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Mizoram

Mizoram is a hill state in India's far south-east, the "land of the Mizo." About 11 lakh people live across its forested ridges — one of India's least crowded yet most urbanised states, and among its most literate. Christianity is the faith of nearly nine in ten Mizos, and Mizo and English are the official languages.

Capital Aizawl · A state since 20 February 1987

  • Among India's most literate states
  • One of India's most urbanised states
  • Nearly 88% Christian
  • Article 371G protects Mizo law & land
  • Cheraw — the famous bamboo dance
  • The Mautam — famine on a 48-year bamboo cycle
Tap a district to highlight it

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

The Basics

Mizoram at a Glance

Mizoram is a small, hilly state tucked into India's far south-east, bordering both Myanmar and Bangladesh. Carved from Assam, it became a Union Territory in 1972 and India's 23rd state in 1987, and is governed with special protections under Article 371G.

  • Aizawl Capital and largest city — a town built along the hill ridges
  • 20 Feb 1987 Became India's 23rd state — a Union Territory from 1972
  • 21,081 km² Area — one of India's smaller states
  • 11 districts Eight at statehood; Hnahthial, Khawzawl and Saitual added in 2019
  • Mizo & English Official languages — Mizo is written in the Roman script
  • 40 seats Legislative Assembly — with 1 Lok Sabha and 1 Rajya Sabha seat
  • Borders Assam, Manipur and Tripura within India; Myanmar and Bangladesh abroad
  • Article 371G Special provisions protecting Mizo customary law, social practice and land
  • Phawngpui The "Blue Mountain" (2,157 m) — the state's highest peak
  • State symbols Animal: serow (Saza) · Bird: Mrs Hume's pheasant · Flower: Red Vanda orchid

People

Population & Society

Census 2011 is the last full count. Mizoram is overwhelmingly tribal and Christian, sparsely settled yet unusually urban, and among the most literate states in India. Figures below are Census 2011.

  • 10.97 lakh Population, 2011 (1,097,206) — one of India's least populous states
  • 23.5% Decadal growth, 2001–2011
  • 52 /km² Population density, 2011 — among India's lowest
  • 976 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011 (above the national average)
  • 91.6% Literacy rate, 2011 — second among states, after Kerala
  • 52% Urban population, 2011 — among the most urbanised states
  • ~94% Scheduled Tribes — the Mizo clans, with Chakma & Bru minorities
  • ~87% Christian Mostly Presbyterian & Baptist — Census 2011 (Buddhist ~9%, mainly the Chakma)

Economy

Bamboo, Jhum & the Hills

Mizoram is a small, hilly economy historically built on jhum farming and bamboo, and it leans on central support. Yet, unusually for the region, its income per head sits above the national average.

  • ₹36,089 cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate)
  • ~6% Nominal GSDP growth, 2025-26 (budget estimate)
  • ~₹2.32 lakh Per-capita income — above the national average
  • Services-led Services ~46%, industry ~33% and farming ~21% of the economy

Land & resources

  • Bamboo One of India's most bamboo-rich states — a huge share of its land is under bamboo
  • Jhum & NLUP Shifting cultivation, which the New Land Use Policy has tried to replace
  • Passion fruit India's largest passion-fruit producer; with mandarin oranges & anthuriums
  • Handloom The colourful Puan & Puanchei weave — Thenzawl is the "handloom town"
  • Centre-dependent: like other small north-eastern states, Mizoram relies heavily on central transfers, with a narrow own-revenue base.
  • Figures here are the latest Mizoram Budget estimates (via PRS) and the state Economic Survey. The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25.

Agriculture

Jhum, Chillies & the Mautam

Farming clings to the hillsides — terraces and jhum plots, prized chillies and grapes — all shadowed by the Mautam, the strange famine that arrives with the bamboo flower.

  • Mizo Chilli The fiery "Bird's Eye Chilli" (Hmarcha) — GI-tagged in 2021
  • The Mautam Every ~48 years the bamboo flowers, rats multiply and famine follows; the 1959 Mautam fed the Mizo political movement
  • Mizo Ginger The aromatic Thingpui & Thinglaidum — GI-tagged
  • Rice The staple, grown on terraces; Champhai is the "rice bowl"
  • Grapes & wine The vineyards of Hnahlan & Champhai — home of the "Zawlaidi" wine
  • Orchard & flowers Passion fruit, mandarin oranges and anthurium cut-flowers
  • Bamboo Woven, eaten and built with — central to Mizo life

Administrative

The Districts

Mizoram has 11 districts — eight at statehood, with Hnahthial, Khawzawl and Saitual added in 2019. The map shows the 10 that open boundary data covers. Select one 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; Saitual, the newest district (created 2019), is not yet on this open-data outline.

    What Makes Mizoram Unique

    Strengths, Heritage & Nature

    Mizoram's appeal is its green, quiet hills — among the most forested in the country — the Blue Mountain, flower valleys, tiger forests and a famously close-knit, honest society.

    Heritage & society

    • Solomon's Temple A vast modern church on the edge of Aizawl
    • Reiek A hilltop heritage village and viewpoint near Aizawl
    • Champhai The eastern "rice bowl" valley and vineyards on the Myanmar border
    • Nghah Loh Dawr The unmanned "honesty shops" where buyers pay into a box — a token of Mizo trust

    Nature

    • Phawngpui The "Blue Mountain" (2,157 m), the highest peak, in its own national park
    • Vantawng Falls The state's highest waterfall (~230 m), near Thenzawl
    • Dampa Mizoram's largest wildlife reserve — a tiger reserve on the Bangladesh border
    • Among India's greenest About 85% forest cover — the highest of any full Indian state (ISFR 2023)

    Culture & Traditions

    Cheraw, the Kut & Tlawmngaihna

    Mizo culture turns on the festivals of the farming year, the clack of bamboo poles in the Cheraw dance, the bright Puanchei cloth, and tlawmngaihna — the quiet ethic of selfless service.

    • Chapchar Kut The spring festival (March), the most loved — held before the jhum sowing
    • Pawl Kut & Mim Kut The winter harvest festival and the late-summer maize festival
    • Cheraw The bamboo dance, stepped between clapping poles; a 2010 Aizawl performance set a Guinness record with ~10,700 dancers
    • Puanchei The colourful handwoven wrap worn for festivals — GI-tagged in 2019
    • Tlawmngaihna The Mizo code of hospitality and selfless service to others
    • Mizo food Bai (a pork-and-vegetable one-pot), smoked pork (vawksa rep) and bamboo shoot

    Places to Visit

    Hills, Waterfalls & Aizawl

    From the ridge-top capital to the Blue Mountain, the flower valleys and the grape country of Champhai, Mizoram rewards the traveller who comes for green quiet.

    • Aizawl The ridge-top capital and its bustling Bara Bazar
    • Phawngpui The Blue Mountain and its national park, in the south
    • Vantawng Falls The state's tallest waterfall, near Thenzawl
    • Reiek The heritage village and viewpoint near Aizawl
    • Champhai Rice-bowl valley, vineyards and the Myanmar frontier
    • Lakes Tam Dil near Saitual; Palak, the state's largest lake, in the south
    • Hmuifang A forested hill resort south of Aizawl

    Rail, Road & Air

    Reaching the Hills

    Long among India's most isolated states, Mizoram's links are opening up fast — the capital reached the railway map only in 2025, and a sea route to Myanmar is taking shape.

    • Rail to Aizawl The Bairabi–Sairang line reached the capital in September 2025 — Mizoram's first railway to Aizawl
    • Lengpui Airport The state's only operational airport, near Aizawl — built by the state government
    • NH-6 The Aizawl–Silchar highway (the old NH-54) — the main road lifeline
    • Kaladan project A sea-and-river route linking south Mizoram (Zorinpui) to Sittwe port in Myanmar — under development
    • Mizoram University The state's central university at Aizawl (since 2001); NIT Mizoram too
    • Border trade The Zokhawthar land-customs post on the Myanmar frontier

    People

    Mizo Voices

    From the leader who turned an insurgency into a lasting peace to footballers and an Olympian, a few of the Mizos who have left a mark.

    • Laldenga Led the Mizo National Front and signed the 1986 peace accord; the state's first Chief Minister
    • The Mizo Accord The 1986 settlement — widely seen as one of India's most durable peace deals
    • Zoramthanga A former Chief Minister and long-time MNF leader
    • Lalduhoma A former IPS officer, now Chief Minister (since 2023)
    • Jeje Lalpekhlua One of India's leading footballers — Mizoram is football-mad
    • Lalremsiami The hockey forward who played at the Tokyo 2020 Olympics

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Mizoram

    From the Lushai Hills under British rule to a hard insurgency and a celebrated peace, a few of the milestones — told plainly.

    Key milestones in the history of Mizoram, from the 1870s to 2025.
    WhenMilestone
    1871–72A British expedition enters the Lushai Hills
    1890sThe Lushai Hills are annexed and administered under Assam
    1894Welsh missionaries Lorrain & Savidge arrive; the Mizo script and mass literacy follow
    1959The Mautam famine deepens Mizo grievances
    1961The Mizo National Front is formed under Laldenga
    1966The MNF declares independence; an uprising begins and the Indian Air Force carries out air operations over Aizawl. A two-decade insurgency follows
    1972Mizoram becomes a Union Territory, carved from Assam
    30 June 1986The Mizo Peace Accord is signed between the Government of India and the MNF
    20 February 1987Mizoram becomes India's 23rd state, with special protections under Article 371G
    2025The first train reaches Sairang, bringing the railway to Aizawl

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

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

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