Telangana Municipal Voter List Reveals 52.43 Lakh Electors for 118 Local Bodies

The Telangana State Election Commission has published the final voter list for 118 municipalities and five municipal corporations, revealing a total electorate of 52.43 lakh voters. Nizamabad Municipal Corporation has the highest number of voters at 3.48 lakh, while the smallest municipality is Amarachinta with just 9,147 electors. Elections for these urban local bodies, whose terms ended in July 2025, are likely to be held next month. The commission is currently focusing on finalizing ward reservations before issuing the official notification.

Key Points: Telangana Voter List for 118 Municipalities, 5 Corporations Published

  • 52.43 lakh voters mapped
  • 118 municipalities & 5 corporations
  • Nizamabad has highest voters
  • Elections likely next month
2 min read

Telangana Election Commission publishes voter list for 118 municipalities, 5 corporations

Telangana SEC publishes final voter list for 118 municipalities and 5 corporations, totaling 52.43 lakh voters. Elections likely next month.

"The total number of voters is 52,43,023, comprising 25,62,369 men, 26,80,014 women and 640 others. - State Election Commission"

Hyderabad, Jan 13

There are 52.43 lakh voters in 118 municipalities and five municipal corporations in Telangana, reveals the final voter list published by the State Election Commission on Tuesday.

The municipalities and corporations have 2,996 wards. The total number of voters is 52,43,023, comprising 25,62,369 men, 26,80,014 women and 640 others.

Stepping up the arrangements for the upcoming municipal elections, the Election Commission has mapped and confirmed municipality-wise voters.

The five municipal corporations are Karimnagar, Nizamabad, Mahabubnagar, Mancherial and Ramagundam.

Nizamabad Municipal Corporation has the highest number of voters (3,48,051) with 60 wards. Karimnagar Municipal Corporation, comprising 66 wards, has 3,40,580 voters, while Mahabubnagar Municipal Corporation has 1,97,841 voters in 60 wards.

There are 1,81,778 voters in Mancherial Municipal Corporation, while Ramagundam Municipal Corporation has 1,83,049 voters in 60 wards.

Adilabad municipality has the highest number of voters at 1,43,655, while Amarachinta municipality in Wanaparthy district is the smallest municipality with just 9,147 voters.

The elections for the urban local bodies are likely to be held next month. The process has been taken up for those municipalities and corporations whose term ended in July 2025.

The Election Commission has not mapped and confirmed voters in the Greater Hyderabad Municipal Corporation (GHMC) and Khammam and Warangal corporations, as their terms will be completed later.

GHMC's tenure ends in February, while the terms of Khammam and Warangal corporations end in April.

State Election Commissioner Rani Kumudini recently held a meeting with representatives of recognised political parties as part of the preparations for the municipal polls.

The notification for the municipal elections will be issued after deciding the reservation for various sections. The reservation of wards and divisions in municipalities and corporations concerned will be decided on the basis of population.

As the reservation has become a crucial issue, the officials are focusing on it ahead of the release of the notification.

The polling station list and polling station-wise photo electoral rolls will be published on January 16 at Collectors', Municipal Commissioners' Offices, DEAs, RDO and Tahsildars' offices.

- IANS

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Reader Comments

R
Rohit P
Over 52 lakh voters! That's a significant number. The focus should now be on ensuring these urban local body elections are free and fair. The EC must keep a strict watch on code violations.
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Arjun K
Interesting data. Nizamabad has the highest voters among corporations. I appreciate the breakdown by gender as well. The '640 others' category is a small but important inclusion for inclusivity.
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Sarah B
As someone who recently moved to Hyderabad for work, this is useful info. I'm in GHMC area, so my election is later. Good to see the process is systematic and planned in phases.
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Vikram M
The real challenge begins now with ward reservations. It often becomes a political tug-of-war. Hope the SEC stands firm and bases it purely on population data, not political pressure.
K
Kavya N
Municipal elections are so important for daily issues like water, roads, and waste management. Finally, women voters outnumber men! Hope we see more women candidates and winners this time. 👍
M
Michael C
The scale of Indian elections never ceases to amaze. Managing elections for nearly 3000 wards is a massive logistical task. Credit to the Election Commission for the detailed planning.

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