PhonePe processed over 1,033 crore UPI transactions in April 2026, pushing its market share to 47.07% even as its raw transaction count dipped slightly from March's 1,050 crore. The numbers, drawn from NPCI data, cement PhonePe's position as the dominant force in India's largest retail payments network ahead of its anticipated IPO.
Google Pay held second place with 735.9 crore transactions, nudging its share up to 33.54% from 33.51% in March. Paytm processed 177.8 crore transactions, lifting its share to 8.10% from 7.87%. The two leaders, PhonePe and Google Pay, jointly handled more than 80% of all UPI volume in April, a level of concentration that has drawn regulatory attention for years.
Total UPI volume fell 1.3% month-on-month to 2,235 crore transactions in April, down from 2,264 crore in March. Transaction value also eased to Rs 29.03 lakh crore from Rs 29.53 lakh crore. Monthly dips of this size are not unusual and the year-on-year picture tells a different story: volume is up 25% from 1,789 crore in April 2025, and value is up 21% from Rs 23.95 lakh crore. The underlying growth trajectory remains strong.
Smaller Players Gain, But Slowly
Among challengers, Sachin Bansal-led Navi processed 80.1 crore transactions in April, lifting its share to 3.65% from 3.51%. Super.money processed 36.9 crore transactions worth Rs 16,365 crore, taking its share to 1.68% from 1.52%. FamApp by Trio handled 18.2 crore transactions, up from 16.8 crore in March, with its share rising to 0.83% from 0.75%. The gains are real but modest, and the distance between these players and the top two remains vast.
The concentration at the top creates a compounding advantage. Larger player bases attract more merchants, more merchant presence pulls in more users, and the cycle repeats. That dynamic is precisely what NPCI has been trying to address, though its tools remain works in progress.
Regulatory Pressure Builds as Deadlines Approach
NPCI is currently working on two fronts. First, it is developing a common interoperable infrastructure for UPI soundboxes, the audio devices merchants use to confirm payments. Today, a kirana store accepting PhonePe, Google Pay, and Paytm often needs a separate soundbox for each platform. The proposed single-device standard would remove that friction for merchants and simplify payment settlement. However, it would also compress recurring rental income that fintech platforms earn from soundbox deployments, a meaningful revenue line as offline merchant adoption has grown sharply.
Second, NPCI officials held discussions with smaller UPI players last month on the long-pending market share cap. Talks reportedly covered preferential incentives for smaller apps, early access to new product features, and easing certain autopay restrictions. The 30% market share cap that NPCI first proposed in 2020 has never been enforced. In 2024, NPCI extended the implementation deadline for third-party app providers, including PhonePe and Google Pay, to December 31, 2026. That deadline is now roughly eight months away.
PhonePe, sitting at 47%, would face the most direct pressure if the cap were enforced. The company is IPO-bound, which means any regulatory action that constrains its market share or revenue model carries direct valuation consequences. Investors and analysts will watch whether NPCI firms up enforcement intent ahead of the year-end deadline or extends it once more.
For merchants and users, the immediate picture is stable. UPI remains free to use, transaction success rates are high, and adoption continues to broaden across street vendors, small retailers, and urban consumers alike. The policy choices made over the next eight months will determine whether the payments market diversifies or whether the current two-player dominance becomes permanent infrastructure.