India’s financial services sector is undergoing a major transformation, shaped by rising domestic savings, surging IPO activity, and the rapid expansion of digital finance. Covering capital markets, insurance, and non-banking financial companies (NBFCs), the sector is building resilience through reforms, fintech adoption, and a growing investor base. Together, these changes are helping create a globally competitive financial ecosystem that supports India’s economic ambitions.
As of January 27, 2026, India’s financial services sector is rapidly expanding, driven by digital transformation, innovation, and supportive regulations. Technology is reshaping banking, insurance, payments, and wealth management, accelerating the shift to a digital ecosystem. The sector is projected to nearly double profits by FY2030, with NBFCs growing around 16% annually, while rising incomes continue to boost demand across credit, insurance, and investment services.
India’s accounting and professional services segment is showing steady expansion, reflecting the broader growth of the financial services ecosystem. According to a July 2025 report, the market was valued at Rs. 1.32 lakh crore (US$ 15.32 billion) in 2025 and is estimated to reach Rs. 1.40 lakh crore (US$ 15.97 billion) in 2026, with projections rising to Rs. 1.73 lakh crore (US$ 19.66 billion) by 2031, growing at a 4.25% CAGR (2026-2031). Growth is driven by increasing digitalisation, stricter regulatory oversight by authorities such as RBI and NFRA, and rising demand for technology-led advisory services, with digital transformation consulting alone accounting for over 50% of revenues in 2025.
On December 19, 2025, India announced a major wave of financial sector reforms aimed at boosting the country’s financial services ecosystem and attracting foreign investment. The government approved measures such as allowing up to 100% foreign ownership in insurance firms and overhauling regulations for banks, pension funds, and capital markets to deepen financial markets and redirect savings into equities and long-term investments. These recent developments are designed to channel capital into infrastructure and industrial growth, support India’s ambition of becoming a developed economy by 2047 and revive global investor sentiment. The reform push has already been accompanied by rising foreign investor interest and large cross-border deals in the financial services sector, signalling strong growth momentum.
At ETBFSI Converge 2025 (December 10-11, 2025, Mumbai), India’s financial services sector highlighted strong growth momentum, backed by 8.2% GDP growth, easing inflation (0.25% in October 2025), and a 25-bps rate cut by the Reserve Bank of India on December 5, 2025. Industry leaders emphasized expanding credit, deeper capital markets, and digital innovation to sustain growth into 2026.
By September 2025, the Sensex touched a record 82,381, while India’s foreign exchange reserves rose to US$ 698.27 billion, aided by higher gold reserves. Around the same time, India announced GST reforms to make small cars and insurance more affordable, including a rate cut on auto insurance and the removal of the 18% GST on health insurance premiums from September 22, 2025. These steps are expected to boost demand and extend financial coverage across households.
As of November 2025, India’s total demat accounts climbed to a record 21 crore, driven by a 22% surge in new accounts in October amid a busy IPO season and rising retail investor participation, reflecting expanding direct equity market engagement.
As of September 30, 2025, India’s mutual fund industry’s total assets under management (AUM) reached a record Rs. 75,61,000 crore (US$ 864 billion) with strong systematic investment plan (SIP) contributions and equity fund inflows driving expansion despite debt fund outflows, underlining rising investor participation and confidence.
India’s IPO market surpassed 100 mainboard listings in 2025 and raised a record Rs. 1,60,000 crore (US$ 18.29 billion) driven by technology, consumer and infrastructure sector issuances, strong foreign participation and an active primary market pipeline.
India’s life insurance sector saw growth, with new business premiums rising to Rs. 40,206 crore (US$ 4.59 billion) in September 2025 and YTD collections growing even more from Rs. 1,89,214 crore (US$ 21.62 billion) to Rs. 2,03,668 crore (US$ 23.28 billion) this month. While gross direct premiums written by non-life insurers H1 FY26 stood at Rs. 1,65,161 crore (US$ 18.89 billion), up 7.32% the corresponding period of the previous year. Overall, India’s insurance market is projected to reach US$ 250 billion by 2025, backed by innovation, digitalization, and rising demand.
Wealth creation is accelerating. A July 2025 Knight Frank report projected a 58.4% rise in India’s ultra-high-net-worth individual (UHNWI) population by 2028, estimating around 13,600 UHNWIs today with 6% YoY growth. By June 2025, India also had 8.56 lakh HNWIs, projected to cross 9.37 lakh by 2028. This rise is attributed to India’s unicorn boom, digital reforms, and vibrant equity markets.
Private investments have added strength to this momentum. In H1 2025, private credit reached a record US$ 9 billion, up 53% YoY, while private equity and venture capital investments stood at US$ 26.4 billion across 593 deals. Mutual funds, too, recorded steady inflows, with SIPs alone contributing Rs. 26,688 crore (US$ 3.03 billion) monthly as of May 2025.
Digital adoption is reshaping the financial landscape. As of October 2025, Unified Payments Interface (UPI) recorded an all-time high of Rs. 27,28,000 crore (US$ 311 billion) in transaction value and 20.7 billion transactions in a single month, driven by festive season spending and deepening digital adoption across India’s economy. The mobile wallet market, valued at US$ 19.19 billion in FY25, is projected to grow to US$ 51.75 billion by FY33. Microinsurance, fintech distribution, and government-backed schemes like PMFBY have also expanded reach, with Rs. 3,200 crore (US$ 363 million) in digital crop insurance claims disbursed to 30 lakh farmers across states.
NBFCs continue to benefit from rising retail credit. By FY25, India’s retail credit touched Rs. 82,00,000 crore (US$ 937 billion), growing at a CAGR of 15.1% since FY19. Growth was led by housing finance, auto loans, credit cards, and personal loans, with the segment expanding 14% in FY25 alone.
India’s financial growth is underpinned by strong savings. In 2024, gross savings accounted for 30.74% of GDP, while savings as a share of GNDI stood at 30.3% in 2023-24. Household financial savings are expected to channel nearly US$ 9.5 trillion into financial assets by 2035, signalling a decisive shift away from gold and real estate toward equities, mutual funds, and insurance.
Looking back, India has consistently deepened reforms. The IPO process was simplified to attract global investors, foreign portfolio investments surged in 2019, and mutual fund penetration grew in smaller towns - B30 locations contributed 18% of industry assets in 2024. The number of listed companies also expanded steadily, with 5,328 on the BSE by February 2025, compared to just 135 in 1995.
With robust credit growth, booming capital markets, rising insurance penetration, and digital innovation, India’s financial services sector is positioned to nearly double profits by FY30. Anchored by reforms, technology, and investor confidence, it is steadily evolving into one of the world’s most dynamic financial ecosystems.
India’s financial services sector stands at the threshold of a defining decade. With strong capital inflows, expanding insurance coverage, deepening retail participation, and accelerating digital adoption, the ecosystem is becoming more inclusive, efficient, and globally competitive. As reforms continue and innovation drives new financial frontiers, India is poised to emerge as a leading hub for financial growth and wealth creation, shaping a resilient and future-ready economy.