Are concerts India’s next big economy?
Last year, Coldplay didn’t just perform in India. It exposed how big India’s concert economy can become.
In January 2025, over 2.2 lakh people packed into Ahmedabad’s Narendra Modi Stadium across two nights, making it one of the largest concerts of the century. But the real story wasn’t inside the stadium. It was outside.
The event generated nearly ₹641 crore in economic impact, with ₹392 crore flowing directly into the city. Hotels sold out, flights ran at peak capacity, airfares jumped 3 to 4 times, and over 1.4 lakh passengers passed through the airport in just three days. For every ₹100 spent on a ticket, fans spent another ₹585 on travel, food, shopping, and stay. What looked like a concert was actually a full-blown economic engine.
And this is no longer a one-off moment. It is becoming a pattern.
Across India, concerts and live events are turning into something people plan their lives around. Fans are flying across cities, booking hotels, taking leaves, and building entire trips around shows. Nearly 5 to 6 lakh Indians travelled across cities for concerts in 2025 alone, and industry estimates suggest fans are willing to travel over 500 kilometres and pay up to three times normal hotel prices if the artist is big enough.
This behaviour has a name now, event tourism, and it is quietly reshaping how India spends.
Event tourism is when people travel to a city primarily to attend a specific event, and then build an entire trip around it. Instead of visiting a place for sightseeing and maybe catching an event on the side, the event itself becomes the main reason to travel. Everything else like flights, hotels, food, shopping, even local exploration happens because of that one event.
At the heart of this shift is a very simple reality.
India is young, and it is earning more. Over 65% of the population is under 35, and income per capita is rising among the fastest in major emerging markets. Once basic needs are met, spending naturally moves toward experiences. And concerts sit right at the centre of that shift.
Today, more than 70% of Gen Z and millennials in Tier 1 cities have attended at least one ticketed live event in the past year. This is not casual consumption. It is planned, intentional, and increasingly habitual.
But money alone does not explain it. Culture does.
For younger audiences, concerts are not just entertainment. They are identity markers. The artists you follow, the festivals you attend, and the moments you post online all signal who you are. There is also a strong element of FOMO.
When thousands of people are sharing stories, inside jokes, and memories from the same event, not being there feels like missing out on something bigger than just a show. And the fact that experiences now matter more than material purchases, and you begin to see why people are willing to spend ₹5,000 or even ₹25,000 on a ticket without thinking twice.
This demand is showing up clearly in the numbers.
India’s live events market has already crossed ₹20,000 crore and is growing at around 15-19% annually, which is faster than the global average. The organised segment alone is over ₹12,000 crore, and ticketed music events added more than ₹1,300 crore in incremental revenue recently.
In 2025, India hosted over 34,000 live events across concerts, comedy, and theatre. What’s even more telling is how the spending pattern is evolving. Premium experiences like VIP zones, hospitality decks, and exclusive access packages have seen more than double the footfall in just a year, which shows that people are not just attending events, they are upgrading how they experience them.
If you look at where this demand is coming from, it gets even more interesting. It is no longer limited to metros. Cities like Shillong, Guwahati, and Nashik have seen event footfall jump by over 200 percent in some cases. Around 35% of attendees at large concerts like Coldplay came from non-metro cities. Fandom in India is no longer tied to geography. If the artist matters, people will show up from anywhere.
Karan Aujla is a strong example of how Indian artists are scaling within this growing concert economy. His 2024–25 India tour sold out across multiple cities, with ticket prices ranging from around ₹2,000 to ₹25,000 depending on the city and access tier. In cities like Delhi, Mumbai, and Chandigarh, tickets were reportedly sold out within hours of release. A significant portion of his audience travels across cities, especially from North Indian hubs like Punjab and Delhi, as well as smaller towns. His shows also lean heavily on premium sections, which signals that audiences are willing to spend more for proximity and a better experience, not just entry.
Diljit Dosanjh, who operates at a similar scale, offers an even clearer picture. His “Born To Shine” and subsequent tours have delivered stadium-level attendance, with shows in India and abroad selling out within minutes. In several cases, resale prices have jumped 2 to 3 times. His concerts have also triggered the same spillover effects seen with global artists, including spikes in hotel prices and increased travel demand.
If you zoom out, these artists help explain something important. India’s concert economy is not just driven by global superstars anymore. It is becoming layered. At the top, you have mega stadium acts like Coldplay. In the middle, you have large-scale Indian artists like Diljit and Aujla filling arenas. And at the base, you have indie artists building consistent demand across cities.
Even without perfect numbers, the pattern is clear. Sellouts are happening faster, ticket prices are rising, premium categories are growing, and fans are increasingly willing to travel. That is exactly the kind of behaviour needed for a concert economy to sustain itself at scale.
This shift is also changing how the industry makes money. Before 2020, concerts in India were largely brand-funded, with sponsors covering most of the costs and ticket sales contributing just 10 to 30 percent of revenue. Today, that model has flipped. Tickets now account for 50-70% of earnings, with fans directly paying for access, experiences, and exclusivity.
Brands are still involved, but they are no longer carrying the business. Platforms like BookMyShow, District, and Skillbox have built entire ecosystems around this, handling ticketing, discovery, marketing, and even on-ground execution. Buying a ticket is no longer just a transaction. It is the first step of the experience.
And then there is the ripple effect.
Live events do not just generate revenue for organisers. They create entire micro-economies. Hotels see occupancy spike by 60-100% during major events. Restaurants and bars report 25-40% higher sales. Local transport, retail, and even small vendors benefit from the surge in footfall.
A single large event can inject ₹25 to ₹40 crore into a city over a weekend. The sector also employs over 10 million people directly and indirectly, from artists and technicians to security staff and caterers. In the case of Coldplay alone, around 15,000 people were involved in making the event happen.
All of this sounds like a market that is ready to explode. But there is a catch.
India does not have the infrastructure to keep up.
Despite the demand, the country has fewer than 10 purpose-built venues that can host concerts with more than 10,000 people comfortably. Most events are still held in cricket stadiums, open grounds, or temporary setups.
These spaces were not designed for concerts, which means sound quality, crowd flow, safety, and logistics often suffer. Even in metros, entry and exit can take hours, and traffic outside venues becomes chaotic. In Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, the situation is even more basic, with events relying on college grounds or open fields.
This lack of infrastructure also impacts profitability. Concerts are expensive to produce. Artists charge high fees, and organisers have to build everything from scratch each time, from stage and sound to lighting and crowd management.
On top of that, they need to deal with complex licensing systems that can involve 10-15 different approvals across departments. All of this adds cost and uncertainty. As a result, many large events operate on thin margins, and profitability often takes years to achieve.
So what you have is a market where demand is already strong, but the system around it is still catching up.
That is also where the opportunity lies.
If this ecosystem matures, the real winners will not just be the artists or the organisers. It will be the infrastructure around it. Venues, ticketing platforms, production companies, hospitality chains, transport networks, and even content platforms that stream or package these events. Because while a concert lasts a few hours, the spending around it stretches across days, sometimes weeks.
India is essentially at the early stage of something much bigger. Globally, live music is expected to become a $33 billion industry by 2027. Countries like the US, UK, and UAE have already turned concerts into major economic drivers by investing in infrastructure, policy support, and tourism integration. India has the audience, the cultural diversity, and the digital ecosystem to do the same, but it still needs the physical backbone to support it.
That is why 2025 and 2026 are starting to look like a turning point. Global artists are adding multiple Indian cities to their tours. Domestic artists are building large-scale touring brands. New venues and event formats are being tested. The government is also beginning to recognise live events as part of the broader creative economy, with ambitions to make India one of the top five live entertainment markets by 2030.
If that happens, concerts in India will stop being rare moments and become a regular part of how cities function.
And when that shift happens, the real story will not be about music. It will be about how an entire economy quietly built itself around people simply wanting to show up and experience something together.
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