Sahil Luthra Is Building the Factory That Could Change How India Makes Its Bullets
- Apr 10
- 7 min read
By hindustanherald
Apr 7, 2026

New Delhi, April 7: So here’s a question most of us never think about. The bullet that a soldier loads into his rifle on the border, where does it come from? Who made it? And if the answer is “we imported it,” then maybe we should be asking why a country of 1.4 billion people, with one of the largest armies in the world, is still dependent on other nations for something as basic as ammunition.



In 2024, he co-founded Vijayan Trishul Defence Solutions (VTDS) with his wife and co-director, Prikansha Luthra, with a mission to make India self-reliant in defence manufacturing. The company’s focus? Small arms and ammunition. The unglamorous, essential, utterly critical stuff. The rounds that soldiers actually fire. The calibres that paramilitary forces depend on. The kind of inventory that India, embarrassingly, still sources significantly from abroad.
The clearest signal that this isn’t just talk is a piece of paper that was signed in Jhansi last year.
VTDS signed a lease deed with the Uttar Pradesh Expressways Industrial Development Authority (UPEIDA) for a 20-hectare plot of land in the UP Defence Industrial Corridor. The allotted land, Plot No. S-8, is located in Village Erach, Tehsil Garautha, District Jhansi, and the lease has been executed for a period of 90 years.
VTDS has a three-phase vision. In the first phase, the company will produce small ammunition such as 5.56 mm, 7.62 mm, and 9 mm rounds, which are critical for defence needs both in India and globally. All ammunition will be for defence use only, not for civilians, and will cover both NATO and Russian-grade formats.
The target is to have the first batch of ammunition rolled out by June 2026, with the team already in talks with Indian Armed Forces, paramilitary forces, and international defence clients for pre-agreements.
The company’s advisory bench includes Lt Gen Kamaljit Singh (PVSM, AVSM and Bar) as Vice President, G R Aloria (IAS Retd.), former Chief Secretary of Gujarat, as Chief Advisor, and Col PVS Nageswara Rao (Retd.) as Chief Consultant.
VTDS recently announced the establishment of its second manufacturing facility in Amritsar, following the success of its first facility in the UP Defence Corridor Jhansi node. The company has received all necessary approvals for this expansion.
In March 2025, Luthra was recognised at the ET Now Business Conclave in New Delhi. He was honoured with the Excellence in Defence Entrepreneurship Award, celebrating his contributions to the defence sector and his commitment to fostering innovation, self-reliance, and national security.
Separately, Luthra is recognised by the UP government as the youngest defence entrepreneur in India. Whether that distinction becomes a footnote or a headline will depend entirely on what gets built in Jhansi.

She serves as a Director at the company and is involved in its day-to-day operations and strategic decisions. In a sector that has very few women in leadership positions, that is quietly significant. Defence manufacturing in India, from the ordnance factories to the DPSUs to most private entrants, has been overwhelmingly male at every level above the shop floor.

Sahil Luthra is 34. He has signed a 90-year lease. He has his family’s money and reputation in this.





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