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Rajasthan

India's largest state by area — a land of forts and palaces, of the golden Thar Desert and the ancient Aravalli hills. The realm of the Rajputs, of Jaipur the Pink City and Udaipur's lakes, of camel fairs and the Ghoomar dance — home to ~6.9 crore people.

Capital Jaipur · Largest city Jaipur · Formed 1 November 1956

  • India's largest state by area
  • Jaipur — the Pink City, a UNESCO site
  • Six hill forts on the UNESCO list
  • The Thar — India's great desert
  • India's leader in solar power
  • Land of Maharana Pratap & the Rajputs
Tap a district to highlight it

The 33 historic districts, from open data — a reference, not an official survey map. Rajasthan now has 41 districts (see below).

The Basics

Rajasthan at a Glance

India's largest state, in the country's north-west — a land of desert and hills, forts and palaces, on the border with Pakistan.

  • Jaipur Capital and largest city — the famous "Pink City"
  • 1 Nov 1956 Formed in its present shape; the celebrated Rajasthan Day is 30 March (from 1949)
  • 342,239 km² Area — India's largest state, about a tenth of the country
  • 41 districts Currently — after reorganisations in 2023–24; across 7 divisions
  • Hindi Official language; Rajasthani & its dialects (Marwari, Mewari, Dhundhari) widely spoken
  • 200 seats Legislative Assembly (unicameral); 25 Lok Sabha seats
  • Borders Pakistan to the west (over 1,000 km); and Punjab, Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, MP & Gujarat
  • Desert & hills The Thar (India's largest desert) and the Aravalli — one of the world's oldest mountain ranges
  • Rivers & canal The Chambal, Luni, Banas & Mahi; the Indira Gandhi Canal greens the Thar
  • Guru Shikhar The highest peak of the Aravallis (1,722 m), at Mount Abu
  • State symbols Animal: chinkara (camel for livestock) · Bird: godawan · Tree: khejri · Flower: rohida

People

Population & Society

A vast state with the lowest population density of any large state — its people spread thin across the desert. Census 2011 is the last full count, so current totals are projections.

  • 6.85 cr Population, 2011 (68,548,437) — India's 8th most populous; about 8.6 crore today (projected)
  • 21.3% Decadal growth, 2001–2011 — among India's higher rates
  • 200 /km² Population density, 2011 — the lowest among India's large states
  • 928 Sex ratio — females per 1,000 males, 2011 — below the national average
  • 66.1% Literacy rate, 2011 — with a wide male–female gap
  • 24.9% Urbanisation — a largely rural state
  • 3 cities Million-plus cities — Jaipur, Jodhpur & Kota
  • Tribal belt A large tribal population in the south — the Bhil & Meena communities
  • SC & ST ~18% Scheduled Castes and ~13% Scheduled Tribes (2011)

Economy

Minerals, Solar & a ₹20-Lakh-Crore Economy

One of India's larger economies — built on minerals, a booming solar industry and agriculture — though incomes per head remain below the national average and its debt burden is high.

  • ₹19.9 L cr GSDP 2025-26 (budget estimate, current prices) — India's ~7th-largest state economy
  • ~17% Nominal GSDP growth, 2025-26 (budget estimate)
  • Below average Per-capita income (~₹1.87 lakh, 2023-24) — below the national average
  • ~38% Outstanding debt as % of GSDP — a relatively high burden

What the economy is made of — share of GSVA (2024-25)

  • ~46% Services — trade, tourism, transport & government
  • ~27% Industry — minerals, cement, textiles & chemicals
  • ~27% Agriculture & allied — a high share, reflecting the rural base

Minerals & energy

  • #1 in solar India's largest installed solar capacity — around a third of the national total
  • Bhadla The Thar's vast solar park, near Jodhpur — among the world's largest
  • Zinc & lead India's main source — Hindustan Zinc (Udaipur), with the world's largest zinc mine at Rampura Agucha
  • Marble India's leading marble producer — Makrana's marble built the Taj Mahal
  • Gypsum & silver Most of India's gypsum and silver come from Rajasthan
  • 2nd in mining India's 2nd-largest mineral-producing state, mining some 57 minerals
  • Desert resources: the Thar's sun and the Aravalli's minerals give Rajasthan a distinctive economy — India's solar leader and a mining powerhouse — even as its income per head and its high debt remain challenges.
  • Figures here are the latest Rajasthan Budget estimates (2025-26). The India GDP page compares all states at FY2024-25, so its Rajasthan figure is for that earlier year.

Agriculture & Livestock

The Desert Farm

Despite its dry climate, Rajasthan is India's top producer of several crops — bajra, mustard and the world's guar — and the country's leading wool and camel state.

  • Bajra India's largest producer of pearl millet (bajra), the grain of the dry lands
  • Mustard India's largest producer of rapeseed-mustard — about half the country's crop
  • Guar The world's largest producer of guar (cluster bean) — its gum is used across industry worldwide
  • Wool & camels India's largest wool producer, and home to most of the country's camels
  • Spices A leading grower of cumin, coriander, fenugreek & fennel
  • Milk Among India's largest milk producers — second only to Uttar Pradesh
  • Indira Gandhi Canal One of India's longest canals — carrying Himalayan water across the Thar

Administrative

The Districts

Rajasthan's map has changed a lot lately: its 33 historic districts became 50 in 2023, then were trimmed to 41 in late 2024. The interactive map below uses the 33 historic districts in the open data — pick one to highlight it above.

    The map and this list share the same data. Clicking a district highlights it on the interactive map in the hero.

    What Makes Rajasthan Unique

    Forts, Desert & Heritage

    From a clutch of UNESCO hill forts and the Pink City to the great Thar, the ancient Aravallis and the marble that built the Taj — a few things Rajasthan is known for.

    World Heritage & forts

    • Hill Forts Six great forts on the UNESCO list (2013): Chittorgarh, Kumbhalgarh, Ranthambore, Amber, Jaisalmer & Gagron
    • Jaipur The walled Pink City — a UNESCO World Heritage Site (2019)
    • Keoladeo The Bharatpur bird sanctuary — a UNESCO World Heritage Site (1985)
    • Kumbhalgarh Its rampart is among the longest continuous walls in the world

    Desert, hills & resources

    • The Thar India's largest desert, spread across the state's west
    • Aravalli One of the world's oldest mountain ranges; Mount Abu is its only hill station
    • Tigers Ranthambore & Sariska — among India's most famous tiger reserves
    • Makrana The white marble of Makrana — used to build the Taj Mahal

    Culture & Traditions

    Fairs, Folk Arts & Food

    Rajasthan's culture is as colourful as its turbans — a great camel fair, swirling folk dances, desert musicians, and crafts of cloth, stone and silver.

    • Pushkar Fair One of the world's largest camel & livestock fairs, by the sacred Pushkar lake
    • Kalbelia The snake-charmers' dance — on UNESCO's heritage list (2010); alongside the Ghoomar
    • Folk music The Manganiyar & Langa musicians of the western desert
    • Crafts Jaipur's blue pottery, bandhani tie-dye, block printing (Sanganer & Bagru) & Kota Doria
    • Cuisine Dal baati churma, the fiery laal maas, ker sangri & the sweet ghevar
    • Coloured cities Pink Jaipur, blue Jodhpur, golden Jaisalmer & Udaipur of the lakes

    Places to Visit

    Palaces, Lakes & Dunes

    One of India's most-visited states — a circuit of royal cities, each with its own colour and fort, plus desert dunes, lake palaces and tiger country.

    • Jaipur The Pink City — Amber Fort, the City Palace, Hawa Mahal & Jantar Mantar
    • Udaipur The "City of Lakes", with its island Lake Palace
    • Jodhpur The Blue City beneath the mighty Mehrangarh Fort
    • Jaisalmer The Golden City and the dunes of the Thar Desert
    • Pushkar The sacred lake and one of India's very few Brahma temples
    • Mount Abu The hill station and the exquisite Dilwara Jain temples
    • Ranthambore Tiger safaris among the ruins of an old fort
    • Chittorgarh The great forts of Mewar — Chittorgarh & Kumbhalgarh

    Modern Rajasthan

    Solar, Oil & Industry

    The desert that draws tourists also powers the state — Rajasthan leads India in solar, pumps its largest onshore oil, and is building new refineries and industrial corridors.

    • Solar power India's solar leader — Bhadla, in the Thar, is one of the world's largest solar parks
    • Mangala Barmer's Mangala field — India's largest onshore oil field (Cairn / Vedanta)
    • Pachpadra A new HPCL refinery near Barmer — being commissioned in 2026
    • Jaipur A growing IT & startup hub; with industrial nodes along the Delhi–Mumbai corridor
    • Pokhran India's nuclear test range, in the Jaisalmer desert (1974 & 1998)
    • Zinc Hindustan Zinc (Udaipur) — among the world's largest zinc producers

    Road, Rail & Air

    Metro, Expressways & the Palace on Wheels

    The biggest stretch of India's longest expressway crosses Rajasthan, alongside a capital metro, a luxury heritage train and a network of airports.

    • Jaipur Metro The state's metro railway — its first line opened in 2015
    • Delhi–Mumbai India's longest expressway — its biggest single-state stretch runs through Rajasthan
    • Palace on Wheels The luxury heritage tourist train, touring the royal cities since 1982
    • Railways North Western Railway, headquartered at Jaipur
    • Airports Jaipur International, with Udaipur, Jodhpur & Kishangarh (Ajmer)
    • Amritsar–Jamnagar Half of this new expressway runs through Rajasthan's west

    People & the Rajputs

    Icons of Rajasthan

    Rajasthan's story is told in its warrior kings and saint-poets — the Rajputs who held the desert against empires, and the builders of its great cities.

    • Maharana Pratap The Mewar hero who defied the Mughals at Haldighati (1576)
    • Prithviraj Chauhan The Chauhan king of Ajmer and Delhi, of the Battles of Tarain (1191–92)
    • Sawai Jai Singh II The astronomer-king who founded the planned city of Jaipur in 1727
    • Mirabai The 16th-century Rajput saint-poet and devotee of Krishna
    • The Rajputs The warrior clans of Mewar, Marwar & Amber — and the jauhar of Chittor
    • Mohan Lal Sukhadia The long-serving Chief Minister who built modern Rajasthan

    Through the Ages

    A Short History of Rajasthan

    From an Indus Valley city to the land of the Rajput kingdoms and a state of its own — a few milestones that shaped Rajasthan.

    Key milestones in the history of Rajasthan, from about 2600 BCE to 2019.
    WhenMilestone
    c. 2600 BCEKalibangan, a great Indus Valley city, flourishes on the Ghaggar
    8th–11th c. CEThe Gurjara-Pratihara empire rules from Rajasthan over northern India
    1191–1192Prithviraj Chauhan and Muhammad of Ghor clash in the Battles of Tarain
    1303Alauddin Khalji's siege of Chittorgarh, and the first jauhar
    1568Akbar takes Chittorgarh after its last jauhar
    1576Maharana Pratap fights the Mughals at the Battle of Haldighati
    1727Sawai Jai Singh II founds the city of Jaipur
    1818The Rajput states sign treaties with the British (Rajputana)
    30 March 1949"Greater Rajasthan" is inaugurated — celebrated as Rajasthan Day
    1 Nov 1956Rajasthan takes its present form under the States Reorganisation Act
    2013The Hill Forts of Rajasthan join UNESCO's World Heritage list
    2019Jaipur, the Pink City, becomes a UNESCO World Heritage Site

    Spotted an error, or know this state well?

    This profile is compiled from Census 2011, the Rajasthan budget (via PRS), the state Economic Review, the Indian Bureau of Mines, MNRE, 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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