India 2026: real opportunities in the Indian market | Octagona
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India 2026: real opportunities to enter and grow in the Indian market, now the world's fourth largest economy

India 2026: real opportunities to enter and grow in the Indian market, now the world's fourth largest economy

Summary 

India continues to be among the most dynamic markets in the world, with projected growth around 7% and a rapidly expanding domestic demand. For Italian companies, 2026 represents a strategic moment to consider structured entry: on one hand, the abolition of scheme X simplifies BIS certification, reducing regulatory uncertainty; on the other hand, the future EU-India free trade agreement promises to eliminate tariffs on over 96% of European exports, with savings of up to 4 billion euros per year. This guide accompanies Italian companies through concrete opportunities, rules to observe, and sectors on which to focus investments and resources to compete successfully in the world's fourth-largest market. 

India's ecosystem is accelerating: the country has overtaken Japan as the world's fourth-largest economy and is confirmed as one of the fastest-growing markets in 2025-26, with government estimates around 7-7.4% for fiscal year 2026-27. For Italian companies, this translates into structural demand for premium technologies, components, and goods, but access to the indian market in 2026 requires discipline on compliance, pricing, and distribution channels. 

Within this framework, the abolition of the X scheme (OTR) and the path toward an EU-India free trade agreement (FTA) reshape operational priorities and timelines: on the one hand, less regulatory uncertainty over BIS certification; on the other hand, the prospect of significant duty reductions, amounting to about 96.6% of European exports to India, with potential savings of up to €4 billion per year for EU companies. 

This article is a practical guide for Italian companies that want to understand whether and how to enter the Indian market in 2026: what opportunities are realistic, what rules they need to govern (BIS, duties, EU-India agreement), and on which sectors to focus resources and risks. 

 

Why look at India now 

For Italian companies, India in 2026 is a “must-screen” market: it may not necessarily be a top priority for everyone, but it is a country worth evaluating in a structured way. The resilience of real growth, driven by domestic demand, investment and services, makes India a key market for those competing in high-value industrial and consumer sectors. 

 L’Economic Survey 2025-26 and the major economic newspapers confirm an expansionary trajectory, with inflation under control and credit improving, albeit with external risks (geopolitical, exports) to monitor. To be truly competitive in India, Italian enterprises need. three key pillars: 

  • Certified Quality (compliance with BIS standards and complete documentation) 
  • Reliable service before and after the sale (installation, parts availability, measurable SLAs) 
  • Local adaptation of product and processes (technical specifications, manuals/labels, logistics and tax compliance) 

Together, these elements reduce buyers' perceived risks, accelerate approvals, and increase the likelihood of commercial success in the Indian market in 2026. 

 

Rules of the game: what changes on BIS certification 

Compliance with the Indian Standards remains the “Passport” to sell in India. After months of debate, the government canceled the scheme X related to the Omnibus Technical Regulation (OTR) for electrical machinery and equipment: many families, previously included, no longer require that dedicated pathway. 

The following remain active BIS patterns traditional: 

  • ISI/FMCS, with license and plant audit, typical for machinery, components and industrial products 
  • CRS, to registration, typical for electronics and ICT 

The result is less regulatory uncertainty, but more responsibility in properly mapping HS → IS → scheme and governing product versions and variants. 

In operational terms, the route can be summarized as follows: 

  1. Check whether the product falls under a Quality Control Order (QCO) and identify the applicable Indian Standard (IS) 
  2. Choose the correct compliance scheme - ISI/FMCS (license with plant audit) or CRS (registration, typical for electronic/ICT) - based on perimeter and product type 
  3. Prepare a complete data room (data sheets, bills of materials and drawings, test reports, manuals/labels, proxies and appointment of Authorized Indian Representative) and plan test/audit 
  4. Apply the intended marking (Standard Mark/ISI or CRS registration number) in a manner consistent with the license and approved variants 

Rigorous governance of versions and variants, samples, suppliers, and deadlines reduces retests, customs blockages, and delays in enterprise tenders and supplies. 

 

Toward the EU-India agreement: tariffs, access and timing 

The agreement of EU-India Free Trade Agreement (FTA) concluded negotiations at the end of January 2026 and has now entered the legal review and ratification stage; the goal is Simplify access to their respective markets, reducing tariffs and non-tariff barriers and making rules more predictable for businesses. 

In practical terms, the understanding Eliminates or reduces duties on about 96.6% of European exports to India and brings the estimated annual savings for EU companies up to 4 billion euros; on the other hand, the EU almost completely liberalizes its tariff lines for Indian goods over a multi-year horizon. 

For key European sectors (machinery, chemical, pharmaceutical, aerospace), Indian duties, now often high, are being reduced or phased out, improving price competitiveness for the same value offered. In mobility, there is a sharp cut in tariffs on European cars, with a descent to 10% within dedicated annual quotas, and the phasing out of duties on components, supporting more integrated supply chains. On the premium agribusiness front, India significantly reduces tariffs on wines and olive oil, with abatement pathways already defined in the agreement's schedules. 

In addition to goods, the FTA opens up service segments (e.g., financial and maritime) and strengthens protections on intellectual property and sustainability, while chapters dedicated to SMEs aim to simplify procedures and transparency. The agreement is not just a tariff cut, but a structured framework that, once in force, reduces costs and operational uncertainties in the Indian market in 2026. To benefit, companies will need to adjust their price lists (net of duty), rules of origin, documentation and channel strategies in line with the implementation schedule. 

 

Where to focus effort: key areas 

Before allocating budget and resources, it is essential to focus effort on demand clusters consistent with competitive advantages and compliance requirements, rather than following sporadic opportunities. In the Indian context, this means. Select sectors and geographies with market depth, reliable and cost-to-serve sustainable channels, and plan short- and medium-term actions. 

  • Automation & Mechatronics: question driven by plant upgrade and downtime reduction. Opportunities in motion, sensors, cobots/AGVs and precision components, with local service and BIS documentation where required. 
  • Energy Efficiency & Decarbonization: Priority to solutions with clear payback: high-efficiency motors, VFDs, heat recovery, energy monitoring. Selling on a TCO basis with measurable KPIs and, where possible, performance-based models. 
  • Water and waste treatment: Urbanization and ever-increasing environmental standards create space for compact skids, pumps/valves, membranes, and quality control systems; proposing O&M and A/B spare parts is crucial to ensure service continuity. 
  • Food processing and cold chain: The transformed and modern retail sectors are growing. Opportunities in process lines, filling/packaging, and industrial refrigeration; hygiene, traceability, and a rapid service network to prevent plant downtime are winning. 
  • Construction, Materials & HVAC: large projects and upgrades support technical windows and doors, efficient MEP/HVAC systems, and BIM-ready solutions. Clear specifications, reliable logistics, and the ability to work alongside design firms and contractors are required. 
  • Healthcare & Devices (including pharma-machinery): Expansion of clinical capabilities and healthcare supply chains. Opportunities on diagnostic devices, medical furniture, clean rooms, and packaging machines: robust regulatory dossiers and service level agreements (AMCs) are essential. 
  • Digital for manufacturing (MES, analytics, OT security):  Focus on productivity and end-to-end visibility. Propose rapid pilots with demonstrable ROI, IT/OT integration, and local support to overcome reservations about adoption and security. 
  • Contract furniture & premium hospitality/retail: High-end tourist and retail clusters demand bespoke interiors, technical lighting and performance finishes. Decisive rapid mock-ups, project management and after-sales, with attention to logistics and construction time. 

 

Mistakes to avoid and how to prevent them 

Error 1: skipping regulatory mapping (HS → IS → schema) 

Starting the project without properly mapping the Harmonized System (HS) code, the applicable Indian Standard (IS), and the correct BIS scheme (FMCS or CRS) leads to irrelevant testing, duplication, and customs delays. To prevent this, it is crucial to initiate detailed regulatory mapping from the outset, using a product-specific checklist and confirming the pathway before proceeding. 

Mistake 2: Shipping unproven variants 

Differences between the certified sample and the goods actually shipped, such as changes in components, firmware, or materials, can invalidate the BIS license. In case of changes, a license extension or new conformity tests may be required; it is equally important to update markings and labels according to the changes. 

Mistake 3: Partners selected without due diligence 

Choosing a “name” distributor or partner without checking coverage capacity, available stock, or after-sales service can lead to sporadic sales and a lack of customer satisfaction. To avoid this, you need thorough due diligence (commercial, financial, technical) and a contract with clear KPIs on sales, delivery time, and service, possibly linking exclusivity to the achievement of targets. 

Error 4: Pricing and conditions not aligned with Indian market 2026 

Not considering the impact of duties, GST, logistics, and service costs can erode margins and compromise competitiveness. It is essential to work with net-of-duty price lists, TCO (Total Cost of Ownership) models with clear ROI, Incoterms consistent with shipping methods, and scenario simulations. 

Error 5: weak governance and cash management 

Without clear governance, defined milestones, and operational KPIs, it is easy to lose control over timelines, costs, and financial flows. A dedicated project owner, periodic review meetings, credit risk mitigation tools (insurance, letters of credit), and a logistics plan with buffers and inventory safety stock (PSI) help maintain control.

 

Conclusions: the road to safe and competitive entry into India 

India's attractiveness today is supported by solid fundamentals and a pro-industry agenda, but execution makes the difference between potential and results: compliance By design to BIS regulations, value positioning In priority segments, selected channels and partners with rigor, customer-friendly service, and risk governance that anticipates blockages and delays. 

The evolving regulatory framework and the horizon of FTA with the European Union urge preparation now: mapping HS→IS→scheme, planning test/audit, structuring data room and marking, grounding operational and financial KPIs. In this way, the Bureau of Indian Standards certification becomes a commercial enabler, reducing time-to-market and strengthening credibility and margins in the medium term. 

Relying on a specialized consulting with local presidium, capable of mapping BIS requirements, orchestrating tests and audits, selecting reliable partners, and setting KPIs, Accelerates entry, reduces risk and cost and supports a solid growth path and scalable in the Indian market 2026 for Italian companies. 

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