Top Cities Indians Call Home
Mumbai
128 Stories
London
100 Stories
Bengaluru
82 Stories
Hyderabad
81 Stories
Delhi
74 Stories
New York City
63 Stories
Los Angeles
41 Stories
San Francisco
37 Stories
Dubai
30 Stories
Pune
22 Stories
New York City
63 Stories
Los Angeles
41 Stories
San Francisco
37 Stories
Toronto
22 Stories
Washington, D.C.
18 Stories
Chicago
14 Stories
Houston
14 Stories
Seattle
13 Stories
Cambridge
12 Stories
Palo Alto
11 Stories
Port of Spain
4 Stories
Montevideo
1 Stories
Petrópolis
1 Stories
Rio de Janeiro
1 Stories
Santarem
1 Stories
Santiago
1 Stories
South Trinidad
1 Stories
Johannesburg
4 Stories
Cape Town
3 Stories
Accra & Kumasi
2 Stories
Durban
2 Stories
Nairobi
2 Stories
Chisasila
1 Stories
Dar es Salaam
1 Stories
Lagos
1 Stories
Lilongwe
1 Stories
Mombasa
1 Stories
Sydney
12 Stories
Melbourne
11 Stories
Auckland
5 Stories
Perth
4 Stories
Brisbane
2 Stories
Canberra
2 Stories
Darwin
2 Stories
Liverpool
2 Stories
Canterbury
1 Stories
Queenstown
1 Stories
BACK IN TIME
Pre - 1965
Early Arrivals, Students and professional pioneers
1965–1980s
Skills‑based migration opens; growth in universities and hospitals
1990s–2000s
Tech boom, consulting, and IT services; student numbers surge
2010s–2020s
Startup founders, product tech, research, healthcare, logistics; cultural festivals scale nationally
Return & Bridges
Rising “Return with Purpose” mentorship, investment, India‑US innovation links
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FAQs
What is the Indian Diaspora?
The Indian Diaspora refers to the community of people of Indian origin or ancestry who live outside India. It encompasses over 32 million people spread across more than 200 countries and territories, making it one of the largest and most geographically dispersed diasporas in the world. The community includes Indian citizens working or studying abroad, foreign nationals with Indian ancestry going back generations, and second- and third-generation families whose roots trace to India but whose lives are firmly planted in their adopted nations. What unites them is a shared heritage of language, culture, values, and the distinctly Indian capacity to build community wherever the journey leads.
How big is the Indian Diaspora and where is it concentrated?
The Indian Diaspora numbers over 32 million people across every inhabited continent. The largest concentrations are in the United States (5.16 million), the Gulf region (over 8 million across the UAE, Saudi Arabia, Kuwait, Qatar, Oman, and Bahrain), the United Kingdom (1.93 million), Canada (1.86 million), and Australia (845,000). Legacy diaspora communities dating back to the 19th century thrive in Mauritius (894,000), South Africa (750,000), Trinidad and Tobago (470,000), and Fiji (315,000). In Southeast Asia, significant populations exist in Malaysia (650,000), Singapore (400,000), and Myanmar (500,000). India is also the world’s largest recipient of remittances, receiving over $100 billion annually, much of it from Gulf-based workers.
What is the difference between NRI, PIO, and OCI?
These are three distinct legal categories within the Indian Diaspora. NRI (Non-Resident Indian) refers to an Indian citizen who resides outside India for employment, business, or other purposes, but holds an Indian passport. PIO (Person of Indian Origin) refers to a foreign citizen who, or whose ancestors, were born in India or held Indian nationality. PIOs may be several generations removed from India. OCI (Overseas Citizen of India) is a special legal status introduced by the Indian government that offers lifelong visa-free travel to India, the right to work and study in India, and other benefits—without full citizenship. The OCI scheme was created to strengthen ties with the diaspora and has effectively merged the earlier PIO card category. Together, these categories reflect the layered reality of Indian identity abroad: some hold Indian passports, some hold foreign passports with Indian heritage, and many navigate both worlds.
What are the five waves of Indian migration?
The Indian Diaspora is as diverse as India itself, with distinct ethno-linguistic communities that have their own migration patterns, cultural institutions, and settlement hubs worldwide. The major communities include Gujarati (dominant in East Africa, UK, and US retail/hospitality), Punjabi and Sikh (concentrated in Canada, UK, and Australia with strong trucking, agriculture, and construction sectors), Tamil (historical presence in Malaysia, Singapore, Sri Lanka, and growing in the UK/US), Telugu (a major force in US tech hubs), Malayali (the backbone of Gulf healthcare and services), Marathi (strong in engineering and research across the US and Germany), Bengali (vibrant in academia and the arts across the UK, US, and Singapore), and Sindhi and Marwari communities renowned for global trading networks and philanthropy. Each community maintains its own temples, gurdwaras, associations, cultural festivals, and business chambers abroad.
Which country has the largest Indian Diaspora?
The United States has the largest single-country Indian diaspora, with over 5.16 million people of Indian origin. Indian Americans are among the most highly educated and highest-earning immigrant communities in the United States, with significant representation in technology, medicine, academia, law, and public office. However, if measured as a region, the Gulf countries collectively host over 8 million Indians, making the Arabian Peninsula the most densely concentrated Indian diaspora hub in the world. The UAE alone is home to 3.5 million Indians, and Saudi Arabia to 2.6 million.
How does the Indian Diaspora contribute economically?
India is the world’s largest recipient of remittances, receiving over $100 billion annually—funds that support millions of families, build homes, finance education, and drive rural development. Beyond remittances, the diaspora contributes intellectual capital, global networks, and market access that fuel India’s startup ecosystem, foreign direct investment, and tourism. Diaspora-led companies and investments have played a significant role in sectors like technology, healthcare, and education. Politically and culturally, Indian-origin leaders now hold positions of global influence—from corporate boardrooms at Google and Microsoft to elected office across multiple continents. Indian cuisine, yoga, Bollywood, and festivals like Diwali have become global cultural phenomena, driven in large part by diaspora communities.
What challenges does the Indian Diaspora face?
Despite remarkable successes, diaspora communities navigate real and persistent challenges. These include racism and xenophobia in host countries, identity struggles particularly among second- and third-generation diaspora members who balance dual cultural identities, complex immigration and visa systems that create legal uncertainty, and a sense of disconnection from a homeland that continues to change rapidly. Workers in the Gulf often face difficult labour conditions and limited pathways to permanent residency. Students abroad deal with cultural adjustment, financial pressure, and the weight of family expectations. Yet these challenges also forge resilience and strengthen community bonds—many of the diaspora’s most powerful institutions, from gurdwaras and temples to professional associations and cultural bodies, were built precisely to address these difficulties.
What is Pravasi Bharatiya Divas?
Pravasi Bharatiya Divas (PBD) is India’s annual celebration of the overseas Indian community, organised by the Ministry of External Affairs. Held around January 9th—the date Mahatma Gandhi returned to India from South Africa in 1915—it brings together diaspora leaders, professionals, and community builders from around the world. The event includes the Pravasi Bharatiya Samman Awards, which recognise outstanding contributions by overseas Indians to India and to their countries of residence. PBD serves as a platform for dialogue between India and its diaspora on issues of mutual interest, from investment opportunities to cultural preservation.
What does “Return with Purpose” mean in the context of the Indian Diaspora?
“Return with Purpose” describes the growing wave of Global Indians who are returning to India not out of compulsion but out of conviction—to start companies, invest capital, mentor the next generation, launch social enterprises, or build institutions. Driven by India’s booming startup ecosystem (with over 100 unicorns), improved infrastructure, and a desire to apply global knowledge to Indian challenges, this reverse migration represents the fifth and most recent wave of diaspora movement. Many returnees are IIT or Ivy League graduates, Silicon Valley veterans, or second-generation Indians who feel drawn to contribute to India’s growth story. Even those who don’t return permanently often maintain strong India ties through investments, advisory roles, philanthropic foundations, or bi-national ventures. This wave has created vibrant returnee communities in Bangalore, Hyderabad, Mumbai, Delhi, and Chennai.