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Odisha

The land of Lord Jagannath and the Konark Sun Temple — the ancient kingdom of Kalinga on India's east coast, which gave the world the chariot festival and the classical Odissi dance. India's mineral powerhouse and a global model for surviving cyclones, home to ~4.2 crore people across 30 districts.

Capital Bhubaneswar · Largest city Bhubaneswar · Formed 1 April 1936

  • Jagannath of Puri & the Rath Yatra
  • Konark — the UNESCO Sun Temple
  • Holds ~98% of India's chromite
  • Chilika — Asia's largest brackish lagoon
  • A world model for cyclone preparedness
  • The home of Odissi dance
Tap a district to highlight it

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

The Basics

Odisha at a Glance

A state on India's east coast, on the Bay of Bengal — the ancient land of Kalinga, rich in temples and minerals, forests and a long shoreline.

  • Bhubaneswar Capital and largest city — with Cuttack, the state's "twin cities"
  • 1 April 1936 Formed — India's first province created on a linguistic basis; observed as Utkal Dibasa
  • 155,707 km² Area — India's 8th-largest state
  • ~480 km coast A long Bay of Bengal coastline (recently re-measured higher)
  • 30 Districts · 3 divisions — see the interactive map above
  • Odia Official language — one of India's six designated Classical Languages (2014)
  • 147 seats Legislative Assembly (unicameral); 21 Lok Sabha seats
  • Borders West Bengal, Jharkhand, Chhattisgarh & Andhra Pradesh; the Bay of Bengal to the east
  • Rivers & lake The Mahanadi, Brahmani & Baitarani; and Chilika, Asia's largest brackish lagoon
  • Renamed 2011 "Orissa" became "Odisha", and "Oriya" became "Odia"
  • State symbols Animal: sambar · Bird: Indian roller · Tree: peepal · Flower: ashoka

People

Population & Society

A largely rural state with India's richest tribal diversity — and a high sex ratio. Census 2011 is the last full count, so current totals are projections.

  • 4.20 cr Population, 2011 (41,974,218) — India's 11th most populous; about 4.9 crore today (projected)
  • 14.0% Decadal growth, 2001–2011 — below the national average
  • 270 /km² Population density, 2011 — below the national average
  • 979 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011 — well above the national average
  • 72.9% Literacy rate, 2011
  • 16.7% Urbanisation — among India's lowest; a largely rural state
  • ~23% ST Scheduled Tribes; with ~17% Scheduled Castes, about two in five people are SC or ST
  • Most tribes India's greatest tribal diversity — 62 communities, including 13 particularly vulnerable groups (PVTGs)
  • Tribes The Kondh, Santal, Gond, Saora & Munda among them

Economy

India's Mineral Powerhouse

Odisha sits on a huge share of India's minerals, and that drives a fast-growing, industry-heavy economy — run, unusually, with one of the lowest debt burdens of any Indian state.

  • ₹10.6 L cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate, current prices) — growing faster than the national average
  • ~12% Nominal GSDP growth, 2025-26 (BE); real growth ~8%, above India's
  • ~₹2 lakh Per-capita GSDP (2024-25) — below the national average, but rising fast
  • ~13% Outstanding debt as % of GSDP — among India's lowest; a fiscally prudent state

What the economy is made of — share of GSVA (2025-26)

  • ~41% Industry — minerals, steel & aluminium; an unusually high share for an Indian state
  • ~39% Services — trade, transport & government
  • ~20% Agriculture & allied — the base of rural livelihoods

India's mineral storehouse

  • ~98% of India's chromite reserves are in Odisha — virtually the whole country's
  • ~60% of India's bauxite reserves — the largest of any state
  • Iron ore India's largest iron-ore reserves — and its largest producer
  • Coal & more About a quarter of India's coal reserves (after Jharkhand), plus manganese
  • Steel & aluminium Rourkela (India's first public-sector steel plant, 1959), NALCO & Vedanta
  • ~42% of India's mineral output by value — the country's leading mineral state
  • Minerals, fast growth, low debt: Odisha's mineral wealth and a steel-and-aluminium base give it one of India's most industrial economies, growing above the national rate while keeping its debt among the lowest of all states.
  • Figures here are the latest Odisha Budget and Economic Survey estimates (2025-26). The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25, so its Odisha figure is for that earlier year.

Agriculture & Fisheries

Rice, Fish & the Forests

Rice dominates Odisha's fields, fish its coast and lagoons — and a celebrated millets revival is bringing the old grains of its tribal hills back to the table.

  • Rice The dominant crop, on most of the cropped land — Odisha is a major rice producer
  • Pulses An unusually large share of the cropland goes to pulses
  • Fisheries India's 4th-largest fish producer — from the sea, the rivers and Chilika
  • Chilika Asia's largest brackish lagoon — a great prawn, crab & hilsa fishery
  • Millets Mission Odisha's flagship revival of ragi (mandia) across its tribal districts
  • GI produce Kandhamal turmeric, Koraput Kalajeera rice & the Similipal red-ant chutney
  • Odisha Rasagola The state's own GI-tagged version of the beloved sweet (2019)

Administrative

The 30 Districts

Odisha is organised into 30 districts across 3 revenue divisions, from the tribal highlands of Koraput to the temple town of Puri. Pick a district below and it will light up on the map above — district pages are coming next.

    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 Odisha Unique

    Temples, Wildlife & Resilience

    From a UNESCO sun temple and the seat of Jagannath to a turtle coast, a dolphin lagoon and a world-renowned way of weathering cyclones — a few things Odisha is known for.

    Temples & heritage

    • Jagannath, Puri One of Hinduism's four Char Dham — and the source of the English word "juggernaut"
    • Konark The 13th-century Sun Temple — a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1984), the "Black Pagoda"
    • Ekamra Bhubaneswar's ancient temple-city — the Lingaraja, and Udayagiri's Kharavela caves
    • Dhauli Where the Kalinga War turned Emperor Ashoka to Buddhism & non-violence

    Wildlife & resilience

    • Chilika Asia's largest brackish lagoon — and the world's single largest home of the Irrawaddy dolphin
    • Gahirmatha One of the world's largest olive-ridley turtle rookeries; with the crocodile mangroves of Bhitarkanika
    • Simlipal A tiger reserve and biosphere — famed for its rare melanistic (black) tigers
    • Cyclone-ready A globally praised, near-zero-casualty disaster-management model, built after the 1999 super cyclone

    Culture & Traditions

    Festivals, Dance & Crafts

    Odisha's culture flows from its temples — the great chariot festival of Puri, the temple-born Odissi dance, and crafts of cloth, appliqué and silver perfected over centuries.

    • Rath Yatra The Jagannath chariot festival of Puri — one of the world's grandest
    • Odissi One of India's classical dance forms — and among the oldest, born in Odisha's temples
    • More festivals Raja Parba, Cuttack's ancient maritime fair Bali Jatra & the Konark Dance Festival
    • Crafts Pattachitra scroll painting, Pipili appliqué & Cuttack's silver filigree (Tarakasi)
    • Sambalpuri The famed ikat (bandha) handloom of western Odisha
    • Cuisine Dalma, pakhala (water-soaked rice) & chhena poda, the "baked cheese" sweet

    Places to Visit

    Temples, Coast & Wild Country

    From a golden triangle of temples to a dolphin lagoon, turtle beaches, tiger forests and ancient Buddhist edicts — Odisha rewards every kind of traveller.

    • Golden Triangle Puri (Jagannath), Konark (the Sun Temple) & Bhubaneswar (the temple city)
    • Chilika Lake Boating among dolphins and vast flocks of migratory birds
    • Bhitarkanika Mangroves and saltwater crocodiles, beside the Gahirmatha turtle coast
    • Simlipal The tiger reserve and waterfalls of the Mayurbhanj forests
    • Dhauli Ashoka's rock edicts and the white Peace Pagoda above the Daya river
    • Udayagiri The ancient Jain rock-cut caves of Udayagiri & Khandagiri, near Bhubaneswar
    • Hirakud The great Mahanadi dam and its sprawling lake, near Sambalpur
    • Daringbadi The "Kashmir of Odisha" — a cool hill retreat in Kandhamal

    Modern Odisha

    Industry, Ports & a Smart City

    Odisha turns its minerals into metal, ships them from a leading port, and has built a smart capital — and, unusually, made itself the home of Indian hockey.

    • Paradip India's largest government major port by cargo (2024-25) — the first to cross 150 million tonnes
    • Aluminium hub Angul & Jharsuguda (NALCO & Vedanta) — India's largest aluminium output
    • Steel Rourkela (SAIL) and the Kalinganagar steel hub (Tata Steel)
    • Bhubaneswar A "temple city" turned smart city — with IIT, AIIMS, NISER & KIIT
    • Hockey state Odisha sponsors India's national hockey teams; Bhubaneswar & Rourkela host World Cups
    • Hirakud Dam One of the world's longest dams, on the Mahanadi (1957)

    Sea, Rail & Air

    Ports, Trains & Airports

    A long coast and a mineral economy make Odisha a major freight and maritime state, its ports and railways moving the iron, coal and aluminium of eastern India.

    • Ports Paradip, with the private ports of Dhamra & Gopalpur along the Bay of Bengal
    • Railways East Coast Railway (HQ Bhubaneswar) — a top mineral-freight network; with Vande Bharat links
    • NH-16 The coastal Kolkata–Chennai corridor runs the length of the state
    • Airports Biju Patnaik International (Bhubaneswar), with Jharsuguda & Rourkela
    • Twin cities Bhubaneswar & Cuttack — the transport and commercial core of the state
    • A maritime state Odisha's long seaboard makes it one of India's major cargo-handling states

    People & the Kingdom

    Icons of Odisha

    From the great kings of ancient Kalinga to the builders of modern Odisha and its artists and athletes — a few of the people who shaped the state.

    • Biju Patnaik Freedom fighter, daring aviator and Chief Minister — an Odisha legend
    • Naveen Patnaik Among India's longest-serving Chief Ministers, in office from 2000 to 2024
    • Madhusudan Das "Utkala Gouraba" — the father of modern Odisha and its linguistic state
    • Kharavela The great Kalinga emperor of the Hathigumpha inscription (1st century BCE)
    • Pankaj Charan Das The guru who brought Odissi from the temple to the modern stage
    • More The sand artist Sudarsan Pattnaik and the Olympic sprinter Dutee Chand

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Odisha

    From the bloody war that changed an emperor to a state of its own — a few milestones that shaped Odisha.

    Key milestones in the history of Odisha, from about 261 BCE to 2014.
    WhenMilestone
    c. 261 BCEThe Kalinga War — sickened by the bloodshed, Emperor Ashoka embraces Buddhism (Dhauli)
    c. 1st c. BCEKing Kharavela rules Kalinga; his deeds carved in the Hathigumpha inscription
    12th–13th c. CEThe Eastern Ganga kings build the Jagannath Temple at Puri
    c. 1250 CEThe Konark Sun Temple is built by Narasimhadeva I
    1568The last Gajapati king falls — the end of independent Odia rule
    1803The British conquer Odisha
    1866The Na'anka famine kills around a million people
    1 April 1936Odisha is formed as India's first province created on a linguistic basis
    1948The princely states merge into Odisha
    1999A super cyclone devastates the coast — prompting a new disaster-management model
    2011"Orissa" is renamed "Odisha"
    2014Odia is recognised as a Classical Language of India

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

    This profile is compiled from Census 2011, the Odisha budget (via PRS), the state Economic Survey, the Indian Bureau of Mines, UNESCO and IBEF sources. If you find an inaccuracy or have a better source, tell us and we'll review and correct it.

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