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Customs When Importing from India in 2025–2026: What Has Changed and How to Prepare

Importing from India has become both more complex and more rewarding in 2025. India's position as a global manufacturing alternative to China has strengthened significantly, and the number of first-time importers dealing with Indian suppliers has surged. At the same time, customs regulations on both the Indian export side and the importer's destination side have evolved. This guide provides a comprehensive overview of what you need to know to clear Indian goods through customs efficiently in 2025–2026. Browse our client cases to see how we help importers navigate customs challenges. Learn more about our company.

Key Changes Since 2024

India has expanded its ECGC (Export Credit Guarantee) coverage, updated tariff classifications for electronics and chemicals under the 2024 Union Budget, and tightened documentary requirements for pharmaceutical exports. Additionally, several FTAs (with UAE, Australia, and ongoing negotiations with EU) have created preferential duty rates for Indian-origin goods that importers should be aware of.

Overview of the Customs Clearance Process

Importing goods from India involves a sequence of steps on both sides of the transaction. On the Indian export side, the supplier must complete export formalities. On your import side, goods must be declared, duties assessed, and any required certifications presented. Understanding both sides helps you anticipate documentation requirements and avoid costly delays.

Export side (India):

  1. Supplier files Shipping Bill with Indian Customs via ICEGATE portal.
  2. Goods are assessed and Let Export Order (LEO) is issued.
  3. Goods loaded; Bill of Lading / Airway Bill issued by carrier.
  4. Supplier obtains Certificate of Origin and other required export certificates.
  5. IGST refund claimed by exporter (zero-rated exports).

Import side (destination country):

  1. Import declaration filed (HS code, value, country of origin).
  2. Import duties and VAT/GST calculated and paid.
  3. Product-specific certifications verified (food safety, safety standards, etc.).
  4. Physical or documentary inspection by customs (risk-based).
  5. Goods released for delivery.

Import Duty Rates for Key Product Categories

Import duty rates vary significantly by product category and destination country. The following table shows indicative duty ranges for the most common Indian export categories entering major import markets (EU, UK, US):

Product CategoryEU Import DutyUS Import DutyGSP / FTA Preference
Pharmaceuticals (finished)0%0–5%Not applicable
Pharmaceutical APIs0%0%N/A
Textiles and garments9–12%12–32%Reduced under AGOA (not India)
Cotton fabric (unprocessed)4–8%6–14%N/A
Chemicals (industrial)3–6.5%5–10%Some categories 0% under UAE FTA
Spices (whole)0–5.5%0%0% Form A COO
Rice (basmati)0% (quota)0%Safeguard measures may apply
Engineering goods2–7%0–5%N/A
Electronics and components0%0–12%ITA product list at 0%
Leather goods2.5–3.7%5–11%N/A

Always verify the exact HS code for your specific product before finalising cost calculations. A difference of two digits in the HS code can mean a difference of 10+ percentage points in duty rate. For a broader picture of India sourcing trends in 2025, see our article on imports from India in 2025. Our pre-shipment inspection service includes review of export documents to prevent customs delays.

Required Documents for Customs Clearance

The core document set required for customs clearance of Indian goods includes:

  • Commercial Invoice: On company letterhead, showing buyer, seller, product description, HS code (ideally), quantity, unit price, total value, Incoterms, country of origin.
  • Packing List: Itemised list of all packages, weights (gross and net), dimensions, marks and numbers.
  • Bill of Lading (sea) / Airway Bill (air): The shipping contract and title document for the goods.
  • Certificate of Origin: Required to claim preferential duty rates. For India, this is typically Form A (GSP) or a specific FTA COO.
  • Pre-shipment Inspection Certificate: Required for certain regulated goods in some markets.
  • Insurance Certificate: If CIF or CIP Incoterms are used.

Product-specific additions may include: FSSAI certificate for food items, Phytosanitary Certificate for agricultural products, Drug Regulatory Authority approval for pharmaceuticals, and safety test reports for electronics. Verifying whether your supplier holds the correct GST registration and IEC is also essential before shipment.

Certification and Product Compliance

Increasing numbers of product categories require pre-market certification before they can be imported into the EU or other regulated markets. Key requirements:

  • Food and food ingredients: Must comply with destination country food safety regulations. EU requires maximum residue levels (MRL) compliance; US requires FDA prior notice filing.
  • Cosmetics: EU requires responsible person notification; ingredient restrictions apply.
  • Chemicals (REACH): Substances imported into the EU must be registered under REACH if volumes exceed 1 tonne/year per importer.
  • Electronics: CE marking required for EU market; FCC certification required for the US. Indian manufacturers increasingly hold these certifications — verify before ordering.
  • Medical devices: MDR (EU) or FDA 510(k) clearance required — most Indian medical device manufacturers targeting export markets are familiar with these requirements.

Indian Export Documents for Customs

The following Indian-side documents are frequently required by destination customs or are important for preferential duty claims:

  • Certificate of Origin Form A — issued by Indian Export Promotion Councils or Chamber of Commerce; required to claim GSP preferential duty rates in the EU, Japan, Canada, and other GSP-granting countries.
  • Phytosanitary Certificate — issued by NPPO India (Plant Quarantine); required for all plant-based products, seeds, and agricultural goods.
  • Health Certificate — for processed food exports; issued by FSSAI or APEDA.
  • RCMC (Registration cum Membership Certificate) — issued by Export Promotion Councils; confirms the exporter's export standing.
  • GMP Certificate — for pharmaceutical exports; required by most importing country drug regulatory authorities.

Common Mistakes and How to Avoid Them

  • Incorrect HS code: Request the correct HS code from your supplier and verify it independently. Misclassification leads to under/overpayment of duties and potential fines.
  • Invoice value discrepancy: Ensure the commercial invoice value matches the bank transfer amount exactly. Discrepancies trigger customs holds and investigations.
  • Missing Certificate of Origin: Ordering the COO after goods have shipped is not impossible but is complicated. Instruct your supplier to obtain COO before loading.
  • Inadequate product description: Generic descriptions like "textile goods" or "chemical compound" trigger examination. Use specific, technical product descriptions.
  • Supplier invoicing under their personal name: The invoice must be issued by the same legal entity whose bank account received the payment — a common issue with small Indian traders.

Timeframes and Costs for Customs Clearance

Typical timelines for sea freight imports from India:

  • Transit time: 18–28 days (India to Europe), 20–30 days (India to East Coast USA), 12–18 days (India to Middle East/GCC).
  • Customs clearance: 1–3 days for standard shipments with complete documentation; 5–15 days if selected for examination.
  • Customs broker fees: Typically $150–500 per shipment depending on complexity and value.
  • Port handling and THC: Variable by port — budget $200–600 per 20ft container.
Pre-Clearance Document Review

SunPower Biotech can review your supplier's export document package before shipment — ensuring all certificates, invoices, and origin documents are correctly prepared. This prevents customs holds and delays. Document review: included in our $95 verification package or $50 as a standalone service.

Verify your supplier before payment

Correct documents from a verified supplier mean smooth customs clearance and no costly surprises at the border.

Article Summary

Importing from India: Customs Requirements 2025

Importing from India customs requirements 2025
Importing from India customs requirements 2025

Understanding importing from India customs requirements in 2025 is essential for every importer. This guide covers key documentation, duties, and compliance procedures to avoid delays.

India import customs regulations in 2025 have seen key changes that every importer should know. This guide covers documentation, duties, and compliance requirements to avoid costly delays at the border.

Navigating India import customs in 2025 requires understanding a regulatory environment that has changed significantly over the past three years. India’s customs administration under CBIC (Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs) has modernized its processes through the ICEGATE portal, introduced stricter origin certificate requirements, and expanded the scope of product-specific import regulations. For importers sourcing from India, these changes create both new efficiencies and new compliance risks. This guide covers what you need to know for smooth customs clearance in 2025.

Core Documentation Required for India Import Customs

Every India import shipment requires a core set of documents that must be accurate and consistent with each other. Discrepancies between any of these documents are the most common cause of customs delays:

  • Commercial Invoice: Must state accurate unit price, total value, currency, HS code, and buyer/seller details. Under-invoicing is illegal and triggers scrutiny.
  • Packing List: Must exactly match the invoice in quantities, weights, and package count. Any variance causes holds.
  • Bill of Lading (sea) / Airway Bill (air): Issued by the carrier, must match the consignee details in your import license or IEC.
  • Certificate of Origin: Required for claiming preferential duty rates under trade agreements (India-ASEAN, India-UAE, GSP schemes). Form A for GSP, specific forms for bilateral agreements.
  • Product-Specific Certificates: FSSAI NOC/Import permit for food products, BIS registration for regulated items, phytosanitary certificates for agricultural products, drug import license for pharmaceuticals.

2025 Changes to India Import Customs Procedures

Several significant changes affect importers from India in 2025:

  • ICEGATE mandatory e-filing: All import declarations must be filed electronically through the ICEGATE portal. Paper-based processes have been phased out.
  • Stricter origin rules: Enhanced scrutiny of certificates of origin, particularly for products from India that may be re-exported goods from third countries.
  • Product Standards compliance: BIS Quality Control Orders (QCOs) have been extended to additional product categories. Importers must verify that their specific product is not subject to mandatory BIS certification in India before shipment.
  • Environmental compliance: Increased scrutiny on hazardous materials, batteries, and electronic products for compliance with India’s environmental regulations.
  • MSME preference verification: Some buyers require MSME certification for vendor qualification — verification that these certificates are genuine has become important.

Common Customs Delays and How to Prevent Them

Based on our India import customs experience, these are the most frequent causes of clearance delays:

  • HS Code mismatch: The product’s actual classification doesn’t match the declared HS code. Verify the correct 8-digit HS code before shipment, not after.
  • Value understatement: Customs officers flag invoices that show prices significantly below comparable imports. Use accurate transaction values.
  • Missing product certificates: FSSAI import NOC, BIS registration, or drug license missing at time of arrival. These must be obtained before shipment, not after.
  • Inconsistent documentation: Slight name variation between invoice, packing list, and bill of lading (e.g., “Pvt Ltd” vs “Private Limited”). All documents must use identical entity names.
  • Country of origin issues: Products that are assembled in India from imported components may not qualify for COO certification as “made in India.” Verify origin rules for your specific product.

How Supplier Verification Prevents Customs Problems

Many India import customs problems originate with supplier-side documentation errors or deliberate misrepresentation. A supplier that provides incorrect HS codes (to make the transaction appear cheaper than it is), inflates product specifications on certificates, or provides fake quality certificates creates serious customs liability for the importer. Our supplier verification process includes document authentication specifically designed to catch these issues before shipment.

Read more on our India import blog, view cases where customs documentation was a factor, or contact us to discuss verification for your next India shipment.

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