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India 5th Largest Defence Spender Globally 2025| SIPRI

India ranked 5th globally in defence spending with $92.1 billion in 2025, per SIPRI. Know global rankings, Pakistan comparison, arms import shift & UPSC facts.

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📊 2,117 words
📅 April 2026
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“India’s rise to the fifth spot in global defence spending is not just a number — it is a statement of strategic intent in an increasingly contested neighbourhood.” — SIPRI Report, 2025

India has ranked as the world’s fifth-largest defence spender in 2025, according to the latest report by the Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI). With military expenditure reaching $92.1 billion, India accounted for 3.2% of total global defence spending — placing it behind only the United States, China, Russia, and Germany. The rise reflects India’s growing focus on military preparedness, border security, and defence modernisation amid regional tensions, including emergency procurements linked to Operation Sindoor against Pakistan.

$92.1B India’s Defence Spend (2025)
5th India’s Global Rank
8.9% Rise vs. 2024
$2.887T Global Military Spend (Record)
📊 Quick Reference
Source SIPRI (Stockholm, Sweden)
India’s Spend $92.1 billion (3.2% of global)
India’s Rank 5th (after US, China, Russia, Germany)
India Budget 2026–27 ₹7.85 lakh crore for defence
Pakistan’s Spend $11.9 billion (31st globally)
Global Total (2025) $2.887 trillion (record high)

🌍 About SIPRI & the Report

The Stockholm International Peace Research Institute (SIPRI) is an independent international institute based in Stockholm, Sweden, dedicated to research on conflict, armaments, arms control, and disarmament. Its annual Military Expenditure Database is the world’s most authoritative source for defence spending data.

SIPRI’s 2025 report, released in April 2026, reveals that global military expenditure hit a record high of $2.887 trillion — the steepest single-year increase since the Cold War, driven by ongoing conflicts, geopolitical competition, and NATO rearmament.

✓ Quick Recall

SIPRI = Stockholm International Peace Research Institute — Based in Sweden. Publishes the annual Military Expenditure report. Frequently cited in UPSC questions about arms imports, global defence rankings, and nuclear arsenals. Not to be confused with IISS (International Institute for Strategic Studies, UK) which publishes “The Military Balance.”

📌 India’s Defence Spending: Key Details

India becomes world's 5th largest defence spender in 2025 — SIPRI Report
India ranked 5th globally in defence spending (2025) with $92.1 billion — SIPRI Military Expenditure Report 2026

India’s military expenditure in 2025 rose by 8.9% compared to 2024, reaching $92.1 billion. Key drivers of this increase:

  • Operation Sindoor: Emergency procurements and enhanced operational readiness during Operation Sindoor against Pakistan directly contributed to the spending surge.
  • New Systems & Equipment: Defence forces acquired new weapons systems and military equipment to maintain combat preparedness.
  • Air Power Push: The revised capital outlay for military aircraft systems saw a major jump, supporting India’s push for stronger air power and advanced combat capabilities.
  • Union Budget 2026–27: The government allocated ₹7.85 lakh crore for defence, including major spending on fighter jets, submarines, helicopters, missiles, drones, and smart weapons systems.
💭 Think About This

India’s defence budget of ₹7.85 lakh crore in 2026–27 is massive — but as a percentage of GDP, India spends around 2.3–2.5% of GDP on defence. NATO members are expected to spend at least 2% of GDP. Is India’s defence spending adequate given its two-front threat (China + Pakistan), or is it crowding out social sector spending?

✨ Global Military Spending 2025: Record High

The world spent a record $2.887 trillion on defence in 2025 — the highest ever recorded and a reflection of deepening global insecurity:

  • US, China & Russia together accounted for 51% of total global spending.
  • Europe saw the sharpest annual increase — defence expenditure rose by 14%, driven by the Russia-Ukraine war and NATO-led rearmament.
  • China (2nd largest spender) increased its military budget by 7.4% to $336 billion.
  • Germany moved up to 4th place globally — a significant shift for a country that historically kept defence spending low after World War II.
Rank Country Spending (2025) % Change
1st United States ~$997 billion
2nd China $336 billion +7.4%
3rd Russia
4th Germany
5th India $92.1 billion +8.9%
31st Pakistan $11.9 billion +11%

⚖️ India vs. Pakistan: The Defence Gap

Pakistan recorded an 11% rise in military spending in 2025, reaching $11.9 billion and ranking 31st globally. Despite this increase, India’s defence expenditure remained nearly eight times higher.

SIPRI noted that Pakistan’s higher spending was mainly driven by aircraft and missile purchases from China, along with payments for earlier military contracts. This reflects the continued China-Pakistan defence axis and the strategic competition between the two South Asian neighbours.

⚠️ Exam Trap

Don’t confuse the rankings: India is the 5th largest defence spender globally in 2025, but it is also the 2nd largest arms importer globally (though imports fell by 4% in 2021–25 vs 2016–20). These are two different metrics. Spending = total military budget. Arms imports = weapons bought from foreign countries. India can spend more overall while importing less, as it builds domestic defence manufacturing (Atmanirbhar Bharat).

📖 India’s Shifting Arms Import Strategy

A separate SIPRI report reveals India’s evolving arms procurement strategy:

  • Still the World’s 2nd Largest Importer: Despite a 4% fall in arms imports between 2016–20 and 2021–25, India still accounts for 8.2% of global arms imports.
  • Russia’s Declining Share: Russia’s share in India’s arms imports has declined significantly due to supply chain disruptions (Russia-Ukraine war), sanctions concerns, and India’s strategic realignment.
  • Western Nations Rising: India has expanded defence partnerships with France (Rafale jets, submarines), Israel (drones, air defence), and the United States (Apache helicopters, C-17 transport aircraft, armed drones).
  • Atmanirbhar Bharat in Defence: India is pushing for domestic manufacturing through the Defence Acquisition Procedure (DAP), positive indigenisation lists, and increased FDI in defence.
🎯 Simple Explanation

Think of India’s arms strategy like a household shifting its shopping habits. Earlier, India bought almost everything from one shop (Russia). Now, it’s buying from multiple shops (France, Israel, USA) and also trying to make things at home (Atmanirbhar). The total shopping bill is still large, but the dependence on any single supplier is reducing — which is strategically smarter.

🌍 Significance & Strategic Context

India’s rise to 5th place in global defence spending carries significant strategic and policy implications:

  • Two-Front Threat: India faces simultaneous security challenges from China (Ladakh standoff, Indo-Pacific competition) and Pakistan (terrorism, Operation Sindoor), necessitating sustained defence investment.
  • Indo-Pacific Strategy: Higher defence spending supports India’s growing role as a net security provider in the Indo-Pacific, aligned with QUAD (India, US, Australia, Japan) objectives.
  • Defence Exports: India is not just buying — it is also exporting. India’s defence exports crossed ₹21,000 crore in 2023–24, with a target of ₹50,000 crore by 2028–29.
  • Atmanirbhar Bharat: The government’s push to reduce import dependence through domestic production (DRDO, HAL, private sector) aligns with Make in India goals.
  • Global Arms Race Signal: India’s rise in rankings reflects a broader global trend — worldwide military spending hit a record $2.887 trillion, signalling deepening geopolitical tensions worldwide.
🧠 Memory Tricks
Top 5 Order:
Uncle Can Run Germany’s India” — United States, China, Russia, Germany, India. This gives you the top 5 defence spenders in order for 2025.
India’s Key Numbers:
92 is Fine at 5” — India spent $92.1 billion to reach rank 5, with an 8.9% (≈9%) increase. The India-Pakistan ratio: India spends ~8x more than Pakistan ($92B vs $12B).
SIPRI Location:
SIPRI is in Sweden, not Switzerland” — A common confusion in exams. SIPRI = Stockholm (Sweden). IMF/WTO = Geneva (Switzerland). ICRC = Geneva (Switzerland).
📚 Quick Revision Flashcards

Click to flip • Master key facts

Question
What is India’s rank in global defence spending in 2025?
Click to flip
Answer
5th largest globally, with $92.1 billion — behind only the USA, China, Russia, and Germany. Source: SIPRI.
Card 1 of 5
🧠 Think Deeper

For GDPI, Essay Writing & Critical Analysis

⚔️
Is India’s rising defence expenditure a sign of strategic strength or a burden on development? How should India balance “guns vs. butter” in its national budget?
Consider: India’s two-front threat from China and Pakistan; the opportunity cost of defence spending vs. health/education; the economic multiplier of domestic defence manufacturing; India’s aspiration to be a $5 trillion economy.
🌏
India is reducing its dependence on Russian arms and pivoting to Western suppliers (France, USA, Israel). What are the strategic risks and benefits of this shift for India’s “strategic autonomy”?
Think about: India’s traditional non-alignment policy; QUAD and US-India defence ties; the risk of being locked into Western supply chains; Russia’s displeasure; India’s ability to negotiate independently in global crises.
🎯 Test Your Knowledge

5 questions • Instant feedback

Question 1 of 5
According to SIPRI’s 2025 report, which countries ranked above India in defence spending? India was ranked:
A) 3rd — behind USA and China only
B) 4th — behind USA, China, and Russia
C) 5th — behind USA, China, Russia, and Germany
D) 6th — behind USA, China, Russia, Germany, and UK
Explanation

India ranked 5th in global defence spending in 2025 with $92.1 billion — behind the USA, China, Russia, and Germany.

Question 2 of 5
SIPRI, which published the global military expenditure report, is headquartered in which city?
A) Stockholm, Sweden
B) Geneva, Switzerland
C) Brussels, Belgium
D) Vienna, Austria
Explanation

SIPRI stands for Stockholm International Peace Research Institute and is headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden.

Question 3 of 5
By what percentage did India’s defence expenditure increase in 2025 compared to 2024?
A) 4.2%
B) 8.9%
C) 14%
D) 11%
Explanation

India’s defence expenditure rose by 8.9% in 2025 compared to 2024, partly linked to Operation Sindoor emergency procurements and enhanced air power investments.

Question 4 of 5
What was the total global military expenditure in 2025 according to SIPRI?
A) $1.5 trillion
B) $2.1 trillion
C) $2.5 trillion
D) $2.887 trillion
Explanation

Global military expenditure reached a record $2.887 trillion in 2025 — the highest level ever recorded, driven by the Russia-Ukraine war, NATO rearmament, and Indo-Pacific tensions.

Question 5 of 5
Pakistan ranked 31st globally in defence spending in 2025 with $11.9 billion. How does this compare to India’s $92.1 billion?
A) India spends about 3 times more than Pakistan
B) India spends about 5 times more than Pakistan
C) India spends nearly 8 times more than Pakistan
D) India spends about 12 times more than Pakistan
Explanation

Pakistan ranked 31st globally with $11.9 billion in defence spending in 2025 — approximately 8 times less than India’s $92.1 billion, reflecting the significant capability gap between the two countries.

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📌 Key Takeaways for Exams
1
India’s Rank: India is the 5th largest defence spender globally in 2025 with $92.1 billion — behind USA, China, Russia, and Germany. Source: SIPRI.
2
Growth Rate: India’s defence spending rose by 8.9% vs. 2024, partly driven by Operation Sindoor emergency procurements and air power upgrades.
3
SIPRI: Stockholm International Peace Research Institute — headquartered in Stockholm, Sweden. Publishes the authoritative annual military expenditure and arms transfer reports.
4
Global Record: World military spending hit a record $2.887 trillion in 2025. USA + China + Russia = 51% of global spending. Europe’s spending rose by 14%.
5
India vs Pakistan: India spends ~8x more than Pakistan ($92.1B vs $11.9B). Pakistan ranked 31st; its spending was mainly driven by Chinese aircraft and missile purchases.
6
Arms Import Shift: India’s arms imports fell 4% (2021–25 vs 2016–20) but India remains the 2nd largest arms importer globally (8.2% share). Russia’s share fell; France, Israel, USA now key suppliers. India budget: ₹7.85 lakh crore for defence in 2026–27.

❓ Frequently Asked Questions

What is SIPRI and why is its report important?
SIPRI (Stockholm International Peace Research Institute) is an independent international institute based in Stockholm, Sweden. Its annual Military Expenditure Database is the world’s most authoritative source for defence spending comparisons across countries. SIPRI’s findings are cited in policy decisions, academic research, and competitive exam questions on international security and arms control.
Why did India’s defence spending rise by 8.9% in 2025?
The increase was primarily driven by: (1) Operation Sindoor — emergency procurements and enhanced operational readiness during the military operation against Pakistan; (2) acquisition of new weapons systems and equipment; (3) a major jump in capital outlay for military aircraft; and (4) continued investment in border security infrastructure along the China and Pakistan frontiers.
India is the 5th largest defence spender but also the 2nd largest arms importer — how are these two different?
Defence spending refers to the total military budget — including salaries, pensions, domestic procurement, infrastructure, and imported weapons. Arms imports refers specifically to the value of weapons and military equipment purchased from foreign countries. India can spend more overall (5th in spending) while also buying significant weapons from abroad (2nd in imports), though imports are falling as domestic defence manufacturing grows under Atmanirbhar Bharat.
Why is India reducing dependence on Russian arms?
Multiple factors: (1) The Russia-Ukraine war disrupted supply chains and spare parts availability for Russian-origin equipment; (2) Western sanctions on Russia created risks for India’s defence supply chain; (3) India’s growing strategic partnership with the US (QUAD, defence deals) incentivises diversification; (4) France (Rafale), Israel (drones, air defence), and USA (Apache helicopters, C-17s) offer advanced technologies. India retains Russian platforms but is hedging by diversifying suppliers.
What is the significance of global military spending hitting $2.887 trillion in 2025?
It is the highest level of global military spending ever recorded — a signal of deepening geopolitical tensions worldwide. Key drivers include the Russia-Ukraine war (Europe’s defence spending up 14%), China’s military build-up (+7.4% to $336 billion), and Indo-Pacific competition. For UPSC, this is relevant to GS Paper 2 (International Relations) and GS Paper 3 (Security) — it reflects the erosion of the post-Cold War peace dividend and a return to great-power competition.
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Prashant Chadha

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