India's IPO market is expected to gain further momentum in 2026 after a record-breaking 2025, with larger companies and stronger fundraising pipelines taking center stage. While the scale of upcoming IPOs looks promising, investors should continue to focus on valuations and fundamentals rather than brand recognition alone.
If you were even remotely active on Dalal Street in 2025, you know it was not a normal year, it was an IPO carnival. And now that we are well into 2026, the natural question every retail investor is asking is simple, is this year going to top last year, or was 2025 the peak we will talk about for a decade?
2025 in Numbers: The Year IPOs Went Mainstream
Let us start with the scoreboard. Calendar year 2025 saw 373 IPOs hit Dalal Street, split between 103 to 106 mainboard listings and roughly 260 to 270 SME issues. Together they mobilised close to ₹1.95 lakh crore, which is about 12 times what companies raised through IPOs a few years back. Mainboard IPOs alone accounted for ₹1.83 lakh crore, that is a massive 94% of the total pie, led by giants like Tata Capital which raised ₹15,510 crore and HDB Financial Services at ₹12,500 crore, the largest bank led IPO India has ever seen. Meesho and Lenskart also joined the party, proving that new age tech companies are no longer shy of the public markets. What really stood out for me as an analyst is that this growth was not just about two or three mega IPOs. Issues above ₹5,000 crore made up only 8% to 14% of total volumes between 2020 and 2025. The real engine was the mid sized bracket, IPOs worth ₹1,000 to ₹5,000 crore grew at a 68% CAGR, and even the smaller ₹100 to ₹500 crore segment grew 58% annually. That tells you capital formation in India is broadening out, not just concentrating at the top.
How 2026 Is Shaping Up
Now here is where 2026 gets genuinely exciting for us as investors. Analysts at Pantomath expect close to ₹4 lakh crore of capital formation through primary markets this year, roughly double what 2025 delivered. Mainboard activity is expected to stay in the 100 to 120 issue range while SME listings should cross 250 again, so the pace is not slowing down, it is simply getting more disciplined. What makes 2026 different is the sheer scale of names lining up. We are talking about Reliance Jio, PhonePe, Flipkart, boAt, Zepto, OYO, MakeMyTrip, Hero Fincorp and FabIndia, all either filing papers or expected to soon. If even half of these come through at reasonable valuations, 2026 could dwarf 2025 in terms of the quality and recognisability of names hitting your demat account.
Explore: Latest IPO listings in 2026
Side by Side Comparison
| Parameter | 2025 | 2026 (trend so far) |
| Total IPOs (Mainboard + SME) | 373 | More calibrated, guided 350-370 |
| Mainboard IPOs | 103-106 | Expected 100-120 |
| SME IPOs | 259-270 | Expected 250+ |
| Total Money Raised | ₹1.95 lakh crore | Pantomath projects near ₹4 lakh crore |
| Mainboard Share of Funds | ~94% (₹1.83 lakh crore) | Likely to stay dominant |
| Average Mainboard Deal Size | ~₹1,570 crore | Bigger, mega-cap names in pipeline |
| Marquee Names | Tata Capital, HDB Financial, Meesho, Lenskart | Jio, PhonePe, Flipkart, boAt, Zepto, OYO, MakeMyTrip |
Listing Day Reality Check
Before you get carried away by the big names, remember 2025 also taught us a harsh lesson, size does not guarantee returns. Out of 197 mainboard IPOs tracked in that stretch, only 5 opened with premiums above 100%, while 51 actually listed at a discount to the issue price. On the SME side, 119 out of nearly 500 listings debuted below their offer price. Roughly half the IPOs analysed gave positive returns from issue price, the rest were flat or in the red. So the lesson carries straight into 2026, a familiar brand name filing an IPO is not a subscription button you press blindly, it is a starting point for your own homework on valuation, promoter pedigree and use of proceeds.
Take for Retail Investors
2025 proved that Indian IPOs have moved from being a seasonal event to a structural part of how companies raise money, growing at a 29% CAGR for mainboard and 46% for SME over the last decade. 2026 looks set to build on that, with bigger, more recognisable consumer brands entering the fray. But as someone who tracks this space daily, my advice stays the same regardless of how big the IPO or how famous the brand is, read the anchor investor list, check the price to earnings against listed peers, and never let FOMO decide your allocation. The IPO market is getting bigger in 2026, your due diligence needs to get bigger with it.











