In a positive indicator for India’s fiscal health, Goods and Services Tax (GST) collections for September 2025 reached ₹1.89 lakh crore, marking a 9.1% year-on-year increase and 1.5% growth over the previous month. This growth comes despite recent tax rate reductions under the GST 2.0 reforms, suggesting sustained consumption and robust tax compliance. The September collection is especially significant as it captures the initial effects of the rate rationalisation introduced from September 22, which lowered GST on 375 essential and non-essential items, including food, medicines, electronics, and automobiles.
GST 2.0 Reforms: Rate Rationalisation and Demand Trends
The government’s new phase of GST reforms, dubbed GST 2.0, took effect in the latter half of September and aimed at simplifying rates and boosting consumption. Despite expectations of a temporary revenue dip, collections remained strong, reflecting,
- Increased consumer spending after rate cuts
- Pre-festival demand
- Strong compliance and reporting from businesses
According to experts, the rate cut led to pent-up consumption, particularly in essential and discretionary segments, balancing out the slower demand observed in the first three weeks of the month.
Detailed Collection Breakdown
- Gross GST Revenue (September 2025): ₹1.89 lakh crore
- Year-on-Year Growth: 9.1% (₹1.73 lakh crore in September 2024)
- Month-on-Month Growth: 1.5% (₹1.86 lakh crore in August 2025)
- Domestic Revenue: ₹1.36 lakh crore (up 6.8% YoY)
- GST from Imports: ₹52,492 crore (up 15.6% YoY)
- Refunds: ₹28,657 crore (up 40.1% YoY)
- Net GST Revenue: ₹1.60 lakh crore (5% YoY increase)
This continued upward trend indicates resilience in domestic consumption, especially in the context of easing wholesale inflation and improving supply chains.
Strong GST Numbers Boost Economic Confidence
- The ₹1.89 lakh crore collection in September 2025 is a reassuring signal of India’s economic resilience, especially in the context of major policy changes.
- While concerns like logistics disruptions, ITC imbalances, and regional slowdowns persist, the broader picture points to a balanced, recovering economy responding well to tax incentives.
- As the festive season continues and reforms deepen, stakeholders can expect continued buoyancy in revenue, aiding both fiscal management and growth planning.
Key Takeaways
- GST collections in September 2025 rose to ₹1.89 lakh crore, up 9.1% YoY.
- GST 2.0 rate cuts began from September 22, reducing tax on 375 items.
- Domestic GST revenue: ₹1.36 lakh crore; Import GST: ₹52,492 crore.
- GST refunds rose by 40.1% YoY to ₹28,657 crore.
- Net GST revenue for the month stood at ₹1.60 lakh crore, growing 5% YoY.


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