Blitz Bureau
India is now nine days from a landmark opening. On July 15 the India–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement enters into force alongside the Double Contribution Convention on social security, after both governments confirmed the date and the customs authority notified the rules of origin.
From that day the UK will eliminate duties on 99% of Indian tariff lines, opening a market worth more than $500 billion. Tariffs of up to 70% on processed foods, 21.5% on marine products, 18% on engineering goods and auto components, 16% on leather and footwear, and 12% on textiles fall to zero — a direct lift for India’s most labour-intensive, job-creating sectors.
The pact hands India’s textile, leather, marine and engineering exporters a decisive head-start in one of the world’s richest markets.
At a Glance
- Live from: July 15, 2026
- Access: Duty-free on 99% of Indian tariff lines
- Market size: Over $500 billion
- Mobility: Social-security relief extended 3 → 5 years
Signed in London in July 2025, the CETA is India’s most comprehensive agreement with a G7 nation. The accompanying social-security convention lets Indian professionals on temporary assignment in Britain avoid double contributions for up to five years, easing costs for hundreds of companies.
The immediate task is readiness: customs will verify preferential claims through certificates of origin, so exporters — especially smaller firms — that get their documentation in order early will be first to capture the gains.













