India’s indirect tax framework for cigarettes and related products is entering a new phase. With a notification issued on Dec 31st, 2025, the centre announced a revised duty structure that came into force from Feb 1st, 2026, marking one of the most significant shifts in tobacco taxation in recent years.
While the GOI has positioned the move as a structural replacement rather than a blanket tax hike, early estimates indicate a meaningful rise in tax incidence, especially for longer cigarette categories. For manufacturers, exporters, and market participants, the changes will require recalibration across pricing, margins, and supply planning.
What did the earlier tax regime look like?
Until now, cigarettes were taxed under a layered system that combined Goods and Services Tax (GST) with multiple cesses. The structure included:
- 28% GST
- GST compensation cess, split into
- a specific levy ranging from ₹2,076 to ₹4,170 per 1,000 sticks, and
- an ad valorem cess of 5% to 36%, depending on cigarette length and retail price
- a specific levy ranging from ₹2,076 to ₹4,170 per 1,000 sticks, and
- National Calamity Contingent Duty (NCCD) of ₹510 to ₹850 per 1,000 sticks
Together, these levies translated into a total tax burden of roughly 50% to 60% of the maximum retail price (MRP). Longer cigarettes faced a higher absolute levy but benefited from relatively better pricing flexibility.
What changes from February 2026?
Under the newly notified framework, the government has removed the GST compensation cess and replaced it with a fresh excise duty, while retaining other statutory levies unless specifically amended.
The revised structure includes:
- GST at 40%
- New excise duty ranging from ₹2,050 to ₹8,500 per 1,000 sticks
- NCCD remaining unchanged at current rates
Although described as a replacement, the upper end of the new excise duty exceeds the earlier combined cess, particularly for longer cigarette formats. This effectively pushes up the overall tax incidence across categories.
Why does cigarette length now matter even more?
Cigarette taxation in India has long been sensitive to stick length, and the revised framework sharpens that distinction further.
- Longer cigarettes will face significantly higher excise duties in absolute rupee terms.
- Shorter cigarettes, while still taxed less per unit, will see a steeper proportional increase due to the higher uniform GST rate.
In practical terms, the structure tightens pressure across the board, but the largest monetary impact is expected in premium and longer-length segments.
Old vs new: What the numbers indicate?
Based on notified ranges and brokerage estimates, the shift looks like this:
| Metric | Earlier structure | New structure (estimated) |
| GST rate | 28% | 40% |
| Fixed levy per 1,000 sticks* | ₹2,586 – ₹5,020 | ₹2,660 – ₹9,350 |
| Total tax as % of MRP | ~50% – 60% | ~65% – 80% |
| Increase in tax per stick | — | ~20% – 40% |
*Includes cess/excise plus NCCD
The data suggests that the new framework materially raises the effective tax load, even though one component (compensation cess) has been formally removed.
Expected impact on retail prices
Market assessments indicate that tax per stick could rise by 20% to 40%, depending on length and price band. To offset this fully, companies may need to raise prices by approximately 18% to 35%.
A brokerage assessment cited by CNBC-TV18 noted that ITC may need to increase prices by at least 15%, with sharper hikes possible in certain categories.
For illustration:
- A ₹100 pack of 10 regular-size cigarettes (68–70 mm) could see a price increase of ₹15–₹25, pushing the MRP to ₹115–₹125
- This implies a per-stick increase of ₹1.5–₹2.5, subject to how much of the tax burden companies choose to absorb
Brokerages have cautioned that without price hikes, earnings before interest and taxes (EBIT) could fall sharply, while higher prices may weigh on volumes, especially in mass-market segments.
What does this mean for manufacturers and exporters?
For established players with diversified portfolios and strong operational controls, the change reinforces the need for precision in cost management, compliance, and market positioning.
Companies operating across multiple geographies, such as Elitecon International, which serves both domestic and export markets, are likely to experience the shift differently across regions. Export-focused operations, in particular, tend to balance domestic regulatory changes with international demand patterns, currency dynamics, and destination-market regulations.
As the excise framework evolves, adaptability rather than scale alone will determine resilience.
The road ahead
The revised excise duty structure reflects the government’s broader intent to simplify taxation while maintaining revenue buoyancy. For the industry, however, the impact is unambiguous: higher effective taxes, tighter margins, and a renewed emphasis on pricing discipline.
With the changes coming into effect from February 1, 2026, the coming months will be critical as companies reassess product mix, price ladders, and long-term strategies in a more demanding fiscal environment.
For stakeholders across manufacturing, exports, and distribution, the message is clear, the rules have changed, and preparation will matter as much as compliance.
