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Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices jump dramatically: green chillies, cauliflower, tomato soar as Diwali nears —

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Jaipur, Oct.16,2025:Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices have soared to alarming heights, triggering widespread concern across the city. In the wholesale hub of Muḥāna — the largest vegetable market servicing Jaipur and its peripheries — today’s rates shocked both retailers and end consumers. With Diwali approaching, this surge comes at a particularly sensitive moment, straining household budgets and adding inflationary pressure on daily essentials-

Multiple vegetables — green chillies, tomatoes, cauliflower, and more — saw steep increases in wholesale prices. Meanwhile, staples like onions and potatoes experienced varying trends, with slight dips or stability in some segments.

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The steep hikes in Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices reflect deeper systemic issues-supply chain disruptions, climatic shocks, demand pressure, and tightening margins. This article presents a comprehensive breakdown of the market dynamics, detailed rate tables, and actionable insights. (Also, see the Times of India coverage of similar vegetable price surges tied to weather disruptions.

What’s Driving the Price Surge

Several converging factors are fueling the steep climb in Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices:

  • Adverse weather conditions: Recent rain, hail, and dust storms have damaged crops in critical production zones like Bagru, Bassi, Chomu, Dudu, Kanota, and Aklera.
  • Supply disruption & transportation delays: Lower arrivals at Muḥāna due to farm damage and logistical impediments are constraining wholesale inflows.
  • High festival demand: As Diwali nears, merchants and consumers preemptively stock up, intensifying pressure on already tight supplies.
  • Export / inter-state reallocation: Vegetables meant for local wholesale channels might be diverted to more profitable markets in other states.
  • Cost inflation in inputs: Higher fuel, labor, packaging, and transportation costs inevitably reflect in final mandi prices.

In short, disrupted supply + rising demand + elevated costs is creating the perfect storm for Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices to fly.

Day’s Mandi Price Snapshot

Below is a synthesized snapshot of wholesale rates observed (or reported) from Muḥāna mandi today, based on trusted local sources and mandi rate platforms:

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VegetableWholesale Rate (₹/kg) Range*
Tomato (hybrid)₹20 – ₹27
Green Chillies₹40 – ₹45
Fine Chillies₹55 – ₹62
Cauliflower₹40 – ₹50
Cabbage (Pata)₹18 – ₹23
Bitter Gourd₹45 – ₹55
Capsicum (Shimla)₹65 – ₹70
Lemon₹20 – ₹22
Bottle Gourd (Lauki)₹25 – ₹30
Okra (Bhindi)₹40 – ₹50
Ginger₹57 – ₹58
Cluster Beans (Guar)₹70 – ₹80
Brinjal₹20 – ₹35
Pumpkin₹14 – ₹16
Cucumber (Polyhouse)₹30 – ₹35
Ridge Gourd (Tori)₹30 – ₹40
Arbi₹16 – ₹20
Tinda₹35 – ₹60

*Quoted by local traders and sellers in Jaipur’s Muḥāna mandi.

Simultaneously, staples such as potatoes fetched between ₹7 – ₹13 per kg, and onions ranged from ₹7 – ₹15 depending on variety and source. Garlic prices remained more stable, trading between ₹20 – ₹75 per kg in different lots. (These patterns mirror what local mandi bodies and trader unions have reported.)

These numbers reflect a pronounced inflation in volatility: most vegetables are up sharply compared to early-month levels, and many have more than doubled over the past few weeks in certain segments.

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Vegetable-wise Price Breakdown

Here is a deeper dive into how major vegetable groups are performing in the Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices framework.

Chillies & Tomato

Green Chillies (Hari Mirchi) have climbed to ₹40 – ₹45 / kg (wholesale). Fine chillies are even costlier, between ₹55 – ₹62 / kg.

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Tomatoes (Hybrid / local varieties) are being traded in the range ₹20 – ₹27 / kg at Muḥāna. Given their usual demand, this increase is especially painful for locals.

Tomatoes, in particular, have been one of the worst hit due to fragile nature, susceptibility to frost/disease, and transportation damage. The wholesalers say that truck arrivals have dropped dramatically in recent days.

Cauliflower & Cabbage

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Cauliflower is currently between ₹40 – ₹50 / kg wholesale. Pata Cabbage (leaf cabbage) is being quoted at ₹18 – ₹23 / kg.

Broader climatic stress on brassica crops has squeezed supplies in many districts. Also, increased demand for decorative uses (festival decor) has pushed prices further.

Gourds, Beans & Others

  • Gourds such as bottle gourd (lauki) are at ₹25 – ₹30 / kg.
  • Okra (bhindi) commands ₹40 – ₹50 / kg.
  • Bitter gourd trades at ₹45 – ₹55 / kg.
  • Capsicum (Shimla Mirch) is in the range ₹65 – ₹70 / kg.
  • Cluster beans (guar): ₹70 – ₹80 / kg — possibly due to lower yield and export demand.
  • Brinjal is more volatile, ₹20 – ₹35 / kg, depending on variety and quality.
  • Tinda is ranging ₹35 – ₹60 / kg.
  • Pumpkin: ₹14 – ₹16 / kg.
  • Cucumber (Polyhouse): ₹30 – ₹35 / kg.
  • Ridge gourd (Tori): ₹30 – ₹40 / kg.
  • Arbi (Colocasia / taro): ₹16 – ₹20 / kg.

These components reflect that vegetables traditionally considered “low value” are also seeing upward creep, indicating breadth in the inflation wave.

Onion, Potato & Garlic Trends

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  • Potatoes: ₹7 – ₹13 / kg in wholesale.
  • Onions: Local MP onion varieties are at ₹7 – ₹12, older Nasik onion ₹12 – ₹14, and new Nasik onion ₹12 – ₹15.
  • Garlic: More variable — ₹20 – ₹75 / kg depending on lot, quality, and origin.

These more stable or falling items provide some cushion to overall vegetable baskets, but the sharp jumps in high-demand items still dominate consumer pain.

Weather, Supply Disruptions & Crop Damage

Climatic events have been a central driver behind the surge in Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices. Key contributing elements-

  • Unseasonal rains & hailstorms have battered crops en route to or already in marketable condition.
  • Dust storms in periphery farming areas have further damaged foliage and flowering stages.
  • Lower arrivals from outlying supply belts (Bagru, Bassi, Chomu, Dudu) have constrained wholesale inventory.
  • Some farmers reportedly lost entire harvests or had to discard damaged produce.
  • Delayed transport & higher wastage: Fragile vegetables spoil during transit disruptions, making only prime lots reach the mandi — pushing up average costs.

The Times of India has documented that due to damaged supplies, tomato trucks arriving at Muḥāna fell drastically, raising per kg rates multiple times over normal levels.

Traders’ Voices from Muḥāna

Voices from the market floor — wholesalers, commission agents, and trader union representatives — provide context to the Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices surge-

  • Imran Quraishi, Vice President of Jaipur Fruit & Vegetable Wholesale Seller’s Union, confirmed the steep hikes in chillies, tomato, cauliflower, and others.
  • Shiv Shankar Sharma, President of Muḥāna Potato & Vegetable Dealers Association, noted a disrupted supply chain and predicted that retail market prices would further escalate.
  • Some traders expect a 20% additional increase in consumer (retail) prices by mid-week if arrivals don’t improve.
  • Traders also cited rising logistic costs and labor shortages as compounding factors.
  • A few merchants lamented the speculation factor — intermediaries hoarding stocks in anticipation of further escalation.

Their collective sentiment: this is not a short-term blip — unless the supply correction happens swiftly, the pain may linger.

Impact on Consumers & Festival Season Pressure

For Jaipur households, the spike in Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices means-

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  • Ballooning grocery bills: Even small families will see essential vegetable bills surge 30-50% or more.
  • Diet shift: Some families may reduce consumption of expensive vegetables (e.g., chillies, tomatoes) or resort to cheaper alternatives.
  • Festival burden: Diwali/holiday cooking demands more vegetables — the elevated base prices aggravate festive inflation.
  • Rural ripple effect: Smaller towns and villages dependent on Jaipur’s wholesale supplies might also see pass-through inflation, reversing relief in outskirts.
  • Health & nutrition: Less variety or reduced vegetable intake may impact dietary quality among economically vulnerable groups.

The timing is especially harsh — Diwali is just days away, and people often stock up for celebrations. The price surge adds a sudden financial shock when budgets may already be stretched.

Can Prices Stabilize- Factors to Watch

Whether Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices moderate in the near term depends on:

  • Arrival increase: If supply returns — trucks resume full loads from supply belts — pressure may ease.
  • Weather recovery: A window of good weather in coming days can help produce salvage or reduce further crop damage.
  • Inter-state competition: If vegetables are diverted externally, that will sustain upward pressure locally.
  • Input costs: If fuel, labor, packing costs ease, wholesale margins can relax.
  • Government / policy intervention: Subsidies, buffer stock release, trade restrictions or price controls may help.
  • Consumer demand cooldown: After the festival rush, some demand softening may offer relief.

Historically, Jaipur’s Muḥāna mandi has seen periods of extreme volatility during monsoon disruptions. For example, prior reports show how vegetable prices in Jaipur soared when rains disrupted farming zones.

What Authorities & Stakeholders Must Do

To manage the Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices crisis and prevent long-term damage, the following steps are essential:

  1. Supply chain monitoring: Authorities should closely monitor lead belts (Bagru, Bassi, Chomu) and open alternative sourcing routes.
  2. Cold storage & preservation support: Introduce or expand cold storage at mandi and farm clusters to reduce post-harvest losses.
  3. Subsidies or relief packages: For essential vegetable segments (e.g., tomato, cabbage), temporary price support or freight subsidy could help.
  4. Controlled release of buffer stocks: Government can release stored vegetables to stabilize extreme fluctuations.
  5. Market regulation & anti-hoarding: Enforce rules to prevent speculative stockpiling or artificial scarcity.
  6. Weather insurance and relief: For farmers whose crops are lost, compensation and support must be expedited.
  7. Enhance rural connectivity: Better road / transport links can reduce spoilage and encourage more consistent supply.
  8. Consumer awareness & alternative options: Encourage seasonal local alternatives, kitchen gardens, and community vegetable pooling.

If executed swiftly and transparently, these steps can help stem the tide of runaway Jaipur Muḥāna Mandi vegetable prices.

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