India’s influencer marketing industry, estimated at around Rs 3,600 crore in 2024, is on course to cross Rs 5,000 crore this financial year. And for the first time, the growth is not coming from Mumbai and Delhi, but from smaller towns and cities, according to the Reelax Creator Economy Report H1 2026.
The report, according to a press release from the surveying company, draws on campaign and audience data from over 40,000 brand-creator collaborations tracked on the platform. The fastest-growing influencer budgets in India now flow to micro and nano creators in Tier-2 and Tier-3 cities like Indore, Coimbatore, Guwahati, and a few thousand towns most media plans ignored until recently.
Key numbers from the Reelax Creator Economy Report H1 2026 highlight that brand searches for creators outside the top eight metros more than doubled year-on-year; Kannada, Marathi and Odia creator discovery grew faster than Hindi and English; regional micro influencers delivered 2-3x the engagement rate of metro macro-influencers at roughly one-tenth the cost per post.
The shift is visible in where the money lands, the report states. Two years ago, a typical consumer brand put 70-80 percent of its creator budget behind a short roster of metro-based macro influencers.
Today, the same budget is split across dozens, sometimes hundreds, of regional creators with 10,000 to 2,00,000 followers, producing vernacular content in Tamil, Telugu, Marathi, Bengali and Kannada rather than only in English or Hindi.
Why influencer marketing ROI now favours regional creators? The arithmetic is straightforward, the report states. Regional micro-creators deliver engagement rates two to three times higher than metro macro-influencers, at a fraction of the fee, which translates directly into lower cost per acquisition.
A single celebrity collaboration can cost as much as 150 nano and micro creator posts that together reach a more committed, better-converting audience: one that shares a language, an accent and a pin code with the customer.
Quick commerce and D2C brands moved first. When delivery promises shrank to ten minutes, campaign geographies shrank with them: a snack brand no longer needs one national face, it needs fifty hyperlocal ones whose followers live within the delivery radius. Festive-season campaigns for electronics and fashion brands followed the same playbook last Diwali, and BFSI and edtech advertisers are now testing vernacular creator campaigns at scale.
The bottleneck, until recently, was finding these creators at all. No agency’s contact book covers 4,000 towns. This is where the industry’s plumbing has changed: brands now find influencers by filtering verified databases on city, language, category and engagement quality, the way a recruiter searches a job portal. A task that took an agency team three weeks in 2023 now takes an afternoon.
Reelax operates India’s largest verified influencer database of over 1 million creators across 4,000-plus cities, 780-plus categories and 12 languages.
The regional boom has a flip side: influencer fraud scales just as fast. Inflated follower counts and purchased engagement remain the industry’s leakage problem. Reelax’s audit data shows roughly one in four profiles pitched to brands fails a basic audience-authenticity screen.
Two shifts will define the next 18 months. First, performance-linked creator deals: brands paying on tracked conversions rather than flat post fees, which AI-led campaign measurement has finally made auditable at scale. Second, AI search visibility. As consumers ask ChatGPT and Gemini what to buy, brands are discovering that authentic creator content and credible media coverage, not ads, are what these engines cite.
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