New Delhi: As the country is all set to brace the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime from July 1, the taxation on host of products will undergo changes.


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The GST Council has decided the tax rates for 1,211 items, a majority kept at 18 percent.


Meat, fresh vegetables, honey, jaggery, prasadam, kumkum, bindi, pappad and contraceptives have been exempt from GST levy.


Here's a list of products that will become expensive and cheaper after the implementation of GST


  •     Small cars will be charged 1 percent cess on top of 28 percent tax
  •     Mid-sized and luxury cars will attract cess of 15 percent on top of the peak rate
  •     Aerated drinks have been put in the 28 percent bracket along with a cess of 12 percent
  •     Pizza bread, sevaiya, condensed milk, frozen vegetables will attract 5 percent levy
  •     GST on Coal has been brought down to 5 percent from the current tax incidence of 11.69 percent
  •     oil, soaps and toothpaste will be charged GST of 18 percent instead of present 22-24
  •     ACs and refrigerators will fall in the 28 percent tax slab
  •     Life-saving drugs have been kept at 5 percent
  •     All capital goods and all industrial intermediaries would attract 18 percent tax instead of 28 percent.
  •     'Mithai' or sweets will attract 5 percent levy.
  •     Sugar, tea, coffee (barring instant coffee) and edible oil will attract the lowest tax rate of 5 percent
  •     Frozen meat will attract a GST of 12 percent
  •     Ayurvedic or homeopathy medicines, agarbatti, umbrella, electric vehicles and mobile phone manufacturing will be taxed at 12 percent
  •     Pastries and cakes, pasta, ice cream and soups, instant food mixes, betel nut, vinegar and sharbat will attract 18 percent tax
  •     28 percent tax will be levied on chewing gum, chocolates, custard powder and waffles containing chocolate.
  • Train passengers will have to pay a bit more to travel AC and first class. Service tax on ticket charges is set to hike from 4.5 percent to 5 percent
  • Financial services like Credit card bill and telecom have been put in the 18 percent GST slab
  • GST will be levied at the rate of 2.25 percent on premium payment for endowment policy as compared to 1.88 percent earlier
  • Entertainment tax will be merged with service tax and a composite 28 percent levy charged on cinema services as well as gambling and betting at race course
  • Gold will become slightly costlier as gold and gold jewellery will be taxed at 3 percent.