Feb. GST collection increases by 8.1% to over ₹1.83 lakh crore


GST Collection February 2026: 8.1% Growth to ₹1.83 Lakh Crore


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Gross GST Collection (Feb 2026) ₹1.83 lakh crore
YoY Growth (Gross) +8.1%
Gross Domestic Revenue ~₹1.36 lakh crore (+5.3% YoY)
Gross Import Revenue ₹47,837 crore (+17.2% YoY)
Total Refunds ₹22,595 crore (+10.2%)
Net GST Collection ₹1.61 lakh crore (+7.9% YoY)
Net Cess Revenue ₹5,063 crore (down from ₹13,481 crore in Feb 2025)
Rate rationalisation effective September 2025
Items whose rates were slashed ~375 items
New slab structure 5%, 18% (general); 40% (ultra-luxury + tobacco)
Old slab structure 5%, 12%, 18%, 28%
Governing body GST Council (Art. 279A)
Constitutional basis 101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016
Administering legislation CGST Act 2017, IGST Act 2017, UTGST Act 2017, respective SGST Acts
Implementing Ministry Ministry of Finance (Dept. of Revenue)
Feb 2024 gross collection (comparator) ₹1,68,337 crore (+12.5% YoY) [S3]
FY 2024–25 total gross GST ₹22.08 lakh crore (9.4% growth) [S2]
GST portal for data GST Portal (data shifted from PIB, notified 2024) [S4]

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Legal / Constitutional

Administrative / Federalism

Ethical / Governance

Historical


6. Recent Developments (Last 12–18 Months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Gross GST collection in February 2026: over ₹1.83 lakh crore (+8.1% YoY). [S1]
  2. Net GST collection in February 2026: over ₹1.61 lakh crore (+7.9% YoY). [S1]
  3. Gross import GST revenue (Feb 2026): ₹47,837 crore — grew 17.2% YoY, the fastest component. [S1]
  4. GST rate rationalisation effective: September 2025; rates cut on ~375 items. [S1]
  5. New GST slabs post-rationalisation: 5% and 18% (general); 40% for ultra-luxury goods and tobacco. [S1]
  6. Old GST slabs: 5%, 12%, 18%, 28% (four slabs). [S1]
  7. Net cess revenue (Feb 2026): ₹5,063 crore — down sharply from ₹13,481 crore in February 2025. [S1]
  8. First month of GST rate cut implementation (Nov 2025): revenue dipped to ₹1.7 lakh crore. [S1]
  9. Highest-ever annual GST collection: ₹22.08 lakh crore in FY 2024–25 (9.4% growth). [S2]
  10. Constitutional provision for GST Council: Article 279A (inserted by 101st Constitutional Amendment, 2016). [S2]
  11. States with negative GST growth (Feb 2026): Tamil Nadu (–6%), Madhya Pradesh (–8%), Rajasthan (–1%). [S1]
  12. Ministry responsible for GST: Ministry of Finance, Department of Revenue. [S2]
  13. February 2024 gross GST collection: ₹1,68,337 crore (+12.5% YoY). [S3]
  14. GST data dissemination shifted from PIB to: GST Portal (2024). [S4]
  15. In the GST Council's weighted voting: Centre has 1/3 weight; States collectively have 2/3 weight. [S2]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper: GS-III (Indian Economy — Mobilisation of Resources, Issues of Budget, Taxation, Investment Models)

Specific Syllabus Headings: - Government Budgeting; Taxation; Fiscal Policy; Cooperative Federalism

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "GST rate rationalisation in September 2025 reduced slabs from four to two. Critically examine the impact of this reform on revenue buoyancy, federal equity, and India's consumption economy." (15 marks, GS-III)

  2. "The divergence in GST collection growth across major Indian States raises questions about the efficacy of cooperative federalism. Discuss the structural and administrative factors responsible for such inter-State variation." (10 marks, GS-III)

  3. "Evaluate the design of the GST Compensation Cess mechanism in light of the sharp fall in cess revenue in 2025–26 and its implications for State finances." (15 marks, GS-III)


9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
GST Council — composition, functions, voting mechanism Institutional backbone of all rate changes; Art. 279A directly relevant.
GST Compensation Cess Cess revenue collapse in Feb 2026 makes this topical; compensation period ended June 2022 but cess continues.
Fiscal Federalism in India Inter-State GST growth divergence directly engages Centre-State fiscal relations.
GST Rate Rationalisation (September 2025) Root cause of all February 2026 numbers; Fitment Committee's role.
Union Budget 2025–26 — Indirect Tax Proposals Budget context for where GST fits in Centre's overall revenue strategy.
Inflation and Consumption Patterns Rate cuts → consumption uptick logic; links CPI, IIP data to GST trends.
Revenue Deficit Grants (RDG) to States Relevant when States show negative GST growth and seek Centre's fiscal support.
101st Constitutional Amendment Act, 2016 Statutory and constitutional basis for the entire GST regime.

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Confusing Gross vs. Net GST: Net collection = Gross minus refunds. February 2026 gross was ₹1.83 lakh crore; net was ₹1.61 lakh crore (not the same figure). [S1]
  2. Wrong slab count post-rationalisation: After September 2025, the structure is NOT 5%–12%–18%–28%. It is 5% and 18% (plus 40% ultra-luxury). Aspirants may quote the old four-slab structure. [S1]
  3. Constitutional article confusion: GST Council is under Article 279A — not Art. 280 (Finance Commission) or Art. 268–269 (levy of taxes). [S2]
  4. Cess interpretation: The sharp fall in cess revenue (₹5,063 vs ₹13,481 crore) does not mean GST cess was abolished — it reflects the impact of rate rationalisation on demerit goods categorised differently now. [S1]
  5. Attribution of negative State growth: Tamil Nadu's –6% and MP's –8% are not national trend — the national average grew 8.1%. Mixing state-level negative growth with national figures in an answer is a common error. [S1]

11. Sources