Moneycontrol PRO
Swing Trading 101
Swing Trading 101

Budget 2026 Expectations for Tourism: Sector seeks GST relief, infrastructure status and policy support

Budget 2026-27 could be a turning point for India’s tourism sector. Industry leaders are calling for simplified GST, infrastructure status, easier MSME financing, and policy support to boost growth, employment, and global competitiveness.

February 01, 2026 / 11:48 IST
Union Budget 2026: Tourism sector urges GST simplification, infrastructure recognition, and MSME support to drive growth and jobs
Snapshot AI
  • Tourism sector seeks industry status, GST reforms, easier MSME financing in Budget 2026
  • Stakeholders call for infrastructure investment, visa policy review, and skill development
  • Tourism contributed 5.22% to GDP and 13.34% to employment in 2023-24

As the Union Budget 2026-27 approaches, India’s travel, tourism and hospitality sector is closely tracking policy signals that could shape its next phase of growth. Industry stakeholders are calling for structural reforms that go beyond short-term incentives — seeking infrastructure status, GST rationalisation, easier access to finance for MSMEs, improved connectivity, and sustained government support to position tourism as a core economic growth engine.

With domestic travel surging and international interest steadily recovering, industry leaders believe Budget 2026 presents a critical opportunity to address long-standing fiscal and regulatory gaps and strengthen India’s competitiveness as a global tourism destination.

Tourism seen as key driver of economic growth and jobs

Stakeholders across the travel, tourism and hospitality ecosystem say the sector has emerged as a major contributor to economic recovery, regional development and employment generation. They argue that structural and strategic reforms are now needed to transition tourism from being viewed largely as a service industry to becoming a key infrastructure-led growth driver for the country.

India was ranked 39th in the Travel and Tourism Development Index (TTDI) 2024, published by the World Economic Forum. Meanwhile, the tourism sector is projected to post 6–8 per cent revenue growth in FY26, according to the Indian Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF).

Government data underlines the sector’s growing economic footprint. As of June 2025, inbound tourism stood at 16.5 lakh visitors, while outbound tourism touched 84.4 lakh travellers, contributing Rs 51,532 crore in foreign exchange earnings.

As per provisional estimates of the National Accounts Statistics 2025, tourism contributed Rs 15.73 lakh crore to India’s GDP in 2023-24, accounting for 5.22 per cent of the total economy. Employment generation remains another major strength, with the Periodic Labour Force Survey (PLFS) estimating 36.90 million direct jobs and 47.72 million indirect jobs, together representing 13.34 per cent of total employment in the country.

Industry calls for GST simplification, financing support and new ownership models

Industry leaders say that while policy initiatives over the past decade have helped expand tourism infrastructure and visibility, the next stage of growth will depend on simplified taxation, better financing models, and support for evolving ownership and operating structures — particularly for MSMEs that form the backbone of the sector.

Stakeholders also highlighted the importance of rising domestic tourism demand and growing interest from international travellers, noting that tourism and hospitality have the potential to emerge as one of India’s most significant contributors to economic expansion and job creation.

Industry leaders weigh in ahead of Union Budget 2026

As expectations build ahead of Budget 2026, leaders from across the travel and tourism industry have outlined key reforms they believe could unlock sustained, long-term growth.

Hari Ganapathy, Co‑Founder, Pickyourtrail

"As we head into Union Budget 2026, travel and tourism are at a genuine inflection point. Demand is clearly back, but infrastructure and connectivity will decide whether this growth compounds or plateaus.”

He added that while aviation capacity in India is expanding rapidly, this growth must be matched by faster airport expansion, stronger regional connectivity and smoother last-mile integration with rail and road networks to unlock its full economic impact. He also stressed the need for structural support for the sector, including industry status for tourism and hospitality, easier access to long-term financing, GST simplification and sustained investment in destination development and skill building to strengthen India’s global competitiveness.

Vishal Suri – Managing Director & CEO, SOTC Travel Limited

Calling for comprehensive tax reforms and formal recognition of tourism as an industry, Vishal Suri said Budget 2026 presents an opportunity to simplify compliance and improve liquidity across the sector. He highlighted the need for GST procedural reforms such as centralised registration and simplified returns, a flat 1% TCS to ease cash-flow pressures on travellers, and industry status to unlock long-term growth.

“The Union Budget 2026 is a chance to strengthen India’s tourism foundations and accelerate growth"

Mahesh Iyer – Managing Director & CEO, Thomas Cook (India)

Emphasising tourism’s role in driving economic growth, Mahesh Iyer said Budget 2026 offers a crucial opportunity to unlock the sector’s full potential through industry status, infrastructure investment and targeted policy support.

“Granting industry status would provide access to affordable financing, lower interest rates, and institutional credit—particularly for MSMEs that form the backbone of the sector."

He added that targeted infrastructure investment in under-served regions, spiritual destinations and Tier II and III cities, along with a single-window clearance system for hospitality projects, could speed up development. Strengthening inbound tourism, he said, would also require support for niche segments such as medical, sustainable and MICE tourism, visa reforms, skill development and higher spending on global campaigns like Incredible India, alongside continued backing for digital infrastructure and technologies such as AI and blockchain.

Ms. Shoba Rudra, Founder of RARE India

Calling for stronger budgetary support for sustainable tourism, heritage conservation and global promotion, industry expert Shoba Rudra outlined key priorities to boost India’s inbound travel growth.

“My recommendations for the Budget include tax exemptions and funding support for small hoteliers working on heritage preservation, along with dedicated funds to promote India in international markets.”

Vikas Narula – Co Founder, Depot48

Vikas Narula highlighted the critical role of cultural venues in supporting communities and local economies, and the need for policy recognition to ensure their long-term sustainability.

"Hospitality is not just about food and footfall, it is about sustaining spaces where music, communities, and local economies intersect."

He said cultural venues invest year-round in artists, staff and local communities but are often seen by policy as short-term consumption. Budget 2026, he added, is an opportunity to recognise cultural hospitality as a stable, employment-generating sector, with predictable taxation, licensing and access to capital, allowing venues to invest confidently in people, programming and safer, more inclusive public spaces that boost tourism and city life.

Tourism allocations in Union Budget 2025: A recap

In the Union Budget 2025-26, the government allocated Rs 2,541.06 crore to the tourism sector, focusing on infrastructure development, skill enhancement and improved travel facilitation.

A key initiative announced was the development of the top 50 tourist destinations in partnership with state governments through a “challenge mode” framework. The programme aims to upgrade tourism infrastructure, enhance connectivity and improve ease of travel. Under this model, states are required to provide land for critical infrastructure such as hotels, which are classified under the Infrastructure Harmonised Master List (HML) to attract private investment.

In addition, 40 projects across 23 states were approved for interest-free loans amounting to Rs 3,295.8 crore under the Special Assistance to States for Capital Investment, with a repayment tenure of 50 years.

The Swadesh Darshan Scheme 2.0, focused on sustainable and responsible tourism, received Rs 793.2 crore, while Rs 60 crore was earmarked for skill development in FY26 to support training programmes for youth in hospitality management and tourism services.

What the sector expects from Budget 2026

With tourism emerging as a significant contributor to GDP, employment and foreign exchange earnings, industry stakeholders believe Budget 2026 has the potential to be a turning point. Simplified GST norms, industry status, easier access to credit, targeted infrastructure investments and continued policy support for inbound and niche tourism segments are expected to dominate pre-Budget discussions.

If addressed, these measures could help cement tourism’s role as one of India’s most powerful drivers of inclusive growth, regional development and global engagement.

Priyanka Roshan
Priyanka Roshan With over eight years in multimedia journalism, is passionate about storytelling—both visual and textual—across travel, jobs, business, markets, politics, and daily news. From crafting engaging articles to producing compelling videos, she blends creativity with strategy to bring stories to life. With a strong foundation in SEO, and video production she ensures content not only informs but also resonates with audiences.
first published: Jan 28, 2026 12:32 pm

Discover the latest Business News, Sensex, and Nifty updates. Obtain Personal Finance insights, tax queries, and expert opinions on Moneycontrol or download the Moneycontrol App to stay updated!

Subscribe to Tech Newsletters

  • On Saturdays

    Find the best of Al News in one place, specially curated for you every weekend.

  • Daily-Weekdays

    Stay on top of the latest tech trends and biggest startup news.

Advisory Alert: It has come to our attention that certain individuals are representing themselves as affiliates of Moneycontrol and soliciting funds on the false promise of assured returns on their investments. We wish to reiterate that Moneycontrol does not solicit funds from investors and neither does it promise any assured returns. In case you are approached by anyone making such claims, please write to us at grievanceofficer@nw18.com or call on 02268882347