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Apr 29, 2026
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CBIC allows duty drawback on re-export of SEZ goods cleared to DTA
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The Central Board of Indirect Taxes and Customs (CBIC) has clarified that goods cleared from Special Economic Zone (SEZ) units to the Domestic Tariff Area (DTA) on payment of applicable duties, and subsequently re-exported, will be treated as "imported goods" for the purpose of duty drawback under Section 74 of the Customs Act, 1962. The clarification, issued through a notification dated April 27, comes amid divergent practices across customs field formations, with some allowing such claims and others rejecting them on the ground that SEZ-to-DTA clearances do not constitute imports. "....in cases where goods are cleared into DTA from SEZ unit on payment of applicable duties and are re-exported thereafter are to be treated as imported goods for the purposes of disbursement of drawback under Section 74 of the Customs Act, 1962", the notification said.
Under Section 74, drawback is allowed on re-export of imported goods subject to conditions such as easy identification and proof of duty payment. The Board has now clarified that goods sourced from SEZ units on payment of duties meet this threshold. According to the notification, the instruction addresses audit objections that had highlighted inconsistent positions taken by field formations. It noted that the Board has relied on provisions of the Special Economic Zones Act, particularly Sections 2(o) and 30, to underline that SEZs are treated as foreign territory for trade and duty purposes, and that, on a combined reading, there appears to be no gap in the legal framework on the issue.
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