New Delhi: The government sharply raised import tariffs on gold and silver to 15 percent from 6 percent on Wednesday, as it looked to curb non-essential imports and conserve foreign exchange reserves strained by higher oil and fertiliser purchases amid the West Asia conflict.
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The hike follows a rare weekend appeal from Prime Minister Narendra Modi to forgo gold purchases alongside unnecessary foreign travel and conserve oil in order to help the domestic currency.
India is the world's second-largest consumer of precious metals, which has seen a rally in prices in recent months because of an unabated rise in demand, including for investment purposes. Gold is India's second-largest commodity import after crude oil, and rising purchases have added to foreign-exchange outflows, pressuring the rupee to record lows.
The higher tariffs are expected to push up domestic prices of gold and silver.
Effective May 13, import duty on gold and silver has been increased to 15 percent from 6 percent, and that on platinum has been raised to 15.4 per cent from 6.4 percent. Consequential changes have also been made to other items such as gold/silver dore, coins, findings, etc.
Gold and silver imports jumped 26.7 percent year-on-year to USD 102.5 billion in FY2025-26, with their share in total imports rising to 14 percent from 11.8 percent in 2024-25.
The duty hike came within days of Prime Minister Narendra Modi's clarion call for curbs on gold purchases, along with other austerity measures to reduce avoidable foreign exchange expenditure.
Gold imports in India, the world's second-biggest gold consumer after China, are driven by the jewellery industry demand. Such imports involve a substantial outflow of foreign exchange.
Meanwhile, the rupee touched its lowest-ever closing level of 95.71 against the US dollar on Wednesday.
The rupee hit a record low of 95.75 against the US dollar on Tuesday, but recovered some lost ground on Wednesday after the gold import duty was announced.
"During periods of external stress, measured moderation of discretionary imports may contribute significantly to overall macro-economic stability and prudent external-sector management," a source said, explaining the rationale behind the duty hike.
Through the duty hikes carried out on Wednesday, basic customs duty on gold has been doubled to 10 percent, while agriculture infrastructure and development cess (AIDC) has been hiked fivefold from 1 percent to 5 per cent. This takes the effective import duty on gold and silver to 15 percent.
Besides, importers have to pay a 3 percent Integrated GST (IGST), which takes the total duty to 18.45 percent from 9.18 percent earlier.
All India Gems and Jewellery Council (GJC) Chairman Rajesh Rokde said the import duty hike will make gold costlier by around Rs 27,000 per 10 grams.
"What the industry fears is that this will give rise to the grey market... smuggling is likely to grow, setting up a parallel economy in the country," Rokde said.
Jewellery retailer Senco Gold and Diamonds MD and CEO Suvankar Sen said he expects the gold import duty to remain high till the West Asia crisis subsides.
"So maybe for around one year, it shall stay at these levels. The volumes might get impacted by 10-15 percent, but value-wise, it will remain at a higher level. Consumers will buy lighter-weight jewellery," he added.
Government sources said the import duty increase is a "preventive measure" amid "extraordinary external conditions" and is intended to moderate avoidable import demand and ease pressure on the external account.
The measure is neither prohibitory nor anti-consumer in nature, a source said.
"Rather than resorting to quantitative restrictions or more severe import-management tools, the approach relies on moderate price-based disincentives that preserve market flexibility and consumer choice," another source said.
The increase in customs duty on precious metals is intended to moderate avoidable import demand and ease pressure on the external account, sources said, adding that it is a "calibrated and proportionate intervention" designed to encourage moderation in non-essential imports at a time when external vulnerabilities remain elevated.
Sources said the ongoing war in West Asia is expected to balloon India's import bill, and the government wants to prioritise forex expenditure towards essential imports like crude oil, fertilisers, industrial raw materials and capital goods that directly support economic activity and food security.
The war in West Asia and the effective blockade of the Strait of Hormuz have raised prices of crude oil, food, and fertiliser imports. Brent crude prices have jumped from about USD 73/ barrel level prevailing before the war started on February 28 to around USD 107/barrel. It had touched a 4-year high of USD 126/barrel on April 30.
India imports 87 percent of its crude requirement, of which 46 percent transits through or near the Strait of Hormuz, where the seven-day moving average tanker traffic has fallen to five vessels. 60 percent of India's LPG is imported, over 90 percent via the Gulf. Besides, 38 percent of annual remittances originate in Gulf countries.
India's gold imports surged more than 24 percent to an all-time high of USD 71.98 billion in 2025-26. In volume terms, however, the shipments dipped 4.76 percent to 721.03 tonnes in 2025-26.
The prices of gold have risen from USD 76,617.48/KG in FY25 to USD 99,825.38/KG in FY26.
In the national capital, the price of gold increased by Rs 1,500, or nearly 1 percent, to Rs 1,56,800 per 10 grams on Tuesday from Monday's closing level of Rs 1,55,300 per 10 grams. Silver prices also advanced by Rs 12,000, or 4.53 percent, to Rs 2,77,000 per kg.
In the international market, spot gold slipped USD 42.33, or 1 percent, to USD 4,692.64 per ounce while silver fell 3.04 percent to USD 83.49 per ounce.
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Chief Economic Advisor V Anantha Nageswaran on Tuesday said the ongoing West Asia crisis is a "live balance of payments (BoP) stress test", with direct consequences for inflation, the current account, and the exchange rate. BoP is the difference between inflows into and outflows of foreign exchange from the country.
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