India’s youngest billionaires are rewriting the nation’s economic story not just through innovation, but through the paths they’ve taken to get there. The M3M Hurun India Rich List 2025 showcases ten extraordinary individuals aged 31 and under whose ventures span sectors from instant delivery and fintech to solar energy and artificial intelligence. What unites them is not a uniform academic pedigree, but a shared readiness to break convention. Some are Stanford and IIT dropouts, others studied business in Pune or New York, and one never finished high school. Together, they mirror a generational shift in how India perceives education, success, and risk-taking in the age of startups. Kaivalya Vohra, 22, completed his early schooling in Mumbai, where he showed a strong inclination towar

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