Meta has appointed CRED founder Kunal Shah as the next head of WhatsApp, succeeding Will Cathcart. The move places one of India’s most prominent entrepreneurs at the helm of the world’s largest messaging platform as Meta expands its messaging, payments and AI ambitions
Published Date – 22 June 2026, 09:49 PM
New Delhi: From pioneering one of India’s early digital payments ventures to building the fintech unicorn CRED and backing scores of startups, Kunal Shah has been a prominent face of the country’s technology ecosystem for almost two decades. He now gears up to script his most prominent global leadership role to date — running WhatsApp, the world’s largest messaging platform.
The serial entrepreneur and prolific angel investor has been named the next head of WhatsApp, succeeding long-time chief Will Cathcart. Cathcart is helping guide Shah through the transition and will take on a new role at Meta, building new products from the ground up.
WhatsApp’s parent firm Meta is slated to invest Rs 8,550 crore (about USD 900 million) in Shah’s fintech firm CRED. Shah will step down as CRED’s CEO to join Meta’s global leadership team.
Shah brings a deep understanding of how WhatsApp is woven into people’s daily lives, alongside a fresh perspective from outside Meta and the founder mentality that built WhatsApp in the first place, Meta said, adding that he is one of India’s most respected entrepreneurs and brings a track record of building products that people love at scale.
“Kunal Shah will join Meta as WhatsApp’s next leader. Kunal built CRED into one of India’s most important technology companies, and he brings the kind of builder mentality and global perspective that will serve him well in running the world’s biggest messaging app,” Mark Zuckerberg, founder and CEO of Meta, said.
Zuckerberg said he looks forward to working with Shah to continue making WhatsApp the best service for billions of people and millions of businesses.
The move assumes significance as India is WhatsApp’s largest market and one of its most advanced markets for business messaging and payments, both of which remain central to the popular messaging app’s strategy.
Chris Cox, Meta’s Chief Product Officer, had approached Shah directly while looking for a leader who understands the global product opportunity for WhatsApp and can represent the needs of the people who rely on it every single day, Meta said.
“A prolific writer and commentator, Shah has long held strong views about how WhatsApp can become even more useful in people’s lives,” the Meta statement added.
A serial entrepreneur, angel investor and fintech founder, Shah founded CRED, a fintech platform, with a mission to catalyse financial progress for creditworthy Indians. The platform has 17 million monthly active users. His previous startup, FreeCharge, pioneered online payments in India over a decade ago.
Shah champions the startup and financial services ecosystem in India through angel investments, advisory positions and roles in influential industry organisations. He is India’s most prolific angel investor, with investments in over 250 startups, including leading unicorns, and actively mentors hundreds of founders.
He has been an advisor to Sequoia Capital India (now Peak XV), Bennett Coleman and Co Ltd, and was on the board of Pine Labs, a large Indian fintech firm. He has also served as chairman of the Internet and Mobile Association of India, the apex body for Indian internet companies.
“While it’s come very far, the gap between WhatsApp today and its full potential is massive. I look forward to working with Mark, Chris and the leadership across Meta for the next step in WhatsApp’s journey,” Shah said.
Cox, Chief Product Officer at Meta, welcomed Shah as WhatsApp’s next leader and said he is “one of India’s most respected entrepreneurs and a prolific voice for how the apps we build make a positive difference in people’s lives”.
“We are fortunate to have him guide WhatsApp through this next era,” Cox added.
In a social media post, Cathcart said WhatsApp is in the strongest position it has ever been. “That felt like the right moment to step back. I’m very excited to see what Kunal and our amazing team continue to build,” he wrote.
Cathcart led WhatsApp through its most consequential period of growth, scaling end-to-end encrypted messaging to more than three billion people, including over 100 million in the United States, making private communication the default for much of the world.
He grew WhatsApp into multiple multi-billion-dollar businesses and expanded the app well beyond one-to-one chats, adding Communities to help groups better organise their chats and Channels to let people follow the people and organisations they care about most.
Recently, WhatsApp introduced new private AI features that bring the benefits of AI to people without compromising the privacy of their messages. Cathcart has been a steadfast champion of privacy, defending people’s right to private conversations around the world, standing up to governments seeking backdoors, defeating attempts by spyware companies to attack users, and taking NSO Group to court and winning, Meta said.
