I usually read the Hurun Rich List every year, but this time it felt a bit different. Of course there were some really big numbers.
The headlines were familiar with ₹167 lakh crore in combined wealth, 358 billionaires, and 1,687 Indians worth over ₹1,000 crore but the story beneath the numbers felt different.
A record 1,115 people, nearly two-thirds of the list are self-made, up from 55% just five years ago. And almost three out of every four new entrants this year built their fortunes from scratch.
Many of them are not from legacy families or big metros. They come from Pune, Coimbatore, Hyderabad, and even smaller towns – founders, technologists, builders, and dreamers who turned their ideas into wealth.
Reading their stories, it did not feel like a list of the rich. It felt like a portrait of India itself that is restless, creative, and full of people who are learning to build rather than inherit.
Maybe that is what this new age of wealth is really about. Not money alone, but the courage to start something on your own and keep going until the world takes notice.
How India’s New Rich Are Building Wealth
What stands out about this new generation of wealthy Indians is not just what they earn, but how they think. Their blueprint is built on speed, scale, and belief. Many of them are not afraid to start small or fail early. They come from middle-class homes, have studied abroad or in India’s tier-two colleges, and speak the language of risk like it is second nature.
When I looked through the list, I noticed how wide the sources of wealth have become. Tech is no longer just a support sector but more a wealth creator. Founders like Aravind Srinivas, the 31-year-old behind Perplexity, have turned deep-tech and artificial intelligence into billion-dollar opportunities.
Real estate, long considered a legacy game, has seen fresh faces too, with new leaders like Basant Bansal of M3M India and Vikas Oberoi of Oberoi Realty reshaping skylines.
Pharma continues to hold steady with Cyrus Poonawalla and Dilip Shanghvi remain at the top, proving that science and scale can go hand in hand.
But it is also remarkable how new wealth is coming from completely different corners from jewellery, infrastructure, even quick commerce. The rise of Zepto’s founders, aged just 22 and 23, says as much about India’s markets as it does about its mindset.
The common thread is not industry. It is intent. These entrepreneurs are using technology, scale, and global exposure to solve local problems. They build for India but think beyond it.
Many of them have global customers, investors, and operations. They measure success in impact as much as valuation. In a way, this group represents India’s quiet confidence and no longer needing to copy the West, but ready to compete with it.
Another striking shift is the spread of wealth itself. Mumbai still leads the list with 451 individuals, followed by Delhi with 223, but Bengaluru, Hyderabad, Chennai, and Pune together now account for more than 350 names. It shows how the economic power map of India is widening. Wealth is no longer locked in a few zip codes; it is being built across cities that were once considered too small to matter.
When I think about this change, it feels less like a financial story and more like a generational one. The people leading this wave are building companies the way earlier generations built families with faith, hard work, and a sense of purpose. They take pride not just in what they earn, but in what they create.
The Lessons Behind the Numbers
The more I read these stories, the more I realised that this is not a list of the rich. It is a list of lessons. Behind every jump in rank or every billion added lies a mindset that says growth is possible, but never guaranteed.
This year, 1,044 individuals grew their wealth, but 643 saw it decline, and 139 dropped off the list entirely.
Markets moved, valuations changed, and some dreams came undone. It is a reminder that even in success, risk never disappears. The people who last are the ones who stay steady as the ones who grow with intent, not impulse.
But beyond the volatility, there is something far more hopeful taking shape. India is now creating a billionaire almost every week, and not just in Mumbai or Delhi. Wealth is spreading, deepening, and diversifying. It is moving from old corridors of power to new clusters of innovation.
In every city and every industry, people are starting to believe that they can build something world-class from here.
That belief, I think, is the real story. Because the numbers may rise and fall, but the confidence they represent that quiet conviction that an idea from India can go global that is not going anywhere.
When I closed the report, one thought stayed with me. For the first time, wealth in India feels earned, not inherited. Built on patience, risk, and imagination. And if that continues, the next rich list will not just count fortunes and it will count the future we are all helping to build.
Author Note
Note: This article relies on data from fund reports, index history, and public disclosures. We have used our own assumptions for analysis and illustrations.
Parth Parikh has over a decade of experience in finance and research. He currently heads growth and content strategy at Finsire, where he works on investor education initiatives and products like Loan Against Mutual Funds (LAMF) and financial data solutions for banks and fintechs.
The purpose of this article is to share insights, data points, and thought-provoking perspectives on investing. It is not investment advice. If you wish to act on any investment idea, you are strongly advised to consult a qualified advisor. This article is strictly for educational purposes. The views expressed are personal and do not reflect those of my current or past employers.