44,000 new start-ups were registered in 2025, says PM


UPSC Study Note: Startup India — 44,000 New Start-ups in 2025


1. At a Glance


2. Why in the News


3. Background & Evolution


4. Core Static Facts

Parameter Detail
Launch date 16 January 2016
Implementing ministry Ministry of Commerce & Industry
Nodal department DPIIT (Dept. for Promotion of Industry & Internal Trade)
Global rank (ecosystem size) 3rd largest (after USA & China)
Total startups (Jan 2026) 2,00,000+
Startups in 2014 Fewer than 500
New registrations in 2025 ~44,000 (highest single-year figure)
Active unicorns (Jan 2026) ~125
Unicorns in 2014 4
Fund of Funds corpus ₹10,000 crore
FFS investment vehicle SEBI-registered AIFs (daughter funds)
Tax holiday Section 80-IAC — 100% profit deduction for 3 consecutive years out of 10 years from incorporation
Tax holiday turnover cap ₹100 crore in the relevant previous year
Eligibility certificate issuing body Inter-Ministerial Board (IMB)
SISFS incubator approvals ₹477.25 crore to 133 incubators
Women-led startups 73,151 recognised startups with at least one woman director (as of Oct 31, 2024)
Direct jobs created 16.6 lakh+ (2016 – Oct 2024)

5. Multi-Dimensional Analysis

Economic

Social

Legal / Constitutional

Scientific / Technological

Administrative / Governance


6. Recent Developments (last 12–18 months)


7. Prelims Hooks

  1. Startup India was launched on 16 January 2016 at Vigyan Bhawan, New Delhi. [S1]
  2. The nodal department for Startup India is DPIIT under the Ministry of Commerce & Industry (not Ministry of Finance or MSME). [S1]
  3. India is the 3rd-largest startup ecosystem globally (after the USA and China). [S2]
  4. Total DPIIT-recognised startups crossed 2,00,000 as of January 2026. [S2]
  5. India had only 4 unicorns in 2014; the number rose to ~125 active unicorns by January 2026. [S2]
  6. ~44,000 new startups registered in 2025 — the highest in any single year since 2016. [S3]
  7. Tax holiday under Section 80-IAC of the Income Tax Act: 100% profit deduction for 3 consecutive years out of 10 years from incorporation. [S5]
  8. Eligibility for Section 80-IAC tax benefit is certified by the Inter-Ministerial Board (IMB), not DPIIT directly. [S5]
  9. Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS): corpus of ₹10,000 crore, does not invest directly in startups — invests through SEBI-registered AIFs. [S4]
  10. Startup India Seed Fund Scheme (SISFS): ₹477.25 crore approved to 133 incubators. [S4]
  11. 16.6 lakh+ direct jobs created by recognised startups between 2016 and October 2024. [S1]
  12. 73,151 startups have at least one woman director (as of October 2024). [S1]
  13. Startups registered as Private Ltd. Company, LLP, or Registered Partnership are eligible for DPIIT recognition. [S5]
  14. Startup India turnover ceiling for 80-IAC benefit: ₹100 crore in the relevant previous year. [S5]

8. Mains Relevance

GS Paper GS-III (Primary); GS-II (Secondary)
GS-III Syllabus Indian Economy — inclusive growth; government budgeting; effects of liberalization on economy; industrial growth; employment
GS-II Syllabus Government policies and interventions for development; welfare schemes

Plausible Mains Question Stems:

  1. "Assess how the Startup India initiative has transformed India's entrepreneurship ecosystem over the last decade. What structural challenges remain despite impressive headline numbers?" (GS-III, 15 marks)
  2. "Critically examine the role of the Fund of Funds for Startups (FFS) and the Startup India Seed Fund Scheme in bridging the early-stage funding gap for Indian start-ups." (GS-III, 10 marks)
  3. "India's startup ecosystem has grown rapidly, yet deep-tech and rural startups remain underrepresented. Discuss the policy interventions needed to correct this imbalance." (GS-III, 15 marks)

9. Related Topics to Study Next

Topic Connection
Make in India Complementary manufacturing-focused initiative launched alongside Startup India in 2014–16
National Deep Tech Startup Policy (2023) Specific policy for frontier-tech startups within the Startup India umbrella
SEBI (AIF) Regulations, 2012 Governs the FFS daughter-fund route; tests on AIF categories (I, II, III) are common
Insolvency & Bankruptcy Code (IBC), 2016 90-day fast-track wind-up provision for startups; links to ease of doing business
Production-Linked Incentive (PLI) Scheme Synergy with Startup India for scaling manufacturing-oriented startups
Atal Innovation Mission (NITI Aayog) Runs Atal Incubation Centres — directly feeds the startup pipeline
Digital India Technology backbone (e-governance, broadband, UPI) enabling the fintech/edtech startup surge
MSME Sector Start-ups and MSMEs share policy overlap; distinction between the two is a common Prelims trap

10. Common Errors / Trap Areas

  1. Wrong ministry: Startup India is under DPIIT, Ministry of Commerce & Industry — NOT Ministry of MSME or Ministry of Finance. Aspirants frequently confuse this because MSMEs share thematic similarity.
  2. Fund of Funds mechanics: FFS does not invest directly in startups; it invests in SEBI-registered AIFs (daughter funds) which then invest in startups. Confusing direct vs. indirect investment is a common trap.
  3. Section 80-IAC vs. 80-IC: 80-IAC is the startup-specific tax holiday; 80-IC relates to special category states. Conflating the two is a classic distractor.
  4. IMB vs. DPIIT for certification: DPIIT grants recognition certificates; the Inter-Ministerial Board (IMB) issues the eligibility certificate for Section 80-IAC tax exemption. These are two separate steps.
  5. Unicorn count vs. total startups: ~125 are active unicorns (not total unicorns ever); total DPIIT-recognised startups = 2,00,000+. Mixing these figures in MCQs is a frequent error.

11. Sources