India’s economy grew 7.7% in 2025–26, the National Statistics Office confirmed in its provisional estimates — a shade above the 7.6% pencilled in earlier this year — keeping the country comfortably ahead of every other major economy through a year clouded by tension in West Asia.
The engine was domestic. Gross fixed capital formation — a measure of investment — rose 8.2%, private consumption grew 7%, and the services block spanning trade, transport, hotels and communications expanded about 11%. Manufacturing added 7%, a reminder that the factory floor is contributing even as the country leans on its services strength.
A 7.7% year in a nervous world is the dividend of a home-grown expansion — the task now is to make it durable, not just fast.
At a Glance
- FY26 GDP: 7.7% (provisional), up from the 7.6% earlier estimate
- Investment: Gross fixed capital formation +8.2%
- Consumption: Private final consumption +7%
- Services: Trade, transport, hotels & communications ~11%
The composition is what matters most. An investment rate rising faster than consumption points to capacity being built — factories, roads, power and housing — that can carry growth into future years rather than borrowing it from them. A firm services sector, meanwhile, keeps exports and urban jobs ticking.
The constructive priority is to convert a strong cyclical year into a higher structural growth rate. Deepening manufacturing, clearing supply-side bottlenecks and sustaining the investment cycle are what turn a good year into a good decade — so the momentum outlasts any single quarter’s headlines.












