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The Ultimate Guide to Exporting from India: Regulations, Incentives & Logistics

Everything Indian Exporters Need to Know – From Setting Up to Global Shipping and Incentives

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Exporting Guide CA Devesh Thakur
Exporting Guide CA Devesh Thakur
The Ultimate Guide to Exporting from India | CA Devesh Thakur | eTaxSave
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Comprehensive Export Guide · CA Devesh Thakur

The Ultimate Guide to
Exporting from India

📅 July 13, 2025 ✍️ CA Devesh Thakur ⏱️ 25 min read 📦 11 Chapters

Regulations · Incentives · Logistics — A practical guide for entrepreneurs and businesses looking to engage in international trade from India

IEC Code INCOTERMS 2020 RoDTEP · EPCG Freight Forwarding ICEGATE
📥 Download Free E-Book
🌍

I. The Strategic Importance of Exporting

Exporting is a fundamental driver of growth for any economy, with profound impacts at both the national level and for individual businesses. India’s export ecosystem offers remarkable opportunities backed by government support and robust infrastructure.

🏛️

Macroeconomic Benefits

Exports influence a country’s GDP, exchange rates, inflation, and interest rates. They boost foreign currency reserves, stimulate industrial production, and generate higher tax revenue for the government.

📈

Business Benefits

Higher profit margins by leveraging cost differences, economies of scale from increased production, improved liquidity through advance payment terms, and enhanced competitiveness through global exposure.

💱

Strategic Advantages

Access to less competitive international markets, diversification of revenue streams, reduced dependence on domestic demand cycles, and opportunities to benchmark quality globally.

II. Setting Up an Export Business

Establishing a legal entity is the first critical step. All businesses must register under the Companies Act of 2013. Choosing the right structure impacts liability, taxation, and operational flexibility.

Entity TypeKey FeaturesBest For
Private Limited Company2–15 directors, 2–200 shareholders, ₹1,00,000 min capitalSMEs & Startups
Public Limited CompanyShares publicly tradable on stock exchangeLarge Businesses
LLPLimited liability, business assets distinct from personal assetsProfessionals
One Person Company (OPC)Single owner with full liability protectionSolo Entrepreneurs
Sole ProprietorshipEasiest to set up, owner liable for all obligationsVery Small Business
Partnership FirmGoverned by Indian Partnership Act 1932, shared P&LFamily Business

📋 Key Company Formation Documents

  • DIN — Director Identification Number: Mandatory for all directors
  • MOA — Memorandum of Association: The “charter of a company” — defines its constitution, scope, and objectives
  • AOA — Articles of Association: Internal rules governing conduct of business; subordinate to the MOA
  • RoC — Registrar of Companies: Registers all companies and LLPs in India
🔑

III. IEC Code & Essential Registrations

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Bank Account

A Current Account with a Bank authorized to deal in Foreign Exchange is essential for all international transactions and receiving export proceeds.

🪪

PAN Card

Permanent Account Number is mandatory for every exporter and importer. Obtained from the Income Tax Department.

📦

IEC Code

The Importer-Exporter Code — a key business identification number mandatory for all imports and exports. Post-GST, IEC = PAN of the firm.

🔑 IEC — Everything You Need to Know

  • Issued by: DGFT (Directorate General of Foreign Trade)
  • Application: Online via DGFT website with PAN, mobile/email verification, entity details & documents. Fee: ₹500
  • Validity: Lifetime — no renewal required
  • Required for: Customs clearance, international fund transfers, Food Licensing, APEDA Licensing
  • Post-GST: IEC number is now the same as the PAN of the firm, though separately issued by DGFT

📜 RCMC — Registration-Cum-Membership Certificate

Validates an exporter’s registration with an authorized Indian Government agency. Necessary to avail government benefits and export incentives.

  • Issued by 27 Export Promotion Councils and 9 Commodities Boards in India
  • Multi-product exporters or those not covered: FIEO (Federation of Indian Exporters Organisation) issues RCMC

IV. ITC-HS Codes & Trade Policy

India uses the ITC-HS (Indian Trade Classification based on Harmonized System) to classify goods and define import/export policies. Managed by DGFT, it’s an 8-digit code system.

Code DigitsWhat It RepresentsExample
First 2 digitsChapter (broad category)09 = Coffee, Tea, Spices
First 4 digitsHeading (product group)0902 = Tea
First 6 digitsSub-Heading (international standard)090210 = Green Tea
All 8 digitsRegional Tariff (India-specific)09021010 = Green Tea, in packages ≤3 kg
🚫

Import Categories

Restricted (need license) · Canalized (via specific agencies) · Prohibited (banned entirely) · Freely Imported (no restriction with valid IEC)

✈️

Export Categories

Restricted (need explicit license) · Prohibited (cannot be exported at all) · STE (via designated State Trading Enterprises) · Freely Exportable (most items)

⚙️

V. The Export Process — Step by Step

  1. 1

    Market Selection

    Research market size, competition, quality requirements, and payment terms. Consider Demand, Distance, Freight costs, Free Trade Agreements, and Accessibility.

  2. 2

    Finding Buyers

    Participate in trade fairs, buyer-seller meets, exhibitions, B2B portals, web browsing. Maintain multilingual websites for broader reach.

  3. 3

    Sampling & Pricing

    Provide customised samples per buyer demands. Price based on all expenses from sampling to realisation of export proceeds using Incoterms and FTAs/PTAs.

  4. 4

    Risk Coverage via ECGC

    The Export Credit Guarantee Corporation (ECGC) provides policies to cover payment risks due to buyer/country insolvency. Essential for new markets.

  5. 5

    Order Processing

    Confirm order → Procure/manufacture goods to buyer spec → Quality control → Labelling, packaging & marking → Marine insurance → Customs & shipping bill filing.

  6. 6

    Customs & Shipping Bill

    File a Shipping Bill/Bill of Export — mandatory customs document. Exporters need a PAN-based BIN from Customs prior to filing. Most declarations submitted via EDI System.

📄 Essential Export Documents

Bill of Lading / Airway Bill — Transport document
Commercial Invoice cum Packing List
Shipping Bill / Bill of Export — Mandatory customs document
Certificate of Origin (COO)
Letter of Credit (L/C)
Bill of Exchange (BE)
Inspection / Quality Check Certificate
Phyto-sanitary & Fumigation Certificates — for agricultural goods
🤝

VI. INCOTERMS 2020

INCOTERMS (International Commercial Terms) are universally accepted selling terms published by the ICC. They clearly define which tasks, costs and risks are associated with the buyer vs. the seller — critical for pricing and delivery negotiations.

Any Mode of Transport (7 Terms)

EXW
Ex-Works
Seller makes goods available at their premises. Buyer bears all risks & costs from that point.
Any Mode
FCA
Free Carrier
Seller delivers goods to named carrier. Risk transfers at point of handover.
Any Mode
CPT
Carriage Paid To
Seller pays freight to named destination. Risk transfers when goods given to carrier.
Any Mode
CIP
Carriage & Insurance Paid
Like CPT but seller also provides insurance cover for buyer’s risk in transit.
Any Mode
DAP
Delivered At Place
Seller delivers to named destination. Buyer responsible for import customs & duties.
Any Mode
DPU
Delivered & Unloaded
Seller delivers and unloads goods at named terminal/destination.
Any Mode
DDP
Delivered Duty Paid
Maximum obligation on seller — delivers cleared for import, all duties paid.
Any Mode

Sea & Inland Waterway Transport (4 Terms)

FAS
Free Alongside Ship
Seller delivers when goods placed alongside vessel at named port.
Sea Only
FOB
Free On Board
Risk transfers when goods are loaded on board the vessel at port of shipment.
Sea Only
CFR
Cost & Freight
Seller pays cost and freight to destination port. Risk transfers on loading.
Sea Only
CIF
Cost Insurance Freight
Like CFR but seller also provides minimum insurance. Common in India’s export invoicing.
Sea Only

VII. Freight Forwarding & Cargo Logistics

Freight forwarders are crucial intermediaries managing the complexities of international shipping — from documentation to physical delivery.

6 Stages of Freight Forwarding

  1. 1

    Export Haulage

    Transport of goods from exporter’s premises to the freight forwarder’s warehouse at origin.

  2. 2

    Export Customs Clearance

    Approval for departure from origin country — filing of shipping bill, payment of duties if any.

  3. 3

    Origin Handling & Checkpoint

    Inspection, verification and checks for restricted items — flammable liquids, drugs, perishables etc.

  4. 4

    Import Customs Clearance

    Checking paperwork and legality at destination country — potential import duties and fees apply.

  5. 5

    Destination Handling

    Preparing goods for final delivery — handling invoices, Bill of Lading, packing lists and other documents.

  6. 6

    Import Haulage

    Final transport from import warehouse to the buyer’s destination address.

📦

Containerised Cargo

Goods shipped in reusable standardised containers — significantly reduces costs and has driven globalisation. Types: Dry Cargo, Open Top, High Cube, Reefer (refrigerated), GOH, Tanker, Flat Track, and more.

🪵

Break Bulk (Non-Containerised)

Goods shipped in pieces without a container — typically extremely large or oddly shaped cargo. Transported in crates, bags, boxes, drums, or barrels. Higher handling cost.

❄️

Cold Chain Logistics

Ensures integrity of temperature-sensitive products — reduces spoilage, retains quality. Components: cold storages, refrigerated carriers, specialised packaging, MIS-based monitoring.

🏛️

VIII. Government Schemes & Export Incentives

🌐 Key Regulatory Agreements

  • SPS Agreement (WTO) — Sanitary & Phytosanitary standards: food safety and animal/plant health regulations. Standards must be science-based and non-discriminatory.
  • TBT Agreement (WTO) — Technical Barriers to Trade: ensures technical regulations are non-discriminatory and don’t create unnecessary trade obstacles.

Export Promotion Schemes (Financial Incentives)

RoDTEP

Remission of Duties or Taxes on Export Products. Covers all hidden Central, State & Local duties/taxes. WTO compliant.

Advance Authorisation (AA)

Allows duty-free import of inputs used for export production.

DFIA Scheme

Duty Free Import Authorisation — duty-free import of inputs with minimum 20% value addition.

Duty Drawback

Refunds customs duties paid on inputs that were subsequently used in exported products.

EPCG Scheme

Import capital goods at zero customs duty for producing export quality goods — subject to export obligation.

Interest Equalisation (IES)

Interest equalization (subsidy) on Pre & Post Shipment Rupee Export Credit from banks.

EOU / EHTP / STP

Export Oriented Units: import/domestic procurement without duties, commit to 100% export production.

MAI Scheme

Market Access Initiative — financial assistance for export promotion activities and market development.

Status Holder Scheme

Recognises top exporters as “Star Export Houses” — grants non-fiscal privileges and fast-track benefits.

🏗️ Major Policy Initiatives

  • Make in India — Facilitate investment, foster innovation, build infrastructure, make India a manufacturing hub
  • PLI Scheme — Production-linked Incentive for 14 key sectors, outlay of ₹1.97 lakh crore
  • PM Gati Shakti NMP — GIS-based platform for integrated multimodal infrastructure planning, reducing logistics cost
  • National Logistics Policy (NLP) — Reduce logistics cost to match developed-country benchmarks
  • SEZs & EOUs — Special Economic Zones designed for export promotion, investment, employment & infrastructure
  • NSWS — National Single Window System for end-to-end investor facilitation
📉

IX. Trade Statistics & Outlook

$676B
Total Exports
FY 2021–22
21.3%
Exports to GDP
FY 2021–22
$191B
Trade Deficit
Merchandise 2021–22
$300B
E-Commerce Target
Projected by 2030
CategoryMajor ExportsMajor Imports
Key CommoditiesPetroleum Products, Iron & Steel, Pharmaceutical ProductsVegetable Oils, Coal, Organic Chemicals, Computer Hardware
E-CommerceCurrent: $5–10B annuallyProjected: $200–300B by 2030

💱 Foreign Exchange Risk

Exchange rate fluctuation is a natural outcome of floating rates, influenced by economic performance, inflation outlook, interest rate differentials, and capital flows. Exporters must hedge their foreign currency risk via instruments such as futures, forwards, and options.

X. Customs Declaration Forms — CN22 & CN23

These forms accelerate customs clearance by detailing contents, value, and origin of postal shipments. The sender bears full liability for accuracy — a false declaration may lead to a fine or seizure.

📄

CN22

Smaller form (74 × 105 mm). Used for items with declared value up to 300 SDR. Simpler fields covering contents, value, and country of origin.

📋

CN23

Larger form (210 × 148 mm). Required when value is more than 300 SDR. Includes detailed sender/importer information, HS tariff numbers, licence numbers, and a comments section for quarantine/restrictions.

⚠️ Common CN22/CN23 Requirements

  • Description: Generic terms like “clothes” or “food products” are NOT acceptable — must be specific
  • HS Tariff Number: 6-digit code, recommended for all commercial items
  • Country of Origin must be clearly stated
  • Reason for Export: “Gift” is not acceptable for commercial items — use “Sale of Goods” or “Commercial Sample”
  • Total weight, total value, and quantity per article must be accurate
💻

XI. ICEGATE — Indian Customs EDI Gateway

ICEGATE and the DGFT portal are critical digital platforms for trade facilitation in India, enabling end-to-end customs and export management online.

🪪

IEC Management

View, manage and update IEC details, verify UDIN, profile management on DGFT portal.

📝

Authorizations

Advance Authorisation/DFIA applications, EPCG licensing, Export obligation tracking.

💰

Export Incentives

SEIS, RoSCTL, Transport & Marketing Assistance, Interest Equalisation applications.

🚢

Import/Export Systems

Import/Export Management Systems, Online e-COM Applications, EDI gateway for shipping bills.

🎖️

Certificates

Certificate of Origin, Certificate Management, Deemed Export Benefits, Pre-Shipment Inspection.

💳

Payments & Refunds

e-Miscellaneous Payments, e-Refunds, E-RCMC registrations, Gems & Jewellery Schemes.

📖

XII. Key Trade Terms — Quick Glossary

AWB — Airway Bill: Air freight transport document
AD Code — Authorised Dealer Code: Bank code for foreign exchange
BRC — Bank Realization Certificate: Proof of export proceeds received
BoE — Bill of Entry: Customs document for imports
BL — Bill of Lading: Sea freight transport document
CFS — Container Freight Station: Facility for LCL cargo consolidation
FCL — Full Container Load: Entire container booked by one shipper
LCL — Less than Container Load: Container shared by multiple shippers
IGM — Import General Manifest: Vessel’s cargo declaration to customs
L/C — Letter of Credit: Bank guarantee for payment in trade
ECCN — Export Control Classification Number: US export control code
ODC — Over Dimensional Cargo: Cargo exceeding standard container dimensions
SLI — Shipper’s Letter of Instruction: Directions to freight forwarder
CHA — Customs House Agent: Licensed customs clearance professional

📥 Download the Complete Export Guide E-Book

Get the full practical guide by CA Devesh Thakur as a PDF — free to download, packed with checklists, forms, and step-by-step processes.

📄 Download Free E-Book — Exporting from India

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