Customs Baggage Rules 2026: India's New â¹75,000 Duty-Free Allowance Explained
The Customs Baggage Rules 2026, notified via Notification No. 14/2026-Customs (N.T.) dated February 1, 2026, raise the duty-free baggage allowance from â¹50,000 to â¹75,000 for Indian residents arriving by air or sea. A flat 10% customs duty applies on goods exceeding this limit from April 1, 2026, replacing the earlier 20% rate. India's baggage rules hadn't changed in a decade â these are the first major update since 2016.
What are the new duty-free limits under Baggage Rules 2026?
Indian residents, OCI cardholders, and non-tourist visa holders arriving by air or sea can now bring personal goods worth up to â¹75,000 without paying any customs duty. The previous limit was â¹50,000, unchanged since the Baggage Rules 2016.
For foreign tourists, the duty-free limit has gone up from â¹15,000 to â¹25,000. Airline crew members get a bump to â¹2,500.
Used personal effects (worn clothes, toiletries, the phone in your pocket) remain fully exempt with no value cap. The â¹75,000 limit applies only to goods beyond your personal effects â things you're bringing as gifts or new purchases.
Land arrivals get no general duty-free allowance for new goods. If you're crossing the border by road (say, at Attari or Petrapole), only used personal effects are exempt.
Each passenger's â¹75,000 is individual. A family of four cannot combine their limits into a â¹3 lakh allowance for a single item.
What are the new gold jewellery import rules?
The 2026 rules carry forward the same weight-based limits for duty-free gold jewellery, but they trip people up at airports regularly.
Women who have lived abroad for more than one year can bring up to 40 grams of gold jewellery duty-free. Men who have been abroad for more than one year can bring up to 20 grams. Passengers who have been abroad for less than one year get no special jewellery allowance â any jewellery they carry counts toward the general â¹75,000 duty-free limit.
These limits are weight-based, not value-based. A 20g chain worth â¹1.5 lakh is treated the same as a 20g chain worth â¹80,000, as long as you stay within the gram limit.
Gold bars, coins, and unstudded gold are not covered under the jewellery allowance. These fall under separate rules and attract duty.
Carry receipts or proof of purchase for any jewellery you're bringing in. Customs officers at major airports (especially Delhi, Mumbai, and Chennai) regularly weigh gold at the green channel exit. Having receipts saves time and avoids arguments at the counter.
What is the new flat 10% duty on personal imports?
From April 1, 2026, any dutiable goods beyond the â¹75,000 limit attract a flat 10% customs duty, down from 20% under the old rules.
Here's how the calculation works. Say you're arriving with goods worth â¹1,25,000. The first â¹75,000 is exempt. You pay 10% duty on the remaining â¹50,000, which comes to â¹5,000.
Baggage articles have been exempted from Social Welfare Surcharge (SWS) since Notification No. 07/2025-Customs dated February 1, 2025. So the effective rate on excess baggage is a flat 10%, not 10% plus surcharges.
This rate cut applies only if you declare your goods through the Red Channel. Undeclared goods caught during inspection can attract penalties on top of the duty, and the officer has discretion to confiscate items.
Items excluded from the duty-free concession regardless of value:
- Tobacco and cigarettes beyond personal use quantities
- Alcohol beyond 2 litres
- Firearms and ammunition beyond prescribed limits
- Televisions
- Gold bars and unstudded precious metals
These have separate duty schedules.
What is the mandatory digital customs declaration?
The 2026 rules replace the old CBD-I and CBD-II paper forms with a single digital declaration through the Air Suvidha platform.
Under Notification No. 15/2026-Customs (N.T.) and the Customs Baggage (Declaration and Processing) Regulations 2026, every international arrival files one digital form before landing. You fill it out online or through the Air Suvidha app before or during your flight. If your declared value is within the duty-free limit and nothing is flagged, you walk through the green channel.
Digital records make it easier for customs to cross-reference repeat travellers and flag suspicious declarations. For frequent business travellers, keeping declarations clean and consistent matters more now than it did with paper forms. Implementation guidelines are in CBIC Circular No. 04/2026-Customs dated February 1, 2026.
Can I bring a laptop duty-free?
Yes. Under the Baggage Rules 2026, passengers aged 18 and above can bring one new laptop duty-free. The laptop's value does not count against your â¹75,000 limit â so you could bring a laptop worth â¹80,000 and still have your full â¹75,000 for other goods. The earlier rules had no specific laptop exemption.
A second laptop falls under the general baggage allowance and counts toward the â¹75,000 limit (or attracts 10% duty if you've exceeded it).
What about returning NRIs transferring residence to India?
The 2026 rules revamp the Transfer of Residence (TR) scheme. Duty-free limits for personal and household effects now depend on how long you lived outside India:
| Duration abroad | Duty-free allowance |
|---|---|
| More than 2 years | â¹7.5 lakh |
| 1 to 2 years | â¹3 lakh |
| Less than 1 year | â¹1.5 lakh |
The previous flat limit was â¹5 lakh for anyone abroad 2+ years.
To qualify: you must have resided outside India for at least the minimum period, spent no more than 180 days in India over the preceding two years, not claimed TR concession in the last three years, and the goods must be for personal use.
Unaccompanied baggage must arrive within six months of landing, or up to two months before arrival.
How do the old and new baggage rules compare?
All figures from Notification No. 14/2026-Customs (N.T.) and the Baggage Rules 2016.
| Category | Baggage Rules 2016 | Baggage Rules 2026 |
|---|---|---|
| Duty-free limit (air/sea, Indian residents) | â¹50,000 | â¹75,000 |
| Duty-free limit (foreign tourists) | â¹15,000 | â¹25,000 |
| Airline crew allowance | â¹1,500 | â¹2,500 |
| Gold jewellery (women, 1+ year abroad) | 40g | 40g (unchanged) |
| Gold jewellery (men, 1+ year abroad) | 20g | 20g (unchanged) |
| Passengers abroad < 1 year | No separate jewellery allowance | No separate jewellery allowance |
| Customs duty rate on excess goods | 20% | 10% (from April 1, 2026) |
| Laptop duty-free | No specific provision | 1 new laptop per passenger (18+) |
| Transfer of Residence (2+ years abroad) | â¹5 lakh | â¹7.5 lakh |
| Customs declaration | Paper forms (CBD-I, CBD-II) | Single digital form via Air Suvidha |
What are the most common questions about India's new baggage rules?
What is the duty-free allowance for Indians flying home in 2026?
Indian residents, OCI cardholders, and non-tourist visa holders arriving by air or sea can bring personal goods worth up to â¹75,000 without customs duty, up from â¹50,000. Used personal effects are exempt separately and do not count toward this limit.
How much gold jewellery can I bring to India without paying duty?
The weight-based allowance applies only to passengers abroad for more than one year: 40g for women, 20g for men. Passengers abroad less than one year get no separate jewellery allowance â their jewellery counts toward the general â¹75,000 limit. Gold bars, coins, and unstudded gold attract duty separately.
What is the customs duty rate on personal goods exceeding the duty-free limit?
From April 1, 2026, dutiable goods beyond the â¹75,000 limit attract a flat 10% customs duty, down from 20% under the previous rules. Social Welfare Surcharge is exempted for baggage articles. The 10% rate applies only when goods are properly declared through the Red Channel at the airport.
Can I bring a new laptop to India without paying duty?
Yes. One new laptop per passenger (aged 18+) is allowed duty-free, and its value does not count against the â¹75,000 limit.
Can family members combine their duty-free allowances?
No. Each passenger's â¹75,000 is individual and cannot be pooled. A family of four cannot combine allowances for a single item worth â¹3 lakh.
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