Indian Hotels Company has trained over 42,000 young people through 83 skill centres as its Paathya skilling programme marks four years, arriving at a moment when India’s hospitality sector confronts one of its most acute workforce challenges in a generation.
India’s largest hospitality company, IHCL, reached a significant threshold in its skilling initiative: more than 42,000 underprivileged youth trained across 83 centres spanning 21 states and 32 aspirational districts. The announcement came as IHCL marked the fourth anniversary of Paathya, its ESG+ framework, with the Bharat EkSaath Walkathon — a 3 km community walk held simultaneously across 14 countries and more than 200 locations in March 2026.
The programme operates under a multi-partner model, with Tata STRIVE serving as a key implementation partner alongside state governments, Tata Consultancy Services for online delivery, and organisations including the Head Held High Foundation and REACHA. Training spans core hospitality disciplines: Food and Beverage service, Food Production, Housekeeping Operations and Front Office Management. The initiative targets economically and socially disadvantaged communities, with a specific focus on tribal populations and deep rural areas.
Building toward one lakh
IHCL’s stated objective under Paathya is to skill one lakh (100,000) youth by 2030, a target set in 2020 that has accelerated sharply in recent years following slower initial progress during the pandemic. The 42,000 figure represents a substantial jump from the 12,500 reported as of early 2024, reflecting the expanded reach of online training through TCS and the pace of new centre openings.
The company has opened 73 training centres across India, most recently in Nainital, and announced plans for what it describes as India’s largest hospitality skilling centre on the Aguada plateau in Goa, formalised through an MoU with the Goa Directorate of Skill Development. Since 2020, IHCL has achieved approximately a 70% placement rate for graduates from its skilling programme, contributing to socio-economic development in the regions where centres operate.
Gaurav Pokhariyal, Executive Vice President, Human Resources at IHCL, framed Paathya as a framework that guides choices across environmental performance, social impact, governance and heritage stewardship. He noted the company has made significant strides including 53% water recycled and 41% of energy sourced from renewables, alongside the skilling milestone.
The workforce gap IHCL is trying to fill
The skilling push is not simply philanthropic. It is a direct response to one of the Indian hospitality sector’s most persistent structural problems: a shortage of formally trained entry-level talent at precisely the moment the industry is expanding most aggressively.
According to the World Travel and Tourism Council, India faces a projected hospitality workforce shortfall of 11 million workers by 2035, the second largest such gap among major economies globally. India’s hospitality industry already employs around 40 million people, yet continues to face chronic skill shortages, high attrition and gender imbalance.
A 2025 survey of 285 Indian hoteliers found that managerial roles remain the hardest to fill: for every accommodation that found it easy to hire general managers or sales staff, seven reported difficulty. Meanwhile, 41% of respondents planned to increase investment in staff development over the coming year. Frontline roles in housekeeping, food and beverage and front office face persistent quality gaps that affect guest experience and brand standards.
Skilling as a growth strategy
IHCL’s Accelerate 2030 strategy aims to expand to 700-plus hotels from its current 620-property portfolio, which includes 255 properties in development. That expansion depends heavily on a supply of trained hospitality professionals, particularly for properties entering smaller cities and aspirational districts where institutional training infrastructure is limited.
Pokhariyal has acknowledged the dual challenge directly: while manpower is available in rural areas, it requires structured training to become industry-ready, and trainees must be willing to relocate for employment after completing their courses. Changing perceptions of the sector, historically associated with long hours and physically demanding conditions, remains part of IHCL’s mandate alongside the technical curriculum.
The Paathya framework has drawn external recognition, featuring as a case study at the International Institute for Management Development in Lausanne, Switzerland. Women represent at least 25% of skilling targets, and the company has signalled it expects to exceed that threshold before 2030.
A sector-wide signal
IHCL is not alone in recognising the skilling imperative. IHG Hotels and Resorts, Radisson Hotel Group and Hyatt have all announced training partnerships in India over the past two years, and the Tourism and Hospitality Skill Council has expanded its institutional reach through multiple MoUs with hotel schools and chains.
But IHCL’s programme stands apart in scale and geographic reach, operating in aspirational districts and in tribal regions that remain largely untouched by formal hospitality education. The Tripura and Nainital centres represent a deliberate push beyond metro-adjacent locations.
For an industry projecting rapid growth across Tier 2 and Tier 3 cities, the ability to cultivate trained talent close to source, rather than relying on urban migration, may prove as strategically significant as any brand extension or hotel signing.



