New campus in Sector 129 houses more than 700 employees and adds to the company’s growing engineering and customer-facing footprint in India.
Adobe has opened a new office in Noida, marking another step in its expansion in India as the company leans more heavily on the country for innovation, engineering and customer support. The new campus, located in Sector 129, brings together more than 700 employees and becomes Adobe’s seventh office in India and third in Uttar Pradesh.
The move comes as Adobe positions India as a core part of its AI-focused future. Company leaders say the new site is intended to support collaboration across engineering and customer-facing teams while reinforcing India’s role in shaping products and platforms for a global audience.
Adobe first began operations in India in 1997 as an engineering R&D center, and the country has since evolved into its largest workforce outside the United States. The company now has more than 8,000 employees in India, which it says contributes to more than a third of its innovation.
That scale helps explain why the Noida office is being framed as more than a real-estate expansion. It reflects Adobe’s long-term effort to deepen its technical base in India at a time when AI tools and agentic systems are reshaping software development, content creation and customer experience products.
The new campus is designed as a modern workplace built around collaboration, with technology infrastructure intended to support work in the AI era. Adobe says the office was planned to encourage co-creation and team interaction, with an emphasis on environments where employees can build and test ideas together.
The building also carries an environmental angle. Adobe says the Noida site is IGBC Platinum-certified and includes energy-efficient systems and sustainable design practices, aligning with its broader sustainability commitments.
Abhigyan Modi, country manager for Adobe India and senior vice president of Document Cloud, said the company is trying to stay at the center of AI-driven change while keeping its mission focused on helping people create. He described the Noida opening as an important milestone in Adobe’s push to drive innovation from India.
Swati Rustagi, head of employee experience for Adobe India, said the workplace was designed to help teams do their best work through connection and collaboration. The company’s message is that office design, not just headcount, matters in attracting and retaining technical talent.
The Noida announcement follows several recent Adobe initiatives in India. In February 2026, the company expanded access to tools such as Firefly, Photoshop and Acrobat for students at accredited institutions, and it also partnered with Airtel to make Adobe Express Premium available to 360 million users nationwide.
Adobe has also been strengthening its leadership and advisory network in the country, including the appointment of Manoj Kohli to its International Advisory Board and new leadership hires across its India operations.
For Adobe, the Noida office signals that India is no longer just a support market. It is increasingly a strategic hub for product development, talent and the company’s next phase of AI-led growth.









