For decades, ITC's identity was closely tied to cigarettes. Today, the company wants to be known for something entirely different.
ITC is accelerating its transformation into a diversified consumer goods powerhouse, backed by a consumer spend exceeding ₹37,000 crore in FY26, one of the largest among Indian FMCG companies. Management believes the company now has the scale, brand portfolio and distribution strength to challenge the country's biggest consumer goods players.
Rather than relying on one blockbuster product, ITC has crafted a four-pronged strategy aimed at making its FMCG business the largest in India over the coming decade.
A Consumer Business Built Over Two Decades
ITC entered the packaged foods business just over two decades ago with brands like Aashirvaad and Sunfeast. Since then, it has expanded into dairy, snacks, biscuits, noodles, chocolates, beverages, personal care, home care, agarbattis, frozen foods and premium nutrition.
Today, the company owns more than 25 brands generating annual sales of over ₹200 crore each, while several brands have crossed the ₹1,000 crore revenue milestone. Management estimates that consumers spent over ₹37,000 crore on ITC's FMCG products during FY26, reflecting the scale the business has already achieved.
Strategy One: Build Winning Brands Across Categories
The first pillar of ITC's strategy is continuous brand building. Instead of concentrating on a handful of products, the company has created a diversified portfolio spanning daily household consumption. Its leading brands include:
- Aashirvaad
- Sunfeast
- Bingo!
- YiPPee!
- Classmate
- Fiama
- Savlon
- Engage
- Mangaldeep
- Master Chef
- Fabelle
Management believes this broad portfolio reduces dependence on any single category while creating multiple growth engines.
Strategy Two: Premiumisation
Like most FMCG companies, ITC is increasingly focusing on premium products.
Consumers are upgrading to healthier foods, gourmet chocolates, premium personal-care products and value-added packaged foods.
The company has responded by expanding premium offerings under brands such as Fabelle, Master Chef, Sunbean Coffee, Aashirvaad Organic, premium dairy products and luxury personal-care ranges. Higher-value products typically deliver better margins while strengthening customer loyalty.
Strategy Three: Faster Innovation
Innovation has become central to ITC's FMCG growth. The company continues to launch products across:
- Health and nutrition
- Protein-rich foods
- Convenience meals
- Premium snacks
- Personal care
- Home hygiene
- Frozen foods
Management says new product development allows ITC to enter emerging consumption categories before they become mainstream.
The company's integrated research capabilities and agricultural sourcing network also help shorten product-development cycles.
Strategy Four: Strengthening Distribution
No FMCG company can become a market leader without deep distribution. ITC continues to expand its reach across general trade, modern retail, ecommerce and quick-commerce platforms.
The company already has one of India's widest rural distribution networks, supported by its long-standing agri-business operations and digital initiatives. Its growing presence on quick-commerce platforms has also improved visibility for premium and impulse-purchase categories.
Scale Is Becoming ITC's Biggest Advantage
Over the past decade, ITC's FMCG business has steadily reduced its dependence on cigarettes. The non-cigarette FMCG portfolio has become one of the company's fastest-growing businesses and an increasingly important contributor to long-term value creation.
With consumer spending now exceeding ₹37,000 crore, management believes ITC has reached a scale where it can compete more aggressively with established market leaders.
The Competitive Landscape
India's FMCG market remains intensely competitive. ITC competes with companies such as: Hindustan Unilever, Nestlé India, Britannia Industries, Dabur, Marico, Tata Consumer Products, Godrej Consumer Products, Emami and many others.
Unlike many peers that dominate individual categories, ITC is attempting to build leadership across multiple product segments simultaneously.
What Investors Should Watch
Investors tracking ITC's FMCG ambitions should monitor:
- Revenue growth in the non-cigarette FMCG business
- EBITDA margin expansion
- Premium product contribution
- Market-share gains across food and personal care
- New product launches
- Growth in quick-commerce and ecommerce channels
These indicators will determine whether ITC can narrow the gap with India's largest consumer goods companies.
Key Numbers
- ₹37,000 crore+ – Consumer spend on ITC's FMCG products in FY26
- 25+ brands – Each generating over ₹200 crore in annual sales
- Multiple brands – With annual revenues exceeding ₹1,000 crore
- 20+ years – Since ITC entered the packaged foods business
The Bottom Line
ITC's FMCG journey has moved well beyond diversification. The company is now pursuing market leadership through a combination of brand building, premiumisation, innovation and distribution expansion.
While rivals continue to dominate individual categories, ITC's strength lies in creating a broad portfolio of high-growth brands across foods, personal care and household products.
Crossing ₹37,000 crore in consumer spend marks an important milestone.
The next challenge is translating that scale into sustained market-share gains and establishing itself as India's largest FMCG company in the years ahead.






