Jul 20, 2025
10
mins read
Swachh Survekshan is an annual flagship cleanliness survey conducted by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) under the Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban). Launched in 2016, it has grown into the world’s largest urban sanitation assessment, covering thousands of cities and engaging millions of citizens. The latest (9th) edition, covering April 2024 to March 2025, involved 4,589 Urban Local Bodies (ULBs) and nearly 14 crore citizen participants making it the largest urban cleanliness audit to date.
Why in the News?
The President of India conferred Swachh Survekshan Awards 2024-25 (9th edition) hosted by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA) in New Delhi.
Revamped Survey Framework:
Swachh Survekshan 2024-25 introduced major reforms to ensure fairness and inclusivity.
Cities are now classified in five population categories (Very Small, Small, Medium, Big, Million-Plus), enabling equitable comparison across similarly sized urban areas.
Super Swachh League:
A new Super Swachh League (SSL) was created for consistently high-performing cities.
Top cities that had placed in the top three for at least two of the last three years were exempted from normal rankings and assessed on aspirational criteria. Indore, Surat, and Navi Mumbai again topped this league as the cleanest cities in the country allowing newer cities to vie for top spots.

Awards and Recognition:
A total of 78 national awards were conferred across various categories, including cities, cantonments, and institutions.
Notable recognitions included 34 Promising Swachh Shehars (state-level top performers) and special awards for initiatives like waste management during the Kumbh Mela Prominent awards included Best Ganga Town (Prayagraj) and Best Cantonment Board (Secunderabad).
Assessment Parameters:
Cities were evaluated on a comprehensive set of 10 parameters
covering visible cleanliness,
waste segregation and processing,
sanitation infrastructure,
water and wastewater management,
mechanized faecal sludge handling,
advocacy for cleanliness,
institutional effectiveness,
sanitation worker welfare,
and citizen feedback.
A new scoring scale (12,500 points, up from 9,500) was adopted, reflecting additional metrics like cleanliness of roads, drains, and public spaces.
Accelerated Dumpsite Remediation:
An Accelerated Dumpsite Remediation Program was announced to fast-track the clean-up of legacy landfills and expand scientific waste processing capacity.
This one-year initiative (from August 15, 2025) aims to clear toxic dumpsites and unlock urban land for development, directly supporting the garbage-free city vision.
Citizen Participation and 3R Principle:
The survey emphasized citizen feedback and the principles of Reduce, Reuse, Recycle (3R).
The President praised cities for integrating the 3R mantra, transforming waste into wealth and generating green jobs.
Initiatives like school-level cleanliness assessments and zero-waste colonies were highlighted to inculcate clean habits in youth and communities.
The integration of citizen surveys ensures that residents' voices influence city rankings, promoting accountability.
Super Swachh League cities (2024–25) by population category. Indore, Surat, and Navi Mumbai lead the million-plus category, and other top performers in each category are shown. For example, Noida and Chandigarh appear in the 3–10 lakh category.
Table of content
Super Swachh League Cities – Million Plus Cities:
Indore, Surat, and Navi Mumbai continued their cleanest cities of India dominance.
They secured the first, second, and third ranks respectively in the elite Super Swachh League, Vijayawada and other cities closely followed.
These cities have maintained top hygiene standards for several consecutive years
City Classification Based on Population:
For the first time, city classification based on population was introduced, enabling fair comparison and targeted improvement across Urban Local Bodies (ULBs). Cities were ranked in 5 categories:
Very Small Cities (< 20,000)
Small Cities (20,000 – 50,000)
Medium Cities (50,000 – 3 lakh)
Big Cities (3 – 10 lakh)
Million Plus Cities (> 10 lakh)

Big Cities (3–10 lakh pop):
Mira-Bhayandar (MH), Bilaspur (CG), and Jamshedpur (JH) led the big-city category. Ahmedabad (GJ), Bhopal (MP), and Lucknow (UP) were recognized as the new generation of top clean cities in this segment
This shows that both metropolitan and smaller urban centers are achieving high cleanliness standards.
Medium and Small Cities:
Dewas (MP), Karhad (MH), and Karnal (HR) topped the medium-city category, while Panaji (Goa), Aska (OD), and Kumhari (CG) led the smaller-city category.
In the very small category (<20,000), Bilha (CG), Chikiti (OD), and Shahganj (UP) were top performers.
Notably, Panchgani (MH) and Ambikapur (CG) earned SSL status in the smallest and medium categories respectively, demonstrating statewide progress.
Special Awards for Exemplary Initiatives:
Prayagraj (UP) was honored as the Best Ganga Town for its waste management during the Kumbh Mela, and Secunderabad Cantonment was awarded Cleanest Cantonment Board Visakhapatnam, Jabalpur, and Gorakhpur received Safaimitra Surakshit Shehar awards for prioritizing sanitation worker welfare.
These recognitions highlight cities that have implemented targeted cleanliness drives and citizen engagement.
Cleanest cities of India by population category (2024–25). Ahmedabad, Bhopal, and Lucknow led the above-10-lakh category, while Dewas, Karhad, and Karnal led the 50k–3 lakh category, and Panaji, Aska, and Kumhari led the 20k–50k category.
Scaling Peer Learning:
The Swachh City Partnership leverages top cities as mentors. For example, a clean city like Indore will advise a less-performing city, sharing best practices.
This ‘Each One Clean One’ approach is expected to uplift underperformers nationwide.
Accelerating Infrastructure:
Continued focus will be on modernizing waste systems. The upcoming one-year Dumpsite Remediation program (from Aug 15, 2025) will target legacy landfills, creating space for green projects.
Cities will also adopt circular economy technologies (e.g. waste-to-energy plants, recycling hubs) to increase processing capacity.
Citizen Engagement and Behaviour Change:
Sustaining gains requires active public involvement.
Educational campaigns, stricter enforcement of segregation laws, and neighbourhood cleanliness drives will deepen the cleanliness culture.
Local bodies plan to tighten plastic bans and involve communities (such as self-help groups) in recycling, echoing the President’s call for traditional reduce-reuse practices
Policy and Innovation:
Cities are encouraged to continue innovating (smart bins, IoT waste monitoring, composting units, etc.) and refine strategies.
Future survey editions will update parameters to reflect emerging needs.
The healthy competition fostered by Swachh Survekshan will keep driving improvement, as recognition and rankings boost civic pride.
Launched on 2nd October 2014, the Swachh Bharat Mission is a nationwide cleanliness drive, divided into SBM-Gramin (under the Ministry of Jal Shakti) and SBM-Urban (under MoHUA), with funding support from the Swachh Bharat Kosh for CSR and philanthropic contributions.
Objective: The Swachh Bharat Mission’s initial goal was to make India Open Defecation Free (ODF) by 2nd October 2019, through large-scale construction of toilets and behavioral change campaigns.
Phase-II (SBM-Gramin) was launched in 2020–21 with the aim to achieve ODF Plus status by 2024–25 through solid and liquid waste management in rural areas.
SBM-Urban 2.0, introduced in 2021, focuses on garbage-free cities, faecal sludge and plastic waste management, greywater treatment, and capacity building to sustain urban sanitation outcomes.
Q1: What are the Swachh Survekshan 2024-25 Awards?
A: It is an annual urban cleanliness and sanitation survey under Swachh Bharat Mission (Urban), ranking cities on parameters like waste management, public toilets, and citizen feedback.
Q2: Who conducts Swachh Survekshan?
A: The survey is organized by the Ministry of Housing and Urban Affairs (MoHUA), with technical support from partners (such as the Quality Council of India) under the SBM-Urban framework.
Q3: What is the Super Swachh League and what are Super Swachh League cities?
A: A category created in 2024-25 to honour cities that consistently excel. Top performers (Indore, Surat, Navi Mumbai) enter this league and are evaluated on aspirational criteria. The new Super Swachh League (SSL) was created for consistently high-performing cities.
Q4: How are cities categorized in Swachh Survekshan?
A: Cities are grouped by population into five classes: Very Small (<20k), Small (20k–50k), Medium (50k–3 lakh), Big (3–10 lakh), and Million-Plus (>10 lakh). This ensures fair competition among similar cities.
Q5. Which is the cleanest city in India?
A. Indore has been declared India’s cleanest city for the eighth consecutive year in Swachh Survekshan 2024‑25, followed by Surat in second and Navi Mumbai in third place.
Swachh Survekshan 2025 (for the 2024–25 period) reaffirms India’s determined pursuit of clean cities. Through rigorous evaluation and public participation, it has helped transform urban sanitation. The recent results show that with strong governance, citizen involvement, and inter-city collaboration, a garbage-free, healthy India is within reach. The combined efforts of government agencies, local bodies, and citizens underscore a shared commitment to the Swachh Bharat vision.
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