New Delhi. Friday, 29 May 2026
India’s road infrastructure is shifting gears into higher financing efficiency. As part of the central government’s National Monetization Pipeline (NMP), the National Highways Authority of India (NHAI) has officially finalized a tentative list of 17 critical highway projects earmarked for asset monetization during the financial year 2026-27 (FY27).
With a total combined length of 1,692.5 kilometers, this ambitious initiative targets a massive revenue generation of nearly ₹35,000 crore. By unlocking value from operational public roads, the government aims to continuously fuel its next-generation network of expressways and bridges without over-relying on the taxpayer budget.
What is Highway Monetization?
For everyday commuters, it is important to know that the government is not selling off the highways. Asset monetization simply means leasing the operations, maintenance, and toll-collection rights of successfully completed, income-generating roads to institutional investors and private entities for a fixed block of time (typically 20 to 30 years). The physical ownership of the land and roads stays strictly with the state.
High-Value Corridors Spreading Across 9 States
The 17 selected highway stretches act as vital life support systems for inter-state logistics and freight movement. Bidders and global infrastructure funds are expected to show robust interest because these corridors boast mature, highly predictable traffic volumes.
The assets are strategically spread across nine major states:
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North & Central: Haryana, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan
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East: Bihar, Jharkhand
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West & South: Maharashtra, Karnataka, Tamil Nadu, Telangana
Key High-Traffic Stretches in the Pipeline
While the complete 17-project list is hosted on the official NHAI portal, some of the most prominent operational stretches include:
| Highway Stretch | State | Length (Approx.) |
| NH-9: Delhi-Haryana Border to Rohtak | Haryana | 52.0 km |
| NH-20: Hazaribagh–Barhi–Koderma Section | Jharkhand | 68.8 km |
| NH-38: Trichy–Thuvarankurichi–Madurai Section | Tamil Nadu | 124.8 km |
| NH-344: UP-Haryana Border to Panchkula | UP / Haryana | Over 40.0 km |
| NH-52: Hisar to Dabwali | Haryana | High-Volume Logistics |
The Financial Engines: TOT vs. InvIT Models
To bring in private capital safely and transparently, NHAI utilizes two highly successful and internationally recognized investment models:
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Toll-Operate-Transfer (TOT): Private developers pay a one-time, lump-sum upfront fee to NHAI. In return, they get the exclusive right to operate the highway and collect toll revenue over a multi-decade concession period.
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Infrastructure Investment Trusts (InvIT): Think of this like a mutual fund but for massive infrastructure. It pools smaller capital contributions from domestic retail investors and international institutions (like pension funds) to buy stakes in operational road assets, delivering regular dividend payouts from toll revenues.
Crucial Exclusion for FY27: To help investors build clear financial strategies, the Ministry of Road Transport and Highways clarified that this 1,692.5 km pipeline excludes any assets proposed to be managed by the newly self-sponsored Raajmarg Infra Investment Trust (RIIT) during FY27.
Learning from FY26 Performance
Setting a higher target for FY27 is a confident move by the NHAI, building on lessons learned from the previous fiscal cycle. During FY26, the authority target stood at ₹29,000 crore but missed the mark by a narrow margin of roughly ₹1,000 crore, ultimately bringing in close to ₹28,000–₹29,000 crore.
With asset lists published well in advance for the upcoming cycle, international bidders have ample runway to perform due diligence, ensuring smoother bidding wars and zero delays in capital mobilization.
Why This Matters for the Indian Economy
The ripple effects of this monetization framework reach far beyond financial balance sheets:
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Lower Logistics Costs: Better-maintained roads mean lower fuel consumption and faster turnaround times for cargo trucks, aligning with India’s National Logistics Policy.
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Self-Sustaining Development Cycle: Every rupee generated from these mature roads goes right back into a dedicated fund used exclusively to build fresh infrastructure—like the ongoing phases of the Bharatmala project or state-of-the-art mountain tunnels.
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Operational Excellence: Private concessionaires bring advanced tolling technologies (like next-gen automated FASTag tracking) and higher maintenance standards, making road travel smoother and safer for the average passenger.
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