India's defence bill crossed $90bn last year. Where the money is going is the more interesting story

On 9 June 2026 The Indian Express reported that India's defence expenditure reached roughly $90 billion in 2025, placing the country fifth in the world — behind the United States, China, Russia and Germany, and ahead of every other Asian state. The figure, drawn from the latest Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) yearbook, marks India's third consecutive year inside the global top five and confirms what defence planners in New Delhi have argued for the better part of a decade: that the country is now a permanent, structural member of the world's high-spending military club, not an aspirant to it.
The number alone is striking. Read against the political backdrop, it is more striking still. India is spending at this scale at a moment when its neighbourhood — Pakistan, with its own fiscal crisis, and the contested highlands of PoK — is showing fresh volatility, and when the Indian Air Force is still working through a multi-decade fighter-modernisation backlog. The $90bn question is therefore not how big the bill is, but what the bill is actually buying.
A bill that keeps climbing while procurement stays stuck
The headline figure obscures a stubborn domestic problem the Indian press has been documenting for years. The Indian Express's reporting on the 2025 figure lands alongside a familiar pattern: outlays are climbing, but the share of the budget that actually turns into new platforms — ships, aircraft, artillery, radars — has been flat or shrinking for much of the last decade. Pensions, salaries and the running costs of a 1.4-million-strong active force eat the bulk of the increase. Capital acquisition, the line item that defines long-run combat power, continues to lag.
That tension matters for the same reason it matters in any large standing army: day-to-day readiness and tomorrow's force structure are funded from different pots, and the press has spent the last several years flagging that the second pot is the one not growing fast enough.
The PoK crisis is a stress test, not a cause
The defence-spend data lands in the same news cycle as a serious flare-up across the Line of Control. The Indian Express, reporting on 9 June, cited Indian government statements condemning Pakistan after at least 20 people were reported killed in protests in Pakistan-occupied Kashmir. New Delhi's framing was pointed: the unrest is a product of Pakistani misgovernance, not an India-driven provocation.
The honest read is that the two stories are connected, but not in the way a casual reader might assume. A $90bn defence bill does not respond to a single week of unrest in a region India does not administer. The relationship runs the other way: sustained high defence spending is what gives New Delhi the option of not responding militarily to the PoK flare-up, because the conventional-balance floor is already so far above Pakistan's that escalation would be a choice, not a necessity. The bill is a deterrent balance, not a war budget — a distinction the wire coverage has not always spelled out.
Industrial policy dressed in khaki
The third beat of the story is industrial. The Indian Express's reporting emphasises the sheer scale of the outlay, but the more revealing comparison is to a decade ago, when capital procurement was overwhelmingly an import line — French Rafales, Russian Su-30MKIs, Israeli Phalcons, American C-17s and C-130Js, with indigenous content measured in single digits on most major platforms.
That mix is shifting, slowly and unevenly, in the direction of an explicit industrial policy. The Tejas light combat aircraft programme, the naval indigenous-carrier programme, the planned move toward domestic aero-engine manufacturing, and the Make-in-India defence corridors in Tamil Nadu and Uttar Pradesh are all visible evidence of a strategy that treats the defence budget as a sovereign-industrial instrument, not just a consumption line.
The critics of that strategy — usually retired officers, opposition parliamentarians and a handful of defence economists — argue that the indigenisation drive has slowed procurement and raised unit costs. The defenders — usually the current MoD and the public-sector defence primes — argue that the early years always look expensive, and that sovereign capability is the only defence expenditure that compounds.
Stakes: a $90bn bet on strategic autonomy
The forward view is straightforward to state. India is now committed, by trajectory and by political consensus across the ruling party and the principal opposition, to a defence bill of roughly this scale for the rest of the decade. The variables that remain genuinely open are: how much of it is capital, how much of the capital line turns into Indian-built platforms, and whether the industrial base can absorb the planned ramp without the cost overruns that have dogged the sector for forty years.
If those three questions resolve favourably, the $90bn number will look, in retrospect, like the moment India stopped being a defence importer with offset obligations and started being a defence producer with export ambitions. If they do not, the same $90bn will look like a very large bill that bought the country a great deal of activity and a much smaller amount of additional combat power than the headline number implies.
This piece sits inside Monexus's Asia desk. The Indian Express wire line on the 2025 SIPRI figure is taken as the primary anchor; the PoK reporting from the same outlet is treated as concurrent context, not as a causal explanation for the defence-spend level. Estimates of the capital-versus-revenue split within the Indian budget rely on the outlet's framing rather than on a granular line-item audit this publication has not conducted.
Sources
- The Indian Express — "India had a $90 billion defence bill in 2025. Only 4 countries spent more" — 9 June 2026. https://ift.tt/0uygtMZ
- The Indian Express — "Why are protests erupting in PoK? India slams Pakistan as 20 killed in clashes" — 9 June 2026. https://ift.tt/rHASYzT
- The Indian Express — "As logjam over Bengaluru development portfolio continues, insiders point fingers at CM Shivakumar" — 9 June 2026. https://ift.tt/eJvzTon
- The Indian Express — "A greenhouse against the cold: Queer India Now is a living, tender archive" — 9 June 2026. https://ift.tt/Wk3QVd2