
Minister of Commerce and Industry Piyush Goyal, during the India-Brazil Business Dialogue, in New Delhi on October 16, 2025
| Photo Credit: PTI
India has implemented a number of free trade agreements with developed nations and is in active dialogue for such pacts with nations including the U.S., Oman, and the EU, Commerce and Industry Minister Piyush Goyal said.
India has implemented trade pacts with Australia, the UAE and EFTA bloc. It has also signed an agreement with the U.K.
“We have done free trade agreements (FTAs) with many developed countries in the last three years…We are in active dialogue with the U.S., EU, Chile, Peru, New Zealand, and Oman,” the Minister told reporters in New Delhi.
“It clearly shows that India is the favoured and preferred destination both for investment and for bilateral trade,” he added.
Mr. Goyal also said that on Thursday (October 16, 2025), with Brazil, he has discussed expanding the preferential trade agreement from its current level so that “we can” in the future penetrate the South American market in a bigger way.
The Indian official team is in Washington at present to hold trade talks with their U.S. counterparts. The team will be there till Friday (October 17, 2025). In February this year, leaders of India and the U.S. directed officials to negotiate a proposed Bilateral Trade Agreement (BTA).

They have fixed a deadline to conclude the first tranche of the pact by the fall (October-November) of 2025. So far, five rounds of negotiations have been completed. Last month, Mr. Goyal led an official delegation to New York for trade talks.
These deliberations are important as the relations between the two countries have been reeling under severe stress after the Trump administration imposed a steep 50% on Indian goods. It includes a 25% additional import duty for buying Russian crude oil.
India has described these duties as “unfair, unjustified and unreasonable”. The Indian industry has also raised concerns over Mr. Trump’s new policy on H1B visas. However, the recent phone conversations between Prime Minister Narendra Modi and U.S. President Donald Trump have raised hopes of a positive outcome from the ongoing negotiations for the trade deal.
After a brief gap, Assistant U.S. Trade Representative for South and Central Asia Brendan Lynch held talks with Indian officials in New Delhi on September 16. In that meeting, both sides agreed to push for an early and mutually beneficial conclusion of the agreement.

The proposed pact aims to more than double the bilateral trade to $500 billion by 2030 from the current ₹191 billion. The U.S. remained India’s largest trading partner for the fourth consecutive year in 2024-25, with bilateral trade valued at $131.84 billion ($ 86.5 billion exports). It accounts for about 18% of India’s total goods exports, 6.22% in imports, and 10.73% in the country’s total merchandise trade.
India’s merchandise exports to the U.S. declined by 11.93% to $5.46 billion in September due to the high tariffs imposed by Washington, while imports increased by 11.78% to $3.98 billion during the month, according to the Commerce Ministry data.
Published – October 16, 2025 04:50 pm IST