Bangalore To Be Pothole-Free In 2 Months: Here's The Plan

Written By: Kailash Jha
Published: September 18, 2025 at 12:06 PMUpdated: September 18, 2025 at 12:06 PM
bangalore pothole-free 2 months plan featured

Bengaluru residents may finally see relief from years of dodging potholes. Karnataka Deputy Chief Minister DK Shivakumar has set November as the deadline for contractors to complete citywide repairs. The government has allocated fresh funds and promised strict penalties for missed deadlines.

Why The Deadline Was Set

massive pothole on bengaluru road

The announcement came after BlackBuck CEO Rajesh Yabaji said his company would move out of the city, citing poor roads and long commutes for employees.

His comments struck a nerve in the corporate community and pushed the government to act. Industry bodies have since demanded a transparent roadmap to improve road quality and transport.

rajesh yabaji ceo blackbuck

Citizens, for long, have been protesting poor roads in the city, especially in far flung localities that have sprung up over the past 10-20 years. IT professionals in a locality called Gunjur even took to fixing potholes on their own after enduring civic apathy for years.

How The Work Will Be Funded

The state has earmarked ₹1,100 crore for road development. Each of the 14 major constituencies will get ₹50 crore, while others will receive ₹25 crore each.

A separate project will blacktop 182 roads covering 349 kilometres at a cost of ₹694 crore. Contractors have been warned that delays could mean penalties and blacklisting.

Bengaluru has also seen many roads getting white-topped. White-topping refers to concretization of roads, and this is said to be a long-term fix for potholes as concrete roads are more resistant to damage than regular tar (bitumen) based roads.

Who Will Oversee The Repairs

bangalore road potholes

Responsibility now rests with the newly formed Greater Bengaluru Authority, which replaced the BBMP in September 2025. The city has been split into five smaller corporations to improve accountability.

Officials like Bengaluru Central City Commissioner Rajendra Cholan are already carrying out inspections, identifying damaged roads, footpaths and waste “black spots.”

Multiple agencies, including BESCOM, BWSSB, BMTC and BMRCL, will now work under a single coordinating body. This aims to prevent the jurisdictional confusion that previously slowed repairs. Special monitoring teams will upload photos of completed work to a central dashboard for public tracking.

What The Plan Covers

Guidelines require that repaired roads be properly asphalted so potholes do not return after rain. Water stagnation must be prevented, and utility-related damage must be fixed jointly with agencies like BWSSB. The plan goes beyond patchwork fixes, focusing on permanent solutions.

What’s At Stake

bengaluru bbmp pothole app

For Bengaluru, the issue is not just daily traffic but also its reputation as India’s technology hub. Poor infrastructure has already prompted relocation threats from companies, while states like Andhra Pradesh are keen to attract frustrated firms.

The next two months will decide whether Bengaluru can deliver on the promise of smoother roads. For now, commuters continue to navigate broken asphalt while waiting to see if political deadlines can finally translate into lasting results.