Govt Eyes Windfall Tax on Fuel Retailers’ Profits
The government is considering a new windfall tax targeting the marketing margins of fuel retailers, aiming to capture their ‘supernormal’ profits as global crude prices fall while pump rates remain frozen.
Key Takeaways
- The government plans a windfall tax on oil marketing companies (OMCs) like IOCL, BPCL, and HPCL.
- The tax would apply to marketing margins exceeding a set threshold, likely based on historical averages.
- This follows a similar tax on crude producers last year that netted over ₹40,000 crore.
- The move could be announced in the upcoming budget.
Why a New Tax is Being Considered
Sources indicate the government views the current high profits of OMCs as being made at consumer expense. With global crude prices dropping from $139 to around $80 per barrel since March 2022, retail petrol and diesel prices in India have not been cut since May 2022.
This has led to substantial marketing margins—currently around ₹10 per litre on petrol and ₹6 per litre on diesel in Delhi. The government intends to use these funds to support its welfare schemes.
Understanding Marketing Margins
The marketing margin is the difference between the price OMCs pay refineries and the price they charge dealers. It covers transportation, storage, marketing costs, and profit.
“The government is considering a windfall tax on marketing margins of OMCs. The idea is to tax the supernormal profits made by them. The modalities are being worked out,” a source said.
Impact on Oil Marketing Companies
The tax would affect the record profits recently reported by OMCs. In the first nine months of this financial year:
- Indian Oil (IOCL): ₹26,313 crore net profit.
- Bharat Petroleum (BPCL): ₹17,792 crore net profit.
- Hindustan Petroleum (HPCL): ₹5,118 crore net profit.
Industry executives argue these profits are necessary to recoup past losses and fund infrastructure expansion. They point to losses exceeding ₹20,000 crore in early 2022-23 when high global prices weren’t passed to consumers.
“OMCs had suffered losses of over ₹20,000 crore… They are now making up for those losses,” an industry executive stated.
Precedent and Next Steps
This move mirrors the windfall tax imposed on crude producers and fuel exporters in July 2022, which generated significant revenue. The government is now finalising the new tax’s threshold and collection mechanism—potentially on a quarterly or annual basis—with an announcement expected in the upcoming budget.



