Data InsightsIndia went from 15% to 70% Internet access in a decade, mostly through mobile phones

India went from 15% to 70% Internet access in a decade, mostly through mobile phones

Line chart of the percentage of the population who accessed the internet in the last three months from 1990 to 2025, where it illustrates rapid growth in India. The line shows India rising from 0% in the 1990s to about 70% in 2025. The global average at 74% in 2025, high-income countries around 94% and low-income countries about 23%; figures include access from any device. Data source: International Telecommunication Union via World Bank (2026). License: CC BY.

In 2018, my colleague Max Roser wrote an article titled “The Internet’s history has just begun”. His point was that while the Internet had already changed the world, large changes lay ahead because billions of people weren’t using it yet.

In this chart, I revisit that observation using more recent data from India, the world’s most populous country.

When Max wrote his article, roughly one in five people in India were online. The chart shows that since then, adoption has grown much faster than in the decades before. Today, more than 70% of India’s population is online — close to the global average.

When you look at related trends in the adoption of communication technologies, you see that much of the sudden acceleration in growth after 2018 was driven by mobile phones.

Mobile phone subscriptions in India took off in the early 2000s and had already reached 75 per 100 people by 2015. Internet access accelerated through its mobile networks, which were made affordable by new technologies and market competition — including a major market disruption, which started in 2016 when a new low-cost entrant drove down prices.

Explore the data on the adoption of communication technologies in our interactive chart.

Our latest Data Insights

See all Data Insights