Gross Foreign Direct Investment (Gross FDI) refers to the total foreign direct investment coming into a country before deducting repatriation, disinvestment and outward FDI.
It shows the total foreign investor interest in an economy. Unlike net FDI, it does not show how much investment finally remains in the country after outflows.
Meaning and Components
Gross FDI includes all direct investment inflows from foreign investors into India.
It generally includes:
- equity capital brought by foreign investors
- reinvested earnings of foreign companies
- other capital such as intra-company loans
- investment through RBI and government approval routes
Gross FDI is different from portfolio investment. FDI usually involves a lasting interest and some degree of control or influence in an enterprise, while portfolio investment mainly involves buying financial assets such as shares or bonds without management control.
Latest India Data
India’s gross FDI inflows reached a record $94.53 billion in FY 2025–26, up from $80.62 billion in FY 2024–25. This marked a rise of around 17% and showed renewed foreign investor interest in India.
However, the net FDI figure was much lower at around $7.65 billion in FY 2025–26 because of repatriation, disinvestment and outward FDI.
FDI equity inflows also improved in FY 2025–26. DPIIT data reported that FDI equity inflows rose by about 18%, with US investments more than doubling from $5.45 billion in FY25 to $11.17 billion in FY26.
Significance
Gross FDI is important because it reflects the attractiveness of an economy for foreign investors.
High gross FDI indicates that foreign companies see opportunities in areas such as manufacturing, services, digital economy, infrastructure, renewable energy, automobiles, electronics and financial services.
It is useful for understanding:
- investor confidence
- global capital interest in India
- sector-wise foreign investment trends
- state-wise investment concentration
- technology and management inflows
- India’s integration with global value chains
For India, strong gross FDI supports investment, employment, technology transfer and industrial expansion.
Gross FDI vs Net FDI
Gross FDI shows the total investment coming into India.
Net FDI shows what remains after deducting outward flows.
So, gross FDI may be high even when net FDI is low. This can happen when foreign investors bring new capital, but older investors also exit, repatriate profits or sell stakes.
In FY 2025–26, this contrast was clearly visible. Gross FDI reached a record level, but net FDI remained modest because outflows were also high.
Limitations
Gross FDI should not be used alone to judge the quality of foreign investment.
A high gross number may include mergers and acquisitions, stake transfers, reinvested earnings or financial restructuring. It may not always mean new factories, new jobs or new productive capacity.
The more important question is whether FDI is going into greenfield investment, manufacturing, infrastructure, clean energy and high-technology sectors.
Other concerns include:
- high repatriation by foreign investors
- private equity exits
- concentration of FDI in a few states
- dominance of services over manufacturing
- limited job creation in some investment categories
- global uncertainty affecting future inflows
Conclusion
Gross FDI is the total foreign direct investment entering India before deducting outflows.
India’s gross FDI reached a record $94.53 billion in FY 2025–26, showing strong investor interest. However, net FDI remained much lower because of high repatriation, disinvestment and outward FDI.
Therefore, gross FDI shows foreign investor confidence, but it must be read together with net FDI, sectoral distribution and greenfield investment to understand the real economic impact.



