Home » 2025 year-end achievement – India’s Ministry of Textiles

2025 year-end achievement – India’s Ministry of Textiles

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2025 year-end achievement – India’s Ministry of Textiles
India’s textiles sector recorded wide-ranging policy reforms, infrastructure rollout and tax rationalisation in 2025, as outlined in the Year End Review released by the Ministry of Textiles on December 24, 2025. The measures aim to boost domestic manufacturing, improve global competitiveness and support farmers, weavers and artisans across the value chain.

A major highlight was the rescinding of Quality Control Orders on viscose staple fibre from November 18, 2025, MMF polyester segments from November 12, 2025, and textile machinery, alongside deferring cotton bale QCO implementation to August 2026. Customs duty exemption on raw cotton was granted for August–December 2025 to ease input costs for spinners.

The 56th GST Council meeting delivered significant tax rationalisation, cutting GST on garments and made-ups priced up to ₹2,500 per piece to 5 per cent. Rates on MMF fibres were reduced from 18 per cent to 5 per cent, and MMF yarns from 12 per cent to 5 per cent, while carpets, handicrafts, handlooms and sewing machines were also brought under the 5 per cent slab.

Export facilitation improved through the extension of the export obligation period under Advance Authorisation from six to 18 months for QCO-covered items, and the extension of RoDTEP benefits to EOUs, SEZs and Advance Authorisation units. RoSCTL for garments and made-ups has been extended until March 31, 2026.

The Production Linked Incentive scheme was revised to ease compliance, with expanded eligible products, relaxed company formation norms, lower investment thresholds and a reduction in incremental turnover criteria from 25 per cent to 10 per cent.

On infrastructure, seven PM MITRA Parks with an outlay of ₹4,445 crore were approved and rolled out. The ministry confirmed 100 per cent land acquisition, environmental clearances for all parks and approved land allotment policies in Madhya Pradesh and Tamil Nadu. Cotton procurement systems were also expanded and digitised, while decriminalisation measures were introduced under the Jan Vishwas Bill 2025 across key textile laws.

Click here to read the full review.

Fibre2Fashion News Desk (KD)

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