Iranian capital relocation
Iranian capital relocation refers to a 2025 proposal issued by Masoud Pezeshkian to the Iranian government that began discussing changing the capital city from Tehran to Makran and Chabahar. This decision, aimed at addressing Tehran’s overpopulation, water scarcity, power shortages, and other ecological pressures, was officially declared by government spokeswoman Fatemeh Mohajerani on January 8, 2025. The government has formed two councils to examine the feasibility of the move and develop a sea-based economy in the Makran region.
It is expected to cost between $77 and $100 billion US Dollars to complete.
In April 2025, the Deputy Minister of Roads and Urban Development announced the start of studies on 27 zones identified for the possible creation of coastal settlements in southern Iran, saying, "It is not yet clear how many new cities will be created in these 27 zones, and the consultants must announce what population these zones can accommodate."
Background
Since 1796, Tehran has been serving as the capital of Iran, under the Qajar dynasty that designated it as the center of political authority. They moved the capital from Mashhad that served as a political capital, as the Safavids had picked Isfahan to be their capital in 1598.The idea of moving the capital has been discussed periodically since the Islamic Revolution in 1979 but was previously abandoned due to economic constraints and logistical challenges.
The official authorities seriously considered the project after the 2003 Bam earthquake, which killed tens of thousands of people. Seismologists cited in 2009 warned that Tehran sits on at least 100 fault lines—including one nearly long—and that many buildings would not survive a major earthquake.
The current administration under President Masoud Pezeshkian is revisiting the proposal, citing strategic and economic benefits for the move. However, critics have raised concerns about the enormous financial and logistical demands associated with such a relocation.
The move is intended to shift the country’s economic and political center closer to the sea, enhancing Iran’s trade capabilities and reducing the burden on Tehran.
Makran is a largely undeveloped region, whose name means palm tree.
Timeline
By 2009, Tehran's infrastructure had been strained by rapid population growth, with the metropolitan area estimated at about 12 million residents, up from about 250,000 at the start of the 20th century.In November 2009 Supreme Leader Khamenei proposed moving the capital from Tehran.
In 2017, the Expediency Discernment Council approved changing the capital.
In summer 2024, Pezeshkian proposed to move the capital to resolve various issues. He made a trip to southern cities in January 2025.
In July 2025, Pezeshkian warned that unless water consumption was curbed, reservoirs supplying Tehran could run dry by September or October. In October 2025, he said Iran had "no choice" but to relocate the capital, citing Tehran's over-expansion, inadequate water supplies and land subsidence, and linking the proposal to directing development toward the country's southern coastline and maritime access. In November 2025, he said the government would have to begin rationing water in Tehran if rainfall did not arrive by December, and warned that residents might have to evacuate the city if rationing proved insufficient and supplies ran out.
Proposed alternative locations
The 2013 parliamentary proposal to explore relocating the capital did not name any candidate sites and instead left the selection to a study council, which was envisaged to spend two years evaluating alternatives. Subsequent discussion has included both purpose-built capitals and existing cities, and no relocation site has been finalised.In January 2025, officials said the government was studying relocation to the southern Makran coast, including areas around the port city of Chabahar on the Gulf of Oman. The area has been described as a largely undeveloped coastal region spanning parts of Sistan and Baluchestan province and Hormozgan province. Concerns have also been raised that water scarcity and climate change could limit large-scale development in Makran.
In 2009, Bahram Akasheh, a seismologist and dean of the faculty of basic sciences at Tehran Azad University, suggested building a purpose-built capital in the area between Qom and Delijan, describing it as a region that had not experienced an earthquake for 2,000 years.
Other locations that have been mentioned at various times as potential alternatives to Tehran include Shiraz, Isfahan, Hamadan, Semnan, Pardis, Bandar Abbas on the Persian Gulf, and Kashan.