Facebook Opens Operations Office in India
By wchung | 24 Jun, 2026
Social networking site Facebook is opening an operations office in India, its first in Asia, to help manage rapid growth in the number of users.
The office, in the southern Indian city of Hyderabad, will have advertising and developer support teams, the company said Monday. It will supplement Facebook’s other centers in Palo Alto, California; Dublin, Ireland; and Austin, Texas.
The move is part of a push to create support centers across time zones, with round-the-clock, multilingual support, the company said.
The number of Facebook users has rocketed to over 400 million since it was founded in 2004.
Seventy percent of users are now outside the U.S. and use the site in over 70 languages, Don Faul, director of global online operations, said in his blog Monday.
“In India alone, we’ve seen rapid growth and now have more than 8 million people there actively connecting on Facebook,” he said.
Faul’s posting generated dozens of comments, with users from Malaysia, Turkey, Indonesia, Sri Lanka and Africa asking whether Facebook might soon open offices in their countries too.
“When are you coming to Nigeria? There’s much potential here and we’ve exceeded the one million mark!” wrote Segun Segebee Abisagbo.
One woman asked for a job.
According to its website, Facebook is hiring in the U.S., Italy, Spain, Australia, Ireland, England, France, Japan, Germany, Sweden and Canada, as well as India.
The company did not release details of the size of investment or how many people if will hire for the India office.
Hyderabad is one of India’s technology hubs and a base for Google, Microsoft and IBM, among others. All three companies are hiring there, according to their websites.
ERIKA KINETZ, AP Business Writer MUMBAI, India
Recent Articles
- Alibaba Sues US for Being Linked to Chinese Military
- Zohran Mamdani Sends Message to Democratic Establishment
- Oil Prices Extend Decline on Smoother Crude Flows via Hormuz
- Anthropic's Mythos Took Only Hours to Find Weaknesses in Every Classified US Government System
- How SK Hynix's Bet on a Niche Memory Chip Made It More Valuable Than Samsung
- US on Track to Break World Cup Attendance Record Despite High Ticket Prices
- S. Korea Coach Warns Team Against Complacency Before South Africa Match
- Senate Joins House to Require Trump to Seek Approval for Iran Hostilities
- US Consumers Favor Homebuying over Renting for First Time Since 2023
- US Manufacturing Rises but Factory Employment Falls to Six-Year Low
