
Major Relief on High Reciprocal Tariffs

One of the most significant outcomes of the agreement is the sharp reduction in Reciprocal Tariffs that earlier reached as high as 50 percent on several Indian products. Of India’s USD 86.35 billion exports to the U.S., goods worth USD 40.96 billion were subject to such tariffs.
Under the new framework, tariffs on USD 30.94 billion of these exports have been reduced from 50 percent to 18 percent, while exports worth USD 10.03 billion now enjoy zero-duty access. This restructuring dramatically improves the price competitiveness of Indian products in the U.S. market.
Zero Additional Duty and Section 232 Relief
The agreement also provides stability through exemption categories that ensure no additional duty on exports valued at USD 1.04 billion. Notably, agricultural exports worth USD 1.035 billion have been assured zero Reciprocal Tariff treatment, offering predictability to Indian farmers and exporters.
Further relief has been secured under Section 232 provisions, where products worth USD 28.30 billion will face zero additional duty on an end-use basis. This removes earlier uncertainty caused by duties that could rise up to 50 percent.
Strong Sectoral Gains Across Manufacturing
The agreement creates a clear tariff advantage for India compared to competing suppliers such as China, Vietnam and Bangladesh. This differential strengthens India’s position across labour-intensive and value-added manufacturing sectors.
Textiles and apparel see tariffs reduced from 50 percent to 18 percent, with silk securing zero-duty access to a U.S. market valued at USD 113 billion. Leather and footwear exports gain similar tariff relief, enhancing access to a USD 42 billion market.
Boost for Gems, Home Décor, Toys and Machinery
Gems and jewellery exports benefit from tariff cuts to 18 percent, while diamonds, platinum and coins receive zero-duty access in a USD 29 billion market. Home décor products, including furniture and furnishings, gain improved access to a USD 52 billion market.
Toy exports and machinery (excluding aircraft parts) also receive tariff reductions from 50 percent to 18 percent, opening opportunities in U.S. markets valued at USD 18 billion and USD 477 billion respectively.
Agriculture: Export Growth with Strong Safeguards
India maintains a trade surplus in agricultural trade with the U.S., and the agreement expands export opportunities without compromising domestic interests. Indian agricultural exports worth USD 1.36 billion will receive zero additional U.S. duty.
At the same time, highly sensitive sectors such as dairy, meat, poultry, cereals and millets remain fully protected through exemption and quota-based mechanisms, ensuring food security and farmer welfare.
Technology, Digital Trade and Supply Chains
The agreement strengthens cooperation in digital trade, semiconductors and high-technology sectors. Improved access to critical technology inputs supports India’s Digital India initiative, data centres and advanced manufacturing ecosystems.
Trade facilitation measures, recognition of conformity assessments and streamlined licensing procedures are expected to reduce compliance costs and integrate Indian firms more deeply into global value chains.
A Strategic Trade Milestone
Officials describe the agreement as a strategic milestone that balances market access with robust safeguards. By combining tariff reform with regulatory cooperation, the framework enhances exports while protecting domestic capacity and employment.
