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HomeBusinessIndia's billionaire count to rise 51% by 2031: Report - The Tribune

India’s billionaire count to rise 51% by 2031: Report – The Tribune

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India’s billionaire count to rise 51% by 2031: Report – The Tribune

India's billionaire population will rise by 51 per cent from 207 in 2026 to 313 by 2031, outperforming China and the US, which stand at 20 and 12 per cent, respectively.

India is at present ranked third in the number of billionaires in the world, behind only China (485) and the US (914).

The expansion of the ultra wealthy segment reflects India's entrepreneurial economy evolving into one characterized by larger capital reserves, more advanced financial markets, and an expanding group of globally linked founders and investors.

India is home to a growing number of ultra-rich people and is currently the six largest in the world by ultra-high net worth individual (UNWHI) population, which will rise further as the years go by.

The country is currently home to 19,877 UNWHIs defined as those with a net worth of $30 million which is roughly Rs 250 crore or more. Mumbai, followed by Delhi are home to the highest number of UNWHIs in India. The overall UNWHI numbers nationally are estimated to grow by 27 per cent to 25, 217 by 2031, a new report by Knight Frank India, a global consultancy said today.

Karan Rijhsinghani, head of Product & Advisory, Atom Privé Financial Services, said the rise in Indian billionaires over the next five years was not an isolated surge — it was part of a sustained, multi-cycle wealth creation story.

He said India's growing share of global billionaires signaled a shift in global wealth geography. "What we are seeing is not just more billionaires, but a deeper base of wealth creators feeding into that segment."

"What stands out is that this follows a 58 per cent increase in the previous five-year period, indicating that India is no longer in a phase of sporadic wealth creation, but in a structurally compounding cycle driven by entrepreneurship, capital markets, and sectoral diversification," he said.

The report highlighted that India made up 2.8 per cent of the world's UNWHI population in 2026, up from slightly more than 2 per cent five years prior, thus underscoring the nation's increasing significance in the global wealth scene.

A key takeaway from the report is Mumbai's continued dominance with a 35.4 per cent share of the nation's ultra-rich population followed by Delhi (22.8 per cent), a rise from 20 per cent a decade ago.

Chennai's proportion of ultra rich has gone from 1.3 per cent to 4.8 per cent over a decade while Hyderabad has seen a rise from 5 per cent to 6.3 per cent. Bengaluru's proportion has somewhat decreased in the meantime.

India has witnessed a strong wealth creation over the last couple of years. In December 2025, India generated a record Rs 148 trillion in shareholder wealth during 2020-2025, the most in three decades of tracking, due to robust performance in telecom, banking, and capital-market industries, as per Motilal Oswal 30th annual wealth creation study.

With an increase in market capitalisation of Rs 7.9 trillion, Bharti Airtel was the largest generator of wealth, followed by ICICI Bank with Rs 7.4 trillion and State Bank of India with Rs 5.6 trillion.

Despite such promising numbers and forecasts, India remained one of the world's most unequal nations, said the World Inequality Report.

The inequality in India is "among the highest in the world" with no change in recent years. The lowest 50 per cent of earners receive only 15 per cent of the country's income, while the richest 10 per cent capture 58 of national income.

As noted by Rijhsinghani, growth comes with increasing concentration. The fact that the top 1 per cent controls over 40 per cent of the country's wealth, and a small cohort of ultra-rich individuals accounts for a disproportionate share of GDP, indicates that wealth is scaling faster at the top.

"The focus is shifting from wealth creation to wealth preservation, intergenerational transfer, and institutionalisation of capital. This is where the next phase of India's wealth story will be defined," he concludes.

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