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India’s social sector funding is scaling quickly but continues to lag estimated demand. Total funding grew at a 13% CAGR between FY20 and FY25 to roughly INR 27 lakh crore ($310 billion) and is projected to reach INR 50 lakh crore ($570 billion) by FY30. Public spending is at the heart of this expansion, accounting for about 95% of total funding and continuing to rise across healthcare and education in line with national policy priorities.
Written in collaboration with
Written in collaboration with

Even with this momentum, demand outpaces supply. Based on NITI Aayog norms, the funding gap stood near INR 16 lakh crore ($180 billion) in FY25 and may widen to INR 18 lakh crore ($210 billion) by FY30. Private philanthropy, projected to reach INR 1.43 lakh crore ($16 billion) in FY25 with a 9% to 11% projected CAGR between FY 25 and FY 30, can’t close this gap without faster expansion. Sustained growth above 25% would be required to prevent the funding deficit from widening further.
Families are still central to private giving and are reshaping how philanthropy operates. They contribute about 42% of total private giving through personal philanthropy and CSR from family-owned/run businesses. Giving priorities are expanding beyond legacy causes toward GEDI (gender, equity, diversity, and inclusion), climate action, livelihood enhancement, arts, culture and heritage, and animal welfare. Leadership structures are becoming more inclusive, with women leading philanthropic efforts in 60%+ families and younger generations increasingly anchoring giving decisions.
Philanthropy is becoming increasingly professionalized, enabling structured governance, longer-term partnerships, and deeper ecosystem engagement. At the same time, while family-owned/run businesses continue to dominate private sector CSR, it remains concentrated among a small share of large family businesses and is unevenly distributed across states, leaving higher-poverty regions underfunded.
Three key forces could significantly expand philanthropic capital over the next decade. First, domestic wealth is becoming more institutionalized, reflected in the sharp rise in family offices. Turning this institutionalized wealth into effective philanthropy requires two deliberate choices: investing in strong philanthropic infrastructure and leveraging philanthropy as a connective layer between wealth planning and wealth stewardship. Second, the Indian diaspora, now about 34 million strong with rapidly growing remittances, is moving toward deeper engagement that combines funding with time, expertise and global networks. Third, Asian philanthropic hubs are gaining influence as global aid declines. Indian metros have already demonstrated credibility, capacity, and capability, and the need is to build durable philanthropic institutions beyond major metros and learn from regional best practices. Targeted investments in this enabling infrastructure could unlock INR 125,000 crore to 135,000 crore ($14 billion to $15 billion) in philanthropic capital by FY30 and accelerate progress toward Viksit Bharat.
Dasra, meaning ‘enlightened giving’ in Sanskrit, is a pioneering strategic philanthropic organization that aims for a transformed India where a billion thrive with dignity and equity. Since its inception in 1999, Dasra has accelerated social change by driving collaborative action through powerful partnerships among a trust-based network of stakeholders. To date, Dasra has catalyzed more than $330 million towards social causes in India, supported over 1,500 diverse NGOs across the country, advised more than 750 philanthropists, foundations, and corporates, published 200+ research reports and whitepapers, and impacted the lives of over 170 million people.