The Azim Premji Foundation has announced plans to develop a 1,000-bed charitable super-speciality transplant hospital on a 10-acre site within the Rajiv Gandhi Institute of Chest Diseases campus in Bengaluru. The Karnataka government has agreed to lease the land to the Foundation for 99 years, formalized through a Memorandum of Understanding with the State’s Medical Education Department. Chief Minister Shri Siddaramaiah described the project as a landmark public–philanthropic collaboration, emphasizing the Foundation’s commitment to operate the hospital on a not-for-profit basis.
An initial investment of ₹1,000 crore will be allocated for construction, with additional funding planned over the years to support operations and ensure continued free and low-cost care. Azim Premji Foundation CEO Anurag Behar highlighted that the initiative aims to reinforce public healthcare systems rather than replace them. Long-term health outcomes will be supported by preventive care, strong primary health centres, and community-based interventions led by frontline workers such as ASHAs, reflecting the Foundation’s broader philosophy and decades of engagement in Karnataka’s health and education sectors.
The hospital is envisioned as a comprehensive multi-organ transplant hub, providing kidney, liver, and other organ transplants. Nearly 70% of procedures will be free, with the remaining offered at highly subsidized rates, similar to models at premier institutions such as Jayadeva Institute of Cardiovascular Sciences and Kidwai Memorial Institute of Oncology. This comes as Karnataka faces a significant transplant burden, with over 5,000 patients awaiting kidney transplants and more than 1,000 requiring liver transplants.
The project aligns with Karnataka’s broader universal healthcare roadmap, which aims to establish one medical college, one super-speciality hospital, one trauma centre, and one cancer hospital in every district. Currently, the State operates 22 government medical colleges, 10 super-speciality hospitals, eight trauma centres, and eight cancer centres, with plans to move towards a universal health coverage model inspired by systems such as the UK’s NHS.
For India’s healthcare sector, this initiative demonstrates the growing role of structured philanthropy in expanding high-end clinical infrastructure, organ transplantation capacity, and equitable access to care. It sets a precedent for collaborative models involving government, philanthropic capital, and public institutions, offering a potential blueprint for future investments in healthcare delivery, medical education, and advanced clinical services across the country.







