India Aims for 10% of Global 6G Patents, Full 4G Saturation by June 2026

Union Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia has announced India's ambitious target to contribute 10% of global patents to future 6G standards. Simultaneously, the government aims to achieve complete 4G saturation across every village in India by the end of June 2026. The Bharat 6G initiative has expanded from 12 to over 1800 participating organizations, including IITs and tech companies. India also boasts the world's second-largest 5G subscriber base, with over 400 million users and coverage reaching 99.6% of the country.

Key Points: India Targets 10% of 6G Patents, Full 4G by 2026

  • 10% global 6G patent target
  • Full 4G saturation by June 2026
  • 5G now covers 99.6% of country
  • Bharat 6G initiative involves 1800+ organizations
2 min read

India to contribute 10% of global patterns to future 6G standards, full 4G saturation by June 2026: Jyotiraditya Scindia

Union Minister Jyotiraditya Scindia announces India's goal to contribute 10% of global 6G patents and achieve nationwide 4G saturation by June 2026.

"Our target is to contribute 10% of the patterns to the 6G formulations - Jyotiraditya Scindia"

New Delhi, January 21

Union Minister of Communications, Jyotiraditya M. Scindia, on Wednesday said India has set an ambitious target of contributing 10% of global patterns to future 6G standards, while simultaneously moving close to achieving complete 4G saturation across the country.

"By end of June this year, we aim at providing full 4G saturation across every length and breadth of India," the minister said.

"The standardization process, driven primarily by the International Telecommunication Union (ITU) and 3GPP, emphasizes AI-native networking, integrated sensing, and terahertz (THz) spectrum usage to enable applications like holographic communication and digital twins," the minister said.

"We have seven verticals within Bharat 6G which are working assiduously on technology, equipment, use cases, policy making which is being reviewed on quarterly basis," he said.

While speaking with ANI on the 6G Roadmap of India, Union Minister said, "We initiated the 6G vision documents in 2022, which is active and has grown from 12 organisations to 18 hundred organisations. Not only technology-driven companies, but also our IITs and other respected institutions, involve all our entrepreneurs across the board. Our target is to contribute 10% of the patterns to the 6G formulations"

Speaking further on the 4G saturation, Minister Scindia said, "4G saturation involves all operators working to ensure that every village has connectivity. There are close to 39,000 villages that were still not connected when we rolled out the project. 21,000 towers were installed, and another 5,000 towers will be erected by June of this year to connect the entire length and breadth of India"

Recently, Jyotiraditya Scindia had said India has the 2nd largest 5G subscriber base, only second to China, and is among the fastest adopters of the technology in the world.

"With over 400M+ 5G users, India today stands as the world's second-largest 5G subscriber base and among the fastest adopters globally", stated Scindia in his X post.

He emphasised on how India is setting global benchmarks in scale, speed and digital transformation.

Since its launched in 2022, 5G services are now available across the country with a major base of 99.6% and with a population coverage of 85% in the country. As of March 2025, 4.69 lakhs 5G Base Transceiver Stations (BTSs) have been installed by the Telecom Service Providers (TSPs) across the country which is one of the fastest rollout of 5G network, as per the data released by Ministry of Communications in December 2025.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
Great ambition, but I hope the focus on 6G doesn't mean we forget the ground reality. My village in Odisha still has patchy 4G. The minister says 39,000 villages were unconnected... I hope the remaining 5,000 towers by June truly cover the last mile. Connectivity should be reliable, not just on paper.
R
Rohit P
Involving IITs and 1800 organisations is the key. We have the brainpower. If this collaboration works, we can move from being just a massive consumer market to a technology contributor. The 5G rollout speed was impressive, hoping 6G R&D gets similar momentum. Future looks digital!
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Sarah B
As someone working in tech, the mention of AI-native networking and digital twins is exciting. India contributing to these global standards could position our startups perfectly for the next wave of innovation. Hope the policy framework supports actual IP creation, not just implementation.
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Vikram M
The numbers are staggering - 400M+ 5G users already! But alongside speed, we need to talk about affordability. Data plans are costlier now. For true digital transformation, 6G must be accessible to the common man, not just urban elites. Bharat 6G should mean *for* Bharat.
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Karthik V
A respectful criticism: Announcements are good, but consistent execution is key. We've heard many "targets" before. Quarterly reviews for the 6G verticals is a positive step. Hope there's transparency in progress. Also, what about the electronic manufacturing ecosystem to support this? We can't just design

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