GST 2.0 Latest News
- In its 56th meeting, the GST Council approved next-generation reforms, moving towards a simplified two-slab structure of 5% and 18%.Â
- A higher 40% demerit rate will apply only to super luxury, sin, and demerit goods, streamlining India’s eight-year-old indirect tax regime.
Aim of GST Reforms
- The Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council, during its 56th meeting, decided to revamp the tax structure into a primarily two-rate system.
- The GST reforms seek to reduce the tax burden on common people, cut slabs, ease working capital issues, and improve business efficiency through automated refunds and registrations.
- All rate changes, except for tobacco-related products, will take effect from September 22 (Navratri’s first day).
- Despite state concerns over revenue loss, the meeting concluded in a single day under Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman, with participation from ministers of 31 states and UTs.
Key Highlights of GST ReformsÂ
- PM Modi welcomed the GST Council’s decision to approve sweeping rate cuts and structural reforms, calling it a pro-people move benefiting farmers, MSMEs, middle-class families, women, and youth.
Focus on Common-Use Goods and Services
- The reforms bring major relief on daily-use items:
- Packaged food (juices, butter, cheese, coconut water, pasta, nuts) reduced to 5%.
- Medical items like oxygen, gauze, bandages, diagnostic kits lowered from 12% to 5%.
- Ultra-high temperature milk, paneer, pizza bread, chapati, khakra, and erasers made GST-free.
- Household goods (hair oil, soaps, shampoos, bicycles, kitchenware) brought down to 5%.
Tax Cuts on White Goods and Automobiles
- GST on ACs, TVs, dishwashers cut from 28% to 18%.
- Small cars (petrol up to 1200 cc/diesel up to 1500 cc) now taxed at 18%.
- Motorcycles under 350 cc and all auto parts also shifted to 18%.
- Luxury cars taxed at 40%; electric vehicles remain at 5%.
Insurance and Services
- Life and health insurance (including term, ULIP, endowment, and family floater policies) made GST-exempt.
- Gyms, salons, barbers, yoga services reduced from 18% to 5%.
Rationalisation of GST Slabs
- The Council replaced multiple slabs (5%, 12%, 18%, 28%) with a two-slab system (5% and 18%), plus a 40% demerit rate for sin goods (tobacco, pan masala, luxury cars).
- This corrects the inverted duty structure, simplifies compliance, and reduces disputes.
Financial Impact and States’ Concerns
- Some states flagged potential revenue losses of ₹80,000–1.5 lakh crore, but consensus prevailed.
- The Centre estimates the reforms will have a net fiscal implication of ₹48,000 crore on 2023–24 consumption data.
Sector-Specific Reforms
- Textiles: GST on manmade fibre cut from 18% to 5%, yarn from 12% to 5%.
- Fertilisers: Inputs like sulphuric acid, nitric acid, ammonia reduced from 18% to 5%.
Industry Response
- Industry bodies like CII hailed the reforms as pathbreaking, promising to pass benefits to consumers, reduce litigation, and enhance compliance.Â
- The reforms are expected to lift demand, ease compliance, and support job creation.
GST Reforms 2025: Key Rate Cuts Impact
- GST Rate Cuts for Common Man
- The latest GST reforms bring major relief to households and middle-class consumers.Â
- Everyday essentials such as hair oil, soaps, shampoos, toothpaste, toothbrushes, bicycles, kitchenware, and tableware have all been shifted to the 5% tax slab from 12–18% earlier.Â
- Popular food items like namkeens, sauces, pasta, instant noodles, chocolates, coffee, and butter have also seen their tax rate reduced to 5%.Â
- Significantly, cement, a key infrastructure input, has been reduced from 28% to 18%, lowering construction costs.
- Zero-Tax Relief for Essentials and Healthcare
- Products such as ultra-high temperature milk, paneer, rotis, chapatis, and parathas will now attract 0% GST, making everyday food items cheaper.Â
- In healthcare, 33 lifesaving medicines have been exempted from GST, while spectacles for vision correction will now attract just 5% instead of 28%.Â
- Insurance services also see a major shift, with life and health insurance policies moved to 0% from 18%, providing direct benefits to households.
- White Goods and Automobiles
- High-ticket consumer items such as air-conditioners, TVs, dishwashers, small cars, motorcycles (≤350cc), buses, trucks, and ambulances will now attract 18% GST instead of 28%.
- This will ease affordability for consumers and boosting demand in the automotive sector.Â
- Correcting Inverted Duty Structures
- The government has addressed long-pending anomalies in textiles and fertilisers.Â
- GST on manmade fibre has been reduced from 18% to 5%, and on manmade yarn from 12% to 5%, correcting distortions in the textile value chain.Â
- Similarly, fertiliser inputs like sulphuric acid, nitric acid, and ammonia have been cut from 18% to 5%, lowering costs for agriculture and farmers.
- Special 40% Slab for Sin and Luxury Goods
- A 40% GST rate will apply only to super-luxury and sin goods such as pan masala, cigarettes, gutka, zarda, unmanufactured tobacco, caffeinated beverages, private-use helicopters, airplanes, yachts, and large cars/motorcycles (>350cc).Â
- For now, pan masala and tobacco products will remain taxed at 28% plus cess, but they will move into the 40% slab once the Centre repays compensation loans borrowed for states.
GST 2.0 FAQs
Q1: What is GST 2.0?
Ans: GST 2.0 is the latest reform approved by the GST Council, simplifying slabs to 5% and 18%, with 40% for sin and luxury goods.
Q2: When will GST 2.0 reforms take effect?
Ans: Most rate changes will be effective from September 22, 2025, coinciding with Navratri, except for tobacco-related products which remain unchanged.
Q3: Which items became cheaper under GST 2.0?
Ans: Daily-use goods like soaps, shampoos, bicycles, food items, medical supplies, and even cement saw significant GST rate reductions, directly benefiting households.
Q4: How does GST 2.0 impact automobiles?
Ans: Small cars, motorcycles (≤350cc), and auto parts moved to 18% GST, while luxury cars face 40%. Electric vehicles continue with a 5% GST rate.
Q5: What is the financial impact of GST 2.0 reforms?
Ans: The Centre estimates a ₹48,000 crore net fiscal implication, while industries welcomed the reforms, promising to pass benefits to consumers and boost demand.