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Abstract Introduction Low- and lower-middle-income countries face chronic deficits in specialist surgeons, particularly in rural and remote settings. Task-sharing and -shifting (TSS) to other health worker cadres is a remedy supported by effectiveness studies. However, policy adoption depends not only on effectiveness but also on feasibility at the health systems level, especially when personnel deficits co-occur across multiple cadres. We aimed to develop and apply an analytic approach to assess whether co-occurring workforce deficits constrain the feasibility of surgical TSS using a pan-Indian sample of district hospitals. Methods We conducted a cross-sectional descriptive analysis using administrative staffing data from the National Institution for Transforming India (NITI) Aayog assessment of 707 district hospitals for the 2017–18 financial year. Cadre-wise staffing ratios for specialist surgeons, general doctors, nurses, and paramedics were calculated using Indian Public Health Standards (IPHS) norms. A ratio <1 indicated a staffing deficit. We evaluated TSS feasibility for selected cadre pairs, with target and substituting cadres, using a rule-based categorization of relative staffing adequacy (not needed, possible, strained, unlikely, or not possible). Results Across 479 hospitals with deficits in specialist surgeons or general doctors included in the analysis. Staffing deficits were widespread across cadres. Only one hospital demonstrated TSS feasibility across all cadre pairs. For general doctors substituting specialist surgeons, TSS was possible in 1.5% of hospitals, strained in 9.0%, unlikely in 78.7%, and not possible in 10.9%. Similar patterns were observed for nurses substituting for specialist surgeons and for those substituting for general doctors. Feasibility was higher when paramedics substituted for general doctors or nurses, but co-occurring deficits were common. Conclusion Co-occurring workforce deficits substantially limit health systems-level feasibility of surgical task-sharing and -shifting in Indian district hospitals. Evaluation of TSS interventions should incorporate system-level workforce constraints in addition to evidence of effectiveness.