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Exporters, CFOs and supply-chain directors operating in India face a consequential structural choice: set up manufacturing inside a Special Economic Zone (SEZ) to access duty-free inputs and export incentives, or operate in the Domestic Tariff Area (DTA) and avoid the customs re-characterisation risk that hits every time goods move from an SEZ into the domestic market. The April 2026 CBIC measures, including conditional concessional customs duty relief and a 30% DTA-sales cap for eligible SEZ units, have materially changed the cost calculus for this decision. This guide provides a dimension-by-dimension SEZ vs DTA India 2026 comparison covering tax, customs, IGST, compliance and litigation risk, then delivers a concrete decision framework so you can choose with confidence before engaging counsel.
At its simplest, an SEZ is a demarcated customs-free enclave governed by the Special Economic Zones Act, 2005 and the SEZ Rules, 2006. A DTA unit is any ordinary domestic factory or company operating under the standard Customs Act, GST law and Income Tax Act regime. The difference is not merely administrative. Under Section 30 of the SEZ Act, any goods removed from an SEZ to the DTA are treated as imports into India, attracting applicable customs duties including Basic Customs Duty (BCD), Social Welfare Surcharge (SWS), Integrated Goods and Services Tax (IGST) and applicable cesses. That single statutory rule shapes every downstream tax and cashflow consequence discussed below.
The April 1, 2026 policy package, announced via a PIB press release and implemented through CBIC customs notifications, introduced a one-time concessional duty route for eligible SEZ manufacturers selling into the DTA, subject to a cap of 30% of the highest annual FOB value of exports in any of the three immediately preceding financial years. Industry observers expect this measure to benefit approximately 1,200 SEZ units, though the conditions, documentation requirements and sector-specific tariff lines must be verified before any individual unit relies on the concession.
An SEZ unit is a business entity authorised by the Development Commissioner to operate within a notified Special Economic Zone under the SEZ Act, 2005 and the SEZ Rules, 2006. The unit must comply with zone-specific approvals, export obligations, bonding requirements and periodic performance reviews. Every import of goods into the SEZ is treated as an export from India (duty-free), and every clearance out of the SEZ into the DTA is treated as an import back into India, a legal fiction with very real cost implications.
The SEZ framework was designed to make India’s export manufacturing globally competitive. The key incentives include:
Choose the SEZ route when your business is predominantly export-oriented, typically with 70% or more of revenue from exports, and your planned domestic sales are limited enough to stay within any applicable DTA-sales cap. The SEZ option is strongest for manufacturers that rely heavily on imported inputs, where the duty savings on raw materials and capital goods compound over time. It also suits businesses with a longer planning horizon, since SEZ approvals, infrastructure buildout and compliance onboarding typically take several months to more than a year.
A DTA operation is simply a domestic Indian company or factory operating under the standard regulatory framework: the Customs Act for imports, the GST regime for domestic and interstate supplies, and the Income Tax Act for direct taxation. There is no special zone approval, no Development Commissioner oversight, and no bonding requirement. Imported inputs attract BCD, IGST, SWS and applicable cesses at the point of import. Domestic sales are invoiced under normal GST rules without any import re-characterisation.
DTA is the right structure when your business has a substantial domestic customer base, when your export intensity is below 50–60%, or when you anticipate frequent and significant sales into the Indian market. It eliminates the risk of SEZ-to-DTA import characterisation entirely, every domestic sale is a straightforward GST transaction, with no customs duty overlay. DTA operations also suit businesses that need speed to market: setting up a domestic facility under normal company and industrial licensing approvals is materially faster than obtaining SEZ authorisation.
DTA exporters are not without incentive options. Several schemes offer partial equivalence to SEZ benefits:
Each alternative carries its own compliance burden, export obligation netting and documentation requirements. The right choice often involves modelling the net present value of duty savings against compliance costs, a task best scoped with trade and customs counsel.
The table below is the centrepiece of the SEZ vs DTA India 2026 (tax & customs) comparison. Each dimension is drawn from the governing statutes, the April 2026 CBIC/PIB measures and current practitioner guidance.
| Dimension | SEZ (Option A) | DTA (Option B) |
|---|---|---|
| Legal basis / eligibility | SEZ Act 2005 / SEZ Rules 2006; unit authorised by Development Commissioner | Ordinary domestic company; regulated by Customs Act, GST law and Income Tax Act |
| Typical incentives | Duty-free import of inputs; GST zero-rating for supplies to SEZ; income-tax incentives historically under §10AA (verify 2026 status) | No automatic duty-free inputs; access to scheme-based export incentives (EPCG, Advance Authorisation, drawback, bonded warehousing) |
| GST / IGST treatment | Supplies into SEZ from DTA are zero-rated; supplies from SEZ to DTA are treated as imports, IGST + customs duties collectible | Imports attract IGST/BCD/SWS/cess at import; domestic supplies taxed under normal GST |
| Customs duty on SEZ→DTA clearances | Treated as imports under Section 30 SEZ Act; April 2026 notifications introduced conditional concessional rates with a DTA-sales cap for eligible manufacturers | No SEZ-specific duty overlay; goods imported into DTA pay duty at import; domestically manufactured goods carry no additional import duty |
| Income-tax incentives | Historically §10AA graduated exemptions; subject to sunset rules and Finance Act amendments, confirm current eligibility with counsel | No §10AA-equivalent; standard corporate tax with scheme-specific benefits |
| DTA sales cap (2026) | Post-April 2026: eligible SEZ manufacturers may clear up to 30% of the highest annual FOB of exports in prior 3 FYs to DTA at concessional rates, subject to conditions | No concessional cap; DTA companies sell domestically without SEZ conditionality |
| Timing and set-up | Longer, DC approval, infrastructure, bonding; typically months to over 1 year | Faster, normal company and industrial licensing approvals |
| Compliance burden | Higher: SEZ approvals, bond/permissioned clearances, export accounting, zero-rating records | Standard customs/import documentation and GST compliance; fewer specialised filings |
| Enforcement and dispute route | Customs/SEZ Authority adjudication; appeals to CESTAT, High Court, Supreme Court | Customs and GST adjudication; standard appeal ladder (Tribunal/HC/SC) |
| Key cashflow driver | Lower input cost (duty-free) but potential IGST/BCD outflow on DTA clearances; 2026 concessions can reduce marginal duty within caps | Higher imported-input cost (BCD/IGST), but no re-characterisation risk on domestic sales |
The critical takeaway from this table is the structural asymmetry: SEZ units enjoy lower input costs but face a customs duty event every time they sell domestically, because Section 30 of the SEZ Act deems that movement an import. The April 2026 concessional measures soften the blow for eligible manufacturers, the CBIC one-time relief allows concessional duty clearances up to 30% of the highest annual FOB value of exports, but they do not eliminate the import characterisation itself or the associated documentation and compliance obligations.
For a business with 80% exports and 20% domestic sales, the SEZ option will almost certainly produce a lower all-in duty cost, provided the 20% domestic component falls within the 30% concessional cap. For a business with 50/50 domestic-export split, the DTA route, supplemented by Advance Authorisation or bonded warehousing, is likely more cost-effective and operationally simpler.
The GST treatment of SEZ transactions runs in two directions with opposite consequences. Supplies to an SEZ unit from the DTA are treated as zero-rated exports, meaning the DTA supplier either pays no GST (under Letter of Undertaking) or claims a refund. Supplies from an SEZ unit to the DTA are treated as interstate supplies, attracting IGST. Simultaneously, the movement of goods from the SEZ to the DTA triggers customs duty under Section 30 of the SEZ Act. The legal characterisation debate, whether such supplies constitute “turnover” or “import” for GST purposes, remains a live area of professional disagreement and litigation.
| Item | SEZ Unit | DTA Operation |
|---|---|---|
| Goods moved to DTA | Treated as imports: IGST + BCD + SWS + cess; conditional concessional rates may apply per April 2026 notifications (subject to 30% cap) | Imports attract IGST + BCD at import; domestic inputs subject to normal duty |
| Cashflow / immediate duty outlay | IGST/BCD payable on SEZ→DTA clearances; concessions reduce but do not eliminate outlay | Duty payable at import; drawback/refund schemes available for exporters |
| 2026 constraint | Concessional DTA clearance where DTA sales ≤ 30% of highest annual FOB in prior 3 FYs | No SEZ-specific concession; regular duty rules apply |
The CBIC notifications effective 1 April 2026 introduced conditional concessional customs duty for eligible SEZ manufacturing units clearing goods to the DTA. The concession applies to manufactured goods (not re-exported or traded goods) and is capped at 30% of the highest annual FOB value of exports achieved in any of the three preceding financial years. The practical effect is that SEZ manufacturers with modest domestic sales can now access reduced duty rates on DTA clearances, provided they maintain meticulous documentation, including export accounting records, clearance applications and compliance with any tariff-line-specific conditions specified in the notification.
Section 10AA of the Income Tax Act historically provided graduated exemptions on profits derived from SEZ unit exports. However, this benefit has been subject to sunset clauses, and successive Finance Acts have narrowed eligibility. Whether Section 10AA relief remains available to a specific SEZ unit in 2026 depends on when the unit commenced operations and whether any subsequent CBDT circulars or Finance Act amendments have modified the sunset date. This is not a question that can be answered generically, it requires unit-specific counsel review of the operative Finance Act provisions and CBDT notifications.
SEZ onboarding involves obtaining authorisation from the Development Commissioner, satisfying infrastructure and bonding requirements, establishing export netting and performance monitoring systems, and complying with the SEZ Rules on internal transfers and clearances. The timeline is typically several months to more than a year for a new unit. DTA set-up follows normal company incorporation, industrial licensing and factory approvals, materially faster and with fewer regulatory touchpoints. For businesses facing an urgent market-entry deadline, DTA is almost always the faster path.
SEZ units attract heightened customs scrutiny. Audits focus on proper utilisation of duty-free inputs, compliance with export obligations, accuracy of clearance documentation and correct valuation of SEZ-to-DTA movements. Errors in any of these areas can trigger demand notices, penalties and interest under the Customs Act. DTA units face standard customs and GST audit cycles, which, while not trivial, do not carry the additional layer of SEZ-specific compliance risk. Businesses considering the SEZ route should budget for enhanced internal audit capacity and periodic compliance health-checks.
Three developments effective 1 April 2026 require every SEZ unit, and every business considering the SEZ route, to re-assess its structure:
The likely practical effect of the April 2026 measures is to make the SEZ option marginally more attractive for export-dominant manufacturers with limited domestic sales, but only within the constraints of the concessional conditions. For businesses with significant domestic revenue, the DTA route remains the cleaner structural choice.
| If your priority is… | Choose |
|---|---|
| Maximise duty-free inputs; export revenue ≥ 70%; limited planned DTA sales | SEZ, provided you can satisfy approvals and ongoing compliance |
| Quick time-to-market for domestic sales; substantial domestic customer base | DTA, avoid import re-characterisation and complex SEZ recordkeeping |
| Predictable cashflow; no IGST/BCD on domestic sales | DTA |
| Expensive imported inputs; export margins justify SEZ set-up costs | SEZ, run an NPV model with counsel support |
| Sector eligible for 2026 customs concessions; DTA sales < 30% cap | SEZ with strict compliance controls and counsel review |
| Balanced domestic/export split (40–60% domestic) | DTA supplemented by Advance Authorisation or bonded warehousing |
Choose SEZ when:
Choose DTA when:
Choose hybrid strategies when:
The SEZ vs DTA structural decision involves enough regulatory complexity and financial consequence that self-assessment carries material risk. Engage trade and customs counsel immediately if any of the following apply:
Typical engagement scopes include a fast compliance health-check (2–3 business days), a full NPV/duty modelling exercise comparing SEZ versus DTA total cost of ownership (1–2 weeks), or representation in pending customs adjudication or CESTAT appeals. India-based trade and customs lawyers listed on Global Law Experts can scope these engagements directly.
This article was produced by Global Law Experts. For specialist advice on this topic, contact RSA Legal Solutions at RSA Legal, a member of the Global Law Experts network.
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