What is Advance Authorisation scheme?
Fri May 15 2026
The Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) imposed a limit of 100 kg on gold imports under the Advance Authorisation scheme, which allows jewellery exporters to import raw or input materials at zero duty.
The move comes a day after increasing the import duty on precious metals.
The government has tightened the conditions for issuing and monitoring advance authorisation for the import of gold.
Earlier, there was no limit on gold imports under the scheme.
The scheme allows the duty-free import of inputs that are incorporated into an export product.
In addition to any inputs, packaging material, fuel, oil, and catalyst that are consumed or utilised in the process of production of export product, are also allowed.
On May 13, the government hiked the import duty on gold and silver to 15 per cent from 6 per cent to discourage purchase and trim non-essential imports amid the West Asia crisis.
The import duty on platinum has been raised to 15.4 per cent from 6.4 per cent.
Consequential changes have also been made to other items such as gold/silver dore, coins, findings, etc.
Gold and silver imports jumped 26.7 per cent year-on-year to $102.5 billion in FY2025-26, with their share in total imports rising to 14 per cent from 11.8 per cent in 2024-25.
The duty hike came within days of Prime Minister Narendra Modis call for curbs on gold purchases, along with other austerity measures to reduce avoidable foreign exchange expenditure.
India is the worlds second-biggest gold consumer after China.
Advance Authorisation scheme
Directorate General of Foreign Trade (DGFT) implements the Advance Authorisation scheme under the Foreign Trade Policy, 2023.
It allows duty-free import of inputs for export purposes.
The eligibility of inputs is determined by Sector-specific Norms Committees based on input-output norms.
In addition to any inputs, packaging material, fuel, oil, catalyst which is consumed/utilised in the process of production of export product, is also be allowed.
Advance Authorisation is a WTO-compliant duty exemption scheme.
Under the Advance Authorisation scheme, all import duties on inputs, such as basic customs duty, Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST), cess, anti-dumping duty, etc, are exempted.
Also, local procurement of inputs in place of direct imports is allowed under the scheme wherein IGST for input supplies are refunded.
The required quantity of inputs is calculated based on Standard Input Output Norms (SION).
All manufacturer exporters and merchant exporters tied to supporting manufacturers are eligible to avail of advance authorisation.
The inputs need to be imported within the validity of advance authorisation, which is usually 12 months from the
date of issue of advance authorisation.
The exports are to be completed usually within 18 months from the date of issue of advance authorisation.
Proof of exports needs to be submitted to regional authorities of DGFT along with proof of realised payment in foreign currency after the completion of exports.
Source: https://www.manoramayearbook.in/