The Central Government has sharply increased the import duty on gold and silver to 15 percent in a major move aimed at reducing pressure on India’s foreign exchange reserves. The revised duty structure, which came into effect from today, replaces the earlier 6 percent import duty fixed in 2024. Officials stated that the decision was taken to discourage excessive imports of precious metals and reduce the outflow of foreign currency. Prime Minister Narendra Modi had earlier urged citizens to reduce gold purchases in order to protect the country’s forex reserves, and economists now view the tax hike as a stronger regulatory step toward that goal. The increase is expected to directly impact jewellery prices, silver products, and investment instruments such as Gold ETFs and Silver ETFs across the domestic market. Industry experts believe consumers will now face significantly higher costs while purchasing gold ornaments and investment-grade bullion products.
Affected Sectors:
Jewellery retailers, gold importers, silver traders, bullion dealers, Gold ETF investors, Silver ETF investors, small jewellery businesses, wedding jewellery market.
Duty Breakdown:
Total import duty increased to 15%, basic customs duty fixed at 10%, Agriculture Infrastructure and Development Cess fixed at 5%, previous import duty was 6% in 2024.
Immediate Market Impact:
Rise in gold jewellery prices, increase in silver rates, higher investment costs, ETF value appreciation, reduced affordability for consumers, slowdown expected in jewellery sales.
Government Intent and Reactions:
Control foreign exchange outflow, reduce dependence on imported gold, strengthen domestic savings, manage economic pressure, concerns raised over increase in gold smuggling, demand for stricter enforcement measures.
Additional Developments:
Investor interest in gold remains strong despite market fluctuations, wedding season demand may weaken, bullion market volatility expected, traders monitoring consumer response closely.
Trade associations and market analysts have urged the government to strengthen customs surveillance and border monitoring, warning that the steep increase in import duties could lead to a renewed rise in illegal gold and silver smuggling activities.
