Land of the Rising Sun

Arunachal Pradesh

Arunachal Pradesh is India's easternmost and least crowded state — "the land of the dawn-lit mountains." Around 14 lakh people, from some 26 tribes, live across these forested Himalayan ranges. It holds India's largest hydropower potential and, at Tawang, its largest monastery.

Capital Itanagar · A state since 20 February 1987

  • India's easternmost state — first to see the sunrise
  • The least densely populated state in India
  • ~26 tribes — India's most diverse tribal mosaic
  • Tawang — India's largest Buddhist monastery
  • The largest hydropower potential in India
  • Namdapha — the only park with four big cats
Tap a district to highlight it

Illustrative district boundaries (derived from open data) — a reference, not an official survey map.

The Basics

Arunachal Pradesh at a Glance

Arunachal Pradesh sits in the eastern Himalaya, India's easternmost and largest north-eastern state. Its name means "land of the dawn-lit mountains," and it is home to dozens of tribes.

  • Itanagar Capital & largest town
  • 20 Feb 1987 Became India's 24th state — a Union Territory (renamed from NEFA) since 1972
  • 83,743 km² Area — the largest of the North-East states
  • ~28 districts One of India's fastest-changing district maps (the map shows 25)
  • English Official language — there are around 26 major tribes and 100+ dialects
  • 60 seats Legislative Assembly (most reserved for tribes); 2 Lok Sabha seats
  • Borders China to the north (along the McMahon Line, which China disputes), Bhutan & Myanmar; Assam & Nagaland within India
  • ~79% forest Among the highest forest cover of any state — an Eastern Himalaya biodiversity hotspot
  • Donyi-Polo The sun-and-moon faith — the major indigenous religion, alongside Christianity, Hinduism & Buddhism
  • State symbols Animal: mithun (gayal) · Bird: great hornbill · Flower: foxtail orchid

People

Population & Society

Census 2011 is the last full count. Arunachal is India's least densely peopled state — a vast, forested land shared by dozens of tribes. Figures below are Census 2011.

  • 13.84 lakh Population, 2011 (1,383,727) — among India's least populous states
  • 26.0% Decadal growth, 2001–2011
  • 17 /km² Population density — the lowest of any Indian state
  • 938 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011
  • 65.4% Literacy rate, 2011
  • ~26 tribes India's most diverse tribal mosaic — the Nyishi are the largest, then the Adi
  • ~69% Scheduled Tribes — Nyishi, Adi, Galo, Apatani, Tagin, Monpa, Mishmi, Wancho & many more
  • Many faiths Christianity (~30%), Hinduism (~29%), indigenous Donyi-Polo & others (~26%), and Buddhism (~12%) — Census 2011

Economy

Forests, Rivers & Hydropower

Arunachal is a small, forested economy that leans on the Centre — but it has India's largest untapped hydropower, and a per-person income above the national average.

  • ₹0.48 L cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate) — a small economy
  • ₹2.80 lakh Per-capita GSDP, 2023-24 — above the national average
  • ~53% Outstanding liabilities as % of GSDP — among the highest of any state
  • ~87% of the state's revenue comes from central transfers

Hydropower & forests

  • ~50,000 MW The largest hydropower potential of any Indian state — about a third of the national total, on the Siang and its rivers
  • ~1% tapped Most of that potential is still undeveloped; large dam projects remain contested
  • ~79% forest Among the highest forest cover in India — the second-largest forest area of any state
  • Biodiversity Part of the Eastern Himalaya hotspot — rich in orchids, hornbills & wildlife
  • Above-average income: with a small population and large central funding, Arunachal's per-person income runs above the national average — unusual among the smaller states.
  • Figures here are the latest Arunachal Budget estimates (via PRS) and MoSPI. The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25.

Agriculture

Kiwi, Rice & the Apatani Fields

Farming ranges from hill jhum to the famous wet-rice terraces of the Apatani. Arunachal is India's leading kiwi grower, with a basket of cardamom, oranges and apples.

  • Kiwi India's largest kiwi producer — over half the national crop, much of it organic
  • Apatani fields The Ziro valley's wet-rice-and-fish system, farmed by hand for generations — on UNESCO's tentative list
  • Rice The staple, grown both as jhum (shifting) and wet-rice
  • Cardamom & ginger Large cardamom and the GI-tagged Adi Kekir ginger
  • Oranges & apple The GI-tagged Arunachal (Wakro) mandarin, plus temperate apple
  • Tribal GI crafts Idu Mishmi, Apatani, Monpa & Tangsa textiles, Wancho wood craft & yak churpi
  • Apong The traditional rice beer of the Tani tribes

Administrative

The Districts of Arunachal

Arunachal has around 28 districts — one of India's fastest-growing district maps, redrawn many times. The interactive map shows 25, from the open dataset. Select a district to highlight it on the map above.

    The map and this list share the same data. Clicking a district highlights it on the interactive map in the hero; soon each will open its own page.

    What Makes Arunachal Unique

    Strengths, Nature & Heritage

    Arunachal's riches are its mountains, forests and rivers — the largest hydropower potential in India, a park with four big cats, and the great monastery of Tawang.

    Nature & wildlife

    • Namdapha The only protected area on Earth with four big cats — tiger, leopard, snow leopard & clouded leopard
    • Pakke A tiger reserve famed for hornbill conservation, with its own hornbill festival
    • Eaglenest A birding paradise — the Bugun liocichla, new to science, was found here in 2006
    • Hydropower India's largest hydropower potential, on the Siang and its tributaries
    • Forests Among the highest forest cover of any state — an Eastern Himalaya hotspot
    • Mithun The state animal — a semi-wild bovine central to tribal life and feasts

    Heritage & faith

    • Tawang Monastery India's largest Buddhist monastery, founded around 1680
    • Parshuram Kund A major Hindu pilgrimage on the Lohit, for the Makar Sankranti dip
    • Ancient ruins Malinithan and Bhismaknagar in the foothills

    Culture & Traditions

    Tribes, Festivals & Music

    With some 26 tribes, Arunachal's calendar is full of festivals — and Ziro hosts one of India's best-loved music gatherings.

    • Tribal festivals Nyokum (Nyishi), Solung (Adi), Mopin (Galo), Dree (Apatani), Losar (Monpa) & Reh (Idu Mishmi)
    • Sangken The Theravada Buddhist water festival of the Khamti & Singpho
    • Ziro Festival India's famous outdoor indie-music festival, in the Ziro valley since 2012
    • Donyi-Polo The sun-and-moon faith of the Tani tribes
    • Food Rice-based and lightly spiced — thukpa, momos, smoked meat, bamboo shoot & apong
    • Crafts Idu Mishmi & Apatani weaving, Monpa masks, thangka & carpets, and cane & bamboo work

    Places to Visit

    Monasteries, Passes & Valleys

    From the monastery and high passes of Tawang to the Apatani valley of Ziro and the easternmost forests of Namdapha, Arunachal is for the adventurous traveller.

    • Tawang The great monastery, the Sela Pass & the lakes of the high Himalaya
    • Ziro The Apatani valley — rice terraces & the music festival
    • Namdapha The easternmost national park, with four big cats
    • Mechuka A remote, scenic Himalayan valley near the border
    • Pasighat Arunachal's oldest town (1911), the gateway to the Siang
    • Parshuram Kund The Lohit pilgrimage site, busiest at Makar Sankranti
    • Dong The village often called the first place in India to see the sunrise
    • Bomdila & Dirang A monastery town and a hot-springs valley on the road to Tawang
    • Madhuri Lake The high Sangetsar lake near Tawang

    Air, Rail & Road

    Reaching the Frontier

    Connecting a vast, mountainous frontier is Arunachal's great task — and recent years have brought its first greenfield airport, a rail link, and a landmark Himalayan tunnel.

    • Donyi Polo Airport The state's first greenfield airport, at Itanagar (Hollongi), opened in 2022
    • More airports Tezu, Pasighat & Ziro handle regional flights
    • Naharlagun The main railhead near Itanagar, linked by rail since 2014
    • Sela Tunnel Opened in 2024 — all-weather access to Tawang across the ~13,700 ft Sela Pass
    • Highways The Trans-Arunachal Highway is the spine; a long Frontier Highway is under construction near the border
    • Assam bridges The Bhupen Hazarika & Bogibeel bridges (in Assam) ease access to the state

    People & the Frontier

    People of Arunachal

    Arunachal's story runs from a Dalai Lama born near Tawang to the leaders who built the modern state.

    • 6th Dalai Lama Tsangyang Gyatso was born near Tawang, at Urgelling, in 1683
    • Daying Ering The Adi leader and early Member of Parliament; a wildlife sanctuary bears his name
    • Gegong Apang The state's longest-serving Chief Minister
    • Dorjee Khandu A Chief Minister who died in a 2011 helicopter crash
    • Pema Khandu The current Chief Minister
    • Kiren Rijiju A Union Minister and the state's best-known national figure

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Arunachal

    From the old tribal and Buddhist heritage of the eastern Himalaya to a frontier territory and a state of its own, a few of the milestones that shaped Arunachal.

    Key milestones in the history of Arunachal Pradesh, from the 17th century to 2024.
    WhenMilestone
    Early timesTani peoples (Adi, Nyishi, Apatani, Galo…) and, in the west, the Buddhist Monpa & Sherdukpen
    1680–81Tawang Monastery is founded
    1683The 6th Dalai Lama is born near Tawang, at Urgelling
    1914The McMahon Line is drawn at the Simla Convention; India treats it as the boundary, China disputes it
    1954The North-East Frontier Agency (NEFA) is constituted
    1962In the Sino-Indian War, Chinese forces advance into NEFA and then withdraw after the November ceasefire
    21 January 1972NEFA is renamed Arunachal Pradesh and made a Union Territory
    20 February 1987Arunachal Pradesh becomes India's 24th state
    2022Itanagar's Donyi Polo Airport opens — the state's first greenfield airport
    2024The Sela Tunnel opens, easing the route to Tawang

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

    This profile is compiled from Census 2011, the Arunachal Pradesh budget (via PRS), MoSPI and ministry sources. If you find an inaccuracy or have a better source, tell us and we'll review and correct it.

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