River tributaries in India form the lifeblood of the subcontinent\u2019s vast drainage network, feeding the great Himalayan and Peninsular river systems that sustain billions of people.
Tributaries \u2014 their names, parent rivers, origin points, and bank positions (left or right) \u2014 are a staple topic in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking, Railways, and all State PSC geography sections. This page gives you a complete, updated list of the most important river tributaries across India\u2019s major river systems, with exam-critical facts and memory tricks for confident revision.
⚡ Quick Facts
- The Ganga is fed by major left-bank tributaries (Gomti, Ghaghra, Gandak, Kosi) and right-bank tributaries (Yamuna, Son, Chambal, Betwa).
- The Yamuna \u2014 India\u2019s longest tributary \u2014 is a right-bank tributary of the Ganga, joining at Prayagraj (Triveni Sangam).
- The Kosi River is called the \u201cSorrow of Bihar\u201d due to frequent devastating floods and its shifting course (~120 km westward over 250 years).
- The Indus system receives Jhelum, Chenab, Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej as major tributaries \u2014 all originating in the Himalayas.
- The Ken-Betwa River Interlinking Project (approved 2021) is India\u2019s first inter-river linking project.
The most-tested trap: left bank vs right bank. Always face downstream (the direction the river flows) \u2014 your LEFT hand = left bank; your RIGHT hand = right bank. So Yamuna joins Ganga from the RIGHT (both flow southward, Yamuna comes from the west/right side). Also: Chenab is the longest Indus tributary overall, but Sutlej is the longest Indus tributary flowing within India \u2014 two different \u201clongest\u201d facts for the same river system.
✅ My Progress Tracker
🌊 Complete List of Important River Tributaries in India
| # ↕ | Tributary ↕ | Parent River | Bank ↕ | Origin | States Covered | Key Exam Fact |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Yamuna | Ganga | Right Bank | Yamunotri Glacier, Uttarakhand | UK, HP, Delhi, UP | India\u2019s longest tributary; joins Ganga at Prayagraj (Triveni Sangam) |
| 2 | Chambal | Yamuna (\u2192 Ganga) | Right Bank | Vindhya Range, MP (Mhow) | MP, Rajasthan, UP | Known for ravines; National Chambal Sanctuary; gharial habitat |
| 3 | Betwa | Yamuna (\u2192 Ganga) | Right Bank | Vindhya Range, MP (Raisen) | MP, UP | Flows through Orchha; joins Yamuna at Hamirpur; Ken-Betwa interlinking target river |
| 4 | Ken | Yamuna (\u2192 Ganga) | Right Bank | Vindhya Range, MP (Satna) | MP, UP | Ken-Betwa Project \u2014 India\u2019s first river interlinking project (approved 2021) |
| 5 | Son | Ganga | Right Bank | Amarkantak, MP | MP, UP, Jharkhand, Bihar | Joins Ganga near Patna; major right-bank tributary |
| 6 | Gomti | Ganga | Left Bank | Gomat Taal, Pilibhit, UP | UP | Flows through Lucknow; joins Ganga at Saidpur (Varanasi district) |
| 7 | Ghaghra (Karnali) | Ganga | Left Bank | Mapchachungo Glacier, Tibet | UP, Bihar | Also called Karnali in Nepal; joins Ganga at Chhapra |
| 8 | Gandak (Narayani) | Ganga | Left Bank | Nepal Himalayas | Nepal, Bihar, UP | Also called Narayani/Shaligram; joins Ganga at Hajipur (Sonepur Mela site) |
| 9 | Kosi | Ganga | Left Bank | Nepal Himalayas (7 headstreams) | Nepal, Bihar | \u201cSorrow of Bihar\u201d \u2014 frequent floods; course shifted ~120 km westward over 250 years |
| 10 | Mahananda | Ganga | Left Bank | Darjeeling Hills | West Bengal, Bihar | Last major left-bank tributary before Ganga enters Bangladesh |
| 11 | Jhelum | Indus | Left Bank | Verinag Spring, J&K | J&K, Pakistan | Flows through Dal Lake, Srinagar; linked to Wular Lake; Pakistan river (Indus Treaty) |
| 12 | Chenab | Indus | Left Bank | Bara Lacha Pass, HP | HP, J&K, Pakistan | Longest Indus tributary overall; formed by Chandra + Bhaga rivers; Pakistan river (Indus Treaty) |
| 13 | Ravi | Indus | Left Bank | Kullu Hills, HP | HP, J&K, Pakistan | Flows through Chamba; India has exclusive rights (Eastern river, Indus Waters Treaty 1960) |
| 14 | Beas | Sutlej (\u2192 Indus) | Left Bank | Beas Kund, Rohtang Pass, HP | HP, Punjab | Joins Sutlej at Harike; Pong Dam and Pandoh Dam on it; India\u2019s exclusive river |
| 15 | Sutlej | Indus | Left Bank | Rakshastal Lake, Tibet | HP, Punjab, Pakistan | Longest Indus tributary within India; Bhakra Dam on it; India\u2019s exclusive river |
| 16 | Tons | Yamuna (\u2192 Ganga) | Right Bank | Bandarpunch Glacier, Uttarakhand | UK, UP | Largest tributary of Yamuna by volume |
| 17 | Ramganga | Ganga | Right Bank | Dudhatoli Hills, Uttarakhand | UK, UP | Corbett National Park on its banks; joins Ganga near Kannauj |
| 18 | Damodar | Hooghly (\u2192 Ganga) | Left Bank | Chota Nagpur Plateau, Jharkhand | Jharkhand, WB | \u201cSorrow of Bengal\u201d; Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC, 1948) modelled on USA\u2019s TVA |
| 19 | Subansiri | Brahmaputra | Right Bank | Tibet (south of Kailash) | Arunachal, Assam | Largest right-bank tributary of Brahmaputra in India |
| 20 | Lohit | Brahmaputra | Right Bank | Eastern Tibet | Arunachal Pradesh | Gives name to Lohit district; Dhola-Sadiya Bridge (India\u2019s longest river bridge) crosses it |
| 21 | Manas | Brahmaputra | Right Bank | Bhutan Himalayas | Bhutan, Assam | Manas National Park (UNESCO World Heritage Site) on its banks |
| 22 | Tungabhadra | Krishna | Left Bank | Confluence of Tunga + Bhadra, Karnataka | Karnataka, AP | Tungabhadra Dam at Hospet; major irrigation source for Deccan Plateau |
| 23 | Bhima | Krishna | Left Bank | Bhimashankar, Maharashtra | MH, Karnataka, AP | Flows through Solapur; joins Krishna at Raichur district |
| 24 | Manjra | Krishna | Right Bank | Balaghat Range, Maharashtra | MH, Telangana | Joins Krishna near Sannati (Gulbarga, Karnataka) |
| 25 | Pranhita | Godavari | Left Bank | Confluence of Wainganga + Wardha | Telangana, AP | Largest tributary of Godavari by volume |
| 26 | Indravati | Godavari | Left Bank | Dandakaranya, Odisha/CG | CG, Odisha, Telangana | Chitrakoot Falls (India\u2019s widest waterfall) on Indravati River |
| 27 | Manjra (Godavari) | Godavari | Right Bank | Balaghat Range | MH, Telangana | Also flows into Krishna via different course \u2014 tests knowledge of dual tributary status |
| 28 | Hemavathi | Kaveri | Left Bank | Ballalarayanadurga, Karnataka | Karnataka | Hemavathi Reservoir (Gorur Dam) on it |
| 29 | Kabini | Kaveri | Left Bank | Wayanad Hills, Kerala | Kerala, Karnataka | Kabini Reservoir \u2014 famous wildlife area; joins Kaveri at T. Narasipur |
| 30 | Arkavathi | Kaveri | Right Bank | Nandi Hills, Karnataka | Karnataka | Flows through Bengaluru outskirts; joins Kaveri at Sangama (Kanakapura) |
⚖️ Compare Two Tributaries
📝 Key Notes & Memory Tips
The left vs right bank distinction is the most commonly tested trap. Face downstream to determine banks \u2014 left hand = left bank; right hand = right bank.
LEFT bank (from Nepal/hills): Gomti, Ghaghra, Gandak, Kosi, Mahananda
RIGHT bank (from Vindhya/Deccan): Yamuna, Son, Tons, Ramganga, Chambal (via Yamuna)
Mnemonic for Left bank: \u201cGanges Gets Good Kings Mostly\u201d (Gomti, Ghaghra, Gandak, Kosi, Mahananda)
The Yamuna (1,376 km) is India\u2019s longest tributary \u2014 it flows 1,376 km before joining the Ganga at Prayagraj at the Triveni Sangam (confluence of Ganga + Yamuna + mythical Saraswati). The Chambal, Betwa, Ken, and Tons are all tributaries of the Yamuna \u2014 making them sub-tributaries of the Ganga. This \u201ctributary of a tributary\u201d chain is tested in UPSC.
The Indus Water Treaty (1960), brokered by the World Bank, allocated rivers: India got the Eastern rivers (Ravi, Beas, Sutlej) for exclusive use; Pakistan got the Western rivers (Indus, Jhelum, Chenab). The Sutlej is the longest Indus tributary flowing within India; the Chenab is the longest Indus tributary overall. These two \u201clongest\u201d distinctions are frequently confused in exams.
Two rivers are called \u201cSorrows\u201d: the Kosi = \u201cSorrow of Bihar\u201d (floods; course shifted ~120 km westward over 250 years), and the Damodar = \u201cSorrow of Bengal\u201d (floods) before the Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC) was set up in 1948 \u2014 modelled on the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) of the USA. The Damodar is a left-bank tributary of the Hooghly (not directly of the Ganga).
The Ken-Betwa River Interlinking Project, approved by the Union Cabinet in December 2021, is India\u2019s first major inter-river linking project. It transfers surplus water from the Ken River (Yamuna tributary, MP) to the water-deficit Betwa River (also a Yamuna tributary, MP/UP) to irrigate the drought-prone Bundelkhand region. This is a very high-probability current affairs question for any exam from 2021 onwards.
\u201cGanges Gets Good Kings Mostly\u201d
G = Gomti | G = Ghaghra | G = Gandak | K = Kosi | M = Mahananda
(All five originate from Nepal or the Himalayan foothills and join from the LEFT bank)
🃏 Flashcards
Click a card to flip · Use arrows to navigate
🧩 Practice Quiz
5 questions · Answer all · Check your score
The Yamuna is India\u2019s longest tributary, flowing approximately 1,376 km before joining the Ganga at Prayagraj at the Triveni Sangam \u2014 the sacred confluence of the Ganga, Yamuna, and the mythical Saraswati. The Yamuna is a right-bank tributary of the Ganga.
The Kosi River is called the \u201cSorrow of Bihar\u201d because of its extremely high frequency of flooding and its habit of frequently shifting its course \u2014 it has shifted westward by about 120 km over the past 250 years. It originates from seven Himalayan headstreams in Nepal and has caused catastrophic floods throughout Bihar\u2019s history.
Under the Indus Waters Treaty signed between India and Pakistan in 1960 (brokered by the World Bank), India was allocated exclusive use of the three Eastern rivers \u2014 Ravi, Beas, and Sutlej. Pakistan was allocated the three Western rivers \u2014 Indus, Jhelum, and Chenab.
The Ken-Betwa River Interlinking Project, approved by the Union Cabinet in December 2021, is India\u2019s first major inter-river linking project. It transfers surplus water from the Ken River (a Yamuna tributary in Madhya Pradesh) to the water-deficit Betwa River (also a Yamuna tributary) to irrigate the drought-prone Bundelkhand region.
The Damodar River is a left-bank tributary of the Hooghly River (which is itself a distributary of the Ganga) in West Bengal. Originating from the Chota Nagpur Plateau in Jharkhand, it was historically prone to severe flooding. The Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC), set up in 1948 modelled on the USA\u2019s TVA, has significantly controlled its flooding through dams.
✅ Key Takeaways
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The Ganga has two sets of tributaries \u2014 those joining from the left bank and those from the right bank. Major left-bank tributaries include the Gomti, Ghaghra (Karnali), Gandak (Narayani), Kosi, and Mahananda \u2014 all originating from the Nepal Himalayas or the foothills. Major right-bank tributaries include the Yamuna (the longest), Son, Tons, and Ramganga \u2014 mostly originating from the Vindhya and Satpura ranges or the Uttarakhand Himalayas. The Yamuna itself receives the Chambal, Betwa, Ken, and Tons as its own tributaries.
Himalayan river tributaries \u2014 such as those of the Ganga, Yamuna, Indus, and Brahmaputra \u2014 are perennial rivers fed by both glacial meltwater and monsoon rainfall, so they flow throughout the year. They tend to be long, fast-flowing, and carry heavy sediment loads that build the Indo-Gangetic Plain. Peninsular river tributaries \u2014 such as those of the Godavari, Krishna, Kaveri, and Mahanadi \u2014 are largely rain-fed, flowing only during and after the monsoon season. They are shorter, flow over hard Deccan Plateau rock, and have less sediment load.
The Kosi River is called the \u201cSorrow of Bihar\u201d because it has historically caused catastrophic flooding in Bihar \u2014 it originates from seven headstreams in the Nepal Himalayas and has shifted its course approximately 120 km westward over the past 250 years, inundating vast agricultural areas. The Damodar River was traditionally called the \u201cSorrow of Bengal\u201d because of its severe flood history in West Bengal and Jharkhand. The Damodar Valley Corporation (DVC), established in 1948 on the model of the Tennessee Valley Authority (TVA) in the USA, has largely tamed the Damodar through a series of dams and barrages.
River tributaries are among the most tested geography topics in UPSC Prelims, SSC CGL, Banking General Awareness, Railway, and State PSC exams. Key tested areas include identifying which river joins which (e.g. Yamuna joins Ganga), whether a tributary is on the left or right bank, river-related nicknames (Kosi = Sorrow of Bihar, Damodar = Sorrow of Bengal), rivers under the Indus Waters Treaty, river interlinking projects (Ken-Betwa), rivers associated with dams (Bhakra on Sutlej, Tungabhadra Dam on Tungabhadra), rivers associated with national parks (Manas on Brahmaputra, Corbett on Ramganga), and important confluences like Triveni Sangam at Prayagraj.