Niti Aayog roadmap: Global licensing push to take Ayurveda to 150+ nations

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Niti Aayog roadmap: Global licensing push to take Ayurveda to 150+ nations

Synopsis

Niti Aayog's new roadmap is India's most detailed blueprint yet for taking Ayurveda global — but the real challenge lies in converting USD 2.16 billion in exports, mostly sold as dietary supplements, into recognised pharmaceutical products. With 95 per cent of practitioners still based in India and curricula yet to be standardised, the gap between ambition and execution is wide.

Key Takeaways

Niti Aayog released its Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global on 2 July , covering licensing, exports, research, and workforce development.
Ayurveda is formally recognised in nearly 30 countries ; products are exported to around 150 countries .
Ayurveda exports rose from USD 1.09 billion in 2014 to USD 2.16 billion in 2023 , though most are sold as dietary supplements due to regulatory constraints.
India has more than 3,55,000 trained Ayurveda practitioners, but around 95 per cent remain based within the country.
International Ayurveda research spans nearly 70 countries ; India has awarded scholarships to 277 students from 32 countries .
The WHO Global Traditional Medicine Centre in Jamnagar supports global research collaborations.

Niti Aayog on Thursday, 2 July released a comprehensive strategic roadmap titled Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global, outlining a structured plan to accelerate the international expansion of Ayurveda and position India as the world's foremost authority in traditional medicine. The report argues that a coordinated global push can unlock significant economic opportunities across healthcare, wellness products, and medical value travel.

Key Pillars of the Roadmap

The roadmap is structured around three core pillars: Availability, Acceptability, and Propagation. These span a wide range of policy areas including workforce development, manufacturing and exports, research, education, regulatory compliance, insurance coverage, cultural adaptation, branding, and global visibility. Niti Aayog said the strategy was developed through a mixed-methods approach combining secondary research with extensive consultations involving government ministries, regulatory bodies, industry associations, academic institutions, research organisations, manufacturers, service providers, and international organisations.

Where Ayurveda Stands Globally

Ayurveda is currently formally recognised in nearly 30 countries through varying licensing models, academic collaborations, and inclusion in national health policies. Its products reach approximately 150 countries, with exports climbing from USD 1.09 billion in 2014 to USD 2.16 billion in 2023. Despite this growth, the report notes that global expansion remains uneven. A significant constraint is that most Ayurvedic products are marketed abroad as dietary supplements due to regulatory barriers, limiting the export of finished Ayurvedic pharmaceutical products.

The Practitioner Gap

India currently has more than 3,55,000 trained Ayurveda practitioners, according to the report. However, around 95 per cent of these qualified professionals remain based within the country, creating a critical bottleneck for international practitioner availability. Addressing this concentration is identified as a priority within the workforce development pillar.

Research and Academic Outreach

International Ayurveda research now spans nearly 70 countries, supported by global institutional collaborations and the World Health Organization Global Traditional Medicine Centre in Jamnagar. India has awarded scholarships to 277 international students from 32 countries and established Ayush academic chairs in universities abroad. The report notes, however, that globally standardised Ayurveda curricula are still evolving — a gap the roadmap seeks to close.

What Comes Next

The roadmap signals India's intent to move from bilateral collaborations to a more structured, multilateral licensing and regulatory framework. The report's recommendations, if implemented, could reshape how Ayurvedic practitioners are credentialled and how finished pharmaceutical products are classified in overseas markets. Industry observers and health policy analysts will be watching whether the Centre translates this strategic document into actionable bilateral agreements and regulatory harmonisation efforts with key partner nations.

Point of View

But ambition and execution have historically diverged in this sector. The core tension is regulatory: as long as Ayurvedic products are classified as dietary supplements in major markets, the export ceiling is structural, not promotional. A global licensing framework sounds compelling, but it requires partner-country regulatory buy-in that bilateral goodwill alone cannot guarantee. The 95 per cent practitioner retention figure is the most telling data point — without a credible international workforce pipeline, even the best branding strategy will find no practitioners to deliver it.
NationPress
2 Jul 2026

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the Niti Aayog Ayurveda global roadmap?
It is a strategic document titled 'Strategic Roadmap for Making Ayurveda Global', released by Niti Aayog on 2 July, outlining a plan to expand Ayurveda's international reach through licensing frameworks, workforce development, exports, and research. The roadmap is built around three pillars: Availability, Acceptability, and Propagation.
How many countries currently recognise Ayurveda?
Ayurveda is formally recognised in nearly 30 countries through different licensing models, academic collaborations, and inclusion in national health policies, according to the Niti Aayog report. Ayurvedic products are exported to approximately 150 countries.
What is the current value of India's Ayurveda exports?
India's Ayurveda exports rose from USD 1.09 billion in 2014 to USD 2.16 billion in 2023, according to the report. However, most products are marketed overseas as dietary supplements due to regulatory constraints, limiting the export of finished Ayurvedic pharmaceutical products.
Why are so few Ayurveda practitioners available internationally?
Around 95 per cent of India's more than 3,55,000 trained Ayurveda practitioners are based within the country, according to the Niti Aayog report. The roadmap identifies expanding international practitioner availability as a key priority under its workforce development pillar.
What role does the WHO play in Ayurveda's global expansion?
The World Health Organization Global Traditional Medicine Centre, located in Jamnagar, India, supports international Ayurveda research, which now spans nearly 70 countries. India has also awarded scholarships to 277 international students from 32 countries and established Ayush academic chairs in universities abroad.
Nation Press
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