Map: Indian states by Foreign Direct Investments Inflow (FY 2023-24)

Discover which Indian states attract the most FDI — Maharashtra, Gujarat, Karnataka lead, while many regions remain untapped.

Map: Indian states by Foreign Direct Investments Inflow (FY 2023-24)

Foreign Direct Investment (FDI) is one of the most important indicators of the economic attractiveness, infrastructure readiness of a region, and investor confidence. An examination of India State-wise FDI Inflow, shows a highly concentrated pattern, with a handful of states capturing almost all investments.

Rank Region (State / UT) FDI Inflows (US $ billion)
1 Maharashtra 15.12
2 Gujarat 7.30
3 Karnataka 6.57
4 Delhi 6.52
5 Telangana 3.03
6 Tamil Nadu 2.44
7 Haryana 1.91
8 Uttar Pradesh 0.33
9 Rajasthan 0.27
10 Jharkhand 0.01
11 Andhra Pradesh 0
12 Arunachal Pradesh 0
13 Assam 0
14 Bihar 0
15 Chhattisgarh 0
16 Goa 0
17 Himachal Pradesh 0
18 Kerala 0
19 Madhya Pradesh 0
20 Manipur 0
21 Meghalaya 0
22 Mizoram 0
23 Nagaland 0
24 Odisha 0
25 Punjab 0
26 Sikkim 0
27 Tripura 0
28 Uttarakhand 0
29 West Bengal 0
30 Andaman & Nicobar Islands 0
31 Chandigarh 0
32 Dadra & Nagar Haveli & Daman & Diu 0
33 Jammu & Kashmir 0
34 Ladakh 0
35 Lakshadweep 0
36 Puducherry 0

Maharashtra: The Undisputed Leader

Maharashtra remains far ahead in receiving US $15.1 billion of FDI. Being the financial capital in India, the existence of an exquisite industrial and IT layout in Pune makes this state an immensely attractive investment destination from a foreign investor perspective. Maharashtra comes to a distant first because of good connectivity, skilled workforce, and investor-friendly policies.

Gujarat, Karnataka, and Delhi: The Strong Contenders

Gujarat stood second with an FDI amounting to US $7.3 billion, having a solid manufacturing base, industrial corridors, and port connectivity.

Karnataka comes third at US $6.6 billion, majorly driven by the IT and startup ecosystem in Bengaluru, which continues to attract technology-oriented investments.

Delhi was close behind at US $6.5 billion, being a major services hub and a headquarters for many global companies operating in India.

Telangana and Tamil Nadu: The Rising Hubs

With a good FDI inflow of US $3.0 billion, Telangana is testimony to Hyderabad being recognized as a major tech and pharma hub. Active promotion of investment and improvement in ease of doing business by the state are yielding results.

Tamil Nadu at US $2.4 billion reiterates its strengths in automobiles, electronics manufacturing, and renewable energy in contrast to its diverse industrial base.

Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, and Rajasthan: Emerging Players

The US $1.9 billion is drawn into Haryana, owing to Gurugram's corporate and IT corridor and its nearness to Delhi.

Uttar Pradesh and Rajasthan are still budding with US $0.33 billion and US $0.27 billion, respectively, thereby indicating prospects for future growth, especially when both the states are pushing new industrial policies.

The Investment Divide

An eye-opener in this is that most other states have had negligible or zero recorded FDI inflows in recent years. This underscores the concentration of foreign investment in a few well-established hubs while pointing to untapped opportunities in eastern, northeastern, and smaller states.

Key Takeaway

India's FDI story continues to be metro and corridor-specific. While the trend continues for Maharashtra, Karnataka, and Gujarat to hog limelight, Telangana and Tamil Nadu are making beelines to be placed on the map amongst emerging hubs. Filling up infrastructure gaps and improving ease of business will remain key to spread investments across the country.

Sources