Established investor bases such as the United States, Japan, South Korea and Australia remain active participants.
India’s investment pipeline has continued to show steady momentum in FY 2025–26, with over 6.1 billion US dollars in projects grounded across 14 states, according to data linked to Invest India’s facilitation network under DPIIT. The inflows, spread across multiple sectors, are projected to generate more than 31,000 jobs, underscoring sustained expansion in industrial activity.
Geographically, Europe continues to dominate the investment share at around 42 percent, reinforcing its position as the largest external contributor to India’s project pipeline. Established investor bases such as the United States, Japan, South Korea and Australia remain active participants, reflecting continuity in long-term capital engagement with India’s economy.
At the same time, the investment map is slowly widening. Contributions from countries such as Brazil, New Zealand and Canada indicate that newer geographies are beginning to appear more consistently in India’s inflow structure. While still smaller in scale, this diversification suggests a gradual broadening of India’s external funding base beyond its traditional partners.
Recent data trends also point to a structural shift in facilitation outcomes. Grounded investments associated with Invest India have nearly tripled over recent years, indicating that project conversions from proposals to execution are gaining pace rather than remaining at announcement stage.
Invest India operates as the national investment promotion and facilitation agency under DPIIT, functioning as a single-window interface for investors across advisory, regulatory coordination and post-approval support. Its role spans from initial onboarding to project grounding and expansion, positioning it as a key intermediary in India’s investment ecosystem rather than a policy communicator.