India’s Frozen Food Revolution Moves Beyond Metros as Cold Chain Infrastructure Becomes the Deciding Factor
India’s frozen food industry is expanding beyond metropolitan markets as rising incomes, changing lifestyles and growing convenience food demand create new opportunities. The future growth of the sector depends on strengthening cold chain infrastructure, refrigerated logistics and integrated distribution networks across smaller cities.
Metro cities traditionally provided the ecosystem required for frozen food growth, including organised retail networks, uninterrupted electricity supply, commercial freezers and established cold transportation systems. However, beyond these urban centres, maintaining profitability became significantly more difficult due to infrastructure limitations.
Smaller cities are now emerging as important growth markets, driven by increasing purchasing power, busier lifestyles and greater acceptance of convenience-oriented food products. Consumers in these regions are showing willingness to experiment with frozen foods, while companies are increasing investments to capture this demand. The primary challenge remains the development of infrastructure required to efficiently connect supply with consumption.
The transformation resembles the growth journey of e-commerce a decade ago, when consumer demand expanded faster than the systems required to support it.
Demand Expands Faster Than Cold Chain Capacity
Frozen food is no longer considered a niche category in India. Ready-to-cook snacks, frozen vegetables and meal components are increasingly becoming part of regular household consumption, especially among consumers seeking convenience without compromising on taste.
Industry estimates indicate that India’s frozen food market is expected to grow at a compound annual growth rate of nearly 14.5 percent between 2025 and 2035. However, sustained growth depends on whether supply infrastructure can match rising demand.
Unlike most packaged food categories, frozen products require strict temperature control throughout the supply chain. Any disruption during storage, transportation or retail handling can impact product quality before reaching consumers. As a result, cold chain is not merely a supporting system for the frozen food sector; it is the foundation on which the business operates.
India’s cold storage network has expanded steadily over the years. By mid-2025, the country had more than 8,800 cold storage facilities with a combined capacity exceeding 40 million metric tonnes, according to the National Centre for Cold-chain Development. Despite this growth, the industry continues to face a capacity shortage of nearly 35 million metric tonnes.
A major concern remains the uneven distribution of infrastructure. A significant share of cold storage capacity is concentrated in a limited number of states, leaving large parts of the country with inadequate cold chain support.
The challenge ahead is therefore not limited to increasing storage capacity. The priority is to develop an integrated network where warehouses, refrigerated vehicles, regional distribution hubs and retail freezers operate as a connected ecosystem.
Bharat Markets Drive the Next Wave of Growth
The consumer profile of the frozen food industry has changed significantly. The category is no longer restricted to major cities such as Delhi, Mumbai and Bengaluru. Emerging markets including Lucknow, Indore, Coimbatore, Guwahati and Bhubaneswar are witnessing rising demand as organised retail expands and household incomes increase.
Quick commerce platforms have played a major role in accelerating this transition. Consumers have become increasingly comfortable purchasing frozen products online, with items that were previously bought mainly during supermarket visits now being included in quick commerce orders alongside daily essentials such as milk and bread.
The growth is reflected in market data. Redseer estimates that the frozen ready-to-cook category across India’s three largest quick commerce platforms increased from approximately US$200 million in 2024 to nearly US$376 million in 2025. Frozen vegetable snacks represented the largest share of sales.
However, quick commerce represents only one part of the broader opportunity. While these platforms perform effectively in cities with established infrastructure, reaching the next 200 million consumers will require stronger refrigerated logistics networks extending beyond major urban centres.
Cold Chain Emerges as the New Competitive Advantage
Food companies are preparing for the next phase of growth by expanding frozen product portfolios, increasing manufacturing capacity and strengthening regional distribution networks. These investments indicate expectations that future expansion will increasingly come from markets outside metropolitan areas.
Government initiatives supporting integrated cold chain systems and food processing infrastructure have further accelerated industry development. According to the Ministry of Food Processing Industries, 395 integrated cold chain projects have been approved, of which 291 projects are already operational.
Together, these projects have created preservation capacity of more than 25 lakh metric tonnes and generated nearly 1.74 lakh employment opportunities.
These developments highlight a major shift in industry competition. Companies have traditionally competed through product innovation, pricing strategies and distribution networks. However, maintaining consistent product quality across longer supply routes is becoming equally important.
As consumers increasingly expect similar product experiences regardless of location, cold chain infrastructure is evolving from an operational necessity into a strategic advantage.
India’s frozen food opportunity will not be determined only by production facilities. Its future will depend on the efficiency of the entire journey after products leave manufacturing units.
Companies investing in reliable cold chain networks today will not only expand their presence across new markets but also unlock a consumer base that has already demonstrated demand. The industry was never waiting for consumer interest to emerge; it was waiting for infrastructure to finally bridge the gap between demand and availability.

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