Jain Census 2027

The Jain Census — Jain Janaganana — is the effort to make sure every Jain in India is counted correctly in the National Census 2027.

What is the Jain Census?

The Jain Census, or Jain Janaganana, is the community-wide effort to ensure every Jain in India is recorded correctly as JAIN in the country's official National Census. It is not a separate government count — it is an awareness movement that makes sure Jain families are not missed or misclassified when the national Census is carried out.

As per the Census of India 2011, the recorded Jain population was 4,451,753 — about 0.4% of the country's total population. Many Jain families, however, are recorded under a broader category instead of as Jain, which is why the community runs a dedicated Jain Census campaign for every national count.

Jain Census 2027: India's next count

India's next National Census is scheduled for 2027 and, for the first time, will allow Digital Self-Enumeration — households can record their own details online before the enumerator visit. This makes the 2027 Census the most important opportunity yet for an accurate Jain Census, because every family can ensure their religion is recorded correctly as JAIN.

The Census is conducted in two phases: House-listing and Housing, followed by Population Enumeration, when religion is recorded. Jains must be counted correctly in the second phase.

How to be counted in the Jain Census

1. Record your religion as JAIN

During self-enumeration and the enumerator visit, every member of the family must have their religion clearly recorded as JAIN — not under any broader or related category.

2. Count every family member

Make sure no one in the household is left out, and that Digambar, Shwetambar, Sthanakvasi, Terapanth and all other panths are recorded as one Jain identity.

Jain Census 2011 — the official figures

Why the Jain Census matters

An accurate Jain Census shapes political representation, government planning, minority welfare schemes and resource allocation. When Jains are undercounted, the community's voice and entitlements are weakened.

Jains have the highest literacy rate of any community in India and contribute far beyond their share to the nation's economy and philanthropy — yet a small recorded population understates that role. Counting every Jain correctly in Census 2027 is how the community is seen accurately.

Frequently asked questions about the Jain Census

Be part of the Jain Census 2027

Join Let Every Jain Count to spread awareness so every Jain family is counted correctly in India's National Census 2027.