Overview
India's relationship with the European Union (EU) has evolved from a purely development-focused partnership to a comprehensive strategic partnership encompassing trade, technology, security, and geopolitics. The conclusion of the India–EU Free Trade Agreement in January 2026 — after over a decade of interrupted negotiations — marks the most significant milestone in this relationship.
India–EU Strategic Partnership
| Dimension | Key Features |
|---|---|
| Establishment | India–EU Strategic Partnership launched in 2004 at the 5th India-EU Summit |
| Trade relationship | EU is India's largest trading partner (as a bloc); India is the EU's 10th largest trading partner |
| Bilateral trade (2023–24) | Approximately €120 billion in goods and services annually |
| Investment | EU is one of the largest sources of FDI into India; significant Indian investments in Europe (IT, pharma, steel) |
| Summits | India–EU Summits held periodically; the 16th Summit in New Delhi in January 2026 concluded the FTA |
| Indo-Pacific | EU launched its Indo-Pacific Strategy in 2021; India is a key partner for maritime security, supply chain resilience, and digital connectivity |
India–EU FTA — A Historic Milestone
Background and Negotiations
- Negotiations for a Broad-Based Trade and Investment Agreement (BTIA) were launched in 2007 but stalled in 2013 over disagreements on tariffs, public procurement, and data security
- Talks were formally relaunched on 17 June 2022 at the India–EU Summit in Brussels, alongside separate negotiations for an Investment Protection Agreement and a Geographical Indications Agreement
- Twelve rounds of negotiations were held between 2022 and 2025; key chapters on transparency, customs facilitation, intellectual property rights, and mutual administrative assistance were progressively closed
FTA Concluded — 27 January 2026
The India–EU FTA was formally concluded at the 16th India–EU Summit in New Delhi on 27 January 2026, announced jointly by Prime Minister Narendra Modi and European Commission President Ursula von der Leyen.
| Aspect | Detail |
|---|---|
| Indian exports to EU | Over 99% of Indian exports to EU (by trade value) to receive preferential access |
| EU exports to India | India offers 92.1% of tariff lines covering 97.5% of EU exports — 49.6% immediate elimination, rest over 5–10 years |
| Key sectors benefiting India | Textiles, apparel, leather, footwear, marine products, gems & jewellery, engineering goods, pharmaceuticals |
| Key sectors benefiting EU | Machinery, chemicals, medical devices, high-end automobiles (gradual reduction from 110% to ~10%) |
| Services and mobility | Comprehensive mobility framework for skilled Indian professionals; digital trade chapter included |
| Agriculture | Preferential access for Indian tea, coffee, spices, grapes, gherkins; India safeguarded dairy, cereals, poultry |
| Entry into force | Requires approval by EU Council, European Parliament consent, and Indian Parliament ratification |
Strategic Significance
The India–EU FTA is described as the largest trade deal ever concluded by either party. It is expected to roughly double EU exports to India by 2032 and significantly boost India's labour-intensive manufacturing exports. The deal is also seen as a response to US tariff uncertainties under the second Trump administration (2025–) and China's growing trade leverage in Europe.
India–EU Trade and Technology Council (TTC)
The TTC is the EU's second such mechanism globally, after the US-EU TTC. It is the first of its kind for India.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Announced | 25 April 2022 by PM Modi and Commission President von der Leyen in New Delhi |
| Formally launched | February 2023 |
| First Ministerial Meeting | 16 May 2023, Brussels — co-chaired by EAM Jaishankar, Commerce Minister Piyush Goyal, and EU EVPs Vestager and Dombrovskis |
| Working Groups | (1) Strategic Technologies, Digital Governance & Connectivity; (2) Green & Clean Energy Technologies; (3) Trade, Investment & Resilient Value Chains |
| Objectives | Boost bilateral trade/investment; cooperate on emerging technologies; ensure supply chain resilience; promote shared democratic values |
Key Divergences and Challenges
Despite deepening ties, significant divergences remain:
| Issue | India's Position | EU's Position |
|---|---|---|
| Russia–Ukraine War | Strategic autonomy; has not joined Western sanctions on Russia; continued to purchase Russian oil | Expects partners to align with sanctions regime; has raised concerns about India-Russia energy trade |
| Human rights conditionality | Rejects conditionality in trade/economic partnerships; treats human rights as domestic concerns | Has insisted on inclusion of sustainable development, labour standards, and human rights chapters in the FTA |
| Data localisation | Favours some data localisation (DPDP Act 2023) | Seeks cross-border data flows with minimal localisation requirements |
| Investment protection | Concerns about investor-state dispute settlement (ISDS) provisions | Insists on Investment Court System for dispute resolution |
| Geographical Indications | Negotiations on GIs remain sensitive (Darjeeling, Basmati vs European GIs) | Seeks strong GI protections for European products in Indian market |
India–UK FTA
For context, India also concluded a major bilateral trade deal with the United Kingdom:
| Milestone | Date |
|---|---|
| Negotiations announced | January 2022 |
| Agreement in principle | 6 May 2025 |
| FTA formally signed | 24 July 2025 |
| Expected entry into force | Around May 2026 (subject to parliamentary ratification in both countries) |
The India-UK FTA (officially titled the India–United Kingdom Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement) covers goods, services, digital trade, and includes a Mobility and Migration Partnership for skilled workers.
Key Points for UPSC
- India–EU FTA was concluded on 27 January 2026 after negotiations relaunched in June 2022 — a 14-year journey from the 2007 BTIA launch
- The TTC is the EU's second such mechanism globally and India's first with any partner — focuses on technology, clean energy, and trade resilience
- Key divergence: India's strategic autonomy on Russia vs EU's sanctions alignment expectation — a fundamental geopolitical tension
- The FTA still requires ratification by the European Parliament, EU Council, and Indian Parliament before entering into force
- India–UK FTA was signed in July 2025 and is expected to enter into force around May 2026
- Together, EU and UK FTAs represent India's most significant shift toward rules-based multilateral trade architecture since WTO membership in 1995
Recent Developments (2024–2026)
EU-India FTA Negotiations — Final Push and Conclusion (2024–2026)
The EU College of Commissioners visited New Delhi in February 2025 — an unprecedented collective visit — where President von der Leyen and PM Modi gave the political directive to conclude the FTA by end-2025. Both sides reaffirmed commitment in a Joint Statement from the visit. The FTA was formally concluded on 27 January 2026 after the EU and India bridged remaining gaps on: data localisation (India's requirements vs. EU data flow preferences), the EU Carbon Border Adjustment Mechanism (CBAM) which India views as a trade barrier, and the EU's insistence on a sustainable development chapter with enforcement mechanisms.
The FTA's scope is historic: EU eliminates tariffs on 90%+ of tariff lines; India on 86% of tariff lines. Combined trade liberalisation covers 96.6% (India) and 99.3% (EU) of bilateral trade. The FTA still requires ratification by India's Parliament and the European Parliament and Council.
UPSC angle: India-EU FTA timeline — BTIA negotiations 2007 (stalled 2013), relaunched June 2022, EU College of Commissioners visit February 2025, concluded 27 January 2026. Key obstacles: data localisation, CBAM, sustainable development chapter enforcement.
India-UK FTA — Signed July 2025
Negotiations launched in January 2022 concluded in May 2025, with the FTA formally signed on 24 July 2025. Expected entry into force: around May 2026 (subject to UK and Indian parliamentary ratification). Key provisions: UK eliminates tariffs on Indian goods (textiles, leather, pharmaceuticals, auto parts); India liberalises services sector (financial services, legal services, education); Mobility and Migration Partnership for skilled workers. Bilateral trade is approximately GBP 36 billion.
UPSC angle: India-UK FTA (signed July 2025, entering force ~May 2026) — India's first G7 FTA, services liberalisation focus, Mobility and Migration Partnership. Note: India and UK are both G20 members with a large Indian diaspora in the UK (~1.5 million).
India-EFTA TEPA — Historic Investment Commitment (March 2024)
India signed the Trade and Economic Partnership Agreement (TEPA) with the European Free Trade Association (EFTA: Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein) in March 2024. EFTA committed to facilitate USD 100 billion in investment into India over 15 years, creating 1 million direct jobs — a binding investment commitment unprecedented in India's FTA history. India offered tariff concessions on goods; EFTA offered goods and services market access. This was India's first concluded agreement with any European grouping.
UPSC angle: India-EFTA TEPA (March 2024) — first concluded European trade agreement; USD 100 billion investment commitment (binding); EFTA ≠ EU; EFTA members: Switzerland, Norway, Iceland, Liechtenstein. This preceded both the India-UK (2025) and India-EU (2026) FTAs.
India-EU Trade and Technology Council — Digital and Clean Energy Cooperation
The India-EU Trade and Technology Council (TTC), launched in February 2023, held its first ministerial meeting in May 2023 and continued work through 2024. The TTC's three working groups cover: strategic technologies, digital connectivity and infrastructure, and green and clean energy technologies. It represents the EU's second such mechanism globally (after the EU-US TTC). Key outcomes in 2024: AI governance norms alignment, semiconductor supply chain cooperation, and renewable energy technology exchange under the EU-India Clean Energy and Climate Partnership.
UPSC angle: India-EU TTC — launched February 2023, EU's second TTC globally, three working groups (strategic tech, digital, clean energy). Connects India-EU relations with technology governance and the semiconductor supply chain strategy.
Republic Day 2026 — EU's Top Leadership as Joint Chief Guests (26 January 2026)
India's 77th Republic Day on 26 January 2026 at Kartavya Path, New Delhi was symbolically significant for India-EU relations: for the first time in the history of the Republic Day parade, both of the European Union's top leaders jointly attended as Chief Guests — reflecting the maturation of the India-EU strategic partnership.
| Feature | Detail |
|---|---|
| Date | 26 January 2026 |
| Republic Day number | 77th Republic Day |
| Theme | "150 Years of Vande Mataram" — commemorating 150 years of Bankimchandra Chattopadhyay's composition of the national song (1876) |
| Parade venue | Kartavya Path, New Delhi (from Rashtrapati Bhawan to the National War Memorial) |
| Chief Guest 1 | Ursula von der Leyen — President of the European Commission |
| Chief Guest 2 | António Costa — President of the European Council |
| Significance | First time the EU's two top leaders jointly attended as chief guests at India's Republic Day — unprecedented in the history of the parade |
| Geopolitical timing | Followed the India-EU FTA conclusion on 27 January 2026 (just one day after Republic Day) — the visit served as the political capstone of the FTA negotiations |
The joint presence of the Commission President and the Council President signals the EU treating India as a tier-one strategic partner — a distinction previously accorded only to the United States in comparable diplomatic formats. The timing — with the FTA concluded the very next day on 27 January 2026 — was deliberate: the Republic Day visit provided the ceremonial and political backdrop for the historic trade deal announcement at the 16th India-EU Summit.
António Costa has Indian ancestral roots — his family traces origins to Goa — adding a personal dimension to the visit. The Republic Day's theme honouring 150 years of Vande Mataram also aligned with India's broader cultural diplomacy narrative during a period of strategic realignment.
UPSC angle: For GS-2 (International Relations): 77th Republic Day chief guests — Ursula von der Leyen (EU Commission President) and António Costa (EU Council President); first time EU's dual leadership jointly attended; theme "150 Years of Vande Mataram"; venue Kartavya Path; timed with India-EU FTA conclusion (27 January 2026). For Mains: this event encapsulates India-EU strategic convergence — trade (FTA), technology (TTC), and diplomatic symbolism (Republic Day) all aligned simultaneously, reflecting India's shift toward deeper engagement with the democratic West while maintaining strategic autonomy.
BharatNotes