The Goods and Services Tax (GST) Council on Wednesday approved a new two-slab structure of 5% and 18%, bringing a major simplification to India’s indirect tax system. The new rates will take effect from September 22, replacing the earlier four-tier structure of 5%, 12%, 18% and 28%.
Customers at a grocery store, in Mumbai, Thursday, Sept. 4, 2025. The GST Council, in its meeting on Wednesday, simplified the GST from the current four slabs to a two-rate structure – 5 and 18 per cent. A special 40 per cent slab is also proposed for a select few items such as high-end cars, tobacco and cigarettes.(Representative image/PTI)
After day-long marathon meeting of the GST council in New Delhi, finance minister Nirmala Sitharaman said the reforms were carried out with a focus on the common man.
The finance minister said, “We have reduced the slabs, there shall be only two slabs, and we are also addressing issue of compensation cess, ease of living, simplifying registration, return filing, and refunds.”
“Every tax on the common man’s daily use items has gone through a rigorous review and in most cases the rates have come down drastically,” she added.
New two-slab structure
The 56th GST Council replaced the existing four-rate system to a simplified two-slab structure of 5% and 18%, with the exception of cigarettes, chewing tobacco and pan masala, which will remain under the higher category of 40%.
Under the revised structure, most personal-use and household items, including air conditioners and washing machines, will attract lower taxes as the government seeks to spur domestic consumption amid pressure from US tariffs.
What gets cheaper at 5% GST
Daily-use essentials, farm equipment, healthcare products and education supplies have largely moved to the 5% slab, giving relief to households and farmers.