Largest Indian cities by GDP
Appearance
The following is a list of the top 50 cities in India by their gross domestic product (GDP) at and their contribution as % to their respective states.
The top 10 cities contribute about one of quarter of India's GDP.
The Below table shows top 50 cities based on GDP ( 2022-23 ).
S.no | City proper/metropolitan area | State(s) | Real GDP(2022-23) | Nominal GDP (2022-23) |
GDP(PPP)(2022-23)[1] | GDP Share as % of State |
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | National Capital Region ( NCR ) (Delhi NCT, Gurgaon, Faridabad, Noida, Greater Noida, Ghaziabad, Sonipat, Bahadurgarh) | Delhi NCT Haryana Uttar Pradesh |
₹869,833 crore (US$104.2 billion) | ₹1,468,368.48 crore (US$175.9 billion)[2][3][4] | US$727 billion | 34.28% |
2 | Mumbai metropolitan region ( MMR ) | Maharashtra | ₹767,162 crore (US$91.9 billion) | ₹1,216,705 crore (US$145.8 billion)[5] | US$602.4 billion | 34.23% |
3 | Bengaluru Metropolitan Region | Karnataka | ₹542,165 crore (US$65.0 billion) | ₹928,552 crore (US$111.3 billion)[6] | US$459.7 billion | 40.91% |
4 | Chennai metropolitan area | Tamil Nadu | ₹366,612.08 crore (US$43.9 billion) | ₹604,324.41 crore (US$72.4 billion) [7][8] | US$299.2 billion | 25.25% |
5 | Hyderabad metropolitan region | Telangana | ₹333,187.19 crore (US$39.9 billion) | ₹602,126.76 crore (US$72.1 billion)[9] | US$298.1 billion | 45.9% |
6 | Kolkata Metropolitan area (KMA) | West Bengal | ₹303,086 crore (US$36.3 billion) | ₹551,635.59 crore (US$66.1 billion)[10] | US$273.1 billion | 36.01% |
7 | Ahmedabad | Gujarat | ₹278,539.62 crore (US$33.4 billion) | ₹418,649.61 crore (US$50.2 billion)[11] | US$207.3 billion | 19% |
8 | Pune metropolitan Region | Maharastra | ₹231,292 crore (US$27.7 billion) | ₹376,293.6 crore (US$45.1 billion)[12] | US$186.3 billion | 10.32% |
9 | Surat | Gujarat | ₹153,929.79 crore (US$18.4 billion) | ₹231,359 crore (US$27.7 billion)[13] | US$114.6 billion | 10.5% |
10 | Visakhapatnam metropolitan region | Andhra Pradesh | ₹110,880 crore (US$13.3 billion) | ₹189,010.98 crore (US$22.6 billion)[14] | US$93.6 billion | 14.5% |
11 | Nagpur | Maharashtra | ₹111,611.56 crore (US$13.4 billion) | ₹181,665 crore (US$21.8 billion) | US$90 billion | 4.98% |
12 | Andhra Pradesh Capital Region | Andhra Pradesh | ₹99,409.05 crore (US$11.9 billion) | ₹169,458.12 crore (US$20.3 billion) | US$84 billion | 13% |
13 | Kochi | Kerala | ₹82,876.95 crore (US$9.9 billion) | ₹142,280.68 crore (US$17.0 billion) | US$70.5 billion | 13.9% |
14 | Coimbatore | Tamil Nadu | ₹84,647.46 crore (US$10.1 billion) | ₹139,533.13 crore (US$16.7 billion)[7][8] | US$69.1 billion | 5.83% |
15 | Indore | Madhya Pradesh | ₹134,618.88 crore (US$16.1 billion) | US$66.7 billion | ||
16 | Jaipur | Rajastan | ₹124,471.49 crore (US$14.9 billion) | US$61.7 billion | ||
17 | Ludhiana | Punjab | ₹118,454.2 crore (US$14.2 billion) | US$58.7 billion | ||
18 | Patna | Bihar | ₹113,828.6 crore (US$13.6 billion) | US$56.4 billion | ||
19 | Raipur | Chattisgarh | ₹111,455.76 crore (US$13.4 billion) | US$55.2 billion | ||
20 | Nashik | Maharastra | ₹107,655.6 crore (US$12.9 billion) | US$53.3 billion | ||
21 | Chandigarh(Including panchkula , Mohali , Zirakpur , kharar , Nayagaon , Derabassi , new chandigarh ) | Chandigarh | ₹106,675.43 crore (US$12.8 billion) | US$52.8 billion | 6.2% | |
22 | Thiruvananthapuram | Kerala | ₹58,431.23 crore (US$7.0 billion) | ₹100,313 crore (US$12.0 billion) | US$49.7 billion | 9.8% |
23 | Aurangabad | Maharastra | ₹98,804 crore (US$11.8 billion) | US$49 billion | ||
24 | Vadodara | Gujarat | ₹63,037.92 crore (US$7.6 billion) | ₹94,747.02 crore (US$11.4 billion) | US$47 billion | 4.3% |
25 | Thrissur | Kerala | ₹48,295.2 crore (US$5.8 billion) | ₹82,911.77 crore (US$9.9 billion) | US$41 billion | 8.1% |
26 | Mangaluru | Karnataka | ₹82,592.4 crore (US$9.9 billion) | US$40.9 billion | ||
27 | Lucknow | Uttar Pradesh | ₹45,819.23 crore (US$5.5 billion) | ₹79,030 crore (US$9.5 billion) | US$39.2 billion | 3.46% |
28 | Agra | Uttar Pradesh | ₹44,494.97 crore (US$5.3 billion) | ₹76,772 crore (US$9.2 billion) | US$38 billion | 3.36% |
29 | Prayagraj | Uttar Pradesh | ₹43,892.84 crore (US$5.3 billion) | ₹75,643 crore (US$9.1 billion) | US$37.5 billion | 3.31% |
30 | Kollam | Kerala | ₹33,985.51 crore (US$4.1 billion) | ₹58,345.32 crore (US$7.0 billion) | US$28.9 billion | 5.7% |
31 | Tiruppur | Tamil Nadu | ₹44,864.61 crore (US$5.4 billion) | ₹73,954.95 crore (US$8.9 billion)[8] [7] | US$36.7 billion | 3.09% |
32 | Malappuram | Kerala | ₹42,332.83 crore (US$5.1 billion) | ₹72,675.75 crore (US$8.7 billion) | US$36 billion | 7.1% |
33 | Kozhikode | Kerala | ₹53,661.33 crore (US$6.4 billion) | ₹92,124.18 crore (US$11.0 billion) | US$45.6 billion | 9% |
34 | Erode | Tamil nadu | ₹42,831.91 crore (US$5.1 billion) | ₹70,506.27 crore (US$8.4 billion)[7][8] | US$34.9 billion | 2.95% |
35 | Meerut | Uttar Pradesh | ₹39,992.5 crore (US$4.8 billion) | ₹68,869 crore (US$8.3 billion) | US$34.1 billion | 3.02% |
36 | Kanpur | Uttar Pradesh | ₹39,330.38 crore (US$4.7 billion) | ₹67,740 crore (US$8.1 billion) | US$33.6 billion | 2.97% |
37 | Kannur | Kerala | ₹30,408.09 crore (US$3.6 billion) | ₹52,203.71 crore (US$6.3 billion) | US$25.9 billion | 5.1% |
38 | Rajkot | Gujarat | ₹48,866.6 crore (US$5.9 billion) | ₹66,102.57 crore (US$7.9 billion) | US$32.8 billion | 3% |
39 | Tiruchirapalli | Tamil Nadu | ₹37,895.35 crore (US$4.5 billion) | ₹62,439.15 crore (US$7.5 billion) [8] [7] | US$31 billion | 2.61% |
40 | Mysuru | Karnataka | ₹62,120.52 crore (US$7.4 billion) | US$30.8 billion | ||
41 | Madurai | Tamil Nadu | ₹36,007.84 crore (US$4.3 billion) | ₹59,327.42 crore (US$7.1 billion) [8] [7] | US$29.4 billion | 2.48% |
42 | Bhopal | Madhya Pradesh | ₹59,207.28 crore (US$7.1 billion) | US$29.3 billion | ||
43 | Ranchi | Jharkhand | ₹53,214.3 crore (US$6.4 billion) | US$26.4 billion | ||
44 | Kottayam | Kerala | ₹17,887.11 crore (US$2.1 billion) | ₹30,708.06 crore (US$3.7 billion) | US$15.2 billion | 3% |
45 | Hubbali-Dharwad | Karnataka | ₹44,999.85 crore (US$5.4 billion) | US$22.3 billion | ||
46 | Jamshedpur | Jharkhand | ₹43,822.91 crore (US$5.3 billion) | US$21.7 billion | ||
47 | Moradabad | Uttar Pradesh | ₹22,247.49 crore (US$2.7 billion) | ₹38,386 crore (US$4.6 billion) | US$19 billion | 1.68% |
48 | Varanasi | Uttar Pradesh | ₹21,585.36 crore (US$2.6 billion) | ₹37,257 crore (US$4.5 billion) | US$18.5 billion | 1.63% |
49 | Salem | Tamil Nadu | ₹21,488.55 crore (US$2.6 billion) | ₹35,354.55 crore (US$4.2 billion)[8] [7] | US$17.5 billion | 1.48% |
50 | Bhubaneshwar | Odisha | ₹30,382.4 crore (US$3.6 billion) | US$15 billion |
References
[edit]- ^ "IMF PPP Exchange rates". www.imf.org. Retrieved 2024-11-21.
{{cite web}}
: CS1 maint: url-status (link) - ^ Govt, Uttar Pradesh. "Economic Snapshot|Official Website of Invest UP, Government of Uttar Pradesh, India". invest.up.gov.in. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ "Haryana Budget Analysis 2022-23". PRS Legislative Research. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ "Govt of Delhi". delhi.gov.in. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ Maharashtra, Finance Department (2024). Maharashtra economic survey (PDF). Govt of Maharashtra.
- ^ "Karnataka Socio-Economic Survey 2023-24". Govt of Karnataka.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Tamilnadu GSDP estimates 2023-24" (PDF). TamilNadu government portal.
- ^ a b c d e f g "Regional Growth Pattern" (PDF). Tamilnadu state planning commission.
- ^ Telangana, Finance Department (31 March 2024). Telangana Economic Surveh (PDF). Telangana, India: Govt of Telangana.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: date and year (link) - ^ "West Bengal GDDP Estimates" (PDF). NitiAayog.
- ^ "ICRISAT-District Level Data". data.icrisat.org. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ "Maharashtra economic survey 2023-24". Govt of Maharashtra.
- ^ "ICRISAT-District Level Data". data.icrisat.org. Retrieved 2024-10-31.
- ^ "District Domestic Product". AP Finance.