Categories of returning travellers
| Category | Free allowance | Gold allowance |
|---|---|---|
| Indian resident (returning from short trip < 6 months) | ₹50,000 | 40g (men) / 20g (women) IF lived abroad 1+ year |
| Indian resident (returning from 6+ month stay) | ₹50,000 | 40g (men) / 20g (women) duty-free |
| NRI / OCI returning to India | ₹50,000 | 40g (men) / 20g (women) duty-free |
| Foreign tourist | ₹15,000 | Limited; declare anything substantial |
| Diplomatic / official passport | Separate rules per protocol | — |
Gold allowance in detail
Gold is the most-asked topic. Current 2026 rules:
- Men, Indian passport, 1+ year abroad: Up to 40g of gold ornaments duty-free. Bars / biscuits NOT covered.
- Women, Indian passport, 1+ year abroad: Up to 20g duty-free. Ornaments only.
- Less than 1 year abroad: Standard ₹50,000 allowance applies — gold value must fit within that.
- Excess gold (within 1 kg total per passenger): 12.5% duty + 3.5% additional cess. Total ~16%.
- Beyond 1 kg per passenger: Considered commercial. Confiscation risk + criminal proceedings.
- Gold bars / biscuits: NOT covered by the 40g/20g free allowance regardless of residency. Duty applies on full amount + cess.
- Mixed jewellery (gold + diamond + precious stones): Whole valuation counted; check with customs officer.
Electronics allowance
| Item | Allowance |
|---|---|
| Laptop (one) | Fully duty-free for any returning passenger (no value cap) |
| Phone (one new + one old) | Within ₹50,000 allowance |
| Tablet, camera, headphones, smartwatch | Within ₹50,000 allowance |
| Multiple identical phones (e.g. 5 iPhones) | Treated as commercial import. Duty + possible confiscation. |
| Drone | DGCA permit required for import. Customs requires declaration. |
| Satellite phone / radio transmitter | BANNED without prior licence. |
Alcohol limits
- Adults 21+: Up to 2 litres of alcohol per passenger (combination of wine, beer, spirits)
- Beyond 2 litres: 150% duty + cess on the excess
- Wine specifically: 2-litre limit shared with other alcohol; no separate wine allowance
- Beer: 2-litre limit; no separate beer allowance
- Duty-free shop purchase: Counts toward the 2-litre limit, but most airports cap your purchase at 2L
Cigarette / tobacco limits
- Cigarettes: 100 per passenger, duty-free
- Cigars: 25 per passenger
- Loose tobacco: 125g
- E-cigarettes / vapes / nicotine pods: BANNED in India under PECA Act 2019. Cannot be brought in any quantity. Confiscation + criminal proceedings if found.
Foreign currency declaration limits (RBI)
| Limit | Declaration |
|---|---|
| Foreign currency cash up to USD 5,000 equivalent | NIL — no declaration needed |
| Foreign currency cash + traveller cheques + bearer instruments up to USD 10,000 | NIL combined cap |
| Above USD 5,000 cash OR USD 10,000 combined | Mandatory declaration on Form CDF at customs |
| Indian rupees (cash) | Residents: ₹25,000 in/out per trip. NRIs: ₹25,000. |
| Gold beyond 40g/20g (men/women) or 1 kg total | Mandatory declaration |
Red Channel vs Green Channel
Every Indian airport has two channels at customs:
- GREEN CHANNEL: Walk through if you have NOTHING to declare and your goods are within free allowance limits.
- RED CHANNEL: Declare if you exceed limits OR carry restricted/banned items.
Wrongly using the Green Channel when you should use Red is a customs offence. Penalties:
- Confiscation of undeclared goods
- Fine: 100-150% of value of undeclared items
- For high-value items (gold, electronics commercial quantities): criminal proceedings under Customs Act 1962
- Re-entry / immigration consequences for repeat offenders
Duty calculation on excess
For goods exceeding your free allowance:
| Item category | Duty rate (approximate) |
|---|---|
| General consumer goods (electronics, clothing, accessories) | 35-40% (BCD + IGST + cess) |
| Gold ornaments (above 40g/20g, within 1 kg) | 12.5% + 3.5% cess = ~16% |
| Gold bars / biscuits | 12.5% + cess = ~16% (no free allowance) |
| Alcohol > 2L | 150% + cess |
| Cigarettes > 100 | 300% + cess |
| High-value luxury (designer bags, watches > ₹2 lakh) | ~38% on excess value |
What is BANNED from import to India
- Ivory, animal products (most exotic species)
- Narcotic substances
- Pirated / counterfeit goods
- Beef / beef products (banned in most states)
- Indian currency exceeding ₹25,000 (entering India)
- Live plants without phytosanitary certificate
- Drones without DGCA permit
- Satellite phones, radio transmitters (without licence)
- Weapons without arms licence
- E-cigarettes / vapes / nicotine pods (PECA Act 2019)
Frequently asked questions
What is the customs duty allowance when returning to India?
For Indian residents returning after a stay abroad: ₹50,000 free allowance (used clothes, personal effects exempt), gold up to 40g (men, after 1+ year abroad), gold up to 20g (women, same residency). Tourists (foreign nationals): ₹15,000 allowance. Duty on excess: 10% (or 35-40% for luxury items + cess). Always declare via Red Channel if you exceed these limits.
How much gold can I bring to India as NRI?
Indian-passport holder NRI returning after 1+ year abroad: up to 40g for men, 20g for women, duty-free (must have stayed at least 6 months abroad). Beyond this: 12.5% duty on gold ornaments (with 3.5% additional cess). Gold bars/biscuits: separate higher duty. Maximum gold allowed without filing: 1 kg per passenger.
How much electronics can I bring to India duty-free?
One laptop is fully duty-free for any returning passenger (no value cap). Other electronics fit within the ₹50,000 general allowance: one phone, one tablet, one camera, headphones. Above the allowance, 35-40% duty + cess applies. Items in commercial quantities (multiple identical phones) trigger commercial-import classification.
What is the Indian customs alcohol allowance?
Up to 2 litres of alcohol per passenger (combination of wine, beer, spirits) is duty-free for adults 21+. Above 2 litres, 150% duty + cess applies on the excess. Cigarettes: 100 cigarettes / 25 cigars / 125g tobacco free. Above: 300% duty. Alcohol limits do NOT change based on length of stay abroad.
Do I need to declare cash entering India?
Indian residents: foreign currency up to USD 5,000 (cash) or USD 10,000 (cash + traveler's cheques) does NOT need declaration. Above these limits, declaration on Form CDF is mandatory at the customs counter. Indian rupees in cash: residents can carry up to ₹25,000 in/out of India per RBI rules. NRIs / foreign nationals: similar USD 5K / 10K rules.
What is the Red Channel vs Green Channel at Indian customs?
GREEN CHANNEL: walk through if you have nothing to declare and your goods are within free allowance limits. RED CHANNEL: declare if you exceed limits or carry restricted items (gold beyond 40g/20g, foreign currency beyond USD 10K, electronics in commercial quantity, etc.). Wrongly using the Green Channel when you should use Red is a customs offence — penalties include confiscation + fine + criminal proceedings.
Can foreigners bring laptop to India duty-free?
Foreign tourists: one laptop included in ₹15,000 free allowance. If the laptop value exceeds ₹15,000 (which most do), you can carry it for personal use as "Carnet" / "Temporary Importation" — declare at arrival, get a re-export certificate, and take the laptop back when leaving. No duty in this case. Foreigners doing business: separate professional-equipment rules.
Which items are banned from import to India?
Banned: ivory, animal products (most exotic), narcotic substances, pirated/counterfeit goods, beef/beef products (most states), Indian currency exceeding ₹25,000 (entry into India), live plants without phytosanitary certificate, satellite phones, radio transmitters, drone (without DGCA permit), weapons without arms licence, e-cigarettes/vapes (PECA Act 2019). Some food items require declaration (meat, dairy, seeds).
Sources
- CBIC (Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs) — Baggage Rules 2016 + 2024 amendments
- Customs Act 1962 — Sections 77, 79 (baggage and detention)
- RBI Master Circular on Cash Carriage
- DGFT — Foreign Trade Policy import restrictions list
- Prohibition of Electronic Cigarettes Act (PECA) 2019
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