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Law Update
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On 29th June 2026, the Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC), under the Ministry of Finance (Department of Revenue), issued Notification No. 59/2026-Customs (N.T.) revising the tariff values for a range of commodities including palm oil, palmolein, soya bean oil, brass scrap, gold, silver, and areca nuts. This notification directly affects import valuation and customs duty calculation for businesses dealing in these goods.
This guide explains the notification in simple, practical terms what it says, what has changed (or not), why tariff values matter, and how businesses should respond.
Customs duty on many bulk commodities in India is not always calculated on the actual transaction value declared by the importer. Instead, for certain notified goods, the government fixes a "tariff value," a benchmark value per unit (per metric tonne, per 10 grams, or per kilogram) under Section 14(2) of the Customs Act, 1962 (Act No. 52 of 1962). Duty is then calculated on this notified tariff value instead of the fluctuating market price, giving both the government and importers a predictable base for taxation.
This system was originally established on 3rd August 2001. Since global commodity prices move constantly, CBIC reviews and revises these tariff values periodically, sometimes every two weeks, through fresh notifications. The current notification is one such periodic revision, replacing the tariff value tables that were last updated on 15th June 2026.
This notification substitutes Table-1, Table-2, and Table-3 of the original 2001 notification with revised tables covering palm oil, palmolein, soyabean oil, brass scrap, gold, silver, and areca nuts. Table-1 covers Crude Palm Oil, RBD Palm Oil, Other Palm Oil, Crude Palmolein, RBD Palmolein, Other Palmolein, Crude Soyabean Oil, and Brass Scrap. Table-2 covers Gold in various forms, Silver in various forms, Gold bars, Gold coins, and Gold findings. Table-3 covers Areca Nuts (Supari).
The important part is that despite issuing a fresh notification, every single tariff value listed remains the same as in the previous notification. The document itself marks each entry with no change.
For edible oils, Crude Palm Oil stays at US dollar1232 per Metric Tonne, RBD Palm Oil at US dollar 1238, Other Palm Oil at US dollar1235, Crude Palmolein at US dollar 1247, RBD Palmolein at US dollar 1250, Other Palmolein at US dollar 1249, and Crude Soyabean Oil at US dollar 1248 per Metric Tonne. Brass Scrap of all grades continues at US dollar 7814 per Metric Tonne.
For precious metals, Gold availing benefits under Notification No. 45/2025-Customs remains at US dollar 1348 per 10 grams, while Silver under the same benefit notification stays at US dollar 1897 per kilogram. General silver, including semi-manufactured forms, also continues at US dollar 1897 per kilogram, and gold bars, gold coins, and gold findings remain at US dollar 1348 per 10 grams. Areca Nuts continue at US dollar 10785 per Metric Tonne.
In short, this notification does not introduce any new value, rate, or category it simply reconfirms the existing tariff values through a fresh, legally current notification, replacing the reference to the older 15th June 2026 notification. This is standard CBIC practice: even when global prices remain broadly stable, CBIC formally re-notifies tariff values at each periodic review cycle so that importers, customs brokers, and assessing officers always have an up-to-date notification to rely on, rather than citing an outdated one.
| Table | Goods Covered |
| Table-1 | Crude Palm Oil, RBD Palm Oil, Other Palm Oil, Crude Palmolein, RBD Palmolein, Other Palmolein, Crude Soyabean Oil, Brass Scrap |
| Table-2 | Gold (various forms), Silver (various forms), Gold bars, Gold coins, Gold findings |
| Table-3 | Areca Nuts (Supari) |
Here is the important part: despite the fresh notification, every single tariff value listed remains unchanged from the previous notification. The document itself marks each entry with no change.
| Item | New Tariff Value | Change from Previous |
| Crude Palm Oil | US dollar 1232 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| RBD Palm Oil | US dollar 1238 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Other Palm Oil | US dollar 1235 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Crude Palmolein | US dollar 1247 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| RBD Palmolein | US dollar 1250 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Other Palmolein | US dollar 1249 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Crude Soyabean Oil | US dollar 1248 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Brass Scrap (all grades) | US dollar 7814 per Metric Tonne | No change |
| Gold (Notification 45/2025 benefit) | US dollar 1348 per 10 grams | No change |
| Silver (Notification 45/2025 benefit) | US dollar 1897 per kilogram | No change |
| Silver (general/semi-manufactured) | US dollar 1897 per kilogram | No change |
| Gold bars, coins, findings | US dollar 1348 per 10 grams | No change |
| Areca Nuts | US dollar 10785 per Metric Tonne | No change |
This is standard CBIC practice. Even when global prices remain broadly stable, CBIC formally reconfirms tariff values through a fresh notification at each review cycle. This keeps the legal reference point current and gives importers, customs brokers, and assessing officers a clear, up-to-date notification to cite instead of relying on an older one.
This notification carries a specific, short-notice effective date:
| Date | Event |
| 15th June 2026 | Previous tariff value notification (No. 55/2026) came into force |
| 29th June 2026 | Notification No. 59/2026 issued and published in the Gazette |
| 30th June 2026 | Notification comes into force |
The notification explicitly states it "shall come into force with effect from the 30th day of June, 2026," just one day after issuance. This is typical for tariff value notifications, which are issued on a fast, recurring cycle (roughly every two weeks) to keep pace with global commodity price movements, even when, as in this case, the values themselves don't move.
CBIC's tariff value mechanism, and its periodic revision, exists for clear administrative and trade-facilitation reasons:
Step 1: Update Reference Documentation
Ensure your customs filing team, CHA (Customs House Agent), or import documentation is the current authority for tariff values from 30th June 2026 onward, replacing references to the superseded 15th June notification.
Step 2: Verify Bill of Entry Filings
For any import of the goods covered: palm oil, palmolein, soyabean oil, brass scrap, gold, silver, or areca nuts cleared on or after 30th June 2026, confirm that the bill of entry reflects the correct, currently applicable tariff value and notification reference.
Step 3: Cross-Check Linked Notifications
For gold and silver imports claiming benefits under entries 194 and 195 of Notification No. 45/2025-Customs, ensure your documentation correctly establishes eligibility for that benefit, since the tariff value applied depends on it.
Step 4: Monitor the Next Revision Cycle
Since CBIC revises these values roughly fortnightly, set up a simple internal tracking system (a shared calendar reminder or compliance checklist) to check for the next tariff value notification, expected around mid-July 2026.
Step 5: Align Costing and Pricing Models
Even though the values are unchanged this cycle, periodically cross-verify your internal costing sheets against the latest notified values to avoid all the errors accumulating from outdated references.
These are the advantages that businesses must get:
This particular notification is a routine regulatory action, not a policy shift, so the burden vs. benefit debate looks different here compared to a substantive rule change.
In favour of this being a smooth, low-friction update
The values themselves have not changed at all, so there is no real additional compliance cost, no need to revise pricing, and no impact on duty outflow. The only administrative task is updating the notification reference in paperwork, a minor, procedural step.
The minor friction points
Businesses and customs brokers must still track and cite the correct, current notification number each cycle. Missing this update, while unlikely to cause duty errors given unchanged values, could still create documentation inconsistencies during audits or scrutiny if the wrong (superseded) notification number is quoted.
Overall view
This is a routine, procedural notification that keeps the regulatory record current without creating any real additional burden for businesses. It must also reflect CBIC's systematic and transparent approach to tariff value management, which benefits trade predictability more than it costs businesses in compliance efforts.
Frequent tariff value notifications like this one create ongoing service opportunities for businesses supporting the import-export ecosystem:
Not every regulatory notification signals a major change, and Notification No. 59/2026-Customs (N.T.) is a good example of that. The tariff values for palm oil, palmolein, soyabean oil, brass scrap, gold, silver, and areca nuts remain exactly where they were. Still, the notification itself is a reminder that customs valuation is a living, regularly reviewed system, not a one-time fixed rule.
At Corpseed, our message to importers and customs stakeholders is straightforward: build a habit of tracking every CBIC tariff value notification, even when the values don't change. Staying current with the correct, latest notification reference protects your documentation from errors, keeps your compliance audit trail clean, and ensures that you're never caught off guard when an actual revision does happen. Treat routine notifications as an opportunity to keep your systems sharp, not as something to ignore until the numbers move.
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