Highlights
- Reliance contributed ₹2,16,472 crore to the national exchequer in FY26
- Contribution includes taxes, duties, levies and other government payments
- Company’s contribution rose 2.95% year-on-year from ₹2,10,269 crore in FY25
- Reliance’s total contribution to India’s exchequer has crossed ₹15 lakh crore in the last 10 years
- For every ₹100 of value created by Reliance, nearly ₹47 went to the government
- Reliance’s CSR spend increased to ₹2,248 crore in FY26
- Post-COVID CSR spending by Reliance has crossed ₹9,500 crore
- Reliance Foundation has impacted over 9.7 crore lives across India
- Social initiatives covered education, healthcare, rural development, sports, women empowerment and animal welfare
Updated News
Reliance Industries reported a major rise in its contribution to India’s public finances during FY2025-26, with total payments to the national exchequer reaching ₹2,16,472 crore. The amount includes taxes, duties, levies and other statutory payments made by the company to the government.
The company’s contribution increased by 2.95% compared to ₹2,10,269 crore in FY2024-25, reinforcing Reliance’s position as one of India’s largest contributors to government revenues.
According to the company’s annual report, Reliance created total value worth ₹4,63,448 crore during FY26. Out of this, nearly 46.7% — or roughly ₹47 out of every ₹100 created — went directly to the government.
Over the last decade, Reliance’s cumulative contribution to the national exchequer has crossed ₹15 lakh crore, reflecting the company’s expanding scale across energy, telecom, retail and digital businesses.
At the same time, Reliance also increased its spending on corporate social responsibility (CSR). The company spent ₹2,248 crore on CSR initiatives in FY26, up 4.3% from ₹2,156 crore in the previous financial year. Since the COVID-19 pandemic, Reliance’s cumulative CSR expenditure has crossed ₹9,500 crore.
Reliance Foundation said its social initiatives have impacted more than 9.7 crore people across India since inception. The programmes span rural transformation, healthcare, education, women empowerment, sports, environmental sustainability and animal welfare.
The foundation’s scholarship programme currently supports 5,100 students annually, while its rural transformation initiatives have reported significant growth in farmer income and dairy productivity across participating communities.
Reliance said it plans to further scale its efforts in education, women empowerment and rural livelihoods in the coming years.









