United Kingdom → India
India Industrial Machinery Market Entry for British Companies
7.5-10% tariff · $82 billion market
UK-India bilateral trade is worth $42 billion, with both nations negotiating a comprehensive FTA since 2022.
India's machinery market is valued at $82 billion (2025), projected $135 billion by 2030, growing at 10.4% CAGR. For British machinery companies, the ongoing UK-India FTA negotiations (14th round completed) promise eventual tariff relief from current MFN rates of 7.5-10%. But the smart money is not waiting for ratification. UK firms that establish Indian beachheads now will be positioned to capture disproportionate share once preferential rates take effect.
Key Figures
Industrial Machinery in India: The Numbers
$82 billion
India machinery market size
10.4%
Projected annual growth rate (CAGR)
7.5-10%
Current MFN tariff on machinery
0-2.5%
Projected tariff under UK-India FTA
6-12 months
BIS Certification approval timeline
$8.6B
British exports to India (annual)
Market Overview
Why British machinery Companies Are Looking at India
India's Make in India 2.0 initiative targets $1 trillion in manufacturing output by 2030. Capital goods imports remain essential -- over 40% of industrial machinery is imported, creating sustained demand for precision equipment from Western manufacturers.
UK-India bilateral trade is worth $42 billion, with both nations negotiating a comprehensive FTA since 2022. British exports to India total approximately $8.6B annually, and machinery represents one of the highest-growth segments within that corridor. Indian buyers consistently rank British suppliers as premium-tier, which supports price realisation 15-25% above Chinese alternatives -- but only when supported by after-sales service infrastructure and local technical support.
The competitive landscape is shifting. Chinese manufacturers are improving quality positioning, and domestic Indian players are scaling. The 12-18 month window where Western incumbency translates to structural advantage is closing. Companies that secure BIS certifications, appoint distributors, and build reference customers now will create moats that are difficult to breach.
Tariff Analysis
Tariff Impact: 7.5-10% MFN and the Path to Preferential Rates
India applies MFN tariff rates of 7.5-10% on machinery imports (HS chapters HS 8428, 8455, 8462, 8466). Under the UK-India FTA (negotiations ongoing, 14th round completed), these rates are expected to see phased reductions to 0-2.5% (phased over 5-7 years).
For British exporters, the timing gap between agreement signature and full implementation creates a strategic planning window. Companies should begin the regulatory approval process now (BIS Certification / QCO Compliance takes 6-12 months) so that market access and tariff benefits arrive simultaneously. The Rules of Origin requirements under the agreement will determine whether your products qualify for preferential rates -- our Scout Reports include detailed product-level tariff analysis.
Regulatory Landscape
BIS Certification / QCO Compliance: What British Companies Need
The primary regulatory gatekeeper for machinery entering India is BIS (Bureau of Indian Standards). British companies must obtain BIS Certification / QCO Compliance, a process that typically takes 6-12 months.
Key requirements:
Product registration and testing: All machinery products must meet Indian standards, which are often adapted from ISO/IEC but with India-specific modifications. Testing must be performed at BIS-recognised laboratories, and British test data is accepted only when generated by ILAC-accredited facilities.
Authorised Indian Representative: Foreign manufacturers must appoint an Authorised Indian Representative (AIR) who holds a valid Import-Export Code (IEC). The AIR assumes regulatory liability and must maintain compliance records in India.
Labelling and documentation: Products must carry ISI marks (where BIS-mandated), with labelling in English and Hindi. Technical documentation must include manufacturing process flows, QC protocols, and test certificates translated into English.
Quality Control Orders (QCOs): India is progressively expanding mandatory QCOs to new product categories. In machinery, recent QCOs have added compliance requirements that were previously voluntary. British companies should treat QCO monitoring as an ongoing obligation, not a one-time exercise.
Our Accelerator service includes full regulatory mapping for your specific product portfolio, including timeline modelling and cost estimation for BIS Certification / QCO Compliance.
Competitive Landscape
Who You Are Competing Against in India
The Indian machinery market features three competitive tiers that British companies must understand:
Tier 1 -- Western multinationals: Large British and other European/American incumbents who entered India 10-20 years ago and have established manufacturing, distribution, and service networks. These firms set the quality benchmark but are often perceived as expensive and slow to customise for Indian requirements.
Tier 2 -- Chinese and East Asian suppliers: Rapidly improving quality at 30-50% lower price points. Chinese suppliers in machinery have gained significant share since 2018, particularly in price-sensitive segments. However, post-COVID and in the context of India's "China+1" policy, Indian buyers are actively seeking alternatives.
Tier 3 -- Domestic Indian manufacturers: Growing in capability but still reliant on imported technology for high-precision or complex applications. Many Indian firms actively seek technology licensing or JV partnerships with Western companies.
The strategic opportunity for British machinery companies lies in the mid-market: offering Western quality and reliability at a price point that undercuts Tier 1 multinationals while maintaining a clear quality premium over Tier 2 Chinese alternatives. This requires an India-specific pricing strategy, localised service infrastructure, and in many cases, a local assembly or manufacturing presence.
Next Steps
Your India Market Entry Roadmap
The path from export ambition to India market presence follows a predictable sequence. Based on our work with British machinery companies, here is the recommended approach:
Month 1-2: Market validation. Commission a Scout Report to validate market size, identify specific product-market fit, map competitors, and model tariff scenarios for your product range. Go/no-go decision point.
Month 3-6: Regulatory groundwork. Initiate BIS Certification / QCO Compliance applications. Appoint an Authorised Indian Representative. Begin BIS testing if applicable. This stage runs in parallel with partner identification.
Month 4-8: Partner selection. Identify and vet 3-5 potential distribution partners, technology licensees, or JV candidates. Conduct due diligence including financial analysis, reference checks, and site visits.
Month 6-12: Market entry execution. Finalise partner agreements, complete regulatory approvals, establish service infrastructure, and execute go-to-market plan with initial reference customers.
Tensor Advisory supports British companies at every stage. Our Scout Report (€5,000-€8,000) provides the intelligence foundation. The Accelerator (€15,000-€20,000) adds partner identification and entry model design. Embedded Advisory (€20,000-€50,000) provides hands-on support through first-year operations.
Related Intelligence
Further Reading
EU-India FTA: Machinery & Industrial Equipment Sector Analysis
Read briefing →BIS Certification Guide for European Companies
Read briefing →India Market Entry Costs: A Realistic Budget
Read briefing →Five Mistakes Western Companies Make Entering India
Read briefing →How to Find a Reliable Distributor in India
Read briefing →Our Services
How Tensor Advisory Helps British Companies Enter India
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Related Market Entry Guides
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