Gujarat is set to unveil a new industrial policy on June 15, with reporting indicating a new ultra mega category, reclassified industry tiers and stricter startup screening.
Gujarat is set to unveil a new industrial policy on June 15, 2026, in a move that could reshape how the state classifies major projects and decides which businesses qualify for support.
Reporting over the past week suggests the policy is designed to attract more investment while tightening the rules around state assistance, especially for startups. The final version has not yet been released, but the draft details point to a significant rewrite of the industrial framework.
The announcement will be closely watched by large manufacturers, infrastructure investors and early-stage companies that depend on state incentives. It also comes as Gujarat looks to refine how it groups projects and targets benefits under its industrial promotion system.
What the policy is expected to change
Pre-release reporting says the draft policy adds a new ultra mega category for industries. That classification appears intended for the largest projects and could create a separate tier in the state's investment incentives structure.
Another reported change is a broader reclassification of industry categories. According to the reporting, the government has proposed restructuring those tiers to maximise investment, suggesting that project size and classification may matter more in the new framework.
The policy is also expected to tighten screening for startups seeking government support. If that survives into the final version, access to subsidies or other benefits could become more selective.
How the story developed
The first reporting on the policy came on June 10, when it was said that the government had readied a new industrial policy and planned to unveil it within two weeks. That early account established that the draft was already at an advanced stage.
By June 12, reporting said the policy would tighten screening for startups seeking government support. That detail shifted attention from broad investment promotion to the eligibility rules that will govern access to benefits.
On June 13, the government was reported to have proposed reclassifying industry categories to maximise investment. That added another layer to the draft, showing that the policy may alter not just incentives but also how industrial projects are formally grouped.
On June 14, reporting said the Gujarat government was set to unveil the new industrial policy on June 15. The sequence of reports suggests the state has spent the past several days refining a package aimed at both attracting capital and resetting eligibility rules.
Who is affected
Large industrial investors are the clearest audience for the new policy. If the ultra mega category is formally adopted, it could give the state a new way to recognise and support the biggest projects.
Manufacturers with major expansion plans will also be watching the reclassification of industry tiers. Changes in categorisation can affect how projects are assessed for incentives, approvals and support.
Startups are likely to face a more demanding process if the tighter screening remains in the final policy. That could narrow the pool of firms eligible for state-backed support.
What remains unclear
The final incentives, eligibility thresholds and implementation timeline are still unknown until the official release. Reporting has sketched the direction of travel, but not the full operating details.
It is also not yet clear how the ultra mega category will be defined in practice, or which sectors will receive priority under the new framework. The same is true for district-level targeting, if any such preferences are included.
Those questions should be answered once the state publishes the policy on June 15, along with any accompanying guidelines or enforcement rules.
Next step
The immediate next milestone is the official unveiling. Until then, the draft policy remains a significant but incomplete guide to how Gujarat may reset its industrial incentives and investment rules.
,Revision note
Initial automated publication.