In a landmark move, the central government is conducting an intensive review of the Jal Jeevan Mission (JJM) after reports of delays and irregularities in several states. The scrutiny follows Prime Minister Narendra Modi’s directive for robust accountability, leading to penalties totalling nearly ₹129 crore imposed on seven states as part of enhanced oversight measures.
- Gujarat faces the highest penalty, followed by Maharashtra, Rajasthan, Karnataka, Tripura, Assam, and Tamil Nadu.
- Of the total penalties imposed, ₹12.95 crore has been recovered to date from states showing irregularities in implementation.
- Government teams performed ground verification across hundreds of villages, reviewing reported tap connections versus actual water delivery to assess progress.
- Finance Minister announced the scheme’s extension till 2028, but future funding will depend on states taking corrective action for any reported lapses and fulfilling audit requirements.
- Officials emphasize transparency, zero tolerance for financial and procedural violations, and the importance of improving water quality for rural households.
- Launched in 2019 to provide safe drinking water via functional tap connections to rural families.
- As of November 2025, the mission has delivered tap water to over 15.7 crore rural households across India.
- Initial budget allocation: ₹3.60 lakh crore. Actual expenditure so far has crossed ₹4.33 lakh crore.
The ongoing review process has resulted in action against more than 60 officials, 900+ contractors, and several third-party inspection agencies across the country. FIRs have been registered in serious cases, with some arrests including government and contractor personnel wherever misconduct was found.
The government remains committed to reforming monitoring, enforcing timely project completion, and ensuring all rural families benefit as promised. Further releases of funds will be strictly linked to genuine progress and transparent practices on the ground.

