
Listen to this article in summarized format
Budget 2026 Live
Your 2-minute guide to becoming a Budget pro
Check what gets cheaper and costlier in Budget this year
How far has India come since the last money manual
“To promote India as a global data centre hub, any foreign company providing cloud services to customers worldwide using data centre services located in India will be eligible for a tax holiday up to 2047,” Sitharaman said, adding that such firms will be required to serve Indian customers through an Indian reseller entity.
The government also proposed a 15% safe harbour on cost in cases where data centre services are provided by a related entity of the foreign cloud firm.
The provision is likely to benefit foreign cloud companies structuring their India operations through group entities by offering tax certainty and operational efficiency.
The announcement comes at a time when India is witnessing some of the largest data centre investments globally, led by cloud computing giants such as Google, Microsoft, and Amazon Web Services, which have together committed about $40 billion in investments in 2025 alone.
Demand for digital infrastructure, fuelled by AI and regional data protection laws, has unleashed a new wave of investments in India’s data centre industry.
Global hyperscalers and Indian conglomerates such as Reliance, Adani, Tata, and L&T are set to invest more than $70 billion in the next five to seven years in the domestic data centre industry, taking total capacity to about 9 gigawatts (GW) from one GW now.
Long seen as an undervalued market, India is now emerging as one of the world’s most attractive data centre destinations because of cheap power, rapid capacity build-out, and unmatched engineering talent.
Besides, data consumption in India has zoomed from eight exabytes in FY17 to 229 exabytes in FY25, led by OTT platforms, digital payments, social media, and ecommerce. The data law and expected AI adoption could be the next big levers for data centre growth in India.

