The Layoff Landscape in India 2026

India's corporate sector has seen multiple waves of significant layoffs over the past three years. The 2022-2023 global tech correction hit India's IT sector hard — Wipro, Infosys, TCS, and dozens of startups reduced headcount significantly. BYJU's collapse affected thousands. In 2024 and 2025, restructuring in FMCG, banking, and manufacturing continued as companies optimised for automation and efficiency.

A layoff carries a cultural weight in India that it does not in some other countries. Indian families, social circles, and internal self-perception are often tightly linked to employment status. The social question — "So what are you doing now?" — can feel devastating in a culture where "between jobs" has not yet been normalised as a legitimate professional phase.

This guide is designed to help you manage the practical and psychological reality of a layoff in India — and to help you decide whether to simply find a new job in your existing field or to use this moment to change direction.

The First 30 Days: Priorities in Order

Days 1-7: Financial triage and emotional stabilisation

Before anything else, understand your financial position clearly.

Calculate your total cash in hand: savings accounts, liquid mutual funds, and fixed deposits. Calculate your monthly non-negotiable expenses (EMIs, rent, utilities, food, insurance). Divide the first by the second. This is your runway in months. Knowing this number — even if it is uncomfortable — removes the panic of uncertainty and enables rational decision-making.

Claim everything owed to you. Ensure your full and final settlement from your employer is processed: gratuity (if applicable), leave encashment, bonus entitlements, and any deferred compensation. If severance was promised, track its payment.

Check your EPF balance via the EPFO member portal (passbook.epfindia.gov.in) or UMANG app. If you have been unemployed for more than 2 months, you are eligible to withdraw your EPF balance. However, consider whether you actually need this now — EPF accrues at 8.1% per annum and early withdrawal has tax implications (TDS deducted if service was less than 5 years).

On the emotional front: give yourself 3-5 days to process the shock before making any major decisions. Talk to someone you trust. The decisions you make in the first week of a layoff are often the worst ones.

Days 8-21: Reactivate your network

This is the single most important job search activity in India. Statistics consistently show that 50-70% of professional roles in India are filled through referrals and direct conversations. Job portals (Naukri, LinkedIn, Indeed) matter, but relationships matter more.

Go through your phone contacts, LinkedIn connections, and email history. Identify: former managers who valued your work, colleagues who moved to companies that interest you, classmates from college or business school, and any industry contacts you have built up.

The message does not need to be formal or awkward. A WhatsApp message to a former colleague: "Hey Vikram, I'm sure you heard about the restructuring at [Company]. I'm exploring options now and was wondering if you know of anything at [His Company] or elsewhere in [Sector]. Happy to catch up over coffee or a call if you have 20 minutes." This is both natural and effective.

Days 22-30: Decide on your direction

By the end of the first month, you should have a preliminary answer to the most important question: Do you want to return to your previous career trajectory, or use this as an opportunity to change direction?

This is not a decision to make emotionally. A layoff is a disruption, and disruptions can trigger impulsive "I'm done with this industry" reactions that do not reflect genuine, considered values. Take the time to do this decision properly.

The Decision Framework: Return vs. Reset

Before deciding whether to change careers after a layoff, separate two questions:

Question 1: Am I unhappy with my field, or am I unhappy because of the shock and humiliation of the layoff?

Layoffs — even when intellectually understood as business decisions — carry psychological weight that can distort judgment. If you were broadly satisfied with your career direction before the layoff, returning to it (perhaps at a different company) may be the right answer. Do not let the emotional disruption of a layoff generate a career change decision that your calmer, pre-layoff self would not have endorsed.

Question 2: Was I already planning to change careers before the layoff, and is this actually the push I needed?

For many people, a layoff is the external catalyst for a change they had been contemplating but not acting on. If you were already feeling misaligned with your field and the layoff has clarified that you want something different, this is potentially the opportunity you needed — as long as you have the runway to pursue it thoughtfully.

If the answer to Question 1 is yes (you are primarily in shock and return to your field would suit you), focus on an efficient job search and return to your trajectory. If the answer to Question 2 is yes (you were already planning to change), use your severance and runway to make the change deliberately.

Using Severance Productively for a Career Change

If you have received severance pay — typically 1-2 months per year of service, depending on company policy and negotiation — using it strategically can significantly accelerate a career change.

Upskilling investments. Allocate a portion of your severance to a focused skills programme in your target field. ₹30,000-₹1,50,000 invested in a data analytics certification, a UX design bootcamp, a digital marketing programme, or a cloud computing certification can dramatically accelerate your transition.

Bridge the income gap. Do not spend your full severance immediately. Live frugally during the transition period. Your severance should cover you for 6-12 months at careful spending; this runway allows you to be selective rather than desperate.

Business launch capital. If you are considering freelancing or consulting, your severance can fund the infrastructure of a small practice: a professional website, equipment, accounting software, and initial marketing.

Industries Actively Hiring in India 2026

For those returning to employment (rather than pivoting), it helps to know where the actual demand is. Based on current trends:

Healthcare and hospital management. India's healthcare infrastructure expansion — new hospital chains, health-tech companies, insurance expansion — continues to create demand across clinical, operational, financial, and technology roles.

Green energy and sustainability. India's renewable energy expansion (solar, wind, green hydrogen) is driving hiring across project management, engineering, finance, policy, and environmental compliance roles.

Defence and aerospace technology. India's defence indigenisation push and the expansion of companies like HAL, DRDO, L&T Defence, Tata Advanced Systems, and new-age aerospace startups (Skyroot, Agnikul) creates demand for technical and management professionals.

Semiconductor and electronics manufacturing. With India actively building domestic semiconductor capacity (Tata Semiconductor, Micron India, HCL SemiconductorFabs), this sector is creating engineering, supply chain, and operations roles.

Government and public sector. Central and state government hiring continues at scale through UPSC, SSC, state PSC processes, and PSU direct recruitment. Less attractive for many professionals but genuinely stable.

Cybersecurity. Structural demand that consistently outpaces supply. Professionals with certifications (CISSP, CEH, CISM) are in demand across sectors.

India's interview culture has some specific dynamics around layoffs that differ from Western conventions.

Be direct, not defensive. Some Indian candidates over-explain layoffs in ways that inadvertently raise more questions. A brief, confident statement is more effective: "I was part of a restructuring at [Company] that reduced headcount by [X%]. It was a business decision based on [market conditions/automation/merger]. Here's what I did during the gap and what I'm focused on now."

Expect the cultural discomfort. Some Indian interviewers — particularly older hiring managers — carry residual stigma about job gaps. Acknowledge this professionally and redirect: "I understand the concern about continuity; I used the time to [specific productive activity] and I'm excited about this role because [specific, genuine reason]."

Focus on the forward, not the backward. The most effective interview strategy after a layoff is to quickly move the conversation to your value proposition, your specific interest in the role, and your vision for contribution. The layoff is context; your capability is the story.

Managing Mental Health During a Layoff in India

The psychological impact of layoffs in India is real and often underserved. India's professional culture ties identity tightly to job title and employer; losing a job can feel like losing a central piece of self-definition.

Practical mental health strategies: Maintain structure in your daily schedule (wake up and work on your career search during work hours). Exercise consistently. Stay socially engaged (isolation amplifies anxiety). Be honest with close family and friends about your situation — the energy cost of concealing a layoff is often severe.

If you find that anxiety, low motivation, or sleep disruption is affecting your job search, speaking with a counsellor or therapist is a sensible step, not a sign of weakness.

How Dheya Supports Laid-Off Professionals

A layoff presents a genuine decision point — and making it well requires both self-knowledge and market knowledge. Dheya's career counselling service helps laid-off professionals in India answer the core question: Is this an opportunity to course-correct, or is it best resolved by finding a similar role at a better company?

Our RAPD assessments provide the self-knowledge component. Our counsellors bring the market knowledge: which fields are actually hiring, which pivots are realistic from your background, and how to present yourself most effectively.

Visit dheya.com to speak with a career counsellor and build a clear plan for your next chapter.