Water becomes latest luxury symbol for India’s elite – World

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Premium Indian mineral water costs $1 for a one-litre bottle, while imported brands can cost 15 times the price of the country’s lowest-priced bottled water.

At an Indian gourmet food store, Avanti Mehta is organising a blind tasting of drinks sourced from France, Italy and India. No, this isn’t wine, it’s water.

Participants use tiny shot glasses to check the minerality, carbonation and salinity in samples of Evian from the French Alps, Perrier from southern France, San Pellegrino from Italy and India’s Aava from the foothills of the Aravalli mountains.

“They will all taste different … you should be choosing a water that can give you some sort of nutritional value,” said Mehta, who is 32 and calls herself India’s youngest water sommelier, a term usually associated with premium wine. Her family owns the Aava mineral water brand.

Premium water is a $400 million business in the world’s most populous nation and is growing bigger as its wealthy see it as a new status symbol that fits in with a spreading wellness craze.

Avanti Mehta, 32, India’s youngest water sommelier, talks about different brands of packaged water at “Sip and Sense”, a water tasting event in Hyderabad, India, January 9. — Reuters

Premium Indian mineral water costs around $1 for a one-litre bottle, while imported brands are upwards of $3, or 15 times the price of the country’s lowest-priced basic bottled water.

Clean water is a privilege in the country of 1.4 billion people, where researchers say 70 per cent of the groundwater is contaminated. Tap water remains unfit to drink, and 16 people died in Indore city after consuming contaminated tap water in December.

Many in India see bottled water as a necessity and standard 20 US-cent bottles are available widely at convenience stores, restaurants and hotels. The market is worth nearly $5bn annually and is set to grow 24pc a year — among the fastest in the world.

Bottled water demand in the United States or China is driven by convenience, making it a $30bn-plus market in each country, which will grow just 4-5pc each year, market researcher Euromonitor says.

In India, the premium water segment is leading the surge in demand, accounting for 8pc of the bottled water market last year compared to just 1pc in 2021, Euromonitor said.

Workers arrange PET (Polyethylene Terephthalate) bottles filled with natural water on a conveyor at Tata’s Himalayan natural mineral water bottling plant in Dhaula Kuan, Himachal Pradesh, India on October 16, 2025. — Reuters/File

“Distrust of municipal water in some areas has escalated the demand for bottled water. Now, people understand how mineral water has more health benefits. It’s expensive, but the category will boom,” said Amulya Pandit, a senior consultant at Euromonitor specialising in the drinks market.

Among its consumers is New Delhi-based real estate developer BS. Batra, who says his family uses only premium water at home to get more minerals and safeguard health.

“You feel different, more energetic during the day,” said Batra, 49, an avid badminton player. “I consume mineral water even with whisky at home, and kids use it for their smoothies.”

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