Cabinet extends PMGSY-III rural-roads programme up to March 2028
The Union Cabinet on 20 April 2026 cleared a three-year extension of the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana Phase III (PMGSY-III), pushing its end date from March 2025 to March 2028 to allow remaining sanctioned roads to be completed. Roughly 95 per cent of the 8.25 lakh km sanctioned across all PMGSY phases is already built, and the extension is meant to close out balance works without disturbing the parallel PMGSY-IV scheme.
What happened: The Union Cabinet, chaired by Prime Minister Narendra Modi, on 20 April 2026 approved the continuation of the Pradhan Mantri Gram Sadak Yojana Phase III (PMGSY-III) beyond its earlier March 2025 deadline up to March 2028. The decision allows states to finish balance road works that were sanctioned under Phase III but could not be completed within the original timeline.
Why it matters: PMGSY is India's flagship rural connectivity programme, launched on 25 December 2000 by the Ministry of Rural Development. Phase III, sanctioned in 2019, focused on upgrading the most-used 1.25 lakh km of existing rural roads — the ones connecting habitations to markets, hospitals, schools and higher-tier towns. Without an extension, sanctioned but unfinished segments would have lost central funding cover.
Numbers in context: Across PMGSY-I, II and III, about 8.25 lakh km of rural roads have been sanctioned and roughly 95 per cent built. PMGSY-IV, which runs in parallel from FY 2024-25 to 2028-29, has its own outlay of Rs 70,125 crore for 62,500 km of fresh roads aimed at connecting 25,000 still-unconnected habitations. The Phase III extension does not change those Phase IV numbers.
India angle: Studies by NITI Aayog and IIM-A have linked PMGSY roads to higher non-farm employment, better access to wholesale markets for farmers, lower transport costs for inputs, and stronger school enrolment. The scheme also pioneered the use of Cold Mix Technology, plastic-blended bitumen, fly ash and steel slag in rural road construction — important from a circular-economy angle.
Exam angle: Remember the launch date (25 December 2000), the ministry (Rural Development), the phase numbers (I, II, III, III extended, IV), the new Phase III deadline (March 2028) and the Phase IV outlay (Rs 70,125 crore for 62,500 km).
Key Points to Remember
- Cabinet approval given on 20 April 2026 to extend PMGSY-III by three years, up to March 2028.
- PMGSY-III focuses on consolidating and upgrading existing through-routes and major rural links.
- Across all PMGSY phases, about 8.25 lakh km of rural roads have been sanctioned, with around 95 per cent built.
- PMGSY-IV (FY 2024-25 to 2028-29) runs in parallel with an outlay of Rs 70,125 crore for 62,500 km of new roads.
- Scheme launched on 25 December 2000 by the Ministry of Rural Development; uses Cold Mix, plastic-blended bitumen and other green technologies.
Exam Relevance
Frequently tested in Prelims and SSC exams as a one-line factual: launch date, ministry, current phase, and outlay. Useful for GS-II governance and GS-III rural infrastructure.
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