
New Delhi, February 15 According to an official, the India-UK free trade agreement, signed in July last year, is likely to be implemented in April 2026.
On July 24, 2025, India and the UK signed the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), under which 99 per cent of Indian exports will enter the British market at zero duty, while tariffs on British products such as cars and whisky will be reduced in India.
"We are expecting the agreement to be implemented from April this year," the government official said.
The two countries have also signed the Double Contributions Convention (DCC) agreement to ensure that temporary workers will not have to duplicate social levies in either country.
The official said that both agreements are likely to be implemented in parallel.
The agreement needs approval from the UK parliament before it can be implemented.
In India, the Union cabinet approves such agreements. After it gets approved by the British parliament, it will be implemented on a mutually agreed date.
The House of Commons in the UK held a debate on the India-UK CETA earlier this week.
Chris Bryant, Minister of State in the Department for Business and Trade, responded on behalf of the Labour government to emphasize that CETA was a momentous achievement, which goes "far beyond India's precedent in opening the door for UK businesses".
The British Parliament is ratifying the agreement, including debates across both Houses (House of Commons and House of Lords) and reviews by relevant committees on all aspects of the agreement, before it can be implemented in the coming months.
CETA aims to double the USD 56 billion trade between the world's fifth and sixth largest economies by 2030.
While India has opened its market to various consumer goods, including chocolates, biscuits, and cosmetics, it will gain greater access to export products such as textiles, footwear, gems and jewellery, sports goods, and toys.
Under the agreement, which has been termed CETA, tariffs on Scotch whisky will be reduced from 150 per cent to 75 per cent immediately, and further lowered to 40 per cent by 2035.
On automobiles, India will reduce import duties to 10 per cent over five years, down from the current rate of up to 110 per cent, under a gradually liberalised quota system.
In return, Indian manufacturers will gain access to the UK market for electric and hybrid vehicles within a quota framework.

