2000 – 2013
Consolidation
Gauge conversion, a freight-led financial turnaround and the first private container trains — but modest investment.
Ministry of Railways · 2000 – 2026
The world's 4th-largest rail network has been transformed since 2014: capex up to ₹2.65 lakh crore, the broad-gauge network ~99.6% electrified, and a wave of new trains, freight corridors, safety tech and station rebuilds. (City metros & the Namo Bharat RRTS are on the separate India Metro & Urban Rail page.)
A log of key changes & implementations · 2000 → 2026
The Big Picture
From slow consolidation, to an investment-and-speed push, to modernisation at scale.
2000 – 2013
Gauge conversion, a freight-led financial turnaround and the first private container trains — but modest investment.
2014 – 2019
Capex climbs steeply, the electrification mission kicks off, Vande Bharat launches and the bullet train is founded.
2020 – 2026
Freight corridors, the Kavach safety system, ~99.6% electrification, station rebuilds and record capex.
Year by Year
The key things implemented each year, tagged by category, with the government of the day. The line fills as you scroll.
Reference Log
Every milestone from the timeline, with its category.
| Year | Change implemented | Category |
|---|
Flagship Projects
The marquee programmes reshaping how India travels and moves goods.
Trains in Service
India runs everything from high-speed-ready trains to humble passenger locals. The premier categories and their top speeds:
| Train | Top speed | Type / notes |
|---|---|---|
| Vande Bharat Express | 160 km/h | Flagship semi-high-speed; chair-car (2019) + sleeper (2025); self-propelled; 130+ services |
| Gatimaan Express | 160 km/h | India's first 160 km/h train (2016); Delhi–Jhansi |
| Shatabdi Express | ~150 km/h | Fast AC day intercity, return same day (since 1988) |
| Rajdhani Express | ~140 km/h | Premier fully-AC trains linking state capitals to Delhi (since 1969) |
| Duronto Express | ~140 km/h | Long-distance, (near) non-stop point-to-point (since 2009) |
| Tejas Express | ~130 km/h | Premium; first private-operated train (2019) |
| Amrit Bharat Express | ~130 km/h | Affordable push-pull long-distance (2024) |
| Humsafar / Garib Rath | ~110–130 km/h | Fully-AC economy trains |
| Bullet train (MAHSR) | 320 km/h | High-speed rail, Mumbai–Ahmedabad — under construction |
By the Numbers
One of the world's biggest rail systems — and one of its largest employers.
Money · Safety · Green
How the railways pays for itself, how safe it has become, and where it's headed on emissions.
Accidents · Lives · Experience
Train accidents have fallen sharply — but most railway deaths happen off the trains, on the tracks. And what is the journey actually like for passengers?
| Year | Accident | Lives lost (approx.) |
|---|---|---|
| 1981 | Bagmati River, Bihar — train blown/derailed off a bridge into the river (India's worst ever) | ~800+ |
| 1995 | Firozabad, UP — Purushottam Express rams the stationary Kalindi Express | ~358 |
| 1999 | Gaisal, Assam — Brahmaputra Mail collides head-on with the Awadh-Assam Express | ~285 |
| 1998 | Khanna, Punjab — Sealdah–Jammu Tawi Express hits derailed coaches of the Golden Temple Mail | ~212 |
| 2023 | Balasore, Odisha — three-train collision/derailment; the deadliest in decades | ~296 |
Selected worst accidents (not exhaustive). Approximate tolls cross-checked across reports. Source: Wikipedia / NCRB / press.
This page is compiled from Ministry of Railways / PIB, Union Budget and Economic Survey sources and updated periodically. If something's off or missing, tell us and we'll review it.