The number of women C-suite executives earning more than $1 million annually has risen to nine from seven two years ago, with domestic companies leading the trend as corporate India places greater emphasis on diversity and professional leadership talent, according to a TOI report by Rupali Mukherjee.According to an analysis of BSE 200 companies by executive search firm EMA Partners, a majority of women executives in the million-dollar compensation bracket are employed by Indian companies, with the pharmaceuticals and consumer goods sectors accounting for the largest share. The study considered annual compensation, including fixed pay, bonuses, variable compensation and exercised stock options, exceeding $1 million as the benchmark.Also read: Women’s role in business, workforce expands: ASUSEGopinadhan KG, Senior Partner – India and Singapore at EMA Partners, said the increase reflects a broader shift in corporate India, where diversity is increasingly being treated as a business priority rather than a compliance requirement. He noted that the trend is being driven largely by professional executives rather than promoter-led compensation structures and is particularly visible in sectors such as financial services and pharmaceuticals, which have historically built stronger female leadership pipelinesFor FY25, Nilima Prasad Divi of Divi’s Laboratories emerged as the highest-paid woman executive, followed by Hina Nagarajan, Managing Director and CEO of United Spirits, and Vinita Gupta, Chief Executive Officer of Lupin.Industry leaders attribute the trend to the growing scale of Indian companies and their increasing willingness to benchmark leadership compensation against global standards. They also point to a stronger pipeline of women moving into profit-and-loss, digital and strategic leadership roles across organisations.Also read: Women's role in India's labour market is shifting toward stability, SBI Research findsExperts said the shift highlights a broader move among Indian companies towards merit-based leadership and specialised managerial expertise, with financial services, consumer-facing businesses and pharmaceutical companies continuing to provide some of the strongest pathways for women to reach senior executive positions.The analysis also found that domestic companies have outpaced multinational corporations in rewarding women leaders at the top level, reflecting changing priorities in talent management and leadership development across corporate India.With inputs from TOI
More women CXOs join India’s million-dollar pay club as domestic firms lead compensation growth
Nine women now earn over one million dollars annually as C-suite executives. Domestic companies are leading this rise, reflecting a focus on diversity and professional talent. Pharmaceuticals and consumer goods sectors show the highest numbers. This trend highlights a shift towards merit-based leadership and stronger female leadership pipelines in Indian companies.
Nine women CXOs in India now earn over $1M annually, up from seven two years ago, with domestic pharma and consumer-goods firms leading, per EMA Partners' BSE 200 analysis. Indian companies are benchmarking C-suite pay globally and treating diversity as talent strategy, not compliance — intensifying competition for senior P&L and digital roles.













