Zuari Industries Limited highlighted strong operational milestones and diversified business growth in its Q4 FY26 investor presentation, led by record sugarcane crushing volumes, improving subsidiary performance, and continued expansion across real estate and financial services.
The company achieved its highest-ever annual sugarcane crush at 159.7 lakh quintals during FY26, surpassing the previous year’s 157.2 lakh quintals. Ethanol production registered healthy 10.1% YoY growth for the full year, while sugar sales in Q4 increased 6.2% YoY. Power generation also recorded a 2% annual rise, reflecting stable operational momentum across core businesses.
On the financial front, Zuari Industries reported FY26 standalone revenue of ₹994.9 crore with EBITDA of ₹54.1 crore and profit before tax of ₹31.8 crore. Consolidated total income stood at ₹1,155.1 crore, while consolidated profit before tax came in at ₹122.3 crore for FY26.
The company’s financial services subsidiaries, including ZFL and ZIBL, emerged as strong growth drivers with FY26 revenue rising 38% YoY and EBITDA increasing 61% YoY. Zuari Industries also reduced borrowing costs, achieving finance cost savings of ₹11.4 crore during the year.
Among key strategic developments, the company announced that the St. Regis Residences Dubai project under its subsidiary ZIIL is now 98% complete, with handover expected in June 2026. The luxury project has achieved full sales closure, with all 232 units sold and total sales value reaching AED 1,304 million.
Zuari Industries is also strengthening its asset-light real estate strategy through a Development Manager (DM) model, with projects underway in Hyderabad, Kolkata, and Bengaluru. Additionally, subsidiary Simon India secured nearly ₹95 crore worth of orders under execution while also obtaining copyright approval for its proprietary Project Control Platform.
The company’s diversified presence across sugar, ethanol, infrastructure, financial services, and real estate continues to position it for long-term growth amid increasing focus on operational efficiency and capital-light expansion strategies.