The Indian government has announced higher levies on tobacco products and pan masala, with the measures coming into force from 1 February 2026. A late-night notification from the finance ministry replaces the current GST compensation cess on these goods with a combination of higher excise duties and targeted cesses, the ministry said on Wednesday.
India tobacco tax hike — What changes from Feb 1
The notification states that cigarettes, pan masala, chewing tobacco and similar products will be subject to a GST-equivalent rate of 40%. Under the GST framework, beedis will continue to attract an 18% rate. In addition to GST, the government will levy a new health cess and a national security cess on pan masala products. Tobacco and tobacco-related products will attract an additional excise duty.
The move replaces the existing GST compensation cess structure, which had been applied at varying rates on so-called sin goods. The two bills that permit these new levies were approved by Parliament in December 2025, and the ministry’s notification provides the operational details and the effective date.
The finance ministry also issued the Chewing Tobacco, Zarda, Flavoured Tobacco and Gutkha Packing Machines (Capacity Determination and Duty Collection) Rules, 2026. These rules set out procedures to determine production capacity and to collect duty from manufacturers using packing machines for chewing tobacco, zarda and gutkha, strengthening compliance and enforcement mechanisms.
Officials say the combined structure of higher excise duties and additional cesses is designed both to raise revenue and to address public-health concerns linked to pan masala and tobacco consumption. By shifting from a compensatory GST cess to excise and cesses, the government aims to create a clearer tax structure for these products.
Industry groups are expected to assess the immediate financial impact on producers and retailers. Higher levies normally feed through to consumer prices, which could reduce demand over time, particularly for lower-income buyers. At the same time, manufacturers will need to adapt to the new packing-machine rules and the methodology for capacity determination and duty remittance.
Tax analysts note that such fiscal measures can strengthen central revenues, particularly where administration and enforcement are improved. The packing-machine rules, by linking capacity assessment to duty collection, aim to plug gaps in compliance that have previously permitted under-reporting.
Public-health advocates have long called for stricter taxation and regulation of tobacco and pan masala to curb consumption and the related disease burden. The newly introduced health and national security cesses on pan masala reflect that policy orientation, while the additional excise duty on tobacco products aligns taxation more closely with public-health objectives.
The changes will be monitored closely by fiscal authorities, industry representatives and public-health bodies as the 1 February deadline approaches. The finance ministry’s notification provides the legal framework for collection and enforcement; detailed operational guidance and implementation will follow as officials and manufacturers prepare for the new regime.
Key Takeaways:
- India tobacco tax hike takes effect 1 February 2026, replacing the GST compensation cess with higher excise duties and new cesses.
- Cigarettes, pan masala and similar products will attract a 40% GST-equivalent rate; beedis will remain at 18% under the GST framework.
- New health and national security cesses will apply to pan masala while additional excise duty targets tobacco products; rules on packing-machine capacity aim to improve duty collection.

















