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Census 2027 house-listing ends; Telangana household count likely to cross 1 cr, up 38% from 2011

Census 2027 house-listing ends;  Telangana household count likely to cross 1 cr, up 38% from 2011
Census 2027 house-listing ends; Telangana household count likely to cross 1 cr, up 38% from 2011
Hyderabad: Telangana’s house-listing and housing census exercise—the first phase of Census 2027—concluded on Tuesday, with the state’s household count expected to exceed about 1.15 crore, marking an increase of nearly 38% from the 83.6 lakh households recorded in Census 2011.The exercise was carried out by nearly 89,000 census personnel and supplemented by self-enumeration by more than five lakh residents.The Census operation began with a self-enumeration window from April 26 to May 10, followed by door-to-door house-listing and housing census activities from May 11 to June 9.“The exact number of households will be revealed later by the Registrar General and Census Commissioner of India. Naturally, the number of households has increased since the last Census,” official sources said.The projected household count is higher than the figures recorded in Telangana’s caste survey, which covered around 1.12 crore families. If the final Census count crosses 1.15 crore households, the state would have added nearly 31.5 lakh households since 2011 despite relatively modest population growth during the period.
The caste survey estimated Telangana’s population at around 3.7 crore and covered about 1.12 crore families, translating into an average family size of roughly 3.3 persons. In comparison, Census 2011, which was conducted in undivided (united) Andhra Pradesh, recorded a population of about 3.5 crore and 83.6 lakh households in Telangana region, resulting in an average household size of approximately 4.2 persons.Census definitions can significantly influence household numbers. A single Census house can contain multiple households, each defined as a group of persons who normally live together and share a common kitchen.Members of the same family living under one roof may be counted as separate households if they maintain separate kitchens. Conversely, unrelated individuals living together and sharing meals may be classified as a single household. A Census house, therefore, can contain one or several households.The Census also categorises households into normal households, institutional households—such as those in hostels, hotels, hospitals, old-age homes and prisons—and houseless households, comprising people living on pavements, railway platforms, under flyovers and in other open spaces.The rise in the number of households has important implications for housing, drinking water, electricity, sanitation and welfare planning. Govts increasingly have to provide services to a larger number of family units even when overall population growth remains moderate.The house-listing phase will form the foundation for the population enumeration exercise of Census 2027 and is expected to provide the clearest picture yet of Telangana’s demographic transformation since the state’s formation.

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About the AuthorSribala Vadlapatla

Sribala Vadlapatla is a Senior Assistant Editor with 15 years of experience at The Times of India and 30 years overall in mainstream and web journalism. She covers Telangana's political, economic, health, technological, and socio-cultural topics, and is deeply interested in policy, governance, emerging technologies, international affairs, economy and music.

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