GST collections hit all-time high of ₹2.42 lakh crore in April
Gross GST collections in April 2026 stood at ₹2,42,702 crore, an 8.7% year-on-year increase over ₹2,23,265 crore in April 2025, marking the highest single-mo...
What Happened
- Gross GST collections in April 2026 stood at ₹2,42,702 crore, an 8.7% year-on-year increase over ₹2,23,265 crore in April 2025, marking the highest single-month GST revenue since the tax's introduction in July 2017.
- Collections were driven by a 25.8% surge in import-related taxes (₹57,580 crore) and year-end stock clearances by businesses, reflecting resilient consumption and trade activity.
- Domestic GST revenue grew at a slower pace of 4.3%, reaching ₹1,85,122 crore for the month.
- Net GST revenue after refunds settled at ₹2,10,909 crore, a 7.3% increase year-on-year.
- April traditionally records higher-than-average collections due to settlement of fourth-quarter (January–March) dues, contributing to the annual pattern of April peaks.
- The record comes without the support of GST Compensation Cess on items like luxury goods and sin goods — a mechanism that had provided supplementary revenue through June 2022.
Static Topic Bridges
GST Architecture: CGST, SGST, and IGST
India's Goods and Services Tax, enacted under Article 246A (inserted by the Constitution (101st Amendment) Act, 2016), is a dual GST system levied concurrently by the Centre and States. The three components are: CGST (Central GST, collected by the Union), SGST (State GST, collected by each state on intra-state supplies), and IGST (Integrated GST, levied by the Centre on inter-state supplies and imports, and subsequently apportioned). GST is a destination-based consumption tax — revenue flows to the state where goods or services are consumed, not produced.
- Constitutional basis: Article 246A grants concurrent power to Parliament and State Legislatures to legislate on GST; Article 279A constitutes the GST Council.
- GST Council: Chaired by Union Finance Minister; state finance ministers as members; decisions by three-fourths majority (Centre has one-third voting weight; States collectively have two-thirds).
- IGST on imports: Collected entirely by the Centre and subsequently distributed between Centre and consuming state per apportionment formula.
- Rate slabs: 0%, 5%, 12%, 18%, 28% — with a special 3% slab for gold and precious metals.
Connection to this news: The April 2026 figure of ₹57,580 crore from imports reflects IGST on imported goods — a significant and growing component of total GST revenue. The 25.8% surge in import taxes was the primary driver of the record collection.
GST Compensation Cess: Origin and Phaseout
The Goods and Services Tax (Compensation to States) Act, 2017 mandated that the Centre compensate states for any revenue shortfall below a guaranteed 14% annual growth (over 2015-16 base) for the first five years of GST implementation — until June 2022. To fund this compensation, a Compensation Cess was levied on luxury goods, pan masala, tobacco, coal, and aerated beverages (the "sin goods" list), over and above the 28% peak rate. The cess revenue was deposited into the GST Compensation Fund and distributed to deficit states monthly.
- Compensation period: July 1, 2017 to June 30, 2022 (5 years).
- Guaranteed growth rate to states: 14% per annum on 2015-16 base revenues.
- Compensation Cess: Levied at rates up to 135% (pan masala), ₹400/tonne (coal), 22% (large cars/SUVs).
- COVID shortfall crisis: In FY21 and FY22, cess collections fell far short of compensation obligations; Centre borrowed back-to-back loans on behalf of states.
- Post-June 2022: Cess collection continued to repay the COVID-era borrowings (originally ₹2.69 lakh crore); cess formally extended for repayment through March 2026.
Connection to this news: The April 2026 record comes precisely as the extended Compensation Cess has wound down. The strong base GST collection — without the supplementary crutch of cess-funded top-ups — signals that GST's own architecture is generating adequate and growing revenue, though states now bear the full risk of shortfalls without any compensation guarantee.
Import-Driven GST Growth and Trade Dynamics
GST on imports is collected as IGST at the customs point and is a significant indicator of trade volume and import bill health. A sharp rise in import-related GST reflects higher import values — either higher volumes or higher global prices (or both). In April 2026, import GST surged 25.8%, consistent with India's widening trade deficit and continued high import demand in electronics, crude, gold, and capital goods.
- Import GST (IGST): April 2026 — ₹57,580 crore (vs. ₹45,768 crore in April 2025).
- Trade deficit context: India's goods trade deficit has widened in FY26, driven by electronics, crude oil, and capital goods imports.
- IGST on imports feeds both Centre and States proportionally after apportionment — it is not solely Centre revenue.
Connection to this news: Strong import-side GST can mask slower domestic consumption growth. Domestic GST grew at only 4.3% in April 2026, signalling that household and business consumption — the true measure of demand-side economic health — is growing more modestly than the headline figure suggests.
Key Facts & Data
- April 2026 gross GST: ₹2,42,702 crore — all-time monthly high.
- YoY growth: 8.7% over April 2025 (₹2,23,265 crore).
- Import GST: ₹57,580 crore — up 25.8% YoY.
- Domestic GST: ₹1,85,122 crore — up 4.3% YoY.
- Net GST (after refunds): ₹2,10,909 crore — up 7.3% YoY.
- GST introduced: 1 July 2017, replacing a patchwork of 17 central and state taxes.
- Constitutional amendment: 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016 (inserted Articles 246A, 269A, 279A).
- Compensation cess operational period: July 2017 – June 2022; extended for COVID-borrowing repayment through March 2026.
- GST Council meetings held as of 2026: Over 53 meetings since inaugural meeting in 2016.