With just two days left for the Union Budget 2026, attention is firmly on how much capital the Centre will set aside for Indian Railways, and whether that money will translate into faster Vande Bharat sleeper rollouts, more routes and 160 kmph-ready corridors that regular travellers can actually experience over the next few years.
The backdrop is crucial. In Budget 2025-26, rail capex from gross budgetary support was kept flat at ₹2.52 lakh crore for the second straight year, even as officials stressed continuity in big-ticket modernisation, safety and electrification programmes.

Railway capex trend and what may change in Budget 2026
For two consecutive years, the overall rail capex envelope has hovered around ₹2.65 lakh crore, combining budgetary support, internal resources and extra‑budgetary funding, with nearly 80 percent already utilised by early January 2025. This execution pace strengthens the case inside government for either a modest hike or at least more flexible deployment in 2026-27.
Officials have repeatedly underlined that the bulk of this spending is flowing into capacity expansion, rolling stock and safety. In FY25, around ₹50,903 crore was earmarked for rolling stock alone, while safety works, including bridges, signalling and level crossings, received over ₹34,000 crore. Any Budget 2026 tweak is likely to track these same priorities, but with sharper focus on high-speed corridors and upgraded trainsets.
| Year | Rail capex (approx) | GBS component |
|---|---|---|
| 2024-25 BE | ₹2.65 lakh crore | ₹2.52 lakh crore |
| 2025-26 BE | ₹2.65 lakh crore | ₹2.52 lakh crore |
Vande Bharat sleeper: testing now, rollout window next
Beyond the headline numbers, Budget 2026 will be judged by passengers on one metric: how quickly Vande Bharat sleeper rakes move from testing tracks into regular overnight services. Railway Minister Ashwini Vaishnaw said in January 2025 that the Vande Bharat sleeper trains are “under testing and will be rolled out soon”.
The 2025-26 Budget also approved manufacturing of 200 Vande Bharat trains, including sleeper and chair car variants, over the next two to three years. Given prototyping, oscillation trials and route‑specific clearances, analysts expect the first regular Vande Bharat sleeper deployments on high‑demand overnight corridors in phases between FY26 and FY28, if dedicated funding for rakes and maintenance ecosystems is protected.
More corridors and 160 kmph aspirations
Track and signalling upgrades are the other big determinant of how far Vande Bharat speeds can go. The minister has outlined plans to upgrade important sections to support 160 kmph operations, with most other key routes targeted at 130 kmph and the wider network at 100 kmph. This requires sustained capex on track renewals, bridges and automatic signalling, not just shiny new trainsets.
Separately, the Railways has talked of a long‑term vision for a 7,000 km high‑speed network by 2047, alongside dedicated corridors for 160‑200 kmph semi‑high‑speed services. Budget 2026 is unlikely to radically alter that roadmap, but a stronger line item for route electrification completion, automatic train protection and higher‑speed track renewals would indicate seriousness about cutting journey times on dense inter‑city stretches.
Safety tech, Kavach and station upgrades in focus
Safety is expected to remain the political and administrative red line. At Davos 2025, Vaishnaw described safety as the “big ticket” head in railway expenditure, highlighting an expansion drive for the indigenous Kavach automatic train protection system and a sharp fall in accidents from 345 to about 90 over recent years.
Budget documents for 2025-26 already show safety‑related works consuming more than four‑fifths of their annual allocation by early January. With public expectations heightened after high‑profile derailments, Budget 2026 is likely to preserve or slightly increase dedicated safety outlays, even if overall capex remains flat, which could mean tighter competition between Kavach expansion, station redevelopment and rolling stock modernisation.
For travellers, the near‑term impact will depend less on a headline capex bump and more on how much of the 2026-27 envelope is ring‑fenced for commissioning Vande Bharat sleeper rakes, upgrading specific 160 kmph‑ready corridors and accelerating Kavach deployment on busy passenger routes, turning big numbers on paper into faster, safer journeys over the next few years.
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