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Last Updated:May 23, 2026, 14:32 IST
New York's metro has held the world record for decades. Delhi is about to cross 400 km and take that title — one corridor away from making history. Here's exactly how it gets there

Where It All Began: Not long ago, Delhi Metro was just a dream on paper. Today, it operates a 394 km network — the largest in India — and accounts for more than 55% of all daily metro journeys in the country. From five cities with metro in 2014, India has grown to become the world's third-largest metro network. And Delhi is the engine driving that story — one station, one corridor at a time.

The Record In Sight: By December 2025, Delhi Metro was expected to become the world's largest metro network in a single city, surpassing New York Metro's 399 km record. The trigger: the addition of the 12 km Aerocity–Tughlakabad corridor, which would push Delhi Metro's total operational length past 400 km. New York held that title for decades. Delhi is now knocking on the door.

Building Deeper Than Ever: The Phase 4 expansion is not just about length — it is also about engineering ambition. A Tunnel Boring Machine, 97 metres long, completed a 1,475 metre tunnel at an average depth of 26 metres between Chhatarpur Mandir and IGNOU Station — one of Delhi Metro's deepest tunnels ever. Every metre dug brings the record closer.

A City That Trusts Its Metro: Records mean little without riders. On 8 August 2025, Delhi Metro recorded its highest ever single-day ridership — 81,87,674 passengers in one day. That is more than the entire population of many Indian states using one city's metro in 24 hours. The numbers make clear that Delhi has not just built a metro — it has built a habit.

Smarter, Not Just Bigger: Size alone does not make a world-class metro. Delhi Metro currently operates around 121 kilometres of driverless metro corridors with 80 driverless trains — making it one of the largest automated metro networks in the world. Add to that QR ticketing, platform screen doors, regenerative braking, and solar-powered stations — and what you have is a network built for the future, not just the present.

Second Only To China, Soon: The Delhi Metro record is not just a city milestone — it is a national one. India's metro network has expanded threefold since 2014, from 249 km to over 1,000 km, and the country is now on track to become the world's second-largest metro network, behind only China. When Delhi crosses 400 km and claims the single-city record, it will not just be a win for the capital — it will announce to the world that India builds differently now.
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