Chief Ministers - National Portal of India

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served for the most terms (9).

[3] Twelve incumbents belong to the Bharatiya Janata Party, three to the
Indian National Congress and two to the Aam Aadmi Party. No other party has more than one chief
minister in office.

List of chief ministers


Took office
State Name[4] Portrait
(tenure length)
Party[a] Alliance Ministry Ref

YSR
Andhra Y. S. Jagan 30 May 2019 [5]
Congress None Reddy
Pradesh Mohan Reddy (4 years, 305 days)
Party

Arunachal 17 July 2016 [6]


Pema Khandu Khandu IV
Pradesh (7 years, 257 days)

Bharatiya
Janata
Party

Himanta Biswa 10 May 2021 [7]


Assam Sarma
Sarma (2 years, 325 days)

NDA

22 February 2015 Janata Dal Nitish Kumar [3]


Bihar Nitish Kumar
(9 years, 37 days) (United) IX

Bharatiya
13 December 2023 [8]
Chhattisgarh Vishnudeo Sai Janata Sai
(108 days)
Party

14 February 2015 Aam Aadmi


Delhi[b] Arvind Kejriwal
(9 years, 45 days) Party
INDIA Kejriwal III [9]

Bharatiya NDA
Janata
Party
Pramod 19 March 2019 [10]
Goa Sawant II
Sawant (5 years, 11 days)

Bhupendrabhai 13 September 2021 [11]


Gujarat Patel II
Patel (2 years, 199 days)
Took office
State Name[4] Portrait
(tenure length) Party[a] Alliance Ministry Ref

Nayab Singh 12 March 2024 [12]


Haryana Saini
Saini (18 days)

Indian
Himachal Sukhvinder 11 December 2022 [13]
National INDIA Sukhu
Pradesh Singh Sukhu (1 year, 110 days)
Congress

Jammu and Vacant


19 June 2018 [14]
(President N/A N/A N/A
Kashmir[b] rule)
(5 years, 285 days)

Jharkhand
Champai 2 February 2024 [15]
Jharkhand Mukti Champai
Soren (57 days)
Morcha

Indian
20 May 2023 Siddaramaiah [16]
Karnataka Siddaramaiah National
(315 days) II
Congress INDIA

Communist
Pinarayi 25 May 2016 Party of [17]
Kerala Vijayan II
Vijayan (7 years, 310 days) India
(Marxist)

NDA

Bharatiya
Madhya 13 December 2023 [18]
Mohan Yadav Janata Yadav
Pradesh (108 days)
Party

30 June 2022 [19]


Maharashtra Eknath Shinde Shiv Sena Shinde
(1 year, 274 days)

Bharatiya
15 March 2017 [20]
Manipur N. Biren Singh Janata Singh II
(7 years, 15 days)
Party
Took office
State Name[4] Portrait
(tenure length) Party[a] Alliance Ministry Ref

National
Conrad 6 March 2018 [21]
Meghalaya People's Sangma II
Sangma (6 years, 24 days)
Party

Zoram
8 December 2023 [22]
Mizoram Lalduhoma People's None Lalduhoma
(113 days)
Movement

Nationalist
8 March 2018 Democratic [23]
Nagaland Neiphiu Rio NDA Rio V
(6 years, 22 days) Progressive
Party

Naveen 5 March 2000 Biju Janata [24]


Odisha None Patnaik V
Patnaik (24 years, 25 days) Dal

All India
N. 7 May 2021 Rangaswamy
Puducherry[b] N.R. NDA [25]
Rangaswamy (2 years, 328 days) IV
Congress

Bhagwant 16 March 2022 Aam Aadmi [26]


Punjab INDIA Mann
Singh Mann (2 years, 14 days) Party

Bharatiya
Bhajan Lal 15 December 2023 [27]
Rajasthan Janata Sharma
Sharma (106 days)
Party

NDA

Sikkim
Prem Singh 27 May 2019 [28]
Sikkim Krantikari Tamang
Tamang (4 years, 308 days)
Morcha

INDIA

Dravida
7 May 2021 [29]
Tamil Nadu M. K. Stalin Munnetra Stalin
(2 years, 328 days)
Kazhagam
Took office
State Name[4] Portrait
(tenure length) Party[a] Alliance Ministry Ref

Indian
Revanth 7 December 2023
Telangana National Reddy
Reddy (114 days)
Congress

15 May 2022 [30]


Tripura Manik Saha Saha II
(1 year, 320 days)

Uttar Yogi 19 March 2017 Bharatiya [31]


Janata NDA Adityanath II
Pradesh Adityanath (7 years, 11 days)
Party

Pushkar Singh 4 July 2021 [32]


Uttarakhand Dhami II
Dhami (2 years, 270 days)

All India
Mamata 20 May 2011 [33]
West Bengal Trinamool INDIA Banerjee III
Banerjee (12 years, 315 days)
Congress

See also
List of current Indian deputy chief ministers
List of current Indian governors
List of current Indian chief justices
List of current Indian legislative speakers and chairpersons
List of current Indian opposition leaders
List of prime ministers of India

Notes
a. Only the chief minister's party is indicated. He/she may head a complex coalition of several parties
and independents; those parties are not listed here.
b. Although Delhi, Jammu and Kashmir and Puducherry each have an elected legislature and a council
of ministers (headed by the chief minister), they are officially classified as union territories.

References
1. Durga Das Basu (1960). Introduction to the Constitution of India (20 ed.). Nagpur, India: LexisNexis
Butterworths Wadhwa. p. 241, 245. ISBN 978-81-8038-559-9.

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