AI and Data Modernisation Drive 40% of India's Tech Spending Surge by 2026

Artificial intelligence and data-led transformation are expected to drive 40-45% of India's change-related technology spending by 2026. Indian enterprises are in a strong investment cycle, with overall IT spending projected to grow 6-8% in 2026, ahead of global growth. However, many organisations struggle to convert investments into measurable outcomes, with only 15% of business leaders viewing IT as truly strategic. Legacy technology debt and skill shortages remain major hurdles, according to Bain & Company's report.

Key Points: AI & Data Modernisation Drive India's Tech Spending Boom

  • AI and data modernisation to account for 40-45% of change-related tech spending in India by 2026
  • Overall IT spending in India expected to grow 6-8% in 2026, outpacing global growth
  • 72% of CIOs cite legacy tech debt as top barrier to transformation
  • Only 15% of business leaders view IT as truly strategic
3 min read

AI and data modernisation emerge as biggest drivers of India's tech spending surge: Report

AI and data modernisation will drive 40-45% of India's tech spending by 2026, as enterprises accelerate digital infrastructure investments, Bain report says.

"Only 15% of business leaders view IT as truly strategic, while 70% rate it as 'good, but not great'. - Bain & Company Report"

New Delhi, May 7

Artificial intelligence and data-led transformation are expected to account for 40-45 per cent of India's change-related technology spending in 2026, as companies accelerate investments in modernising their digital infrastructure, according to Bain & Company's "India Enterprise Technology Report 2026."

The report said Indian enterprises are in the middle of a strong technology investment cycle, with overall IT spending in the country expected to grow 6-8 per cent in 2026, ahead of the 4-6 per cent growth expected globally.

"Approximately 40% of 2026 technology budgets are expected to be allocated to change initiatives, with 40%-45% of that change spend focused on AI and data-led transformations, reflecting AI's growing role in enterprise technology investments," the report said.

According to the report, Indian enterprises are allocating a larger share of their technology budgets toward long-term capability building, with capital expenditure accounting for 50-60 per cent of technology budgets in India, compared to 20-30 per cent globally.

It added that these investments are mainly being directed towards AI platforms and data modernisation, which account for 30 per cent of capex, followed by core application modernisation and cloud infrastructure.

The report, based on insights from more than 250 technology and business leaders across sectors in India, highlighted that companies are increasingly focusing on strengthening core technology foundations to prepare for AI adoption at scale.

"About 60% of CIOs will prioritize high-impact AI roadmaps, alongside application rationalization and data modernization, in the next 12 months," the report stated.

However, Bain & Company noted that despite the sharp rise in spending, many organisations are still struggling to convert technology investments into measurable business outcomes.

"Only 15% of business leaders view IT as truly strategic, while 70% rate it as 'good, but not great'," the report said, adding that businesses need to move away from implementation milestone-based metrics and adopt "outcome-based measures linked to growth, efficiency, and profitability."

The report also flagged legacy technology systems as a major hurdle in enterprise transformation. "Approximately 72% of CIOs cite legacy tech debt as the top barrier to transformation," followed by skill shortages in next-generation domains and "unproven ROI from new-age tech initiatives."

Sandeep Nayak, Partner & APAC Leader of the Technology Practice at Bain & Company, said companies now need to rethink their technology strategies in the AI era.

"At a time when AI is accelerating the pace of change, it is no longer only about modernizing technology stacks or addressing technical debt. Now is the time to go 'future back' and reimagine the enterprise," Nayak said.

The report further said enterprises adopting a "future-back" approach could unlock "15%-20% absolute EBITDA improvement" through higher revenues and operational efficiencies.

Nagaraj Gn, Partner & Head of India Enterprise Technology at Bain & Company, said companies will need to rethink operating models, governance structures and talent strategies to fully benefit from AI-led transformation.

"We are now in a fundamentally different paradigm where all of these will be key to unlocking value at scale and sustaining the impact of technology investments," he said.

- ANI

Share this article:

Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Finally some data-driven insights into India's tech boom! 🇮🇳 The push for data modernisation makes sense - we've got so much data but our infrastructure is often outdated. Hope this translates into real job creation for data scientists and AI engineers in India.
R
Rohit P
The 72% CIOs citing legacy tech debt as top barrier is exactly what I see in my organisation. We're still running on systems from 2010 while competitors jump on AI. The 'future-back' approach makes sense - start from where you want to be and work backwards rather than patching old systems endlessly.
M
Michael C
Interesting report from Bain. The capital expenditure ratio (50-60% in India vs 20-30% globally) reflects our eagerness to build from scratch. But we need to be careful - not every problem needs an AI solution. Sometimes simple process optimisation yields better ROI than flashy tech investments.
K
Kavya N
My company is one of those investing heavily in AI platforms. The talent shortage is real though - we're struggling to find people who understand both business context and AI implementation. Skill development needs to catch up with this investment surge. It's not just about buying tech, it's about having the right minds to use it.
S
Siddharth J
'Unproven ROI from new-age tech initiatives' - that's the elephant in the room. We're spending crores on AI but how many Indian companies have actually seen measurable business outcomes? The report's 15-20% EBITDA improvement potential is promising, but only if we change our approach from 'implementation milestones' to 'outcome-based measures'. Well said, Bain.

We welcome thoughtful discussions from our readers. Please keep comments respectful and on-topic.

Leave a Comment

Minimum 50 characters 0/50