Redesigning India’s Startup Ecosystem: The Case for Regional Capital Institutions
India’s startup story is undergoing a quiet but consequential shift. For over a decade, the country’s startup energy has been synonymous with a handful of megapolitan hubs—Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Mumbai, NCR, etc. Today, that geography is changing. According to a recent report by Tracxn Technologies (released on 30 March), more than 68,000 startups are now headquartered outside India’s primary startup hubs, as of December 2025. Startups are increasingly emerging from tier-two cities (especially Jaipur, Indore, Kochi, Surat, Coimbatore, and Lucknow), driven by lower costs, expanding digital infrastructure, and locally rooted demand. Yet, beneath this diffusion lies a structural imbalance: the report says that tier-two cities' startups account for just 8.6% of total funding rounds and only 2.1% of total capital deployed, over the last ten years. This reveals that while entrepreneurship is decentralising, capital, scale, and institutional support remain concentrated. The result is a fra...