Tier 2 and Tier 3 Is Where the Next Wave of Indian Tech Comes From
Everyone still writes about Bangalore, Hyderabad, Gurgaon, Pune. The interesting story has already moved elsewhere — a developer in Indore, Bhopal, Chandigarh, Kochi, Jaipur building product for global clients from a ₹12,000 rent apartment with better output than most ₹1.5L Bangalore flats. This post argues why Tier 2 and Tier 3 Indian tech is the next decade's quiet story, and why VCs and MNCs both keep missing it.
Tier 2 and Tier 3 Is Where the Next Wave of Indian Tech Comes From
Every other Indian tech article still writes about Bangalore, Hyderabad, Gurgaon, Pune. Those are the cities the media is paid to care about. The actually interesting story has already moved elsewhere, and most of the people telling Indian tech stories have not noticed yet.
A developer in Indore, Bhopal, Chandigarh, Kochi, Jaipur, Coimbatore or Vizag is, in 2026, quietly building product for global clients from a ₹12,000 rent apartment with more peace, fewer commutes and better code than most people in a ₹1.5L Bangalore flat. This is not an exception anymore. It is the next wave.
What changed
- Internet in Tier 2/3 cities is now genuinely comparable to Tier 1
- Cost of living is roughly a third. Savings rate is 3x. Runway to try things is longer
- Remote-first work removed the Bangalore requirement for most tech jobs
- Global payments are no longer a barrier. Dollars land cleanly
- English fluency has crept up in small cities at a rate nobody is measuring publicly
- AI has flattened "access to information" between metros and small cities
Why VCs keep missing it
The Indian VC ecosystem is heavily concentrated in Bangalore and Mumbai. Pattern-matching favours founders they can meet for coffee. A founder in Jaipur or Kochi with the same traction gets noticed three rounds later than a Bangalore founder with worse metrics. This bias is correcting slowly, and the funds that correct first will have an unfair advantage for the next decade.
Why MNCs keep missing it
Multinationals set up in Tier 1 because Tier 1 was where the talent pool lived in 2008. In 2026, the talent is dispersed but the hiring infrastructure still targets four cities. The MNC that builds a serious remote hiring engine across Tier 2 India picks up the best version of a developer for a third of the Bangalore cost. Some are doing this. Most still pretend the talent only exists where their office is.
What Tier 2/3 developers need to do
- Treat your output as your resume. A strong GitHub/portfolio beats a Tier 1 pin code
- Invest in communication (written and spoken). The only remaining gap is speed of communication, not skill
- Join at least two global online communities. Isolation is the real Tier 2/3 risk, not lack of ability
- Travel to Bangalore twice a year for two weeks. You do not need to live there. You do need to not be invisible
- Charge in dollars, spend in rupees. Use the math
The bet
Over the next decade, I expect more new Indian tech companies to be founded outside Tier 1 than inside. More CTOs will have optimised their quality of life early. More product engineers will have longer careers because they did not burn out by 32 in a Bangalore apartment with a two-hour commute. The quiet story of the next decade is this one, and it is already underway.
The talent moved. The narrative has not caught up yet. That gap is the opportunity.