Quick Info: Hometown: Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh | Profession: Acting Coach · Actor · Founder RSW (Rachit Singh Workshop) | Known For: Training Ranveer Singh, Alia Bhatt, Vicky Kaushal · Huma Qureshi’s partner
- Early Life — Varanasi to Delhi to Mumbai, the Slow Way
- The Coaching Career — Artist Collective, RSW & 100+ Workshops
- Complete Films & Projects — Workshop Credits & Acting Work
- The Huma Qureshi Relationship — How It Started & Where It’s Headed
- Controversies
- Lesser Known Facts About Rachit Singh
- 3 Things Most Articles About Rachit Singh Miss
- FAQ — What People Are Searching About Rachit Singh
| Full Name | Rachit Singh |
| Profession | Acting Coach · Actor · Workshop Facilitator · Founder, Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW) |
| Age (as of 2026) | 40 Year |
| Date of Birth | 9 September |
| Birthplace | Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, India |
| Current Base | Mumbai, Maharashtra |
| Nationality | Indian |
| Religion | Hindu |
| Education | Not publicly disclosed |
| Career Start | 2012 — ramp model, New Delhi |
| Mumbai Move | 2016 — began working with Atul Mongia, established Artist Collective |
| Own Company | Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW) — acting training academy, Mumbai |
| Workshops Conducted | 100+ acting workshops (as of 2025) |
| Notable Actor Clients | Ranveer Singh, Alia Bhatt, Vicky Kaushal, Anushka Sharma, Varun Dhawan, Saif Ali Khan, Pooja Hegde, Gulshan Devaiah, Shanaya Kapoor, Shahana Goswami, Ahana Kumra, Kunal Kapoor, Harshvardhan Rane, Imaad Shah |
| OTT Acting Debut | Karmma Calling (2024, Disney+ Hotstar) — Character: Vedant — alongside Raveena Tandon |
| Cameo | Thamma (Ayushmann Khurrana, Rashmika Mandanna) — 2025 |
| Mentor | Atul Mongia — acting coach and filmmaker |
| Relationship Status | In a relationship with actress Huma Qureshi — reportedly engaged (September 2025) — wedding expected October–November 2026 |
| Instagram (Workshop) | @rachitsinghworkshop |
| Hobbies | Travelling, reading, jet skiing, cooking, fitness |
| Net Worth (est.) | ₹2–5 crore (acting coaching fees, workshops, brand work, acting) |

Photo: instagram /rachitsingh08
Ranveer Singh trained with him before Gully Boy. Vicky Kaushal worked with him before Uri. Alia Bhatt attended his workshops. Anushka Sharma. Varun Dhawan. Saif Ali Khan. The list of actors who have sat in Rachit Singh’s workshop sessions and then gone on to deliver career-best performances reads like a roll call of the last decade of Hindi cinema.
And until 2024 — when his relationship with Huma Qureshi started making headlines — almost nobody outside Bollywood’s inner circle had heard of him. That invisibility was not accidental. The best acting coaches in any film industry are almost always the ones who make the work about the actor in front of them, not about themselves. Rachit Singh built a career on that principle, and it produced results so consistent that the industry kept sending him its biggest names.
Early Life — Varanasi to Delhi to Mumbai, the Slow Way

Photo: instagram /rachitsingh08
Rachit Singh was born in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh — the city of ghats, textiles, and one of India’s oldest continuous creative traditions. He moved to New Delhi in 2012, where he worked briefly as a ramp model — a common entry point for young men who want to enter entertainment but have not yet found their specific lane.
The modelling work gave him the fundamental skill set that acting coaching later demands: reading how bodies occupy space, understanding how physical presence communicates before a word is spoken, and developing comfort in front of both cameras and audiences. It was not the career. It was the training ground for the career.
In 2016, he made the move to Mumbai — the city where every serious Hindi entertainment career eventually has to plant itself. What followed was not an acting career or a directing career. It was something far more specific, and far more useful to the industry than either.
The Coaching Career — Artist Collective, RSW & 100+ Workshops

Photo: instagram /rachitsingh08
Rachit Singh’s professional identity was shaped by one crucial early relationship — his collaboration with Atul Mongia, one of India’s most respected acting coaches and filmmakers. Mongia is known for his work developing method-adjacent, emotionally grounded performance technique in Hindi cinema actors. Rachit worked alongside Mongia and helped establish Artist Collective — an acting training platform that became one of Mumbai’s most credible workshops for working actors.
What he learned at Artist Collective was the specific pedagogy that makes his workshops different from the general “acting class” model. His approach focuses on emotional truth, body-based performance work, and the particular demands of camera-facing naturalistic acting — not theatrical projection or generic “feel the emotion” instruction. The distinction matters enormously in a film industry increasingly favouring directors like Shoojit Sircar, Zoya Akhtar, and Meghna Gulzar who demand complete behavioural authenticity from their cast.
He eventually founded Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW) — his own independent acting training company. As of 2025, RSW has conducted over 100 workshops with a client list that includes both established stars and emerging actors. The workshop Instagram (@rachitsinghworkshop) documents the range of participants and the methodology in practice.
Complete Films & Projects — Workshop Credits & Acting Work
| Year | Project | Role | Platform |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2018 | Pari | Acting Workshop Assistant | Theatrical — Anushka Sharma |
| 2018 | Sui Dhaaga: Made in India | Acting Workshop Assistant | Theatrical — Varun Dhawan, Anushka Sharma |
| 2019 | Uri: The Surgical Strike | Acting Workshop Assistant | Theatrical — Vicky Kaushal |
| 2019 | Lego Jurassic World: Legend of Isla Nublar | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | TV Series |
| 2020 | Taish | Acting Workshop Assistant | ZEE5 |
| 2020 | Marzi | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | Voot Select |
| 2021 | Bombay Begums | Acting Workshop Assistant | Netflix |
| 2022 | Mai | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | Netflix |
| 2022 | Radhe Shyam | Acting Workshop Assistant | Theatrical — Prabhas |
| 2023 | Young Love | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | OTT Series |
| 2024 | Big Girls Don’t Cry | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | Prime Video |
| 2024 | Dange | Acting Workshop Assistant | OTT |
| 2024 | Karmma Calling | Actor — Vedant (OTT acting debut) | Disney+ Hotstar |
| 2025 | Sky Force | Acting Workshop Assistant | Theatrical |
| 2025 | Chamak | Acting Workshop / Head of Technology | OTT Series |
| 2025 | Thamma | Actor — Cameo | Theatrical — Ayushmann Khurrana, Rashmika Mandanna |
The Huma Qureshi Relationship — How It Started & Where It’s Headed

The most-searched question about Rachit Singh in 2024 and 2025 was not about his coaching work — it was about his relationship with Huma Qureshi, one of Bollywood’s most accomplished and independently minded actresses.
Speculation began in early 2024 when singer Akasa Singh shared a photograph of the three together with a caption that implied something significant about Huma’s life. From there, the sightings accumulated: Shah Rukh Khan and Gauri Khan’s party for Ed Sheeran in March 2024, where Huma and Rachit appeared together. The Gauri Khan restaurant Torii opening on Valentine’s Day 2024. The Sonakshi Sinha-Zaheer Iqbal wedding celebrations, where they wore matching outfits. Huma’s repeated love-reaction comments on Rachit’s Instagram posts. Rachit publicly praising Huma’s performances in Maharani Season 4 and Delhi Crime Season 3.
Huma’s brother Saqib Saleem — himself an actor — regularly shares photographs with Rachit on social media, signalling that the relationship had the warmth of the Qureshi family before either Huma or Rachit made any public confirmation.
In September 2025, Hindustan Times reported that the couple had got engaged — though neither Huma nor Rachit officially confirmed the engagement publicly. In May 2026, Pinkvilla reported that the couple is planning an intimate wedding for October–November 2026 in Mumbai — not a large Bollywood ceremony but a close-friends-and-family event with a reception to follow for the industry.
Controversies

Photo: instagram /rachitsingh08
Rachit Singh’s career and personal life have been largely controversy-free — but two moments drew public attention beyond his workshop work.
The first was the extended period of neither confirming nor denying the relationship with Huma Qureshi — which, while not a controversy in the conventional sense, kept his name in entertainment news cycles for over a year through careful ambiguity. In an industry where relationship confirmation or denial is a calculated public move, the sustained silence from both parties was itself a media strategy — and it worked, generating consistent coverage without requiring either to make an irreversible public statement.
The second is more structural: the question of whether a high-profile relationship with one of Bollywood’s leading actresses creates a conflict of interest for an acting coach whose entire credibility rests on impartiality and process. When a coach’s name is primarily known through a romantic association rather than through the work itself, there is a reputational risk — however unfair — that the coaching credentials get subordinated to the celebrity relationship in public perception. Rachit Singh has managed this by continuing to post workshop content consistently, maintaining the @rachitsinghworkshop professional identity clearly separate from his personal social media presence.
Lesser Known Facts About Rachit Singh
- Rachit Singh is from Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh — one of India’s most culturally dense cities — giving him a grounding in classical Indian aesthetics that is unusual among acting coaches who typically come from urban metropolitan backgrounds.
- He worked as a ramp model in New Delhi from 2012 before pivoting to acting coaching — a modelling background that directly informed his understanding of how physical presence and body language communicate on camera.
- His mentor is Atul Mongia — one of India’s most respected casting directors and acting coaches, associated with some of Hindi cinema’s most performance-driven films. Rachit considers Mongia “a mentor and dear friend.”
- He co-established Artist Collective Films with Atul Mongia — one of Mumbai’s most credible actor training platforms — before founding his own independent RSW.
- His workshop clients include Ranveer Singh, Vicky Kaushal, Varun Dhawan, Alia Bhatt, Anushka Sharma, Saif Ali Khan, Pooja Hegde, Gulshan Devaiah, Shanaya Kapoor, Kunal Kapoor, and Shahana Goswami — a roster that covers multiple generations and acting styles of Hindi cinema.
- His work as an acting workshop assistant on Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019) — widely regarded as the film that rebuilt Vicky Kaushal’s career — is one of the most credentially significant credits on his workshop CV.
- He also served as Head of Technology on multiple series including Marzi (2020), Mai (2022), Young Love (2023), Big Girls Don’t Cry (2024), and Chamak (2025) — a dual-role that places him at the intersection of performance methodology and production technology.
- His OTT acting debut in Karmma Calling (2024) was as one of the lead characters — not a minor supporting role — signalling that his transition from coach to actor was being taken seriously by the production.
- He had a cameo in Thamma (2025) — Ayushmann Khurrana and Rashmika Mandanna’s film — a casting choice that suggests he has directorial goodwill from the film industry he has served as a coach.
- Huma Qureshi’s brother Saqib Saleem regularly posts photographs with Rachit on social media — a family-level integration that preceded any official relationship confirmation and signals genuine personal closeness.
- Before Rachit, Huma Qureshi was in a relationship with filmmaker Mudassar Aziz (writer of Double XL, director of Pati Patni Aur Woh) for approximately three years before they separated in 2022.
- Reports indicate the planned Huma-Rachit wedding for October–November 2026 will be an intimate Mumbai ceremony — not a grand Bollywood event — with a separate reception for the film industry to follow.
3 Things Most Articles About Rachit Singh Miss

Photo: instagram /rachitsingh08
1. The “Head of Technology” credit alongside acting workshop work is extremely unusual — and almost nobody mentions it. On multiple series including Marzi, Mai, Big Girls Don’t Cry, and Chamak, Rachit Singh served simultaneously as acting workshop facilitator and Head of Technology. That dual role suggests a technical and digital production intelligence that goes well beyond what most acting coaches develop. It is a significant professional credential that gets buried under the relationship coverage.
2. His film credits are a direct map of Hindi cinema’s performance-driven renaissance. Uri, Bombay Begums, Pari, Sui Dhaaga, Radhe Shyam, Sky Force — these are not random commercial films. They represent a specific strand of Hindi cinema that prioritised behavioural authenticity and emotionally grounded performance. That Rachit’s workshop credit appears consistently across this strand is not coincidence — it reflects a coaching philosophy that aligns specifically with what those films’ directors were trying to achieve.
3. The Huma Qureshi relationship making him famous is both the best and most complicated thing that happened to his professional reputation. Before 2024, his name was known only within the industry. After 2024, it was known to the general public — but primarily through a relationship rather than through a workshop credit. For a coach whose entire value proposition depends on credibility and process, visibility through a personal association is a double-edged outcome. He has managed it well — but the tension is real and underreported.
FAQ — What People Are Searching About Rachit Singh
Who is Rachit Singh?
Rachit Singh is a Mumbai-based Indian acting coach, actor, and founder of Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW). Born in Varanasi, Uttar Pradesh, he moved to Mumbai in 2016 and built one of Bollywood’s most credible acting training practices — having worked with Ranveer Singh, Alia Bhatt, Vicky Kaushal, Anushka Sharma, Varun Dhawan, and Saif Ali Khan among others. He became widely known to the general public in 2024 through his relationship with actress Huma Qureshi.
What is Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW)?
Rachit Singh Workshop (RSW) is Rachit Singh’s independent acting training company based in Mumbai. As of 2025, RSW has conducted over 100 acting workshops with a client list spanning established stars and emerging talent. Its Instagram handle is @rachitsinghworkshop. Rachit founded RSW after his earlier work co-establishing Artist Collective Films alongside mentor and filmmaker Atul Mongia.
Is Rachit Singh dating Huma Qureshi?
Yes — Rachit Singh and actress Huma Qureshi have been in a relationship since at least early 2024, when their public appearances together began generating widespread coverage. In September 2025, Hindustan Times reported the couple had got engaged, though neither officially confirmed it. In May 2026, Pinkvilla reported they are planning an intimate wedding for October–November 2026 in Mumbai, followed by a reception for the film industry.
What films has Rachit Singh worked on as acting coach?
Rachit Singh’s acting workshop credits include Pari (2018), Sui Dhaaga (2018), Uri: The Surgical Strike (2019), Taish (2020), Bombay Begums (2021), Radhe Shyam (2022), Dange (2024), and Sky Force (2025). He also served as acting workshop facilitator and Head of Technology on the web series Marzi (2020), Mai (2022), Young Love (2023), Big Girls Don’t Cry (2024), and Chamak (2025).
Has Rachit Singh acted in any films?
Yes. Rachit Singh made his OTT acting debut in Karmma Calling (2024) on Disney+ Hotstar, playing the character Vedant alongside Raveena Tandon, Varun Sood, and Namrata Sheth. He also had a cameo in Thamma (2025), starring Ayushmann Khurrana and Rashmika Mandanna. He transitioned from a behind-the-scenes acting coach role to in-front-of-camera work while continuing his coaching practice simultaneously.
Rachit Singh built a career that the Hindi film industry has known about and relied upon for a decade — and that the general public had no reason to know about until Huma Qureshi walked into the same frame. The visibility that followed was deserved, even if the reason for it was personal rather than professional.
At whatever age he currently is — he hasn’t said, which fits the profile of someone who spent years deliberately staying out of the spotlight — the career ahead looks like the first chapter that the public actually gets to watch: the wedding, the OTT acting work expanding, the workshop legacy compounding. The man who taught Bollywood how to act is finally letting Bollywood watch him.
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