India’s forthcoming Union Budget 2026-27 is shaping up less as a routine fiscal exercise and more as a strategic signal to global infrastructure capital. At the centre of that signal is the India cloud tax holiday, a proposal that would extend fiscal certainty for eligible cloud revenues until 2047. The measure positions data centres and cloud infrastructure as long-duration national assets rather than short-term investment cycles, aligning policy ambition with the realities of AI-driven compute expansion.
At its core, Budget 2026 recognizes that cloud and data centre infrastructure are now foundational economic infrastructure, much like roads and power. The proposal to grant a tax holiday until 2047 for foreign entities providing cloud services to global customers using Indian data centres underscores this shift. These companies are required to serve Indian customers through a domestic reseller entity to qualify, preserving domestic tax jurisdiction while unlocking predictable incentives for capital-intensive compute infrastructure.
Such an extended tax runway is unprecedented in India’s modern economic policies. By offering fiscal certainty over two decades, policymakers hope to alleviate long-term investment risk perceptions that have historically slowed hyperscale infrastructure bets in emerging markets. In the era of AI-accelerated compute demand, where capacity planning and depreciation horizons stretch well into the next decade, predictability becomes the most precious commodity for data centre capital allocation.
Importantly, the proposed tax holiday isn’t just a headline grabber. The 15% safe harbour provision for related-entity data centre service providers adds practical clarity to transfer pricing and intra-company cost recognition, both key factors in structuring large-scale global deployments. It signals that policymakers are listening to CFO-level concerns about tax friction and cash flow timing in cross-border deployments.
The Structure Matters More Than the Headline
This policy dovetails with the government’s broader digital sovereignty narrative. Cloud and data centre infrastructure increasingly influence national security, data governance and digital autonomy. By coupling tax incentives with operational conditions tied to domestic service pathways, India is attempting to balance global cloud integration with local regulatory and data sovereignty objectives.
Yet the compute strategy in Budget 2026 does not stop at tax incentives alone. A revitalized India Semiconductor Mission (ISM) 2.0, announced alongside data centre measures, underscores an intent to build a more resilient semiconductor and electronics ecosystem. The initiative spans designing and manufacturing semiconductor equipment, materials and IP, ecosystem development and talent expansion, all crucial for future AI-ready compute stacks.
The expanded Electronics Components Manufacturing Scheme (ECMS) with its increased outlay supports this broader arc by strengthening domestic supply chains for hardware that feeds into compute infrastructure. Such integrated thinking, linking compute demand (data centres and cloud) with compute supply (semiconductors and components) is essential if India is serious about competing with entrenched players in East Asia and the US.
Policy watchers have long argued that data centres and cloud infrastructure drive productivity spillovers across sectors from FinTech to life sciences to manufacturing. But fiscal incentives alone won’t fulfill the vision. Infrastructure enablers such as high-quality power, fibre connectivity, land and sustainability-friendly cooling solutions are necessary to make these announcements reality rather than rhetoric.
Global Capital Is Watching the Signal, Not the Speech
For global cloud providers, the message is clear: India wants you not only to build data centres, but to treat India as a compute export hub, not just a consumption market. This is a subtle but powerful reversal. Traditionally, incentives have focused on attracting consumption-oriented data centre capacity tied to local demand; now the pitch includes infrastructure that serves global workloads from Indian soil.
Critically, this proposal arrives at a time when hyperscale investment is capital-intensive and risk-averse. Long lead times for build-outs, complexities in land and power acquisition, and competition from regional hubs have historically challenged India’s data centre appeal. A 20-year tax holiday lowers one component of this cost equation, but execution will still require deep coordination with state-level policies, local utilities, environmental compliance and grid readiness.
India’s approach also reflects a conscious acknowledgment of the centrality of sovereign cloud capabilities in national strategy. Sovereign cloud aims to support secure, trusted, locally governed computing environments for the public sector and critical industries. By pushing global data centre revenue incentives hand-in-hand with domestic service conditions, policymakers are attempting to weave together sovereignty and scalability without overtly picking technology winners.
However, the real test for India’s compute forecast lies beyond policy speech. Translating incentives into ground-up infrastructure will require cooperation across ministries, utilities and private actors. It also invites scrutiny into how long-term incentives align with evolving global tax norms, digital trade rules and bilateral investment treaties, areas where legal clarity will be foundational for investor confidence.
From an economic standpoint, the potential positive externalities are significant. A thriving data centre ecosystem enhances employment in high-skilled services, drives demand for local construction, logistics and power sectors, and fosters innovation activity around cloud-native services. Linkages with the domestic startup ecosystem could accelerate India’s role as a partner in global AI innovation.
A Long Game in the Global Compute Race
Yet even as capital returns become clearer through tax structures, policy execution timelines and procedural granularities, such as land allocation timelines, power tariff rationalization, and expeditious environmental approvals will shape the real pace of build-outs. These operational levers ultimately determine whether India’s long-horizon vision becomes infrastructure reality.
In strategic terms, Budget 2026 positions India to compete for global compute capital at a time when enterprises and cloud providers are seeking diversified infrastructure geographies. Tax-free cloud revenues till 2047 send a message that India isn’t offering a short-lived incentive but a multi-decade compute runway. For investors and infrastructure planners, that signal could recalibrate the country’s risk-reward calculus.
Ultimately, this is not just about attracting foreign data centres or transient capital flows. It is about redefining India’s role in the global digital value chain from compute consumption to compute provision. If executed with discipline, the policy signals embedded in Budget 2026 may well mark the beginning of a deeper compute era for India.
