ATF Tax Cuts Ease Pressure on Indian Airlines
Delhi and Mumbai Reduce ATF Taxes to Support Aviation Sector
Delhi and Maharashtra have reduced Value Added Tax (VAT) on Aviation Turbine Fuel (ATF), offering relief to Indian airlines facing rising fuel costs and operational pressures.
Delhi has reduced VAT on ATF from 25% to 7% for six months, while Maharashtra has cut Mumbai’s ATF VAT from 18% to 7% for domestic flight operations.
The decision comes as airlines continue to deal with higher jet fuel prices linked to geopolitical tensions in West Asia, rupee depreciation and rising maintenance and leasing costs.
Industry representatives had earlier raised concerns about rising fuel costs, which they said had increased to nearly 55–60% of airline operating costs, up from 30–40% before the recent escalation in global fuel prices.
The reductions are expected to have a significant impact, as Delhi and Mumbai remain India’s two largest aviation hubs, handling a major share of domestic and international passenger traffic, as well as aircraft refuelling.
According to aviation industry estimates, lower fuel taxes at the two metro airports could improve route economics and reduce the need for fuel tankering, in which airlines carry additional fuel from airports with lower fuel taxes.
The tax cuts may particularly benefit airlines with major hub operations in Delhi and Mumbai, including Air India and IndiGo.
Despite the reduction in fuel taxes, industry experts said passengers may not immediately see lower airfares, as airline ticket pricing continues to depend largely on demand, aircraft availability and operational capacity.
The move has also revived discussions around bringing ATF under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) framework, a long-standing demand from the aviation industry aimed at simplifying fuel taxation across India.
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