Country exposure · IN

India
South Asia · New Delhi · federal parliamentary republic
What India means for your money — the prices you pay, the tariffs in motion, and where U.S. policy could change both.

$103.8B
U.S. imports, 2025
+18.9%
change in one year
$45.4B
U.S. exports, 2025
1.42B
Population
$3.9T
GDP
In your house
What you buy that India makes
America bought $103.8B in goods from India in 2025 — up 18.9% in a single year. Of every $100 of it, here's where the money went.
Cell phones and other household goods, n.e.c.
cell phones and home electronics
Pharmaceutical preparations
medicines and pharmacy items
Apparel, household goods - cotton
cotton clothing and linens
Gem diamonds
Petroleum products, other
gasoline and petroleum products
Telecommunications equipment
phones, routers, networking gear
Industrial machines, other
Chemicals-organic
Fish and shellfish
fish, shrimp, shellfish
Jewelry
jewelry
2026 so far (through April): $31.3B in imports. Source: U.S. Census Bureau, International Trade in Goods (customs basis).
The other direction
What America sells to India
$45.4B in 2025 — a trade rupture cuts both ways, for American producers as well as American prices.
Crude oil
$7.9BCivilian aircraft, engines, equipment, and parts
$2.4BNonmonetary gold
$1.8BNuts
$1.4BChemicals-organic
$1.4BMetallurgical grade coal
$1.4BNatural gas liquids
$1.2BComputers
$1.2Blaptops, desktops, monitors
Coal and fuels, other
$1.2BWhere you stand
U.S. tariff posture toward India
India bore the highest U.S. tariff of any major partner in 2025 — a 25% reciprocal rate stacked with a 25% punitive duty for importing Russian oil, reaching 50% from August 27, 2025. A February 7, 2026 trade deal cut the reciprocal to 18% and removed the Russian-oil penalty (India committing to wind down Russian crude purchases and buy U.S. energy), bringing the effective rate to 18%. Days later Executive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions, Feb 20, 2026) terminated the IEEPA reciprocal duties, and Proclamation 11012 replaced it with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge effective February 24, 2026. India has no Section 232 steel/aluminum exposure.
Reciprocal tariff (assigned — terminated)
26%
The rate this country was assigned under the EO 14257 reciprocal Annex — no longer in force. The Supreme Court struck down the IEEPA tariffs and they were terminated February 24, 2026 (EO 14389), replaced by a universal ~10% Section 122 surcharge. See the timeline below for the current effective rate.
Policy in motion
Tariff status: a moving target
U.S. tariff policy toward India has changed 6 times since 2025. This page tracks it.
2026-02-24
IEEPA reciprocal tariffs terminated — replaced by 10% Section 122
In effectExecutive Order 14389 (Ending Certain Tariff Actions) terminated the IEEPA tariff duties effective February 24, 2026, replacing India's 18% reciprocal rate with a 10% Section 122 temporary import surcharge under Proclamation 11012 (capped at 150 days).
91 FR 9437 →2026-02-07
U.S.-India trade deal — reciprocal cut to 18%, oil penalty removed
AgreementA trade deal lowered India's reciprocal tariff from 25% to 18% and removed the 25% Russian-oil penalty after India committed to stop importing Russian oil, purchase U.S. energy, and expand a 10-year defense framework — cutting the effective rate from 50% to 18%.
91 FR 6501 →2025-08-27
Additional 25% Russian-oil penalty — total reaches 50%
In effectExecutive Order 14329 (Aug 6, 2025) imposed an additional 25% ad valorem duty on articles of India for its direct and indirect importation of Russian Federation oil, effective August 27 and stacking on the 25% reciprocal rate — a combined 50%, the highest borne by any U.S. trading partner.
91 FR 6501 →2025-08-07
25% reciprocal rate takes effect for India
In effectExecutive Order 14326 set the post-pause Annex I reciprocal rates; India's rate was set at 25% effective for goods entered on or after August 7, 2025.
90 FR 37963 →2025-04-10
Elevated reciprocal rates paused to 10% for 90 days
In effectExecutive Order 14266 suspended the higher country-specific reciprocal rates — including India's 26% — back to the 10% baseline for 90 days to allow negotiations.
90 FR 15625 →2025-04-05
Reciprocal tariff regime begins — India assigned 26%
In effectExecutive Order 14257 imposed a 10% universal reciprocal duty effective April 5 and a higher country-specific rate of 26% for India scheduled to take effect April 9 under Annex I.
90 FR 15041 →
Made for America
What India makes for America
India is a direct U.S. source of 12 essential goods Americans rely on — the items themselves, shipped finished off the line.
digital
42% of U.S.Smartphones and tablets
$22.0B to the U.S.
health
16% of U.S.OTC medicines
$13.2B to the U.S.
materials
28% of U.S.Jewelry
$5.6B to the U.S.
materials
6% of U.S.Clothing and apparel
$5.2B to the U.S.
energy
15% of U.S.Gasoline and diesel
$3.1B to the U.S.
digital
3% of U.S.Fiber optic cables and networking
$2.8B to the U.S.
food
10% of U.S.Seafood and fish
$2.6B to the U.S.
home
36% of U.S.Towels & home linens
$2.1B to the U.S.
materials
2% of U.S.Auto parts and repairs
$2.0B to the U.S.
home
38% of U.S.Rugs & carpets
$1.2B to the U.S.
materials
4% of U.S.Steel and iron products
$1.1B to the U.S.
materials
5% of U.S.Plumbing pipes and fittings
$1.0B to the U.S.
Go deeper
The supply chain view
India sits upstream of 24 essential American goods through 12 tracked inputs.
chemical
100%Chlorine, sodium hypochlorite, and chloramine (disinfection chemicals)
manufactured
91%Lab-Grown Diamonds (CVD/HPHT)
manufactured
82%Curcumin Extract (Nutraceutical / Anti-Inflammatory)
agricultural
80%Turmeric (Curcuma longa)
pharmaceutical
75%Tretinoin (all-trans retinoic acid) API
chemical
74%R134a HFC Refrigerant
Reference
The country itself
South Asia · Geography, people, economy, and government — public-domain data from the CIA World Factbook.
The Indus Valley civilization, one of the world's oldest, flourished during the 3rd and 2nd millennia B.C. and extended into northwestern India. Aryan tribes from the northwest infiltrated the Indian subcontinent about 1500 B.C.; their merger with the earlier Dravidian inhabitants created the classical Indian culture. The Maurya Empire of the 4th and 3rd centuries B.C. -- which reached its zenith under ASHOKA -- united much of South Asia. The Gupta dynasty (4th to 6th centuries A.D.) ushered in The Golden Age, which saw a flowering of Indian science, art, and culture. Islam spread across the subcontinent over a period of 700 years. In the 10th and 11th centuries, Turks and Afghans invaded India and established the Delhi Sultanate. In the early 16th century, the Emperor BABUR established the Mughal Dynasty, which ruled large sections of India for more than three centuries. European explorers began establishing footholds in India during the 16th century. By the 19th century, Great Britain had become the dominant political power on the subcontinent, and India was seen as the "Jewel in the Crown" of the British Empire. The British Indian Army played a vital role in both World Wars. Years of nonviolent resistance to British rule, led by Mohandas GANDHI and Jawaharlal NEHRU, eventually resulted in Indian independence in 1947. Large-scale communal violence took place before and after the subcontinent partition into two separate states -- India and Pakistan. The neighboring countries have fought three wars since independence, the last of which was in 1971 and resulted in East Pakistan becoming the separate nation of Bangladesh. India's nuclear weapons tests in 1998 emboldened Pakistan to conduct its own tests that same year. In 2008, terrorists originating from Pakistan conducted a series of coordinated attacks in Mumbai, India's financial capital. India's economic growth after economic reforms in 1991, a massive youth population, and a strategic geographic location have contributed to the country's emergence as a regional and global power. However, India still faces pressing problems such as extensive poverty, widespread corruption, and environmental degradation, and its restrictive business climate challenges economic growth expectations.

Geography
- Location
- Southern Asia, bordering the Arabian Sea and the Bay of Bengal, between Burma and Pakistan
- Area
- 3,287,263 sq km
- Climate
- varies from tropical monsoon in south to temperate in north
- Terrain
- upland plain (Deccan Plateau) in south, flat to rolling plain along the Ganges, deserts in west, Himalayas in north
- Natural resources
- coal (fourth-largest reserves in the world), antimony, iron ore, lead, manganese, mica, bauxite, rare earth elements, titanium ore, chromite, natural gas, diamonds, petroleum, limestone, arable land
- Coastline
- 7,000 km
- Natural hazards
- droughts; flash floods, as well as widespread and destructive flooding from monsoonal rains; severe thunderstorms; earthquakes volcanism: Barren Island (354 m) in the Andaman Sea has been active in recent years
People & society
- Population
- 1,419,316,933 (2025 est.)
- Nationality
- Indian(s)
- Ethnic groups
- Indo-Aryan 72%, Dravidian 25%, and other 3% (2000)
- Languages
- Hindi 43.6%, Bengali 8%, Marathi 6.9%, Telugu 6.7%, Tamil 5.7%, Gujarati 4.6%, Urdu 4.2%, Kannada 3.6%, Odia 3.1%, Malayalam 2.9%, Punjabi 2.7%, Assamese 1.3%, Maithili 1.1%, other 5.6%; English is the subsidiary official language but is the most important one for national, political, and commercial communication (2011 est.)
- Religions
- Hindu 79.8%, Muslim 14.2%, Christian 2.3%, Sikh 1.7%, other and unspecified 2% (2011 est.)
- Median age
- 30.1 years (2025 est.)
- Life expectancy at birth
- 68.2 years (2024 est.)
- Literacy
- 81.7% (2023 est.)
Economy
- Economic overview
- largest South Asian economy; strong, sustained GDP growth led by technology and service sectors, foreign investment, and improved regulatory framework; high poverty rate and income inequality; initiatives on infrastructure development, digitization, manufacturing, and financial access
- Industries
- textiles, chemicals, food processing, steel, transportation equipment, cement, mining, petroleum, machinery, software, pharmaceuticals
- Agricultural products
- sugarcane, rice, milk, wheat, bison milk, potatoes, vegetables, maize, bananas, onions (2023)
- Exports - partners
- USA 19%, UAE 7%, China 4%, Germany 3%, UK 3% (2023)
- Imports - partners
- China 19%, Russia 10%, USA 6%, UAE 6%, Saudi Arabia 5% (2023)
Government
- Government type
- federal parliamentary republic
- Capital
- New Delhi
- Independence
- 15 August 1947 (from the UK)
- Constitution
- previous 1935 (pre-independence); latest draft completed 4 November 1949, adopted 26 November 1949, effective 26 January 1950
- Executive branch
- President Droupadi MURMU (since 25 July 2022)
- Legislative branch
- Parliament (Sansad)
Full reference data
Every field, by section — CIA World Factbook. Open a topic to expand it.
Introduction
Travel Facts
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Page last updated: Monday, July 25, 2022