What Actually Happened
On June 12, 2026, India's Directorate General of Trade Remedies, or DGTR, the government body that investigates unfair trade practices, issued its Final Findings in a long-running case about TPU-based paint protection film imported from China.
The conclusion: Chinese PPF has been entering India at prices below what the Authority considers fair value, and this has caused real injury to Indian manufacturers of the same film. The DGTR has recommended that an anti-dumping duty be imposed, set individually for several named Chinese exporters and a higher residual rate for everyone else, for a period of five years once the Central Government formally notifies it.
This recommendation isn't law yet. It's a formal finding from the investigating authority. The actual duty only takes effect once the Ministry of Finance issues a notification putting it into force, something that typically follows within a few months of a Final Findings report like this one.
What "Anti-Dumping Duty" Actually Means
"Dumping" has a specific, legal meaning here, it isn't just a general complaint about cheap imports. It means a company is selling a product in another country for less than it charges in its own home market, or below its actual cost of production, in a way that damages the industry in the country receiving those imports.
When the DGTR finds dumping has occurred and caused genuine injury to a domestic industry, it can recommend a duty designed to close that price gap, not to punish imports generally, but specifically to offset the unfair pricing advantage. India follows what's called the "lesser duty rule", meaning the recommended duty is set at whichever is smaller: the actual margin of dumping, or the margin of injury to the domestic industry. The goal is to fix the unfair pricing, not to overcorrect.
This case was originally filed by Garware Hi-Tech Films, an Indian manufacturer of TPU-based PPF, back in 2023. The investigation period the Authority studied covered all of calendar year 2024, with injury data going back three financial years before that.
How the Investigation Got Here
Cases like this move slowly by design, since the Authority is required to gather actual pricing, cost, and import volume data from exporters, importers, and the domestic industry before reaching any conclusion.
What This Could Mean for PPF Prices
It's genuinely too early to say exactly how this lands on showroom and installer pricing, but the broad direction is fairly predictable. A duty on imported Chinese film raises the landed cost of that film in India, which narrows the price gap between it and film from other countries or from Indian manufacturers.
In practice, this tends to play out in one of a few ways: importers absorb some of the cost themselves to stay competitive, prices on Chinese-origin film rise to reflect the duty, or buyers shift toward film from countries and brands not affected by this particular ruling. Premium global brands installed through established networks in India are less directly exposed, since this duty specifically targets goods originating in or exported from China, not the PPF category as a whole.
The duty table in the Final Findings sets individual rates for several named Chinese producers and exporters by name, plus a separate, higher rate that applies to "any producer other than" those specifically named, and a further rate for any other exporter shipping via a country other than China. That structure is fairly typical, it's designed to close loopholes where goods get routed through a third country to avoid the duty.
What Hasn't Happened Yet
No duty is currently being collected at Indian customs as a result of this ruling. The DGTR's Final Findings is a recommendation to the Central Government. The duty only becomes enforceable once the Ministry of Finance publishes a formal notification, typically through a customs notification, putting a specific rate into effect.
That said, it would be unusual for a notification to deviate meaningfully from a Final Findings recommendation at this stage. The investigation work, including the dumping margin calculations and injury analysis, is already complete; what remains is largely a procedural step. Once notified, the recommended five-year duty period would typically run from the date of that notification, not backdated to the Final Findings date.