GST 2.0: How India’s new tax overhaul will reshape your wedding, festival, and shopping bills
GST 2.0: How India’s new tax overhaul will reshape your wedding, festival, and shopping bills
India’s GST 2.0 — implemented this month — cuts taxes on many everyday items while raising levies on luxury goods. Here’s a consumer-friendly explainer on what changes, who benefits, and how to plan your festival and wedding shopping.
India’s long-anticipated GST 2.0 — a major rework of the country’s goods and services tax regime — came into the headlines this month and arrives at a sensitive time: the festival and wedding season, when consumer spending traditionally spikes. The reform simplifies slabs, lowers taxes on many everyday goods and services, but raises levies on high-end goods — a shift with clear winners and losers.
What changed — the headline moves
The new structure reduces the number of major slabs and introduces defined brackets that effectively concentrate rates around 5% and 18%, while creating a high-end slab at 40% for premium goods. Many personal-care items, electronics, and small cars saw tax reductions of up to 10 percentage points; some budget clothing items are now taxed at a lower 5% rate. Conversely, luxury apparel and certain premium services move into higher brackets.
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Who benefits: GST 2.0
Middle- and lower-priced consumers purchasing everyday goods (such as personal care and clothing under ₹ 2,500) will feel immediate relief at the checkout. Retailers of budget fashion and essentials can market savings during the festive season.
Small cars and entry-level vehicles may become more affordable due to rate cuts, prompting auto makers to roll out festival offers.
Who pays more: GST 2.0
Premium brands and high-end purchases (luxury clothing, designer goods) will see higher effective tax rates under the new 40% slab. Weddings that lean on luxury designer items could face larger bills unless vendors decide to absorb some cost.
Why the government did it (and the tradeoffs)
Officials argue the rework simplifies compliance, broadens consumption-led growth, and is expected to improve consumer sentiment — boosting spending that could offset revenue losses. Estimates suggest a temporary revenue dip (government statements and market analysis flagged potential revenue shortfalls), but policymakers expect higher volumes and better compliance to close gaps. Industry groups have raised concerns about sectoral impacts and short-term disruption.
What consumers should do before buying
- Compare prices on items you plan to buy — some retailers may pass savings to customers, others might not.
- Time big-ticket buys if possible — monitor offers from automakers and appliance sellers who often cut prices during festive promotions.
- Wedding planners should reforecast budgets for décor, outfits, and catering if they rely on premium vendors.


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