The Maharashtra government has earmarked a record ₹5,980.08 crore for the health sector in its latest budget, reflecting a strong commitment to strengthening public healthcare delivery, expanding digital health infrastructure, and establishing a new state of the art Public Health Institute. The allocation supports Ayushman Bharat expansion, hospital upgrades, workforce recruitment, and the launch of a dedicated Maharashtra Digital Health Mission to accelerate ABDM adoption statewide.
Glimpse:
Announced during the state budget presentation on March 2026, the ₹5,980.08 crore health outlay represents a significant increase over previous years. Key initiatives include full implementation of the Maharashtra Digital Health Mission (aligned with national ABDM), establishment of a new Public Health Institute for training and research, upgradation of district and rural hospitals, recruitment of additional doctors/nurses/paramedics, and enhanced funding for maternal/child health, NCD screening, and emergency services. The budget also earmarks funds for AI integration in diagnostics and telemedicine expansion in rural areas.
Maharashtra Finance Minister presented a landmark health sector allocation of ₹5,980.08 crore in the state budget, signalling one of the largest ever investments in public healthcare in the state’s history. The increased funding aims to address long standing gaps in infrastructure, workforce, digital readiness, and access particularly in rural, tribal, and underserved districts outside Mumbai and Pune.
Major highlights of the health budget include:
- Launch of the Maharashtra Digital Health Mission — a state specific initiative fully aligned with the national Ayushman Bharat Digital Mission (ABDM), focusing on rapid ABHA creation, digitisation of all public health facilities, integration of EHRs, and statewide telemedicine expansion
- Establishment of a new Maharashtra Public Health Institute — a dedicated centre for advanced training of public health professionals, epidemiological research, policy development, and data analytics
- Upgradation of district hospitals, sub-district hospitals, and rural health infrastructure including new ICU beds, modular operation theatres, diagnostic equipment, and blood banks
- Recruitment drive for doctors, nurses, paramedics, and specialists to fill vacancies in government facilities
- Enhanced funding for maternal & child health, non-communicable disease (NCD) screening, TB elimination, and mental health programmes
- Pilot projects for AI-assisted diagnostics, predictive analytics for disease outbreaks, and digital health tools in primary care settings
The budget also provides continued support for Ayushman Bharat coverage expansion, free treatment for critical illnesses, and incentives for medical professionals serving in remote and tribal areas.
Chief Minister Eknath Shinde highlighted the focus on equity and innovation: “Health is the foundation of a prosperous Maharashtra. This record allocation will bring quality healthcare closer to every citizen especially in rural and tribal regions while embracing digital tools to make our system faster, smarter, and more responsive.”
The Maharashtra Digital Health Mission will receive dedicated funding to achieve 100% ABHA coverage, full digitisation of public hospitals, and integration of private facilities into the ABDM ecosystem. The new Public Health Institute is expected to become a centre of excellence for training epidemiologists, public health managers, and data scientists supporting evidence based policymaking and outbreak preparedness.
The health budget has been widely welcomed by medical associations, public health experts, and patient advocacy groups, who see it as a decisive move toward decentralised, technology enabled, and equitable healthcare in India’s second most populous state.
“A strong health system is the backbone of a strong economy and society. With this budget, we are not just allocating funds we are building a future ready, digitally empowered healthcare network that leaves no citizen behind.”
By
HB Team
