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India-EU FTA: 14th round of trade talks to begin on October 6; aim to finalise deal before year-end – The Times of India
India and the European Union (EU) are gearing up for the 14th round of free trade agreement (FTA) negotiations in Brussels on Monday, as both sides aim to smoothen out the differences and finalise the deal by the end of the year.Senior officials from India and the 27-member bloc will hold a five-day round of talks, beginning from October 6. An official said the discussions will aim to resolve outstanding issues to help conclude the negotiations at the earliest.Commerce and industry minister Piyush Goyal recently expressed confidence that the two sides will sign the agreement soon. He is also expected to meet EU trade commissioner Maros Sefcovic in South Africa later this month to assess the progress, with December set as the deadline to wrap up the talks, PTI reported. The pact seeks to boost two-way commerce and investments.Last month, Sefcovic and European commission agriculture commissioner Christophe Hansen travelled to India to meet Goyal and review developments in the negotiations.The proposed trade pact, revived in June 2022 after an eight-year pause, seeks to boost trade and investment flows between India and the EU. Earlier talks were suspended in 2013 over disagreements on market access.The EU is pressing for steep tariff cuts on automobiles and medical devices, lower taxes on products such as wine, spirits, meat and poultry, and stronger intellectual property protections. For India, the deal could make its exports, including ready-made garments, pharmaceuticals, steel, petroleum products and electrical machinery, more competitive in the European market, according to PTI.Negotiations cover 23 policy areas, including goods and services trade, investment, sanitary and phytosanitary measures, technical barriers to trade, rules of origin, customs and trade facilitation, competition, trade remedies, government procurement, dispute settlement, intellectual property rights, geographical indications and sustainable development.The EU is currently India’s largest trading partner for goods. Bilateral trade reached $136.53 billion in 2024–25, with Indian exports worth $75.85 billion and imports worth $60.68 billion. The bloc accounts for around 17% of India’s total exports, while India makes up 9% of the EU’s global exports.In services, bilateral trade stood at $51.45 billion in 2023.
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Business
India, EU Commit To Provide Most-Favoured Nation Treatment For 5 Yrs, Shows Provisional FTA Text
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The Department of Commerce had announced that India will receive MFN treatment in committed services sectors for a period of five years from the Agreement’s entry into force

India announced a landmark FTA with the European Union in January.
Weeks after India and the European Union (EU) clinched a historic free trade agreement (FTA) after nearly two decades of negotiations, the Department of Commerce on Friday released the provisional text of the agreement on its social media handles, which underscored that both countries will accord each other the Most Favoured Nation (MFN) treatment for a period of five years.
“After the historic conclusion of the India-EU Free Trade Agreement a few weeks ago, the provisional text of the agreement is now being made available. It provides a first comprehensive look at the scope and ambition of the agreement. Tariff schedules will follow at a later stage,” said the Commerce Department.
After the historic conclusion of the 🇮🇳–🇪🇺 Free Trade Agreement a few weeks ago, the provisional text of the agreement is now being made available.It provides a first comprehensive look at the scope and ambition of the agreement. Tariff schedules will follow at a later stage.… pic.twitter.com/imeTldZ1Wy
— Dept of Commerce, GoI (@DoC_GoI) February 27, 2026
As per the text, each party shall accord the Most Favoured Nation treatment for a period of 5 years from the date of entry into force of this agreement. That treatment shall apply after five years only if both parties mutually agree in the review to be carried out.
Earlier, the Department of Commerce had announced that India will receive MFN treatment in committed services sectors for a period of five years from the Agreement’s entry into force, ensuring non-discriminatory market access.
The continuation of MFN benefits beyond five years will be subject to a review mechanism, including developments related to the entry, stay, and work rights of Indian students, as well as progress on social security arrangements with EU member states.
The provisional text of the India-EU FTA comprises 20 chapters, including trade in goods, customs and trade facilitation, trade remedies, professional services, financial services, digital trade, intellectual property, good regulatory practices, dispute settlement, code of conduct and more.
India-EU FTA
The EU-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA), concluded in January, was hailed by both sides as the “mother of all deals” as it opens up the vast market of 27 nations for India. It provides immediate duty-free access for over 70.4% of Indian tariff lines, covering more than 90.7% of its export value.
The European Union is India’s largest trading partner, with bilateral goods trade reaching $135 billion in FY 2023–24. Upon full implementation of the trade agreement, a staggering 99% of Indian exports will enter the EU without any duties offering a massive competitive edge to labour-intensive sectors such as textiles and leather.
A central element of the talks has been tariff reduction. India is expected to significantly lower import duties on European cars and wine, while the EU will ease access for Indian products such as textiles, garments, jewellery, chemicals, pharmaceuticals and electronics.
Talks on the India-EU FTA first began in 2007 but were suspended in 2013 over disagreements on tariffs, market access and regulatory standards. Negotiations were revived in 2022 and accelerated last year as global trade tensions intensified and both sides sought to diversify economic partnerships.
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February 27, 2026, 23:34 IST
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