India’s consumer story is shifting away from a narrow, urban elite and towards a far broader base as firms redesign products, pricing and distribution to win over millions in smaller cities. Cheap mobile data, widespread smartphone use and expanding logistics networks are enabling platforms such as Swiggy, Zomato and retail chains like Zudio to reach customers in Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns where growth prospects are large and unit economics can improve.
India’s next billion consumers
For years, India’s consumption boom centred on roughly 150 million affluent, English-speaking city dwellers. That cohort remains important, but the next phase of growth is being written in hill towns, industrial centres and district headquarters. Companies now see potential in modest discretionary spends: a new shirt, an on-demand meal, a streaming subscription. These micro purchases, repeated at scale, are shaping the country’s next growth cycle.
Zudio, the Tata Group-owned fast-fashion brand, illustrates how global aesthetics at local prices can scale quickly. The chain has grown to more than 800 stores, primarily outside major metros, by offering items such as sweaters and sneakers at price points tailored to value-conscious shoppers. By contrast, premium global chains maintain far fewer outlets concentrated in big cities.
Quick commerce firms have also found a fertile ground beyond metros. Delivering groceries and essentials within minutes, platforms including Swiggy Instamart, Zomato and newer players expand where lower rents and operational costs make dark-store models viable. Research shows that a dark store in a Tier 2 town needs fewer daily orders to break even than in a Tier 1 city. That cost advantage accelerates roll-out.
The expansion is creating livelihoods as well as consumers. Delivery and gig-economy roles in smaller towns offer meaningful incomes without the migration costs and congestion associated with metros. For some households the extra wages translate directly into discretionary spending on food delivery, apparel and digital entertainment.
Brands are adapting through what the market calls faux premiumisation: offering the look and perceived quality of a global brand at accessible prices. Local concepts inspired by international formats, and India-specific redesigns by multinational firms, are common. The message is simple: aspiration exists across the country, but it must be met with trust, affordability and consistent access.
Streaming platforms have been particularly responsive. Netflix and Amazon Prime Video introduced lower-priced plans and regional-language content to grow subscriptions. Free, ad-supported services such as MX Player command hundreds of millions of users, many in smaller cities. JioCinema and JioSaavn continue to leverage telecom bundling to widen reach, underlining how pricing and localisation matter as much as content.
That said, consumption remains unequal. The top one per cent holds a large share of wealth and a small proportion of households account for most discretionary spend. Yet companies are betting that scale and habit formation can turn light consumers into repeat buyers over time. The key challenge for global brands is to avoid transplanting global playbooks without local adaptation. India rewards products that reflect local tastes and purchasing power.
As India accelerates towards becoming one of the world’s largest economies, the next wave of consumer growth will not be limited to megacities. It will come from smaller streets and faster phones, where incremental upgrades in convenience and choice add up to sizeable demand. For investors and firms, the question is whether they can combine logistics, pricing and localisation to capture this vast market effectively.
Key Takeaways:
- Cheap data, smartphones and improved logistics are pushing consumption beyond major metros.
- Quick commerce and fast fashion models make services viable in Tier 2 and Tier 3 towns.
- Streaming platforms and faux premiumisation are converting light users into repeat buyers.
- Swiggy, Zomato and Zudio are among firms capitalising on India's next billion consumers.

















