India’s economic ranking has seen a temporary setback. According to the International Monetary Fund (IMF), India slipped to the sixth-largest economy in 2025, down one place from fifth in 2024. The country’s GDP is estimated at $3.92 trillion, placing it behind the UK ($4 trillion) and Japan ($4.44 trillion).
This drop is not due to weak growth. In fact, India recorded nearly 9% nominal growth in rupee terms. The challenge came from a stronger US dollar and rupee depreciation, which reduced India’s GDP when measured in dollar terms. The rupee is projected to weaken from ₹84.6 per dollar in 2024 to ₹88.5 in 2025, further affecting rankings.
Despite this, India remains the fastest-growing major economy, consistently expanding above 6% annually. IMF forecasts show India regaining momentum by 2027, overtaking the UK with GDP at $4.58 trillion. By 2028, India is expected to surpass Japan with GDP at $5.06 trillion, becoming the third-largest economy. The decisive shift comes by 2031, when India’s GDP is projected at $6.79 trillion, well above Japan’s $5.13 trillion.
In rupee terms, India’s GDP rises from ₹318 trillion in 2024 to ₹346.5 trillion in 2025, showing strong domestic growth. The currency effect masks this strength globally, but India’s long-term trajectory remains firmly upward, positioning it as a future global economic powerhouse.



