Hardware, data, and foundation models — how India's demographic tailwind, PLI incentives, and software-engineering depth are converging into a robotics opportunity just as Make-in-India manufacturing hits inflection.
Read the report →India's robotics market grew 17% in 2026 to $2.14B — the fastest major-economy growth rate outside China. Robot density remains low at ~12 per 10,000 employees (vs. 415 in South Korea), but operational stock has compounded 16% annually since 2016 per IFR, and the working-age population now exceeds China's.
The Indian robotics market reached $2.14B in 2026, up 17% from $1.98B in 2025 — ranking 5th globally by growth rate. Industrial robot installations set a new record of 4,945 units in 2023 and have grown since, driven by automotive (36% of robot demand) and electronics (29% of industrial robot revenue). Still, the country imports the majority of its robots from Japan, Germany, and South Korea — a dependency that Make-in-India policy explicitly targets.
Three forces define India's position. First, demographic scale: the world's largest working-age cohort by 2027, deepest English-speaking technical talent pool, and the globally dominant source of US graduate-level robotics researchers. Second, policy alignment: Production Linked Incentive (PLI) scheme, Make in India, and Digital India converge to subsidize domestic robot deployment — particularly in automotive (Tata, Mahindra, Hyundai Chennai) and electronics (iPhone assembly at Foxconn Sriperumbudur). Third, startup emergence: Addverb announced a humanoid robot for 2025 production; GreyOrange leads warehouse robotics; Systemantics builds industrial arms. Indigenous capability is nascent but real.
India is unusual among emerging robotics markets in combining volume manufacturing demand (driven by PLI and Make-in-India) with deep software engineering capability (the global back-office for robotics R&D). The combination has produced no Tier-1 humanoid company yet — but creates a distinctive opportunity for teleoperation data collection, VLA fine-tuning services, and deployment support roles.
The fastest-growing major robotics market, a rising manufacturing-capable nation, and the world's largest English-speaking robotics engineering talent pool.
The India robotics market reached $2.14B in 2026, growing +17% year-over-year. This trajectory reflects the confluence of labor-market dynamics, policy incentives, and foundation-model-enabled deployment velocity discussed throughout this report.
Unit shipments tell a more revealing story than market dollars. Below, SVRC's view of the 2025 competitive landscape for humanoid and leading-category robotics in India, shown alongside relevant global comparisons where instructive.
Every robotics market has its flagship firms — the companies whose trajectory shapes the country's narrative and around which an ecosystem of suppliers, talent, and capital clusters.
Where robots are actually working in India today — and where growth is accelerating fastest. SVRC's estimates reflect operational stock, not cumulative installations.
| Vertical | Deployed Units (2025E) | YoY Growth | Leading Form Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Automotive Manufacturing | 8,800 | +23% | Imported industrial arm (FANUC, ABB) |
| Electronics / Foxconn | 4,200 | +47% | Precision arm + inspection |
| Warehousing / E-commerce | 2,800 | +38% | AMR (GreyOrange, Addverb) |
| Pharmaceutical | 1,900 | +21% | Precision arm + lab automation |
| Food / Dairy | 1,100 | +19% | Industrial arm + cobot |
| Service / Retail / Health | 620 | +42% | Service robot (Mitra, custom) |
A candid assessment of what India does best in global robotics — and where structural vulnerabilities require attention.
The flow of venture capital, strategic corporate investment, and public funding that shapes robotics competitiveness in India.
Indian robotics raised ~$780M across 95 rounds in 2025, led by Addverb's funding and GreyOrange follow-ons. Reliance, Tata, and Mahindra have emerged as strategic corporate investors. Indian VC firms (Chiratae, Blume, Prime Venture) have built robotics theses; US-based Sequoia India (Peak XV) and Accel India lead larger rounds. Government co-investment via SIDBI and state innovation funds provides non-dilutive tail capital.
Globally, investors increasingly cite proprietary data collection infrastructure as the primary defensibility argument in robotics. The question for India specifically: do its robotics companies generate deployment-specific data at a rate that compounds faster than foundation model improvements erode it? This is the question that 2026–2027 will answer.
Four themes SVRC's research team believes will define India's robotics trajectory over the next 18 months.
First Indian humanoid robot for 2025–2026 production marks symbolic entry into the embodied-AI race. Technical success less important than domestic-champion narrative.
Sriperumbudur iPhone 17/18 production expansion will drive precision robotics demand. Expect 3,000+ incremental industrial arm installations over 2026–2027.
As global VLA training demand grows, India's teleoperation operator market is positioned to capture 25–35% of offshore data collection — mirroring the software services arc of 2000s.
Expect a Make-in-India robot certification scheme and a robotics-specific PLI tranche in FY2027 budget. Political will is firming around domestic hardware capacity.
India's robotics trajectory in 2026–2027 will be defined less by hardware breakthroughs than by whether the country can convert its distinctive advantages into repeatable deployment outcomes — at the speed that Chinese and US competitors are setting. The window for structural positioning is narrowing.
Whether you're an enterprise evaluating deployment, a manufacturer considering market entry, or an investor sizing the opportunity — SVRC partners on hardware sourcing, data collection programs, policy navigation, and on-the-ground deployment coordination.