing won’t qualify
The rules allow inputs originating in one partner to count as originating in the other — a cumulation provision that helps integrated supply chains — while barring simple repackaging or relabelling from conferring duty-free status. For Indian firms, the payoff is predictable access to a high-value market and a template for the bigger deals still in the pipeline.
The constructive priority is readiness: helping small firms secure origin certification, meet British standards and scale up capacity, so that week one’s duty-free promise becomes a durable, growing order book rather than a one-off headline.












