American Airlines to expand India tech hub to 800 employees by early next year: Report – Firstpost


American Airlines Group plans to double its India technology hub workforce to around 800 employees by early next year, highlighting the rapid expansion of global capability centres in India’s aviation tech sector

In a further sign of India’s rising importance in global aviation technology, US carrier American Airlines Group plans to expand its India technology hub to around 800 employees by early next year, Reuters reported on Wednesday, citing people familiar with the matter.

According to the report, the airline’s Hyderabad-based technology centre currently employs about 400 staff and is expected to see a significant hiring push over the coming months as it scales up operations.

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The expansion comes as rival carrier Southwest Airlines also deepens its India footprint. The US low-cost airline last week announced plans to grow its Hyderabad global capability centre to around 1,000 employees over the next few years, reflecting intensifying competition among global aviation firms to tap India’s growing technology talent pool.

American Airlines did not confirm the specific hiring target, but told Reuters that its India hub currently has “several hundred” employees and forms part of its broader global technology network. The company added that teams in Fort Worth, Phoenix and Hyderabad work closely to digitise operations, accelerate speed-to-market, and strengthen customer experience systems.

The Hyderabad centre focuses on software engineering, artificial intelligence and cybersecurity, and has become a key pillar of the airline’s digital transformation strategy. The company has also steadily increased its technology investments and US-based tech hiring since 2021.

The broader trend underscores how India has emerged as a critical base for multinational corporations building advanced engineering and digital capabilities outside their home markets.

Global firms such as JPMorgan Chase, Walmart, McDonald’s, Nvidia and Eli Lilly and Company have also expanded their technology and operations hubs in India in recent years, as companies seek to balance rising costs in developed markets with access to a deep pool of skilled talent.

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According to a 2026 Nasscom–Zinnov report cited by Reuters, India is now the world’s largest GCC hub, hosting over 2,100 centres that employ about 2.36 million people and generate nearly $100 billion in revenue.

Once largely viewed as back-office outsourcing units, these centres have evolved into strategic global hubs handling high-value functions including engineering, research and development, finance, analytics and core business operations.

The planned expansion by American Airlines further signals how global aviation and technology firms are increasingly embedding India at the centre of their digital and operational architecture.

First Published:
May 28, 2026, 06:28 IST

End of Article

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