India on around 80% in the apnic labs active measurement of end users.
https://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6/in
They report nearly a billion users, predominantly in mobile.
So, "only" 750 to 800 million users. Think about that: 3x the population of the USA using it most of the time, in one economy.
Here's the rankings:
https://stats.labs.apnic.net/ipv6/XA?o=cINw30x1r1
This is a different measure to Google's. They measure different things,
It happened in india mainly due to regulatory pressure[1]. It also helped that around the same time, Reliance (an oil company) launched at a hitherto-unseen pace an entirely new telco (Jio) with only 4G support (now 5G too, but at the time) and zero legacy infrastructure. Airtel (an older telco) was still using ipv4 in lots of cases. However due to pricing pressure[2] and TRAI pressure, they also switched when their 5G rollout happened in 2022. They changed vendors and with that changed the infrastructure as well. So today they are also in good shape ipv6-wise. See also [3]
[1] https://www.dot.gov.in/ipv6-transition-across-stakeholders Edit: hey look the govt drupal page is broken again, shocker. here is another source: https://icrier.org/pdf/IPv6_Transition.pdf
[2] The pricing pressure was _real_. 4G was the first time networks moved away from circuit switched to IP-based. So the marginal cost equation became better. And no legacy infra to support. By 2020, they also had funding from google and meta.
[3] https://broadbandindiaforum.in/wp-content/uploads/2022/08/Re...
Now compare average income to see how much this matters.
if you want population measurements, there is a APNIC page for that too.
https://stats.labs.apnic.net/v6pop
Fair warning, this page is not optimized and takes a lot of resources to render.