India and New Zealand have signed a landmark Free Trade Agreement that will grant duty-free access to 70 per cent of Indian goods entering the New Zealand market, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal announced following the signing. The deal — confirmed over the weekend after the signing ceremony that both countries had flagged as imminent — covers textiles, engineering goods, pharmaceuticals, and agricultural products, providing Indian exporters with significantly improved market access in what is a growing consumption economy with close cultural and commercial ties to the Indian diaspora.
Goyal described the FTA as a major milestone in India’s trade diversification strategy — the latest in a sequence of FTA conclusions that includes the recently implemented India-UK agreement and the India-UAE Comprehensive Economic Partnership Agreement. With West Asia exports severely disrupted by the Hormuz crisis and US market access complicated by tariff uncertainty, the New Zealand deal adds a stable, tariff-reduced market for Indian manufactured goods at a commercially valuable moment. New Zealand’s duty-free commitment covering 70 per cent of Indian goods by value is a meaningful market opening for a country that has historically maintained moderately protective tariffs on manufactured imports.
Key Sectoral Gains for India
For India’s textiles sector — which recorded a 2.2 per cent decline in FY26 exports to USD 35.8 billion due to softer global demand — the New Zealand FTA provides a fresh market opening at tariff rates that improve competitiveness against Bangladesh, Vietnam, and other competitors. The pharmaceutical chapter, where India is already a dominant supplier of generic medicines globally, streamlines regulatory recognition and market access processes that have been a non-tariff barrier for Indian pharma exporters. Engineering goods — which grew 4.86 per cent to USD 122.43 billion in FY26 — will benefit from reduced import duties that improve India’s price competitiveness against Chinese, Korean, and European suppliers in the New Zealand procurement market.
The services chapter, including professional mobility provisions for Indian IT professionals, aligns with New Zealand’s significant skill shortages in technology and healthcare sectors and India’s surplus of internationally competitive service sector talent. The FTA’s coverage of the dairy sector — politically the most sensitive bilateral issue — is structured with phased tariff reductions on specific product categories rather than immediate full liberalisation, protecting India’s 150 million dairy farmers from sudden competitive disruption while giving New Zealand’s dairy industry a credible medium-term market access pathway.






