New GST Rates from 22 September 2025: What You Should Know?

India is about to see one of its largest overhauls in the Goods & Services Tax (GST) system.

On 22 September 2025, a new simplified structure (“GST 2.0”) comes into effect. For ordinary people, businesses, and even services, this means changes in how much tax you pay on everyday items and luxuries. Here’s what the changes are, why they matter, and how they’ll affect you.

What’s Changing

  • The government has reduced the number of GST slabs. Instead of four main tax rates (5%, 12%, 18%, and 28%), the new structure (two-tier) mainly uses two rates:
  • 5% for essential goods and priority sectors—this is called the “merit/essential” rate.
  • 18% as the standard rate for most goods and services.
  • A higher rate, 40% GST, will now apply to “luxury” or “sin” goods—those considered non-essential and possibly harmful (like tobacco, pan masala, premium alcohol-type products, certain beverages, etc.).
  • Some items will be zero-rated (0% GST) or exempt, especially certain medicines, essential food items, and educational goods. These changes are meant to reduce the cost burden on low-income households.
  • The changes apply broadly: most goods and services will be moved into the new slabs (5%, 18%, 40%) from 22 September. There are a few exceptions: goods like cigarettes, chewing tobacco, gutkha, etc. will continue under the old rates (existing GST + compensation cess).

GST Rate Comparison: Old vs New (Effective 22 Sept 2025)

Sector / ItemsOld Rate (%)New Rate (%)
Daily Essentials (Soaps, Toothpaste, Shampoo, Utensils, Baby Products)12–185
Food Items (Butter, Ghee, Cheese, Namkeens, Indian Breads)125 / Nil
Healthcare & Medicines (33 Life-saving drugs, Thermometers, diagnostic kits, and Medical Devices)12–180–5
Insurance (Life & Health)18Nil
Automobiles (Small Cars, Two-wheelers ≤350 cc, and three-wheelers)2818
Electronics & Appliances (ACs, TVs >32″, Dishwashers, Monitors)2818
Agriculture (Tractors, Farm Machinery, Irrigation, Bio-pesticides)12–185
Education (Pencils, Notebooks, Maps, Charts, Erasers)5–12Nil
Luxury & Sin Goods (Tobacco, Pan Masala*, Aerated Drinks, Luxury Cars, Yachts)2840
Coal & Mining Products518
Paper & Textiles (Apparel > ₹2,500, Quilted Products > ₹2,500)1218

Which Items Get Cheaper, and Which Might Get Costlier?

Goods likely to get cheaper:

  • Daily essentials & FMCG items: things like soaps, shampoo, oral care products, biscuits, packaged foods, etc. Many of them shift from 18% or 12% down to 5%.
  • Medicines, health equipment, and diagnostic kits: many life-saving drugs and essential health products will become cheaper or even zero-rated.
  • Some food & agricultural products, such as certain pre-packaged foods, dried fruits, and items used in agriculture, etc., will have lower tax.

Items that may cost more or stay expensive:

  • Luxury and sin goods, such as cigarettes, gutkha, premium cars, high-end beverages, etc., now come under the 40% slab.
  • Goods that were earlier in the 28% + cess may face an overall higher effective tax (now through the 40% slab). For example, certain beverages, “sin” items, and other nonessentials.

The Reasons Behind This Reform

  1. To simplify the tax structure: fewer slabs mean less confusion for consumers, manufacturers, traders, and tax officials.
  2. To reduce cost of living: by lowering tax on essentials and medicines, the reform seeks to give relief to households, especially lower- and middle-income families.
  3. To boost demand and economic growth: cheaper daily-use items can stimulate consumption; cheaper manufacturing inputs can reduce costs for businesses.

Things to Be Aware Of

  1. Existing stock and labeling: For items already manufactured/in supply chains, there may be rules for updating labels or MRPs to reflect the new GST slabs.
  2. Exceptions: As mentioned, tobacco, cigarettes, gutkha, etc. are exceptions; they retain old rates & cess until certain compensation cess obligations are met.
  3. Services: Many services also fall under the standard rate of 18%. Some services may also become cheaper or remain the same, depending on which slab they are classified in.

Conclusion

The GST reform effective from 22 September 2025 is a turning point in India’s tax system. By cutting rates on essentials and keeping a higher rate for luxury and sin goods, the government aims to balance affordability with revenue. For ordinary households, daily groceries, medicines, and essential products will feel lighter on the pocket. For businesses, the simplified two-slab structure makes compliance easier and more predictable.

While luxury goods and non-essentials may pinch more, the overall shift moves India toward a simpler, fairer, and growth-friendly GST regime. Watching how it plays out in markets and Households will tell us just how successful this reform really is.