GST in 2025: The year India’s indirect tax system got its biggest reset since 2017

  • 26 Dec 2025
  • Team Edukating
  • 479

For Prime Minister Narendra Modi, the Independence Day address has increasingly become a platform for signalling big economic shifts. In 2025, that tradition continued, with the Prime Minister announcing the government’s intent to roll out next-generation Goods and Services Tax (GST) reforms—positioned as a Diwali gift to citizens and businesses alike.

What followed was one of the most consequential overhauls of India’s indirect tax regime since GST was introduced in 2017.

Within weeks of the August 15 announcement, the finance ministry moved swiftly. Finance Minister Nirmala Sitharaman unveiled the details on September 3 and set September 22 as the implementation date for the largest GST rate rationalisation exercise so far—well ahead of what many in industry had expected.

From Four Slabs to Two

At the heart of GST 2.0 was a decisive simplification of rates. The earlier four-slab structure—5%, 12%, 18% and 28%—was dismantled. In its place came a leaner framework: a 5% merit rate, an 18% standard rate, and a single 40% rate reserved for luxury and sin goods.

The reclassification triggered widespread changes across product categories. Several essential and mass-consumption items—such as butter, ghee, biscuits, pasta and other daily-use goods—were shifted to the 5% slab from 12% or 18%, easing the tax burden on households.

Standard goods, including cement and paints, were brought under the 18% bracket, where most services already sat. The real consumer-facing impact, however, came from changes in the automobile and consumer durable segments.

Basic two-wheelers and four-wheelers were moved from the punitive 28% plus cess regime to 18%, significantly improving affordability. Large appliances such as televisions, refrigerators and washing machines also saw their GST rates cut from 28% to 18%.

Narrowing the Sin Goods List

The GST Council also cleaned up the list of luxury, sin and demerit goods, sharply narrowing its scope. Items such as aerated beverages and luxury cars were retained in this category, but with a simplified tax structure.

Instead of a 28% GST plus a cess of up to 12%, these goods now attract a flat 40% GST—keeping the overall tax incidence unchanged while reducing complexity. The same flat rate now applies to luxury cars.

Relief on Medicines and Insurance

One of the most socially impactful elements of the reform came in healthcare-related categories. A wide range of medicines were moved from the 12% slab to either zero-rated or nil GST, lowering prices for consumers.

Source : https://www.cnbctv18.com/economy/gst-reforms-2025-year-in-review-rate-cuts-simplification-consumption-boost-19800964.htm

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