India and the European Union are closer than ever to clinching a landmark free trade agreement (FTA), with negotiators in New Delhi racing to finalise the last remaining issues.
Senior EU leaders are in the capital for high-level meetings, and officials on both sides say an “agreement in principle” could be announced any day. After nearly two decades of stalled attempts, this is the most decisive moment the talks have seen.
The biggest new development is the tariff package India has put on the table. The government is ready to slash import duties on European cars, a move that would have been politically unthinkable a few years ago.
Many high-end models currently face duties as high as 110 per cent. Under the proposal being discussed, some of those cars would see that fall to 40 per cent immediately. Over time, duties for a limited number of premium vehicles could slip towards 10 per cent. This alone changes the equation for European automakers and the Indian auto market.
Officials say several technical chapters are now closed, and only a small set of politically sensitive issues remain. The mood in the negotiating rooms, according to sources, has turned sharply optimistic. If leaders decide to seal the deal this week, it would mark one of India’s boldest market openings in decades.
SECTORS IN FOCUS
New Delhi wants better access to the European market for sectors like textiles, garments, gems, engineering goods and processed foods. Many of these industries lost tariff advantages when EU rules changed recently.
A free trade agreement offers a path to regain competitiveness in one of the world’s richest consumer markets.
For Europe, the motivation is as strategic as it is economic. The EU wants more dependable supply chains and long term partners in a world where politics and trade are becoming more unpredictable.
India brings scale, stability and strong growth. For Brussels, locking in a deeper economic relationship with India is an investment in future resilience.
WHAT TO EXPECT
Cheaper European cars will dominate headlines, but the wider impact will run deeper.
Indian exporters could gain smoother access to a high value market.
European investors may find India a more predictable and attractive destination for manufacturing and clean energy ventures. Consumers might see more choice and possibly better pricing on certain categories of imported goods.
But there will be friction at home. Industries that have long depended on high tariff protection may face sharper competition. Expect lobbying, calls for transition periods and demands for safeguards once the full schedules are released.
WHY IT HAS TAKEN SO LONG
The India-EU free trade talks have been stuck on the same set of issues for years.
The EU has pushed for easier access to India’s markets in cars, wines, spirits and certain regulated services.
India has insisted on mobility for its skilled workers and better treatment for labour-intensive exports.
The real challenges have been in the fine print. Rules of origin, labour standards, sanitary norms, data governance and other technical chapters have proved difficult to align.
These sections often determine who truly benefits from a trade deal, and they take time to negotiate.
This week stands out because both sides appear politically willing to close the remaining gaps.
WHY THIS FTA MATTERS
This deal is more than a tariff negotiation. It signals a shift in India’s trade posture.
Instead of limiting market access to protect domestic industries, India is betting that targeted openings can deliver bigger gains through investment, exports and global positioning.
In a world where supply chains are being rebuilt and alliances reshaped, a strong India-EU pact puts New Delhi at the centre of a new economic architecture.

























