Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal has described the impending India-EU free trade agreement (FTA) as the “mother of all deals” in India’s trade history, positioning it as a transformative pact between two economic powerhouses with immense growth potential. Speaking on January 16, 2026, Goyal highlighted its superiority over prior FTAs with nations like the UAE, Australia, EFTA, UK, Oman, New Zealand, and Mauritius, emphasizing that India and the EU complement rather than compete, ensuring mutual benefits without compromising national interests.
Negotiations, relaunched in 2022 after a decade-long hiatus, have reached their final phase, with 20 of 24 chapters reportedly finalized and a high-profile signing ceremony slated for January 27 in New Delhi. European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen and European Council President António Costa are expected to join Prime Minister Narendra Modi for the event, marking the EU’s largest-ever trade pact despite excluding sensitive agriculture sectors like dairy and sugar to sidestep domestic pushback in India, where farming employs nearly 44% of the workforce.
Bilateral merchandise trade hit $136.53 billion in FY 2024-25, with India exporting $75.85 billion (petroleum, electronics, textiles, pharma) and importing $60.68 billion, making the EU India’s top goods partner accounting for 17% of exports. The FTA promises tariff cuts on over 90% of goods, boosting Indian sectors like textiles (facing 12-16% EU duties), autos, steel, and services (IT, telecom, business process outsourcing), while opening EU markets for aircraft, chemicals, and high-value services. Goyal credited PM Modi’s bold leadership and the confidence of 1.4 billion Indians for enabling aggressive negotiations, contrasting it with past governments’ hesitancy toward developed economies.
This deal arrives at a pivotal moment amid US tariff threats under President Trump and EU’s Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism impacting Indian steel, aluminum, and cement exports. It accelerates European investments in Indian manufacturing, renewables, digital infrastructure, and green tech, while diversifying supply chains for critical minerals and enhancing India’s competitiveness against rivals like Bangladesh and Vietnam with preferential EU access. Goyal also noted ongoing US bilateral talks progressing “at the right time,” underscoring India’s multi-aligned trade strategy. Ratification by the European Parliament and Indian stakeholders could unlock €4-5 billion in annual EU export gains, cementing a resilient partnership for the green and digital transitions.







