India’s GST Council’s 56th meeting on September 3, 2025, has delivered the most significant tax reform for defence since the GST was first introduced in 2017. The comprehensive GST 2.0 framework, which comes into effect on September 22, represents a decisive shift: taxation will no longer be a brake on procurement, but a tool to accelerate capability and strengthen the Armed Forces.
The Defence Dividend of GST 2.0
The government’s willingness to forgo revenue to ease the path of military modernisation sends an unmistakable signal — national security has been placed ahead of fiscal collections. This is not a short-term concession but a strategic investment. Every rupee saved on taxes becomes a rupee redirected into combat power, turning fiscal reform into operational advantage.
With GST 2.0’s rollout, India’s Armed Forces gain immediate procurement relief. The defence allocation for FY 2025–26 stands at RS 6.81 lakh crore, a 9.5 per cent increase over the previous year. Of this, Rs 1.80 lakh crore is earmarked for capital acquisitions and Rs 3.11 lakh crore for revenue expenditure, largely salaries, pensions, and maintenance. For years, GST and customs duties quietly siphoned away procurement resources — roughly 12 per cent of the Army’s budget, an estimated Rs 7,000–8,000 crore annually. Across all three Services combined, analysts calculate that the reforms could save between Rs 15,000 and Rs 25,000 crore every year, amounting to nearly Rs 60,000 crore over five years. That is 10-18 per cent more purchasing power, secured without increasing the budget by a single rupee.
The Zero-Tax Defence Arsenal
The scope of the reform is unprecedented. Equipment that once carried an 18 per cent GST burden is now fully exempt. This includes military UAVs and drones, C-130 and C-295 transport aircraft, and the software-defined radios and communications systems that keep formations connected in battle. Rockets above 100mm calibre and missile systems are now procured free of tax, as are simulators, sonobuoys, and ejection seats used in training. Even underwater platforms and submersibles, along with spare parts for artillery, rifles, and aircraft, have been brought into the nil-GST category.
The civilian side has not been neglected. Commercial drones, once subject to rates as high as 28 per cent, will now be taxed at just 5 per cent. This change not only reduces costs for agriculture, logistics, and mapping but also fuels the dual-use ecosystem that supplies technology back into military applications.
Impact Shorts
More ShortsStrategic Impact: Beyond Cost Savings
The real significance of GST 2.0 lies in what these exemptions unlock. Analysts estimate annual savings of Rs 15,000–25,000 crore across the Services, equivalent to an additional fleet of aircraft, an extra regiment of artillery, or thousands more drones — all without raising the budget ceiling. With three-quarters of the modernisation allocation already committed to domestic procurement, the policy directly boosts Indian industry.
Emergency purchases, often triggered by sudden tensions along the northern and western borders, will now be easier and cheaper to execute. The R&D head of around Rs 11,893 crore will stretch further, supporting investment in technologies from artificial intelligence to hypersonics. Maintenance cycles will improve as tax-free spare parts reduce downtime, while simulator exemptions bring down training costs and expand pilot and crew throughput. This is fiscal policy reshaping readiness.
Catalysing Indigenous Industry
For India’s growing defence-industrial ecosystem, GST 2.0 is transformative. Start-ups and MSMEs gain a level playing field as compliance costs fall, allowing them to invest more in R&D. The simplified two-slab regime ends classification disputes that once stalled contracts. Lower costs make India more attractive for international partnerships and technology transfers, strengthening the Aatmanirbhar Bharat agenda.
HAL, BEL, and BDL — alongside private firms such as Tata, L&T, Mahindra, and Adani — all benefit from zero-rated GST on platforms and components. Maintenance and upgrade programmes, long weighed down by taxes on spares, now become significantly cheaper. In electronics and communication, software-defined radios and surveillance equipment will be more affordable, directly enhancing border security and cyber-defence infrastructure.
Exports and Global Competitiveness
The export story illustrates the opportunity. In 2013–14, India’s defence exports were worth just Rs 686 crore. By FY 2024–25 they had risen to Rs 23,622 crore — a 34-fold increase. With GST eliminated on key hardware, India’s products become more competitive abroad, especially in Southeast Asia and the Middle East where systems such as BrahMos and Pinaka are already in demand. The government’s target of Rs 50,000 crore in exports by 2029 looks more achievable as costs fall and margins improve.
Revenue Mathematics and Strategic Signal
The government is absorbing between Rs 48,000 crore and Rs 1.1 lakh crore in revenue loss, depending on whether one looks at the wider GST impact or defence-specific procurement. That apparent “loss” is better understood as strategic investment. By stimulating production, creating jobs, encouraging exports, and generating spillovers into civilian technology sectors, the reform promises long-term economic and security dividends. In an environment where every ministry fights for its share of allocations, the choice to prioritise security in this way is a powerful statement of intent.
The Road Ahead
GST 2.0 is not the end of fiscal reform for defence but a beginning. As new domains — cyber, space, autonomous systems, and AI — assume greater importance, tax policy will need to adapt to sustain momentum. For India’s Vision 2047 and the goal of reducing import dependence below 40 per cent by 2030, fiscal tools will remain central.
GST 2.0 is more than an accounting change. It is a reset of the relationship between taxation and national security. By turning taxes from a constraint into an enabler, it strengthens procurement, accelerates readiness, and energises indigenous industry. It sharpens India’s export edge and signals to the world that fiscal policy is now aligned with strategic ambition.
Every rupee saved on GST is a rupee invested in sovereignty. That is why this reform is not just about bookkeeping — it is about India’s ability to defend, deter, and ultimately lead.
Lt Gen Dushyant Singh is the Director General of the Centre for Land Warfare Studies (CLAWS), New Delhi. Views expressed are personal and do not necessarily reflect Firstpost’s views.