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India’s Global Capability Centre (GCC) story is no longer a quiet back-office trend. It is one of the most transformative shifts in the global services industry — and 2026 marks the year it became impossible to ignore. From a handful of captive offshore units two decades ago, India now hosts 1,760+ active GCCs employing over 1.9 million professionals, generating revenues that crossed $70 billion in early 2026. NASSCOM projects 2.8 million employees and $105 billion in revenue by 2030.
For global enterprises planning their next decade, India is no longer an outsourcing destination. It is the strategic capability core — where AI engineering, R&D, finance transformation, cybersecurity, data science, and digital product leadership now physically live. For Indian professionals, GCCs have become the most attractive employment category in the country, often outpaying both domestic IT services and traditional MNC roles.
This is the comprehensive 2026 guide to understanding the GCC landscape — written for CXOs evaluating India entry, HR leaders planning hiring strategies, and professionals navigating their next career move. Whether you’re setting up your first capability centre or your fiftieth role, the data, hubs, and trends below will shape your decisions.
A Global Capability Centre is a strategic offshore unit owned and operated by a multinational company — not a vendor — that delivers core business functions back to the parent organisation. Unlike traditional outsourcing arrangements (where you pay an external vendor like Infosys or Wipro), a GCC is an extension of the parent company itself, staffed by the company’s own employees, governed by its own policies, and embedded in its strategic decision-making.
The terminology has evolved over time:
The shift in nomenclature reflects a real change in mandate. Today’s GCC isn’t a cost lever; it’s a capability lever. Roughly 80% of new GCCs being launched in 2026 prioritise AI/ML capabilities at their core — a complete inversion from 2010 when most centres focused on infrastructure support and call operations.
Industry at a glance (early 2026):
To put this in perspective: the GCC sector now employs more people in India than the entire commercial banking industry, and pays significantly higher average salaries than traditional IT services. The shift in capital deployment is equally dramatic — over 350 new GCCs were established between 2020 and 2025, with 2026 on track to add another 100+.
India’s GCC ecosystem is concentrated across six primary hubs and several emerging tier-2 cities. Each location offers a different cost-talent-attrition profile, and selecting the right hub is one of the most consequential decisions in any GCC setup or expansion.
| City | GCC Count (2026) | Cost Index (Bengaluru = 100) | Specialisation | Attrition |
| Bengaluru | ~620 | 100 | AI/ML, deep tech, product engineering | 16–18% |
| Hyderabad | ~330 | 80–85 | BFSI, cloud, semiconductor, life sciences | 14–16% |
| Pune | ~360 | 72–78 | Engineering R&D, automotive, ER&D | 13–14% |
| Chennai | ~200 | 78–82 | Engineering, R&D, banking back-office | 15–17% |
| NCR (Gurgaon, Noida) | ~190 | 92–98 | Consulting, BFSI, retail tech | 17–19% |
| Mumbai | ~120 | 105–110 | BFSI HQ, financial markets, regulatory | 16–18% |
| Ahmedabad / GIFT City | ~50 (rapidly rising) | 65–72 | BFSI/IFSC, fintech, manufacturing | 11–13% |
| Coimbatore, Kochi, Jaipur | ~80 combined | 60–70 | Engineering, captive support, BPM | 10–13% |
The narrative shift in 2026 is clear: tier-2 hubs are no longer just cost plays — they’re strategic plays. Pune has expanded from 210 GCCs in 2019 to over 360 in 2025, combining strong engineering talent with 20–25% cost savings over Bengaluru. Ahmedabad and GIFT City are emerging as the next wave, particularly for BFSI, fintech, and manufacturing-adjacent capability centres.
Companies launching new GCCs in 2026 increasingly use a hub-and-spoke model: leadership in Bengaluru/Hyderabad, scaled engineering in Pune/Chennai, and cost-efficient back-office operations in tier-2 cities. RKHRM’s GCC recruitment practice has executed mandates across all major hubs and several emerging cities.
Today’s GCCs span far beyond the IT-support roots they started from. The 2026 mandate spans:
Pune, Bengaluru, and Chennai house most ER&D centres. Functions include automotive engineering, embedded systems, hardware design, aerospace, and industrial IoT. India delivers roughly 25% of global ER&D outsourced work.
The fastest-growing GCC function in 2026. Roles include AI engineers, data scientists, MLOps specialists, prompt engineers, model evaluators, and AI ethics professionals. Bengaluru leads — hosting nearly 50% of India’s AI/ML talent.
Banking, insurance, capital markets, asset management. Mumbai and Hyderabad dominate, with GIFT City emerging rapidly for IFSC-regulated entities — IFSC Banking Units, foreign banks’ IFSC branches, and global fund administrators.
Threat intelligence, SOC operations, identity management, cloud architecture. Highly distributed across hubs but with concentration in Hyderabad and Bengaluru.
Centres of Excellence (CoEs) for global FP&A, controllership, procurement, and shared services. Often the entry point for first-time GCCs.
UX design, product management, growth analytics — increasingly led from Bengaluru and Pune as global product organisations consolidate India teams.
Onboarding, payroll, learning & development, people analytics — often the hidden engine of larger GCCs.
Salary inflation in GCCs has outpaced general IT services by roughly 200–400 basis points annually since 2022. Here’s a representative 2026 benchmark for mid-tier hubs:
| Role | Junior (0–4 yrs) | Mid (5–10 yrs) | Senior (11–18 yrs) | Leadership (18+ yrs) |
| Software Engineer | ₹8–18 L | ₹22–45 L | ₹45–95 L | ₹1.2–3 cr |
| Data Scientist / AI Engineer | ₹14–28 L | ₹35–70 L | ₹75 L–1.5 cr | ₹2–4.5 cr |
| Product Manager | ₹16–32 L | ₹40–80 L | ₹80 L–1.6 cr | ₹1.8–4 cr |
| Finance / FP&A | ₹7–14 L | ₹18–38 L | ₹40–85 L | ₹1–2.5 cr |
| Cybersecurity Specialist | ₹10–22 L | ₹26–55 L | ₹55 L–1.2 cr | ₹1.5–3 cr |
| HR Business Partner | ₹6–12 L | ₹15–32 L | ₹35–70 L | ₹85 L–2 cr |
Ranges depend heavily on hub city, employer brand, and skill specialisation. Top quartile employers (Goldman Sachs, JPMorgan, Microsoft, Google captives) pay 25–40% above these medians.
Recruiting for GCCs is not the same as recruiting for IT services or product startups. The differences shape what kind of recruitment partner makes sense:
This is exactly why specialised GCC recruitment partners with both executive search depth and volume hiring capability have become preferred over generalist staffing firms.
New GCCs in 2026 don’t bolt AI onto existing operations. They are designed AI-first from day one. Expect every new captive to have at least 15–25% of headcount in AI/ML roles within 18 months of launch.
Bengaluru and Hyderabad’s attrition (16–18%) is pushing GCCs to seed satellite locations in Coimbatore, Ahmedabad, Pune, and Kochi where attrition runs 30–40% lower and costs 25–35% lower.
For BFSI, capital markets, and global financial services GCCs, GIFT City has become the most strategic location due to IFSC tax incentives, regulatory clarity, and a growing critical mass of financial firms.
Pure GCC vs pure outsourcing is dissolving. Many companies now run a “GCC + BOT (Build-Operate-Transfer)” hybrid where a partner builds the centre, operates it for 24–36 months, then transitions ownership.
India is no longer just where execution happens. Increasingly, global P&L roles, product CEOs, and engineering VPs sit in India. Headhunting for these roles has become a defining battleground.
Companies evaluating India entry typically face six decisions:
For the full setup playbook, see our companion guide on How to Set Up a GCC in India 2026.
RKHRM has executed GCC recruitment mandates spanning leadership hiring, engineering scale-up, BFSI specialist roles, and GIFT City IFSC placements. With 16 years in the recruitment industry, 29+ industries served, and Executive Recruiters Association membership since 2012, our team brings:
New GCCs typically launch with 50–150 employees in year one and scale to 500–2,000 by year three. The largest captives in India (American Express, JPMorgan, Goldman Sachs, Microsoft, Google) employ 15,000+ each.
A greenfield GCC typically takes 6–9 months from decision to first hire, depending on location, entity structure, and complexity. BOT models can compress this to 3–4 months.
It depends on the function. For deep-tech AI/ML and product engineering, Bengaluru remains unmatched. For finance, BFSI, and stable engineering scale, Pune, Hyderabad, and Ahmedabad offer 20–35% cost savings with lower attrition.
Yes — typically 25–60% higher at comparable experience levels for product engineering, AI, and BFSI roles. Top-tier GCCs (Goldman, JPMorgan, Microsoft) pay among the highest in India.
Specialised partners like RKHRM combine both. Most generalist staffing firms cover only volume; most boutique executive search firms cover only leadership. The hybrid model fits modern GCC needs better.
Whether you’re evaluating India entry, scaling an existing centre, or hiring senior leadership for your GIFT City IFSC unit, RKHRM brings 16 years of specialist recruitment experience across 29+ industries.
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