Indian Startup IPO Tracker 2026: 23 DRHPs Filed, Mega Unicorns Queued

Soumya Verma
16 Min Read
Indian Startup IPO Tracker 2026: 23 DRHPs Filed & Mega Unicorn Pipeline
Quick Take:
  • 2025 record: 18 Indian startups listed, collectively raising Rs 41,248 Cr — Dalal Street’s best-ever year for startup IPOs
  • 2026 pipeline: 23 startups have already filed DRHPs with SEBI; 23+ more in various stages of finalising plans
  • March 2026 surge: 38 companies (across all categories) filed IPO papers with SEBI in March alone — vs 22 in March 2025
  • Mega unicorn queue: Flipkart, Zepto, OYO, InMobi, Zetwerk alone could raise Rs 47,000–50,000 Cr, making 2026 one of the largest startup IPO years in Indian history
  • Q1 2026 listings: 5 new-age tech companies listed in Jan–Mar 2026; performance mixed — several flat or below issue price
  • Amagi: Listed at 12.2% below issue price despite 30.2x oversubscription — signals valuation recalibration even for profitable companies
  • The investor shift: 48% of investors now cite strong fundamentals, profitability, and lower cash burn as primary trigger for backing tech IPOs — a seismic shift from 2021 when growth narratives drove listings
  • The HC ruling: ‘Recalibration will define 2026’ — public market investors prioritising predictable cash flows, sustainable unit economics, and operational discipline

Dalal Street emerged as a founder’s paradise in 2025 — 18 Indian startups listed on Indian exchanges, collectively raising a record Rs 41,248 Cr from public markets. The surge was driven by macroeconomic tailwinds, robust GDP growth projections, and SEBI’s own reforms: simplified DRHP filings, flexible ESOP rules, and an expanded retail investor base that crossed 20 Cr demat accounts.

In 2026, the pipeline is even more ambitious — but the context has changed. Five new-age tech companies listed in Q1 2026, and most debuted flat or below issue price. Amagi, a SaaS major that turned profitable in H1 FY26, was oversubscribed 30.2x — and still listed at a 12.2% discount to issue price. The public market’s message is clear: profitability is necessary but no longer sufficient. Valuation must also be reasonable.

StartupFeed Insight

The 2026 IPO market is a market in two speeds: 

  • Speed 1 — The pipeline: Enormous. 23 DRHPs filed, 23+ companies finalising, 190+ companies with SEBI approvals or under review across all categories, Rs 2.5–2.65 lakh crore in total fundraising target. By volume and total capital ambition, 2026 could be the largest IPO year in Indian history
  • Speed 2 — The market: Demanding. The post-2022 recalibration has fundamentally reset what public market investors expect from tech IPOs. The 2021 playbook — list on growth narrative, raise at high multiple, fix unit economics later — is no longer viable. The 2026 playbook requires proof of sustainable economics before the roadshow begins
  • The tension: Many companies in the 2026 pipeline built their growth strategies under the 2021 assumptions. They raised private capital at 2021 valuations. The public market is now pricing at 2024-25 multiples. The companies that bridge this gap cleanly — with genuine profitability, strong unit economics, and credible growth plans — will get strong listings. The ones that cannot will either delay or list flat

What this means for founders: If you are planning to list in 2026 or 2027, the single most important preparation is demonstrating operating cash flow discipline — not PAT (which can be managed with deferred tax gains), but genuine operational cash generation. Amagi’s lackluster debut despite profitability suggests the market is even discounting accounting profitability in favour of structural cash flow reliability. Build that first.

Our prediction: Zepto and OYO will be the bellwether listings of 2026. If Zepto — which narrowed losses but still posted Rs 3,367 Cr net loss on Rs 11,109 Cr revenue in FY25 — gets a strong listing, the market is willing to fund growth-stage companies with clear paths to profitability. If it lists flat or below, the recalibration extends another year and even profitable startups face valuation pressure.

The Numbers — India’s 2026 IPO Market at a Glance

Metric 2025 (Record Year) 2026 (Pipeline/Projection)
Startup IPO listings 18 mainboard listings 5 in Q1 2026; 48+ total expected over 12-18 months
Capital raised by startups Rs 41,248 Cr (record) Rs 47,000–50,000 Cr from unicorns alone; Rs 2.5–2.65 lakh crore total across all categories
DRHPs filed with SEBI (startups) Strong pipeline 23 startup DRHPs filed; 23+ finalising
Total IPO filings (all categories, March alone) 22 filings 38 filings in March 2026 alone — highest in 3 years
SEBI-approved IPOs awaiting launch 124 companies have SEBI approval, awaiting timing
Average listing performance Generally strong Mixed — several flat or below issue price
Retail investor demat accounts ~18 Cr 20 Cr+ (crossed milestone)
Investor priority Growth narrative + future potential Strong fundamentals + profitability + low cash burn (48% of investors)

The Big 5 Unicorn IPOs — What They Could Raise and Where They Stand

Company Sector Estimated IPO Size Last Known Valuation Status / Notes
Flipkart E-commerce Rs 25,000–30,000 Cr ($3–4 Bn) $60–70 Bn NCLT approval for domicile shift Singapore→India secured; SEBI DRHP pending; FY26 prep ongoing
Zepto Quick Commerce Rs 8,000–10,000 Cr $7 Bn (post-$450 Mn CalPERS round, Oct 2025) Confidential DRHP filed; potential listing July–September 2026; FY25: revenue Rs 11,109 Cr; loss Rs 3,367 Cr
OYO (PRISM) Hospitality Rs 6,650 Cr $7–8 Bn Confidential DRHP filed; third IPO attempt; FY25: net profit Rs 623 Cr (+172% YoY); revenue Rs 6,463 Cr (+20%)
InMobi AdTech / AI Rs 4,000–5,000 Cr (est.) $1 Bn+ (unicorn) IPO plans firming; bankers being finalised
Zetwerk B2B Manufacturing Rs 4,000–5,000 Cr (est.) ~$5 Bn Six bankers appointed (Kotak, JM Financial, Avendus, HSBC, Morgan Stanley, Goldman Sachs); originally targeted 2027, now back to 2026

More Key Startups in the 2026 IPO Pipeline

Company Sector IPO Details Financial Snapshot Status
PhonePe Fintech / UPI Rs 15,000+ Cr (est.) India’s UPI leader (~50% of UPI transactions); revenue scaling strongly SEBI approved; domicile returned to India from US; bankers finalised; IPO expected 2026
Fractal Analytics AI / Enterprise SaaS Rs 5,000+ Cr (est.) SaaS unicorn; AI-powered analytics; turning profitable SEBI approval received — one of first AI-centric companies to list in India
boAt (Imagine Marketing) Consumer Electronics Rs 1,500 Cr (Rs 500 Cr fresh + Rs 1,000 Cr OFS) Wearables/audio leader; second IPO attempt Updated DRHP filed; audit observations flagged by SEBI; founders Aman Gupta and Sameer Mehta OFS participants
Amagi SaaS / Media Rs 1,000+ Cr (approx.) Net profit Rs 6.5 Cr (H1 FY26); first profitable period LISTED — Q1 2026; oversubscribed 30.2x; listed 12.2% below issue price at Rs 317 vs Rs 361 issue price
Aye Finance NBFC Rs 1,010 Cr (Rs 710 Cr fresh + Rs 300 Cr OFS) Net profit declined 40% YoY to Rs 64.6 Cr (H1 FY26); revenue Rs 843.5 Cr LISTED — Q1 2026; flat debut at issue price Rs 129; undersubscribed at 97%
Travelstack Travel SaaS Rs 250 Cr fresh + OFS of 2.69 Cr shares Net profit Rs 32.2 Cr (H1 FY26, includes deferred tax); operating revenue Rs 400.4 Cr SEBI approved March 2026; IPO imminent
Infra.Market B2B Construction Rs 5,000–8,000 Cr (est.) B2B materials unicorn; strong revenue trajectory IPO plans in advanced stages; bankers being finalised
Razorpay Fintech / Payments Potential listing Payments infrastructure leader; domicile shift underway Under preparation; 2026 listing possible but not confirmed

Q1 2026 Listings — The Mixed Performance Reality

Five new-age tech companies debuted on Indian exchanges in January–March 2026. Their performance reveals the market’s current calibration:

Company Issue Price Listing Price Listing Performance Key Signal
Amagi Rs 361 Rs 317 (BSE) −12.2% below issue price 30.2x oversubscription failed to translate into listing gains — valuation still mattered even for a profitable SaaS company
Aye Finance Rs 129 Rs 129 (BSE/NSE) Flat — at issue price 97% undersubscription; declining net profit flagged; market demanding growth + profitability, not just either

The pattern emerging from Q1 2026 listings: The market is no longer rewarding companies simply for filing — or even for narrow profitability. The demand is for quality of earnings — predictable, recurring revenue; operational cash generation; demonstrated ability to sustain growth without capital infusion. Companies meeting this bar will get good listings. Companies that do not will face flat or negative debuts regardless of oversubscription levels.

The 2025 Base — What India’s Record Year Looked Like

2025’s record performance was built on three structural enablers:

  • SEBI reforms: Simplified DRHP filings reduced bureaucratic friction; more flexible ESOP rules allowed founders to retain meaningful ownership through IPOs — addressing a historic concern that listing diluted founder control disproportionately
  • Macroeconomic tailwinds: Robust GDP growth projections (7%+ for India) revived institutional and retail investor confidence; India’s ‘Goldilocks’ macro narrative attracted both domestic and foreign portfolio investors into the primary market
  • Retail investor surge: Demat accounts crossing 20 Cr represents an unprecedented retail investor base. For IPOs, this means deep subscription pools and retail enthusiasm that supports strong listing premiums for quality companies
  • OFS providing liquidity: The Offer for Sale component of public issues gave early-stage investors (VCs, PEs) a clear, structured exit pathway — removing the overhang of investor pressure for secondary sales and making the IPO pipeline more attractive for all parties

The Investor Mindset Shift — 2021 vs 2026

Dimension 2021 IPO Market 2026 IPO Market
Primary investor signal Future growth potential; TAM story; burn rate considered acceptable Demonstrated unit economics; operating cash generation; path to profitability visible in current numbers
Revenue metrics Top-line growth (GMV, revenue) dominant Revenue quality (gross margin, contribution margin, repeat customer revenue)
Profitability expectation Optional; growth startups valued on revenue multiple Preferred; market heavily discounts companies with widening losses
Valuation tolerance High — comparable to global SaaS multiples Compressed — closer to Indian market comparable + risk premium
Cash burn Acceptable if growth is strong Actively penalised in pricing; companies with high burn face valuation haircuts
Governance Improving but flexible Strict; any SEBI observation (as in boAt’s case) creates negative investor sentiment
What drives listing premium Subscription oversubscription, brand recognition Quality of earnings, cash flow reliability, management credibility

 

“IPO-bound startups in 2026 will be increasingly defined by their ability to demonstrate predictable cash flows, sustainable unit economics, and operational discipline rather than headline growth alone. Public market investors will place greater emphasis on governance, capital efficiency and long-term value creation.” — Rehan Yar Khan, Managing Partner, Orios Venture Partners

What Makes an IPO Work in 2026 — The Checklist

Based on Q1 2026 listing patterns and investor surveys, these are the factors that will determine which 2026 startups get strong listing premiums:

  • Operating cash flow positive (not just accounting profit): Deferred tax gains and one-time items can produce PAT profits that mask underlying cash burn. Amagi’s listing discount despite PAT profitability suggests the market is looking through accounting profits to operational cash generation
  • Revenue quality above revenue volume: ARR (Annual Recurring Revenue), net revenue retention above 100%, and contribution margin percentages matter more than GMV or total transaction value
  • Coherent unit economics at current scale: Payback periods below 18 months, LTV:CAC above 3:1, and clearly declining CAC as brand scales — these metrics, presented credibly in the DRHP, drive institutional investor confidence
  • Governance clean-up: boAt’s SEBI audit observations (discrepancies in lender submissions, compliance gaps) created negative sentiment. DRHP filings that reveal historical governance issues will face valuation penalties in 2026
  • Valuation modesty: The 2026 market will not accept 2021 valuations for pre-profitability companies. Companies that file DRHPs at realistic, market-clearing valuations — rather than the last private round valuation — will get better reception. Companies that try to preserve the last private round headline valuation will face grey market and listing pressure

The Broader Pipeline — March 2026 Surge

March 2026 saw 38 companies file IPO papers with SEBI — significantly higher than 22 in March 2025 and 16 in March 2024. Of those 38, nine chose the confidential filing route (an increasingly common choice for companies in competitive sectors that want to control the information flow ahead of formal IPO announcement).

The full market pipeline (all categories, not just startups): 

  • 64 companies currently awaiting SEBI clearance (DRHP filed, approval pending)
  • 124 companies already have SEBI approval but have not yet launched their IPOs — waiting for market timing
  • 190+ companies total with SEBI approvals or draft filings across all categories
  • Rs 1.25 lakh crore in IPOs have received regulatory clearance and are waiting for the right market window
  • Rs 2.5–2.65 lakh crore in total targeted fundraising across the full 2026 pipeline

 

Which of the 2026 startup IPOs are you most excited about — and which do you think will face valuation pressure at listing? Tell us on X @StartupFeed_news

 

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