Expressways of India


The [median strip|]expressways of India are access-controlled toll highways featuring divided carriageways, engineered to support high-speed vehicular movement and to accommodate heavy loads. They constitute the highest class of road infrastructure in the Indian road network. As of December 2024, the total length of expressways in India was, with under construction.
A central reservation or median separates the traffic moving in opposite directions on expressways. Entry and exits are permitted only through grade separated interchanges. In contrast, National highways may or may not have a median and may lack full access-control. Additionally, some highways constructed by State Governments, which may be fully or partially access-controlled, are designated or named as expressways by the respective State authorities.
Fully opened in April 2002, Mumbai–Pune Expressway was India's first six-lane, access-controlled, inter-city tolled expressway. Spanning between Mumbai and Pune, within the state of Maharashtra, it set the benchmark for future expressway development in the country. Since then, expressway construction has significantly accelerated, particularly under the Bharatmala project and other infrastructure programmes both national and regional.
As of 2024, the longest expressway in India is the partially-opened Delhi–Mumbai Expressway, spanning, which was inaugurated on 18 December 2024. The widest expressway is the DelhiGurgaon section of the Dwarka Expressway, featuring 16 lanes, which was also opened in 2024.

History

Pre-independence

While major roads in the Indian subcontinent existed as early as 29th Century BCE in the Indus Valley, the long Grand Trunk Road built by the Mauryans during 4th century BCE and later maintained by others, is one of the earliest examples of highest class road infrastructure in India. In 1934, Indian Roads Congress was formed to overlook development and research of roads in India and envisioned to achieve a road density of 16 km per 100 km2 of land pre-independence. It was not until in 1995 when National Highways Authority of India was established as an autonomous body to develop, maintain and manage India's road network through National Highways. NHAI would later build and operate various expressways in the country.

Early expressways

In 1990, Government of Maharashtra appointed RITES to conduct a feasibility study for toll-based expressway between Mumbai and Pune, marking it as the first such initiative to construct an expressway in India. Four years later, RITES submitted its report and the project was estimated to cost. In March 1997, Maharashtra State Road Development Corporation undertook the construction of the expressway on a Build–operate–transfer model that allowed the state government to collect tolls for 30 years. At the end of the same year, after all environmental and forest clearances, the construction on the corridor commenced with first sections opening in 2000. In April 2002, India's first expressway was flagged to be fully operational, with an estimated construction cost of, which paved the way for more such expressways across the country.
On 24 January 2001, the eight-lane long DND Flyway between Delhi and Noida was operationalised, becoming the first urban expressway in India. Following Mumbai-Pune, Ahmedabad–Vadodara Expressway was then opened between the cities of Ahmedabad and Vadodara in Gujarat on 16 August 2004. While this expressway was operationalised two years later, it was designated as National Expressway 1 back in 1986 by the Government of India.
In 2009, with the advent of new expressway infrastructures coming up across India, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways was preparing to set-up National Expressways Authority of India to be in-charge of the construction and maintenance of expressways, however, the Ministry did not proceed with the creation of NEAI for unspecified reasons and NHAI continued to remain in-charge.

Bharatmala pariyojana

Prior to being subsumed under Bharatmala Pariyojana, the government of India had launched National Highways Development Project in 1998 as a seven-step flagship project to construct highest class roads in India and to upgrade the existing ones. The phase-4 of which included the development of of expressways at an indicative cost of. In 2017, under Bharatmala about km of corridors had been identified for development of new expressways, of which were taken up under phase-1 of the project.
In the 2010s, the states of Maharashtra and Uttar Pradesh took keen interest in investing in expressways through dedicated expressway corporations of MSRDC and UPEIDA respectively. While Maharashtra led by MSRDC completed its second expressway with long Mumbai–Nagpur Expressway in June 2025, Uttar Pradesh had built four new expressways namely; Bundelkhand, Purvanchal, Agra–Lucknow and Yamuna expressways by the turn of early 2020s. On 21 May 2015, in a first for military aviation and expressway infrastructure in India, the Indian Air Force's Dassault Mirage 2000 successfully landed on the Yamuna Expressway near Mathura in a mock-drill to evaluate the utility of using highways and expressways for emergency landings by military aircraft.
In 2024, the government of India presented an ambitious 'Vision 2047' plan envisioning the construction of up to of access-controlled highways and expressways, with Indians gaining access to the expressways at a distance of from any point in the country. The ministry of road transport and highways had also been finalising new guidelines to improve and standardise infrastructure along the already-developed highways with wayside amenities. Satellite-based tolling was also proposed to be started on 10-15 stretches in the same year.

Designation

Expressway categories

Expressways in India are designated into three main categories:National Expressways : Managed by NHAI under the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways, these are the medium to long-distance expressways which connect the major cities of India. Delhi–Mumbai Expressway, designated as National Expressway-4 is one such example of a National Expressway.Economic Corridors : Also managed by NHAI under MoRTH, these expressways are being built across various Industrial corridors of India. Amritsar–Jamnagar Expressway, designated as Economic Corridor-3 is an example of Industrial expressway.State Expressways : These are the regional expressways undertaken by respective state governments to connect the cities within a state. Mumbai–Nagpur Expressway undertaken by Maharashtra state-government's MSRDC is an example for regional expressway undertaken by the Maharashtra state government.Urban expressways: Additionally some urban governments and municipalities have also constructed expressways within or near urban areas to facilitate decongestion and faster movement within cities. DND Flyway between Delhi and Noida is an example for toll-free urban expressway.Bypass expressways: Bypass expressways are constructed to divert the through-traffic, away from urban areas and city centres. They reduce urban pollution and improve travel speed. Chennai Bypass Road is an example that is built to bypass Chennai.Spur expressways: Spur expressways in India are short corridors that branch off from a main expressway to connect important cities, towns, industrial zones or border areas, thus enhancing the regional connectivity. The long NakodarAmritsar spur section which branches off from the Delhi–Katra Expressway is an example.

Greenfield and Brownfield expressways

Greenfield Expressways in India are new expressways that are built on new alignments to facilitate economy of the areas they pass through. These newly built expressways allow for speeds up to and typically have space reserved between the carriages to allow for a future expansion. Delhi–Mumbai Expressway is an example which is being built with eight-lanes and a reserved space in the median to allow for future expansion of up to twelve lanes. While Brownfield Expressways in India backed by 'Brownfield National Highway Project' are a series of projects undertaken to widen/re-develop existing national highways that have high traffic demand. The upgradation usually involves expansion of lanes from four to six, such as NH-709A.

Design standards

Access

Access-control on Indian expressways offers uninterrupted high-speed travel and safety. It is mainly achieved through fencing, Grade separation with over-passes and under-passes, barriers or medians and with additional dedicated service roads for local traffic. Fully access-controlled expressways do not allow access from side roads, villages or properties but only via inter-changes. Partially access-controlled expressways allow access at some at-grade junctions and minor road crossings may exist. Non access-controlled roads are conventional highways that have a mix of local and through traffic without any entry restrictions.

Carriageways

All Indian expressways have dual carriageways, one for each direction, separated by a
median
. Each carriageway typically has at least two lanes, with three to four lanes also being common. Most Greenfield expressways have a reserved space between the carriages for future expansion in number of lanes. Some expressways utilise concrete or metal beam crash barriers for safety. Paved shoulders or emergency lanes also exist beside each carriageway to support during the event of accident. Service lanes on each direction are often provided outside the fenced area for local traffic.
The Indian Roads Congress has specified guidelines for designing access-controlled highways with its IRC:SP:99-2013 standard. It specifies a standard lane width of with paved shoulders having a width of and unpaved shoulders having width.

Interchanges

Inter-changes are junctions that connect expressway with other roads, highways or other expressways without interrupting the flow of traffic. They improve safety by eliminating right-angle collisions. Indian expressways have various interchanges designed for suitability. System interchanges—such as cloverleaf, three-way, trumpet connect with other national or state highways. Service interchanges—such as Single Point Diamond Interchange are used for connecting smaller roads.
The design of inter-changes for Indian expressways and highways are governed by IRC:SP:99-2013 and Ministry of Road Transport and Highways guidelines. While Cloverleaf interchanges require at least 20-30 acres of land, directional flyovers require less. The inter-change designs include acceleration/deceleration lanes for safe merging.

Speed

High-speed travel is a key feature on Indian expressways unlike conventional highways where speeds are low due to local traffic and cattle interruptions. The Ministry of Road Transport and Highways has set speed limits based on road geometry and vehicle type. Some Greenfield expressways are designed for speeds up to but are legally capped at for safety, with some expressways capped as low as. For heavy vehicles such as buses and trucks, it is usually capped at. The minimum designed speed on ramps on inter-changes per IRC is.
Expressway typeMax enforced limitDesign speed
Greenfield Expressways
Brownfield Expressways
Urban Expressways

Infrastructure

Tolls

Expressways in India excluding some urban ones are tolled. They are implemented to recover cost of construction, maintenance and operations, and are primarily managed by NHAI under MoRTH. The tolls are levied based on vehicle category, type of expressway and distance travelled. They form a great source of revenue for funding the expanding expressway network in India. Only designated interchanges allow entry and exit into the tolls. Rates of tolls are revised every year on April 1, based on the Wholesale price index to adjust for inflation.

FASTag

FASTag is an Electronic toll collection system operated in India by NHAI under MoRTH. It uses Radio-frequency identification technology to enable automatic deduction of toll charges at toll plazas on Indian expressways, allowing for vehicles to pass without stopping for toll transactions.
The FASTag system is based on the National Electronic Toll Collection programme developed by the National Payments Corporation of India as a part of India's efforts to digitise highway infrastructure and reduce congestion on toll plazas. It was launched in 2014 as a pilot project on the Ahmedabad–Mumbai section of Golden Quadrilateral highway. From 15 February 2021, fastag became mandatory for all four-wheeled vehicles on national highways.

Wayside amenities

Offered by NHAI under MoRTH, Wayside Amenities are dedicated rest and service facilities located along Indian expressways and other national highways to improve road travel comfort, safety, and logistics. They offer rest, food, fuel, charging stations and similar services to both passengers and freight vehicles. The help in reducing driver fatigue, supporting logistics movement and in promoting highway tourism. They are typically located at intervals of along expressways. In June 2025, NHAI announced an ambitious plan of establishing over 1000 WSAs over a period of five years under Public–private partnership. The WSAs in the plan include setting up of fuel stations and EV charging points, food courts, dhabas and restaurants, convenience stores, medical and childcare rooms, promotional spaces for local artisans, drone landing facilities and helipads at larger sites.

Financing

The financing of Indian expressways is achieved through a combination of public funding, private investment, multilateral lending and via tolls. Ministry of Road Transport and Highways sets policy and budget allocations while National Highways Authority of India is responsible for implementation and collection of tolls. The private sector entities participate through various Public–private partnership models. A significant amount of funding for expressways comes from central government allocations, especially under Bharatmala Pariyojana. In the 2023-24 Union budget of India, MoRTH was allocated, of which a large share was dedicated for expressways and economic corridor developments. In 2024–25, NHAI earned over in toll revenue, with projections of by 2030 through FASTag and monetisation of roads.

National expressways

Operational national expressways

The following list contains operational national expressways built and operated by National Highways Authority of India.
ExpresswaySignTerminusLocaleLengthLanesTypeStatusOpening
Ahmedabad–VadodaraJashodha Nagar, Ahmedabad – Dumad, VadodaraGujarat4Intrastate16 August 2004
Amritsar–JamnagarEC-3Tibba, KapurthalaJamnagarPunjab, Haryana, Rajasthan and Gujarat6Inter-state economic corridor1 December 2025
Bengaluru–ChennaiHosakoteSriperumbudurKarnataka, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu4Inter-state1 June 2026
Bengaluru–MysuruKumbalgodu, Bengaluru Urban districtHale Kesare, MysuruKarnataka6Intrastate brownfield12 March 2023
Delhi–DehradunDelhi – DehradunDelhi, Uttar Pradesh and Uttarakhand6Inter-state1 December 2025
Delhi–FaridabadBadarpur, Delhi – Sector 37, FaridabadDelhi NCR6Urban brownfield29 November 2010
Delhi–GurgaonManesar, Gurgaon – Arjun Vihar, DelhiDelhi NCR6–8Urban brownfield23 January 2008
Delhi–MeerutNizamuddin Bridge, New DelhiPartapur, MeerutDelhi and Uttar Pradesh14Inter-state1 April 2021
Delhi–MumbaiSohna EC, DelhiJNPT, MumbaiDelhi, Haryana, Rajasthan, Madhya Pradesh, Gujarat and Maharashtra8Inter-state1 October 2025
Delhi–PanipatDelhiPanipatDelhi NCR8Inter-state brownfield20 June 2023
DND–KMPNH-148NADND Flyway, Delhi – KMP, Nuh districtDelhi, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh6Inter-state2026
Durgapur ExpresswayDankuniDurgapurWest Bengal154 km6Intrastate brownfield2025
KonaHastings, KolkataNH 16, Nibra, HowrahWest Bengal11 km6Urban brownfield3 December 2026
Raipur–BilaspurTatibandh, Bilaspur district – Tatibandh, RaipurChhattisgarh4–6Intrastate brownfield1 May 2019
Trans-Haryana (Ambala–Narnaul)Ghangheri, Kurukshetra district – Surana, Mahendragarh districtHaryana6Intrastate1 August 2022
Mumbai-NashikNashikThaneMaharashtra4-6Intrastate2009

Under-construction national expressways

ExpresswaySignTerminusLocaleLengthLanesTypeConstruction beganOpening
Ahmedabad–DholeraSarkhej, Ahmedabad – Adhelai, Bhavnagar districtGujarat4–6Intrastate20212026
Amas–DarbhangaAmas, Gaya , Patna, DarbhangaBihar4–6Intrastate20222026
Ambala-ShamliSadopur, Ambala district – Gogwan Jalalpur, Shamli districtHaryana and Uttar Pradesh6Inter-state20232026
Awadh (Kanpur–Lucknow)Azad Chauraha, Kanpur – Shaheed Path, LucknowUttar Pradesh6Intrastate20222026
Bengaluru–VijayawadaBengaluruVijaywadaKarnataka, Andhra Pradesh6Inter-state20232027
Chennai Port–MaduravoyalChennai PortMaduravoyalTamil Nadu6Urban20232027
Delhi–JaipurKherki Dhaula Toll, Gurgaon – Chandwaji, JaipurDelhi, Haryana and Rajasthan4Inter-state20252027
Delhi–KatraBahadurgarh border, Delhi – KatraDelhi, Haryana, Punjab, Jammu and Kashmir4Inter-state202131 December 2025
Durg–ArangTendesara, Rajnandgaon district – Mahanadi Bridge, ArangChhattisgarh6Intrastate202230 June 2026
Faridabad–GhaziabadGreater Faridabad, Faridabad – Rahul Vihar, GhaziabadUttar Pradesh and Haryana6Inter-state20252027
Ghaziabad-Kanpur ExpresswayGhaziabadKanpurUttar Pradesh6Intrastate20252026
Hyderabad–IndoreHyderabadIndoreTelangana, Maharashtra and Madhya Pradesh4Inter-state brownfield20242025
Jaipur–BandikuiNE-4CJaipurBandikuiRajasthan4Intrastate spur20221 July 2025
Ludhiana–AjmerEC-8LudhianaAjmerPunjab, Haryana and Rajasthan6Inter-state economic corridor2025TBD
Nagpur–VijayawadaNagpurVijaywadaMaharashtra, Telangana and Andhra Pradesh4Inter-state economic corridor20232027
Paniyala–BarodamevPaniyala Mod, Kotputli – Barodamev, AlwarHaryana and Rajasthan6Inter-state economic corridor20242026
Raipur–DhanbadEC-7Dharsiwa, Raipur districtDhanbadChhattisgarh and Jharkhand4Inter-state economic corridor20232026
Raipur–HyderabadPatan, RaipurHyderabadChhattisgarh, Maharashtra and Telangana6Inter-state20232025
Raipur–VisakhapatnamAbhanpur, Raipur districtVisakhapatnam Port, VisakhapatnamChhattisgarh, Odisha and Andhra Pradesh6Inter-state economic corridor20222025
Surat–ChennaiSurat districtChennai districtGujarat, Maharashtra, Karnataka, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Tamil Nadu6Inter-state20232026
Urban Extension Road-IINH-344MAlipurMahipalpurDelhi NCR6Urban20212025
Varanasi–KolkataNH-319BVaranasi Ring Road, Chandauli district – Sarisha, Diamond HarbourUttar Pradesh, Bihar, Jharkhand, West Bengal6Inter-state20242027
Gorakhpur–SiliguriGorakhpur - SiliguriUttar Pradesh, Bihar, West Bengal519 km 4Inter-state20252028
Kharagpur–MorgramNH - 116AKharagpurMorgramWest Bengal4Intrastate20252028

Proposed national expressways

ExpresswayTerminusLocaleLengthLanesTypeProposed in
Bhopal–IndoreKalan, Bhopal – Karnawad, Indore districtMadhya Pradesh6Intrastate2025
Chambal (Kota–Etawah)Seemalya, Kota district – Nanawa, Etawah districtRajasthan, Madhya Pradesh and Uttar Pradesh6Inter-state2017
Haldia–RaxaulHaldia – Mehsi, RaxaulWest Bengal, Jharkhand and Bihar6Inter-state2022
Kharagpur–VisakhapatnamKharagpurVisakhapatnamWest Bengal, Odisha and Andhra Pradesh6Inter-state2025
Ludhiana–AjmerLudhianaAjmerPunjab Haryana and Rajasthan6Inter-state2019
Nagpur–BengaluruNagpurBengaluru Rural districtMaharashtra, Telangana, Andhra Pradesh and Karnataka8Inter-state2025
NarmadaAmarkantakAlirajpurMadhya Pradesh8Intrastate2020
Palakkad–KozhikodeMarutharode, Palakkad districtPantheeramkavu, Kozhikode districtKerala4Intrastate2025
Panipat–DabwaliPanipat district – Dabwali, Sirsa districtHaryana4Intrastate2025
Pune–BengaluruPuneBengaluru rural districtMaharashtra and Karnataka8Inter-state2022
Ranchi–JamshedpurRanchi districtJamshedpurJharkhand4Intrastate brownfield2025
Thiruvananthapuram–AngamalyPulimath, Thiruvananthapuram districtAngamaly, Ernakulam districtKerala6Intrastate2023

Bypass expressways

Operational bypass expressways

Bypassing cityExpresswaySignTerminalsLocaleLengthLanesOwnerStatusOpening
BengaluruSatellite Town RingDobbaspet, Bengaluru Rural districtHosurKarnataka and Tamil Nadu4–6NHAIDecember 2025
ChennaiChennai BypassPuzhal, ChennaiPerungalathur, ChennaiTamil Nadu6NHAI2010
DelhiEastern PeripheralKundli, Sonipat – Dholgarh, PalwalHaryana and Uttar Pradesh6NHAI27 May 2018
DelhiWestern PeripheralKundli, Sonipat – Dholgarh, PalwalHaryana6HSIIDC19 November 2019
GurgaonDwarka ExpresswayMahipalpur, Delhi – Kherli Daula, GurgaonDelhi and Haryana8NHAI11 March 2024
HyderabadOuter RingGachibowliNarsingi, Ranga Reddy districtTelangana8GHMC15 July 2016
KolkataBelghoria ExpresswayDakshineswar, KolkataNSCBIA, KolkataWest Bengal4NHAI2008
LucknowLucknow Outer RingBakshi Ka TalabUttar Pradesh8NHAIMarch 2024
LudhianaLudhiana Elevated CorridorOctroi post – Samrala RoundaboutPunjab4NHAIJanuary 2024
Mumbai and ThaneMumbai Trans-harbourSewri, South MumbaiChirle, Navi MumbaiMumbai MR6MMRDA12 January 2024
NashikNashik FreewayPathardi – AdgaonMaharashtra6NHAI14 June 2013
PanipatPanipat Elevated CorridorSewah – Sector-18Haryana6Panipat Elevated Corridor Limited 16 July 2008
PrayagrajPrayagraj BypassKokhraj, Prayagraj – Handia, PrayagrajUttar Pradesh4NHAI2009
PrayagrajPrayagraj Ring RoadDandupur – SahasauUttar Pradesh4NHAI18 June 2026
VaranasiVaranasi Ring RoadRakhuana – BarhuliUttar Pradesh4NHAI2025

Under-construction bypass expressways

Bypassing cityExpresswaySignTerminalsLocaleLengthLanesOwnerConstruction beganOpening
KanpurKanpur Outer RingMandhanaUttar Pradesh6NHAI20242027
PuneInner Ring RoadMaharashtra6PMRDA20252028
PuneOuter Ring RoadMaharashtra8MSRDC20252028
Ambala and KuraliAmbala-Kurali ExpresswayPunjab8National Highways Authority of India20242026

Proposed bypass expressways

Bypassing cityExpresswaySignTerminalsLocaleLengthLanesOwnerProposed in
AmaravatiAmaravati Outer RingGuntur districtKrishna districtAndhra Pradesh6NHAI2015
PatnaPatna Outer RingVaishali districtSaran districtBihar6NHAI2018
ThiruvananthapuramThiruvananthapuram OAGCNH-886VizhinjamNavaikulamKerala6NHAI2020.

Expressways operated by state

The following list consists expressways of India, built and operated by their respective state governments, rather than NHAI.
StatesExpresswaysLength operational
Bihar1
Chhattisgarh1
Haryana1
Maharashtra7
Punjab1
Uttar Pradesh5
West Bengal1