The e-way bill system under the Goods and Services Tax (GST) regime is set for a major overhaul, with the Government of India pushing a shift towards a trust-based, technology-driven compliance framework aimed at improving logistics efficiency and reducing friction for businesses, according to a report in Business Standard.
The reform, outlined in the Economic Survey 2025–26, seeks to reposition the e-way bill system from a strict enforcement tool to a facilitator of seamless supply chains. The move is expected to cut delays, lower compliance costs, and improve the ease of doing business across India.
Introduced in 2018, the e-way bill system digitised the tracking of goods movement by linking invoices, vehicle details, and transporter information. It helped eliminate physical checkposts and significantly reduced transit times, creating a more unified national market.
However, the survey noted that enforcement-heavy practices—such as mobile inspections away from border points—continue to cause delays and increase compliance burdens. It recommended a transition to risk-based, system-generated checks, minimising discretionary physical inspections.
A key proposal includes adopting a “trusted dealer” approach, where businesses with strong compliance records face fewer checks, enabling faster movement of goods and greater predictability in logistics operations.
The e-way bill system has also emerged as a high-frequency indicator of economic activity, with rising generation numbers reflecting trends in trade, manufacturing, and consumption. Monthly e-way bill generation touched record highs in recent months, signalling robust economic momentum.
Experts believe the next phase of reforms—focused on technology integration, automation, and trust-based governance—will further streamline India’s logistics ecosystem while maintaining effective oversight.
