MUMBAI: Indiaโs invisible surplus widened sharply in the quarter ended Mar 2026 and over FY26, driven by strong services exports and higher remittances, while primary income outflows remained contained.The surplus rose to $90,513.93 million in Q4 FY26, up 24.05% from $72,968.57 million a year earlier. For FY26, it expanded to $312,047.60 million, up 18.20% from $263,999.67 million in FY25, providing a larger cushion to the current account.Services exports remained the main driver of the surplus. Net services contributed $60,356.24 million in Q4 FY26, up 13.21% from a year earlier, and $216,614.79 million for FY26, up 14.71%. Within this, telecommunications, computer, and information services led gains, with net receipts at $46,839.93 million in Q4 FY26, up 13.06%, and $179,302.48 million for FY26, up 12.72%.Remittances also accelerated during the period. Net secondary income rose to $41,266.35 million in Q4 FY26, up 30.87% from a year earlier, and $143,640.51 million for FY26, up 16.30%. Net private transfers, a key component, increased to $41,582.70 million in Q4 FY26, up 30.57%, and $144,794.30 million for FY26, up 16.25%.Within private transfers, โRemittance from Indian workers abroad for family maintenance and savingsโ increased from $87,554.45 million in FY25 to $110,470.73 million in FY26, reflecting continued strength in overseas incomes.Primary income outflows remained stable and limited the drag on the overall surplus. Net primary income stood at -$11,108.66 million in Q4 FY26, narrowing from a year earlier, and at -$48,207.70 million for FY26, almost unchanged from FY25.Growth in outbound payments remained modest. Total invisible payments rose only 1.58% in Q4 FY26 to $76,866.99 million from $75,673.80 million a year earlier, allowing most of the increase in receipts to translate into a higher surplus.