The government provided a tax concession of 17.3 billion rupees for cigarettes during the year 2026, according to Verité Research Executive Director Dr Nishan de Mel.
The institution points out that 75% of the price of a cigarette should be a tax, as recommended by the World Health Organisation. However, he points out that the relevant ratio in Sri Lanka dropped to 66.8% since the year 2018. Furthermore, it noted that whilst value-added tax, social security contribution levy, and other taxes increased during the period from 2021 to 2026, the tax burden on cigarettes decreased by 7.6%.
Latest News
Neymar announces retirement after World Cup exit
Local
06 July 2026
Haaland heroics sink Brazil as Norway make WC history
Local
06 July 2026
Probe launched into deadly Negombo Prison clash
Local
06 July 2026
Showers expected in several areas
Local
06 July 2026
Negombo prison riot sparked by drug trade betrayal as inmates raid dispensary for drugs
Local
06 July 2026
Cricketer collapses and dies during match in Beruwala
Local
06 July 2026
Roof collapses at Negombo Prison during inmate protest
Local
06 July 2026
Masked Patriot Front white nationalists stage July 4 march
Local
05 July 2026
Indonesian army recovers US pilot’s body
Local
05 July 2026
UAE record exports lift Mideast oil shipments
Local
05 July 2026