Understanding India’s milk price map
India is the largest milk producer in the world (~230 million tonnes per year), but prices vary dramatically across states. A crossbred cow in Karnataka may fetch ₹38/L at procurement (thanks to Nandini’s subsidy and strong cooperative). The same cow in Bihar may get only ₹28/L. That is a 35% price gap for identical milk.
Why the gap?
- Cooperative strength: States with strong, well-managed dairy cooperatives (Gujarat-Amul, Karnataka-Nandini, Tamil Nadu-Aavin, Punjab-Verka) pay higher procurement rates. Where cooperatives are weak (UP, Bihar, WB), farmers are at the mercy of private traders.
- Breed composition: States with more high-yielding crossbred cows (Punjab, Haryana, southern states) can support higher per-litre procurement. States with more indigenous desi cows pay less per litre but the milk is sometimes sold at a premium for A2.
- Processing capacity: States with strong milk processing industries (Gujarat, Maharashtra, Punjab) have more demand for raw milk and better prices. States that are net importers of processed dairy (Bihar, Odisha, North-East) have lower procurement rates.
- Government subsidies: Some state governments add a direct incentive (Karnataka adds ₹5/L on cow milk; Maharashtra adds ₹3-5/L in some districts) to support farmers.
What the numbers mean for different people
- Farmers: If your cooperative is paying much less than the average for your region, consider switching to another cooperative or direct-to-customer sales.
- Urban buyers: Your city’s retail price is a function of distribution cost + cooperative margin + profit, not raw milk quality. A brand charging ₹10/L more isn’t necessarily 10% better milk.
- Dairy startups: States with a big procurement-retail gap (~₹18-20/L) are the best markets — there is room for a direct-to-consumer brand to squeeze the middle.
- Policy makers: The lowest-procurement states (Bihar, WB, Jharkhand, Odisha) are the ones where a strong cooperative investment can have the biggest impact on farmer incomes.
Disclaimer: All prices are indicative annual averages based on publicly reported state cooperative rate cards and news reports for 2024-25. They vary month-to-month by season, FAT-SNF quality and local market conditions. Always verify with your local cooperative or dairy before making business decisions.