India’s Data Centre capacity set to accelerate in 2026; total stock likely to rise by ~500 MW across major cities

India’s total data centre stock across major cities is projected to increase by ~30% Y-o-Y in 2026, supported by an estimated 500 MW of new supply addition, according to CBRE’s India Alternate Sectors Outlook 2026 reportIn 2025,the total DC capacity in the country reached the ~1,700 MW mark, driven by a record 440 MW of new supply addition—

a significant 160% surge compared to 2024.

“The data centre story in India is no longer about potential but about execution at scale. The sector’s resilience and attractive return potential are establishing it as a primary focus for investors, with foreign capital playing a dominant role,” said Anshuman Magazine, Chairman & CEO, India, South-East Asia, Middle East & Africa, CBRE.

“This interest is supported by a robust regulatory framework that continues to enhance transparency and streamline credit access. The institutional momentum is expected to drive a significant upswing in deployments, positioning India as one of the fastest growing and most dynamic DC markets in the Asia-Pacific region.”

The report further highlighted that the asset class witnessed investment commitments of USD 56.4 billion in 2025 alone, bringing the cumulative total to USD 126 billion. This year, these commitments are projected to rise by ~45%, potentially surpassing USD 180 billion.

While Telangana, Maharashtra, Andhra Pradesh, Tamil Nadu, and Uttar Pradesh are likely to lead these capital inflows, the investment landscape is beginning to diversify further. Driven by the requirements for lower latency, 5G proliferation, and data localisation, DC operators are moving beyond traditional metro-centric models to direct sustained investment towards tier-II cities such as Ahmedabad, Visakhapatnam, Patna, and Bhopal, amongst others.

The sector is also garnering rising interest from investors across the Asia-Pacific (APAC) region. According to CBRE’s 2026 Asia Pacific Investor Intentions Survey, DCs have emerged as the asset class where investors in the region expect the highest price appreciation in 2026.

Furthermore, over 50% of the surveyed investors across the region expect DC property values to appreciate this year, with nearly 16% anticipating an increase of more than 10%. This pricing conviction places DCs ahead of traditional heavyweights such as Hotels (49.1%), Grade A Core Offices (43.7%), and Prime Logistics (31.5%).

The India Alternate Sectors Outlook 2026 report highlighted that Mumbai alone accounted for over 50% of India’s operational data centre inventory, as of 2025-end, anchored by its superior subsea connectivity and grid reliability. Collectively, Mumbai, Chennai, Delhi-NCR, and Bengaluru account for nearly 90% of the country’s established tier-I DC capacity.

Ram Chandnani, Managing Director, Leasing, CBRE India, said, “Rapidly scaling AI and cloud infrastructure is placing unprecedented strain on power grids in high-density DC hubs. Consequently, renewable energy procurement has become a structural pillar of supply-side strategy, balancing sustainability with long-term power security. Notably, India reached a historic milestone in 2025 by adding a record 44.5 GW of renewable capacity, nearly doubling its 2024 performance.”

India’s regulatory architecture poised to accelerate the opportunity

The central government has introduced several policy initiatives to establish India as a premier global hub for DCs and digital infrastructure. In the Union Budget 2026-27, a long-term tax holiday extending until 2047 for foreign cloud providers utilising India-based infrastructure (contingent upon the use of an Indian reseller for service delivery), a 15% safe harbour margin on costs for domestic data centres to reduce transfer pricing disputes, and a proposed capital support of 25-35% for DCs investing in green technologies have together created a favourable framework for institutional investors.

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