When buyers around the world think of sugar imports, Brazil often comes to mind first. But India — the world's largest sugar producer — has firmly established itself as a major global supplier, exporting millions of metric tonnes annually to markets across Africa, the Middle East, Southeast Asia, and beyond.
Yet many importers still don't fully understand how Indian sugar is graded, what documentation is required, or what to look for in a reliable supplier. This guide answers all of that — clearly and practically.
Why India is a Reliable Sugar Supplier
India's sugarcane belt spans Maharashtra, Uttar Pradesh, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu and Gujarat — producing an enormous and consistent annual crop. The country operates hundreds of large-scale sugar mills, many of which are integrated with refineries capable of producing export-grade white sugar.
From a buyer's perspective, this translates into competitive pricing, large volume availability, flexible packaging, and a well-established export infrastructure through major ports like JNPT (Mumbai), Mundra, Chennai, and Kakinada.
India has been among the top two or three sugar exporters globally for several consecutive years — with annual exports regularly crossing 5–8 million metric tonnes depending on the domestic policy cycle.
Understanding Sugar Grades: ICUMSA Explained
The most important quality benchmark in international sugar trade is the ICUMSA (International Commission for Uniform Methods of Sugar Analysis) rating. ICUMSA measures the colour of sugar — the lower the number, the whiter and more refined the sugar.
As an importer, you need to specify clearly which ICUMSA grade you require. Here are the main grades available from India:
The most commonly traded grade for direct retail and food use is ICUMSA 45. If you are importing for an industrial or refinery purpose, ICUMSA 150 or raw sugar may offer a better cost structure.
Key Quality Parameters to Specify
Beyond ICUMSA colour, international buyers should request and verify the following specifications in every sugar shipment:
- Polarisation (Pol): Measures sucrose purity. Export-grade Indian sugar typically achieves 99.5° or higher
- Moisture Content: Should be below 0.1% for refined grades to prevent caking and spoilage in transit
- Ash Content: Should be under 0.1% for white sugar grades — indicates level of mineral impurities
- Reducing Sugars: Max 0.05% for ICUMSA 45 grade — affects shelf life and processing performance
- Sediment & Turbidity: Visual clarity under standard testing conditions
- Grain Size: Medium grain is standard for retail; fine grain for beverages and confectionery
Reputable exporters will provide a Certificate of Analysis (COA) from an accredited third-party lab confirming all of the above parameters before shipment.
The Export Process: How a Sugar Shipment Works
Step 1 — Mill Procurement & Grade Verification
Sugar is sourced from licensed mills or refineries in the producing belts of Maharashtra or UP. The exporter arranges lot inspection, verifies ICUMSA grade and polarisation through a certified lab before committing the stock.
Step 2 — Packaging & Bagging
Sugar is loaded into new, food-grade PP woven bags — typically 50kg, 25kg or 1MT bulk bags (jumbo bags). The bags are moisture-proof lined. Private label printing (your brand on the bag) is available for most order sizes.
Step 3 — Pre-Shipment Inspection
A pre-shipment inspection (PSI) by an independent agency such as SGS, Bureau Veritas or Intertek is arranged. This covers quality, quantity, packaging condition and marks. The PSI certificate is a key document for your customs clearance.
Step 4 — Loading & Shipping
Containers are loaded (20ft FCL = approximately 25 MT for 50kg bags) at the port. Sugar ships in dry containers only — never refrigerated. JNPT, Mundra and Chennai offer direct sailings to most major African and Middle Eastern ports.
Step 5 — Documentation
Complete export documentation is prepared: Commercial Invoice, Packing List, Bill of Lading, Certificate of Origin, Certificate of Analysis, Phytosanitary Certificate (if required by destination), and SGS/BV inspection report. These are couriered or shared digitally for your bank and customs.
Packaging Options for Export
Indian sugar exporters offer flexible packaging to meet retail, wholesale and industrial requirements:
- 50 kg PP woven bags — Most common. Standard for bulk retail and wholesale markets
- 25 kg PP woven bags — Popular for supermarkets, food processors and smaller distributors
- 1 MT / 1000 kg Bulk / Jumbo Bags — Used by industrial buyers and refineries needing large volume, low handling cost
- 1 kg & 5 kg consumer packs — Available for private label retail programmes on larger orders
All bags are food-grade, UV-treated and moisture-resistant. Printing in Arabic, French, English or any language is available for private label orders.
Private labelling is one of the fastest-growing segments of Indian sugar exports. If you are building a retail brand in your market, we can arrange your own brand, design and language on every bag — with no extra setup cost on standard order volumes.
Documentation Required for Sugar Import
Your customs clearance at the destination will typically require:
- Commercial Invoice (seller to buyer, with HS code 1701)
- Packing List (number of bags, net and gross weight per container)
- Bill of Lading (original or telex release depending on payment terms)
- Certificate of Origin — Form A (GSP) or standard CoO from APEDA / Chamber of Commerce
- Certificate of Analysis from accredited lab (ICUMSA, Pol, moisture, etc.)
- Phytosanitary Certificate (required by some African nations)
- SGS / BV Pre-shipment Inspection Certificate (required for LC shipments)
- Health Certificate (required by some Middle East destinations)
Your freight forwarder and destination customs broker can confirm which specific documents are mandatory for your country. We prepare and provide the full document set as standard for every shipment.
Minimum Order Quantity & Pricing
MOQ for Indian sugar exports is typically one 20-foot FCL container, which carries approximately 25 metric tonnes (500 bags of 50kg). Larger orders of multiple containers can be consolidated at port or shipped on partial charter depending on volume and destination.
Pricing is quoted on FOB (Free on Board) basis from Indian ports — most commonly JNPT, Mundra or Chennai. CIF quotes (including Cost, Insurance and Freight) are available for most destinations. Prices fluctuate with domestic Indian market conditions and global commodity cycles — contact us for a current quote.
Which Markets Import Indian Sugar?
Indian sugar is actively exported to and well-received in a wide range of markets:
- Africa: Kenya, Nigeria, Uganda, Tanzania, Sudan, Egypt — among the largest volume buyers of Indian sugar
- Middle East: UAE, Saudi Arabia, Qatar, Oman — ICUMSA 45 and 100 preferred for retail and food service
- Southeast Asia: Bangladesh, Sri Lanka, Malaysia, Indonesia — regular importers especially during off-season
- Others: UK, USA, Canada — niche and specialty buyers, higher documentation requirements
If you are importing into Africa, ICUMSA 150 mill white sugar at competitive pricing is frequently the most practical grade. For Middle East retail shelf placement, ICUMSA 45 is typically required.
How to Verify a Sugar Supplier from India
The sugar export market has its share of brokers, middlemen and unreliable contacts. Before committing to a supplier, every serious buyer should verify:
- IEC (Import Export Code) registration — confirms the exporter is licensed to export from India
- APEDA registration — mandatory for agricultural product exporters
- GST registration — confirms a legitimate registered Indian business
- MCA registration — confirms the company is incorporated under Indian law
- Bank details verified through a formal LC or escrow arrangement for first shipments
- Willingness to share lab reports, mill source details and pre-shipment inspection
A legitimate exporter will share all of these documents without hesitation. Walk away from any supplier who is evasive on sourcing, skips inspection or pushes for advance payment without documentation.
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