India's Regional Startup Hubs Boom, Attract $3.2B in Funding

India's startup ecosystem is expanding geographically, with over 68,000 startups now based in emerging regional centers like Jaipur, Surat, and Kochi. These hubs have attracted approximately $3.2 billion in investment between 2016 and 2025, with seed funding seeing a significant rise. The funding environment is maturing, characterized by larger median rounds and a focus on conviction-led investments in fewer companies. The report highlights that while startup formation is robust, future growth depends on strengthening mid-stage funding and institutional support systems.

Key Points: India's Regional Startup Ecosystems Expand, Funding Matures

  • Over 68,000 startups in emerging hubs
  • $3.2B invested in regional centers 2016-2025
  • Seed funding grew from $27M to $167M
  • Two new unicorns from outside primary clusters in 2026
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India's regional startup ecosystems expand as funding matures: Report

Report reveals over 68,000 startups in emerging Indian hubs like Jaipur & Kochi, attracting $3.2B in funding and producing new unicorns.

"Investors are increasingly backing fewer startups with stronger execution visibility. - Tracxn Report"

New Delhi, March 27

India's startup landscape is expanding beyond its primary hubs, with over 68,000 startups now headquartered in emerging regional centres, a report said on Friday.

Further, a maturing funding ecosystem producing deeper, conviction‑led capital and occasional large outcomes is lending support to the country's startup landscape, Tracxn said in the report.

Cities such as Jaipur, Surat, Indore, Coimbatore, Kochi, and Lucknow account for a higher share of venture creation, indicating that ecosystem growth is being driven by the deepening of a few regional nodes, the research firm said.

Sectoral activity in these ecosystems remains largely demand-led, with strong representation in edtech, internet first media, fashion tech, and online grocery platforms. These sectors align closely with regional consumption patterns, industrial strengths, and relatively lower capital intensity compared with enterprise software and deep-technology ventures that typically dominate larger startup hubs.

Jaipur, Indore, Kochi, and Surat continue to evolve for an increasingly important role in shaping India's broader innovation landscape, the firm predicted.

However, the report maintained that with funding and exits concentrated within a relatively small number of companies and cities, though startup formation has expanded geographically.

Funding participation has also matured over the past decade, even as capital deployment remains structurally concentrated. Startups outside urban hubs recorded around 2,200 funding rounds and attracted approximately $3.2 billion in investment from 2016-2025.

"Over time, median round sizes have increased significantly, signalling a transition toward conviction-led investment strategies. Investors are increasingly backing fewer startups with stronger execution visibility, resulting in a funding environment characterised by rising capital depth alongside narrowing participation," the report said.

Seed funding expanded from $27 million in 2016 to $167 million in 2025, underscoring the role of emerging ecosystems as consistent startup formation engines, according to analysts.

Mega rounds exceeding $100 million remain rare and strategically important, proving that execution-ready platforms can operate at national or global scale.

In early 2026, two startups headquartered outside the primary clusters, achieved unicorn status demonstrating large-scale outcomes from regional ecosystems, often through longer and more capital-efficient growth trajectories. Exit activity has also progressed gradually, with 102 acquisitions and 33 IPOs recorded between 2016 and 2025.

"While startup formation remains robust and geographically diversified, the next stage of development will depend less on expanding company counts and more on strengthening mid-stage funding pathways, talent networks, and institutional support systems," it noted.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

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Sarah B
As someone who moved back to Coimbatore from the US to start my venture, this report resonates. The lower cost of living and operations here allows us to be more capital-efficient. The focus on demand-led sectors like edtech and online grocery makes perfect sense for regional markets.
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Vikram M
Good to see the data backing this up. But the report also points out a critical issue - funding and exits are still concentrated. We need more mid-stage funding pathways in these cities. Seed funding is growing, but what happens after Series A? That's the real challenge.
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Priya S
Surat and Jaipur becoming startup hubs! 🎉 This is what inclusive growth looks like. It leverages local industrial strengths - Surat for textiles/fashion tech, Jaipur for crafts and tourism. Building on existing ecosystems is smarter than trying to copy Silicon Valley everywhere.
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Rohit P
The part about "conviction-led investment" is key. Earlier, there was a spray-and-pray approach. Now investors are doing deeper diligence, which is better for sustainable startups. But I hope this doesn't mean early-stage founders in tier-2 cities get completely overlooked.
K
Kavya N
Two unicorns from outside primary clusters in early 2026 is the most encouraging data point. It proves you don't need to be in Koramangala or Powai to build a billion-dollar company. This will inspire so many young entrepreneurs in smaller cities to think big.

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