City
Epaper

CBIC eases procedures for provisional assessments of imports and exports

By IANS | Updated: September 16, 2025 11:45 IST

New Delhi, Sep 16 The latest amendments in customs rules on provisional assessments of imports and exports will ...

Open in App

New Delhi, Sep 16 The latest amendments in customs rules on provisional assessments of imports and exports will aid revenue protection, trade facilitation and bring closure to long-pending cases, industry experts said on Tuesday.

The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) has issued the Customs (Finalisation of Provisional Assessment) Regulations, 2025, aimed at enhancing speed, certainty, and transparency in customs administration. The new regulations lay down specific timelines for completing provisional assessments.

Industry experts expect the move to alleviate persistent bottlenecks in trade and customs administration.

"The Customs (Finalisation of Provisional Assessment) Regulations, 2025 mark a long-awaited move towards certainty and efficiency in customs administration.

Businesses will experience faster release of blocked working capital, lower compliance costs, and improved predictability in supply chains, he said.

Mishra, however, added that the true test will be in implementation -- especially in matters tied to Special Valuation Branch proceedings, DRI investigations, or prolonged litigation.

"Timely finalisation, while safeguarding the assessee’s right to present submissions, will be critical. If executed in the intended spirit, these regulations can balance revenue protection with trade facilitation, bringing closure to long-pending cases and building greater trust between industry and administration,” he further said.

Under the new rules, importers and exporters must provide required documents within 15 days of requisition, with a possible extension of up to two months. Customs officers are required to complete enquiries within 14 months. The finalisation of provisional assessments is to be completed within two years from the date of provisional assessment, except in cases involving appeals, stay orders, or international information requests, the notification said.

The new framework permits voluntary duty payments in the provisional assessment phase, which shall be adjusted against the duty finally assessed, at the time of finalisation.

Interest obligations and penalties up to Rs 25,000 apply for non-compliance. Additionally, procedures for refunds, duty recovery, and bond cancellations have been detailed to streamline processes.

Disclaimer: This post has been auto-published from an agency feed without any modifications to the text and has not been reviewed by an editor

Open in App

Related Stories

International"Need Greenland for national security": Trump warns Russia and China could move in

International"Killing in Iran is stopping, no plans for executions," says Trump amid protests

InternationalUS launches second phase of Trump's Gaza peace plan, announces demilitarisation, technocratic government

CricketBangladesh Cricket Board distances itself from director's remarks, assures action amid cricketers' outrage

Cricket"That's a quality hundred": Ryan ten Doeschate on KL Rahul's century in second ODI against NZ

Business Realted Stories

BusinessSecond half of year to be slow, says ACMA President

BusinessIndian banks' deposits cross Rs 253 lakh crore as of Dec'25: RBI

BusinessIndiaAI, NFRA launch AI-Powered Financial Reporting Compliance Challenge with Rs 1.5 Crore prize pool

BusinessRBI issues norms for internal ombudsman in banks, NBFCs

BusinessComposite salary account package for Central Govt staff launched with public sector banks