India medical device exports hit $4 billion in FY25, $35 billion opportunity by 2030
Synopsis
Key Takeaways
India's medical device sector exported goods worth $4 billion in FY2025, reaching buyers in over 125 countries, as a new report by Bain & Company identified the country as the Asia-Pacific region's 'access-led innovator'. The findings, released on 8 July, place India at the centre of a fast-expanding regional medtech market projected to hit $132 billion by 2030.
Key Findings from the Report
The Bain & Company report — developed in partnership with the Agency for Science, Technology and Research, Enterprise Singapore (EnterpriseSG), JP Morgan, SG Growth Capital, and the Singapore Economic Development Board (EDB) — highlights a structural shift in how India's medtech sector is perceived globally. Devices designed for resource-constrained healthcare settings are increasingly finding acceptance in international markets, demonstrating that affordability and scalability can drive global competitiveness.
On the import side, high-end medical devices entering India stood at $5.5 billion, a figure the report frames as the next major opportunity for domestic innovation and import substitution.
Asia-Pacific Medtech: A $132 Billion Market
The Asia-Pacific region, with high-growth markets such as India at its core, is becoming one of the world's most significant demand centres for medical technology. Regional medtech demand is expected to reach $132 billion by 2030, expanding at 6.9% annually — a pace faster than the global market average. This comes amid rising incomes, ageing populations, and expanding healthcare infrastructure across the region.
Notably, the report cautions that the next phase of growth will depend not only on scaling manufacturing but also on building stronger capabilities in clinical evidence generation, regulatory strategy, commercialisation, and market access — areas where India currently lags behind more established medtech hubs.
India's $35 Billion Medtech Opportunity
Dhruv Sukhrani, Partner and Head of Bain & Company's Healthcare & Life Sciences practice in India, described the sector as a $35 billion medtech opportunity by 2030. He projected medical device exports growing at over 20% CAGR through 2030, potentially doubling to $8 billion.
'As the country moves towards becoming the world's third-largest economy, healthcare demand is expected to grow to over $320 billion in the next couple of years at a roughly 10–12% CAGR, creating strong momentum for medical technologies,' Sukhrani said.
He added: 'The next phase of growth, however, will be defined not just by manufacturing scale but by India's ability to build globally competitive innovation through stronger clinical evidence, regulatory capabilities and commercialisation.'
What Comes Next
The report's emphasis on regulatory and commercialisation gaps signals where policy and private investment must converge. India's medtech story, while compelling on export volumes, still hinges on closing a roughly $1.5 billion trade deficit between imports and exports of medical devices. As domestic healthcare spending accelerates toward the $320 billion mark, the pressure to build end-to-end innovation capability — not just cost-competitive manufacturing — will intensify.