June 23, 2026 · 6 min read
Chandigarh — India’s most planned city and the shared capital of Punjab and Haryana — presents an air quality paradox. Its carefully designed urban layout, wide tree-lined roads and relatively low industrial activity should produce better AQI than most Indian cities of comparable size. Yet Chandigarh AQI deteriorates severely each October and November due to a specific and well-documented cause: stubble burning in surrounding Punjab and Haryana agricultural fields sends massive smoke plumes directly over the city. During the rest of the year, Chandigarh generally enjoys moderately good air quality by Indian urban standards. Check your current AQI at AQI of My Location before planning outdoor activity.
The CPCB and Punjab Pollution Control Board (PPCB) monitor Chandigarh’s air quality through stations at Sector 17, Sector 25 and the Industrial Area monitoring point. These report on India’s NAQI: Good (0–50), Satisfactory (51–100), Moderately Polluted (101–200), Poor (201–300), Very Poor (301–400) and Severe (above 401). Chandigarh’s monitoring shows a very distinctive seasonal profile — moderate readings for most of the year, with extreme spikes concentrated in October and November during peak stubble burning season.
Punjab and Haryana together produce over 30 million tonnes of paddy straw each year. Farmers burn this residue in October and November before sowing winter wheat — a fast and cheap solution to the field clearing problem. Chandigarh sits directly downwind of the major burning districts in Ludhiana, Patiala, Sangrur and Ambala. When smoke plumes from these fires converge over Chandigarh, AQI can spike from below 100 to above 400 in under 24 hours. Additionally, calm anti-cyclonic weather during October and November prevents dispersal, allowing smoke concentrations to build over multiple days. Consequently, the AQI spikes Chandigarh experiences are acute and dramatic rather than the chronic persistent pollution seen in NCR cities.
October–November (Stubble Burning Season): The worst period for Chandigarh AQI. Readings frequently exceed 300 and can reach Severe above 400 on peak burning days. This is the single most important health period for Chandigarh residents to prepare for each year. The burning calendar is partially predictable — Punjab and Haryana paddy harvest typically completes in late September, with burning peaking between October 15 and November 15 in 2026.
Winter (December–February): After peak burning ends, Chandigarh AQI falls but remains elevated by Indo-Gangetic Plain winter inversions. Vehicle emissions and heating sources (wood burning, coal) keep readings in the 100–200 Moderate range during December and January. This is significantly better than peak burning season but still above international safe limits.
Summer (March–May): AQI improves to generally Satisfactory (51–100) levels. Chandigarh’s green cover and Sukhna Lake provide microclimate benefits that help moderate particulate levels. Pre-monsoon dust occasionally spikes PM10 in April and May.
Monsoon (June–September): Chandigarh’s best season for air quality. AQI regularly falls to Good (below 50) during active monsoon spells — among the cleanest air available in any North Indian city during this period. Outdoor activities are most comfortable and least polluted in July and August. Use the best time to go outside tool to confirm daily conditions.
Prepare specifically for October–November each year — this is when health risk peaks. Stock N95 masks before October. Ensure HEPA purifiers are serviced and running before peak burning season begins. Keep children’s outdoor activity minimal from mid-October through mid-November. For the rest of the year, Chandigarh’s air quality is manageable with basic precautions. The AQI cigarette calculator illustrates the acute exposure during peak burning — above AQI 400, outdoor exposure exceeds 15 cigarettes daily. Compare Chandigarh against Amritsar and Delhi simultaneously using the AQI comparison tool.