Summary of this article
India represented 2.8 per cent of the global UHNW population in 2026, up from just over 2 per cent five years ago. Its growth story is definitely on the rise.
The wealth creation story is spread across sectors such as technology, industrials and capital markets. India now ranks sixth globally in terms of UHNWI population.
According to Knight Frank’s Wealth Sizing Model, India’s billionaire population is forecast to rise by 51 per cent from 207 in early 2026 to 313 by 2031.
India is steadily carving out a bigger role in the global wealth story, and the latest report from Knight Frank makes that increasingly clear. As the number of ultra-wealthy individuals rises worldwide, India’s climb to sixth place in UHNWI (ultra-high net worth individual) rankings feels less like a sudden jump and more like the result of years of growing entrepreneurship, expanding markets, and rising ambition across sectors.
According to the 20th edition of Knight Frank’s The Wealth Report 2026, the number of UHNWIs individuals across the globe grew to 713,626 by 2026, 162,191 more than in 2021, when there were 551,435 UHNWIs, which is an average of 89 new UHNWIs created every day over the past 5 years.
India represented 2.8 per cent of the global UHNW population in 2026, up from just over 2 per cent five years ago. Its growth story is definitely on the rise. With the population of UHNW expected to increase from 19,877 today to 25,217 by 2031, India is certainly creating wealth at an extraordinary rate. The wealth creation story is spread across sectors such as technology, industrials and capital markets. India now ranks sixth globally in terms of UHNWI population.
Mumbai still dominates the chart with 35.4 per cent of the UHNW or ultra-rich population in India. However, Knight Frank also mentioned that wealth is spreading out as more Indian cities become developed economically at a rapid pace, and hence many cities have increased their share of the ultra-rich population. Delhi and Chennai have increased their share of the pie when it comes to contributing to India’s ultra-rich population by more than 30 basis points (BPS) in the last decade. Hyderabad has increased its share by 1.3 per cent since 2015.
Commenting on the same, Shishir Baijal, international partner, chairman & managing director, Knight Frank India, said, “India’s wealth club is broadening in line with the country’s economic transition from an entrepreneurial economy to one with deeper pools of capital, mature financial markets and increasingly globally-savvy founders and investors. Digitalisation is driving wealth creation across listed equities, private capital and family enterprises. The outcome is a larger and more resilient base of ultra wealth supported by long-term structural growth.”
Liam Bailey, global head of research at Knight Frank, said: “We are living through one of the largest wealth relocations of global wealth in living history. The US continues to lead the charge, however, we are also seeing increased power from India, as well as a host of quickly maturing markets coming into their own. Even amid massive geopolitical turbulence and inflationary pressures, private capital has proven incredibly resilient. Our latest results capture a secular acceleration in wealth creation around the world.”
India’s billionaire count rose 58 per cent over the past five years to 207 in 2026, placing the country third globally after the United States (914) and China (485).
According to Knight Frank’s Wealth Sizing Model, India’s billionaire population is forecast to rise by 51 per cent from 207 in early 2026 to 313 by 2031. India’s current home base of 6.7% of the global billionaires will expand to 8 per cent over the next five years.
Looking at wealth by distribution, the world’s 3,110 billionaires are more widely spread geographically than the overall UHNWI population. Asia Pacific has the highest concentration of billionaires, with 1,116 individuals, whereas North America has 965. The Middle East, with just over 4 per cent of global billionaires - significantly higher than its share of UHNWIs - further demonstrates the concentration of wealth in the region. Growth across regions is expected to be broadly balanced.












