A decade ago, India had fewer than 400 startups. Today, that number stands at over 2.3 lakh — and the journey in between has created jobs for nearly 25 lakh Indians. These numbers, shared at the RISE Conclave 2026 in Bengaluru, paint a picture of a country that has fundamentally changed how it thinks about business, innovation, and opportunity.

What Is RISE Conclave 2026?

The RISE Conclave 2026, held in Bengaluru, brought together over 125 startups under one roof — along with scientists, investors, industry leaders, and policymakers. The theme for this year was "Innovation and Entrepreneurship-Driven Growth for Viksit Bharat 2047" — a clear signal that India's startup ecosystem is no longer just about business. It is now central to the country's long-term vision.

The conclave focused on four pillars: Research, Industry, Startups, and Entrepreneurship — with discussions spanning aerospace technology, artificial intelligence, and agri-food innovation.

The Numbers That Tell the Story

Union Minister of State for Science and Technology, Dr. Jitendra Singh, who addressed the conclave, laid out the scale of what India has achieved:

  • 350–400 — number of startups in India roughly ten years ago
  • 2,30,000+ — number of startups today
  • 24–25 lakh — direct jobs created by the startup ecosystem
  • 3rd largest — India's current rank among global startup ecosystems
  • 50%+ — share of Indian startups now coming from Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities

That last number is perhaps the most telling. Innovation in India is no longer a Delhi-Mumbai-Bengaluru story. It belongs to Jaipur, Indore, Coimbatore, and hundreds of smaller cities where young founders are building companies that matter.

Startup India — The Movement That Started It All

Dr. Jitendra Singh credited Prime Minister Narendra Modi's Startup India call in 2015 as the foundation for this transformation. What began as a government initiative gradually became a cultural shift — one where young Indians started seeing entrepreneurship not as a risky alternative, but as a legitimate and exciting career path.

Subsequent policy reforms opened new doors for private participation in strategic sectors, encouraging the kind of risk-taking that startup ecosystems thrive on. The result is an ecosystem that is now capable of producing not just successful companies, but global innovators.

Aerospace Startups — India's New Frontier

One of the most exciting highlights from RISE 2026 was the growing momentum in India's aerospace startup sector. The country's first public-private aerospace incubation centre, mach33.aero — set up by CSIR-NAL — recently completed five years of operations and has successfully incubated 34 startups.

At RISE 2026, many of the 125+ participating startups were from the aerospace domain — a space that was almost entirely closed to private players just a few years ago. Dr. Singh expressed confidence that collaborations between startups and scientific institutions could produce India's next wave of unicorns in the years ahead.

Innovation Beyond the Metros

One of the most significant shifts in India's startup story is geographic. More than half of all Indian startups today are based outside metro cities — in Tier-2 and Tier-3 towns where cost of living is lower, local problems are sharper, and the hunger to build is just as strong.

Dr. Singh put it simply: today, entrepreneurship is accessible to anyone with commitment, passion, and technical ability — regardless of where they live or what degree they hold. That democratisation of opportunity is arguably the most powerful outcome of the last decade's startup push.

National Missions Driving the Next Wave

Beyond startups, Dr. Singh also highlighted progress on two major national technology missions:

National Quantum Mission — launched with an eight-year roadmap, this mission has already achieved several milestones ahead of schedule, positioning India as a serious player in next-generation computing.

IndiaAI Mission — focused on building computing infrastructure, data ecosystems, and AI-driven innovation, this mission is actively creating new opportunities in skills and technology development across sectors.

Both missions reflect India's deliberate move into sectors it had previously left untouched — from deep-sea exploration and biotechnology to nuclear energy and space.

What Success Looks Like From Here

Dr. Singh was clear that the RISE Conclave should not be measured by the quality of speeches or the number of attendees, but by concrete outcomes — technologies licensed from laboratories, startups that scale, investments secured, industry partnerships formed, products commercialised, and jobs created.

That outcome-first mindset is increasingly what separates India's approach to innovation from older, more ceremonial models of government-industry engagement.

What This Means for Entrepreneurs

If you are a founder — or thinking about becoming one — the message from RISE 2026 is straightforward: the infrastructure is there, the policy support exists, and the market is ready. Whether you are building in AI, aerospace, agritech, or any deep-tech domain, India's startup ecosystem has never been more prepared to support serious builders.

The road to Viksit Bharat 2047, as Dr. Singh put it, runs through India's laboratories, industries, and startup ecosystem — and through the ambitions of its young people.

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Source: Press Information Bureau, Government of India