National Startup Day was celebrated with great enthusiasm and pride across India on January 16, 2026. This day was particularly significant as it marked the tenth anniversary of the central government's ambitious 'Startup India' initiative, launched in 2016. Over the past decade, this initiative has not only strengthened India's entrepreneurial ecosystem but has also played a crucial role in establishing the country as a global startup hub.
Launch
and Objectives of Startup India
¨
The Startup India initiative was launched on January 16, 2016, by Prime
Minister Narendra Modi. Its main objectives were to promote innovation,
encourage entrepreneurship among the youth, create employment opportunities,
and realize the vision of "Make in India" and "Atmanirbhar
Bharat" (Self-Reliant India).
¨
Under this initiative, startups were provided with facilities such as
tax exemptions, simplified regulations, funding assistance, and mentorship.
Criteria
for Recognition as a Startup
In India,
an entity is considered a startup if it fulfills all of the following
conditions:
¨
Age: The entity should be within a period of ten years from the date of
its incorporation or registration.
¨ Legal Status: It must be registered in India
as a Private Limited Company (as defined under the Companies Act, 2013), or as
a Partnership Firm (under the Indian Partnership Act, 1932), or as a Limited
Liability Partnership (LLP) under the LLP Act, 2008.
¨ Turnover Limit: The annual turnover of the
entity should not have exceeded ₹100 crore in any financial year.
¨ DPIIT Recognition: To avail benefits under
Startup India, recognition from the Department for Promotion of Industry and
Internal Trade (DPIIT) is mandatory.
¨
Innovative Nature: The entity should be working towards innovation,
development, or improvement of products, processes, or services, or should have
a scalable business model with a high potential for employment generation or
wealth creation.
More on
the News
¨
The day commemorates the launch of the Startup India initiative (January
16, 2016) and recognises the role of entrepreneurs in driving innovation and
economic growth.
¨
The initiative has evolved from a policy push into a full lifecycle
support system covering ideation, funding, mentorship, and scale-up.
Startup
India Initiative
¨
Startup India is a flagship initiative of the Government of India
launched in January 2016 and led by the Department for Promotion of Industry
and Internal Trade (DPIIT) under the Ministry of Commerce and Industry.
¨ It was started to build a strong and
inclusive startup ecosystem that encourages innovation, supports
entrepreneurship, and generates large-scale employment.
¨
The initiative aims to transform India into a global innovation hub by
reducing regulatory barriers, improving access to capital, and strengthening
industry-academia collaboration.
The
initiative is built on three main pillars
¨
Simplification and Handholding: Reducing regulatory burdens through
self-certification and faster exit mechanisms.
¨ Funding Support and Incentives: Providing tax
exemptions and capital through various government-backed funds.
¨
Industry-Academia Partnership and Incubation: Establishing innovation
hubs and mentorship platforms like MAARG.
Achievements
of the Startup India Initiative in 10 Years (2016–2026)
¨
Global Scale and Ranking: Startup India has transformed India into the
world’s third-largest startup ecosystem, expanding from fewer than 500 startups
in 2016 to over 2 lakh startups today, reflecting unprecedented entrepreneurial
scale.
¨ Rise of Unicorns and Wealth Creation: The
number of unicorns has grown from 4 in 2014 to nearly 125 active unicorns,
demonstrating strong value creation, investor confidence, and global
competitiveness of Indian startups.
¨ Employment Generation and Economic Impact:
Startups have emerged as major job creators, generating lakhs of direct and
indirect jobs, with 2025 alone witnessing the registration of around 44,000 new
startups, the highest annual addition so far.
¨ Democratisation of Entrepreneurship: Startup
India has broken metropolitan and elite barriers, enabling youth from Tier-II,
Tier-III cities and rural areas to build enterprises focused on grassroots and
real-world problem solving. Around fifty percent of the startups originate from
Tier II and Tier III cities.
¨ Women-led Startup Growth: More than 45% of
recognised startups now have at least one woman director or partner,
positioning India as the world’s second-largest ecosystem for women-led startup
funding and strengthening inclusive growth.
¨ Robust Innovation Ecosystem: Initiatives such
as Atal Tinkering Labs, hackathons, incubators, and accelerators have
institutionalised innovation from school to startup stage, ensuring ideas are
nurtured rather than abandoned.According to the StartupBlink Global Startup
Ecosystem Index 2025, India is ranked around 22nd globally among startup
ecosystems.
¨ Regulatory Reforms: Through measures like
self-certification, decriminalisation of over 180 provisions under the Jan Vishwas
Act, and simplified exits, the initiative has reduced compliance burden and
enhanced trust-based governance.
¨ Access to Capital and Financial Support:
Government-backed mechanisms such as the Fund of Funds for Startups with over
₹25,000 crore investments, Seed Fund schemes, and Credit Guarantee frameworks
have ensured that lack of collateral does not stifle innovation.
¨
Public Procurement and Market Access: Through GeM (Government
e-Marketplace), nearly 35,000 startups and small businesses have received around
5 lakh orders worth ₹50,000 crore, integrating startups into government supply
chains.
Issues
& Challenges with Startup India Initiative
¨
Low Survival Rate: Weak product-market fit, Limited post-incubation
support, Market access issues, etc. cause High failure rates in Indian
startups.
¨ Weak Industry–Academia Linkages: Insufficient
commercialization of research from universities, limited skilled and employable
workforce dilutes the startup ecosystem.
¨
Limited Deep-Tech Startups: India’s startup growth remains skewed toward
E-commerce, Fintech and Ed-tech sectors.