Air India, IndiGo Lead India's $44.36 Billion Overseas Borrowing Surge

India's External Commercial Borrowings reached $44.36 billion in December 2025, according to Reserve Bank of India data. The funds were primarily used for importing capital goods, executing new projects, and modernizing facilities across key sectors. Air India emerged as a major borrower, securing $2.75 billion for aircraft acquisition and fleet expansion under its transformation program. Similarly, IndiGo raised $463.7 million through multiple ECB tranches to fund its long-term aircraft induction strategy.

Key Points: India's ECB Hits $44.36B; Air India, IndiGo Top Borrowers

  • ECB at $44.36B in Dec 2025
  • Air India borrowed $2.75B for aircraft
  • IndiGo raised $463.7M for fleet
  • Funds for capital goods & projects
  • Manufacturing & finance lead sectors
2 min read

India's ECB touch USD 44.36 billion in December; Air India, IndiGo emerge as major aviation borrowers

RBI data shows India's External Commercial Borrowings reached $44.36B in Dec 2025, with Air India and IndiGo securing billions for fleet expansion.

"The data reflected sizeable overseas borrowings by Air India and IndiGo that underscore continued capacity expansion - RBI Report"

Mumbai, February 10

India's total External Commercial Borrowings stood at USD 44.36 billion in December 2025, as per the data released by the Reserve Bank of India, reflecting sustained overseas funding by Indian companies for expansion, capacity creation and balance-sheet support.

A review of the data shows that ECB funds during the month were primarily utilised for import of capital goods, new project execution, modernisation of facilities, and on-lending by financial institutions.

Manufacturing, financial services, infrastructure and transportation sectors accounted for a significant share of the borrowings, underlining continued investment activity across the economy.

External Commercial Borrowings refer to loans raised by Indian entities from non-resident lenders in foreign currency or rupee-denominated bonds.

These borrowings are permitted under the Reserve Bank of India's automatic or approval routes and are typically used for capital expenditure, new projects, modernisation, refinancing and working capital needs.

The data reflected sizeable overseas borrowings by Air India and IndiGo that underscore continued capacity expansion and fleet modernisation in India's aviation sector, even as airlines prepare for rising passenger demand and international traffic growth.

With long-tenure ECBs largely tied to aircraft imports, the sector remains one of the key drivers of foreign currency borrowings in the country.

As per the RBI data, Air India Limited emerged as one of the largest individual borrowers during the month, raising a cumulative USD 2.75 billion through multiple ECB tranches. The airline raised USD 1.55 billion and USD 1.20 billion, both with a maturity of 12 years, from leasing companies.

The entire borrowing was earmarked for the import of capital goods, indicating aircraft acquisition and fleet expansion as part of the Tata Group-owned carrier's ongoing transformation and modernisation programme.

InterGlobe Aviation Limited, which operates IndiGo, also featured prominently among ECB borrowers. The airline raised a total of USD 463.7 million across four separate borrowings, with maturities ranging between 10 and 12 years.

All the ECB tranches were utilised for the import of capital goods and were sourced from leasing companies, aligning with IndiGo's strategy of funding aircraft induction through long-term offshore financing.

- ANI

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Reader Comments

P
Priya S
While investment is good, we must be cautious about such high levels of external debt. A strong dollar or global economic slowdown could make repayments very difficult. Hope the RBI is monitoring the risks closely.
A
Aman W
Finally seeing Air India under Tata making big moves! 2.75 billion dollars is no small amount. If this leads to newer planes and better service, it will be worth it. The aviation sector is booming.
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Sarah B
Interesting data. The focus on manufacturing and infrastructure borrowing is crucial for long-term growth. However, I hope a significant portion of these "capital goods" imports includes green technology for sustainable development.
K
Karthik V
IndiGo's strategy of funding through ECBs seems smart—locking in long-term rates for aircraft. As a frequent flyer, I just hope this expansion translates to better on-time performance and not just more planes on the tarmac!
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Nisha Z
The numbers are impressive, but what about the common person? Will this borrowing lead to inflation? And will these new projects actually benefit smaller cities, or is all the development concentrated in metros? These are my questions.

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