🚧 Bengaluru South City Corporation Unveils ₹3,826-Crore Budget to Boost Roads, Ease Traffic in South Bengaluru 🚦
The Bengaluru South City Corporation (BSCC) has announced its first-ever 2026–27 budget after the city’s administrative split, with strong focus on roads, drainage, junction upgrades, and mobility improvements across South Bengaluru.
₹3,826 Cr
Total Budget Outlay
₹1,661 Cr
Development Works Allocation
₹433 Cr
Arterial & Sub-Arterial Roads
₹440 Cr
Stormwater Drain Projects
What This Budget Is About
Core Focus Areas
- Road widening and upgrades
- Traffic bottleneck reduction
- Drainage and flooding control
- Pedestrian infrastructure improvements
- Basic civic infrastructure strengthening
In Simple Terms
This is not just a maintenance budget. BSCC is trying to improve road capacity, redesign choke points, and strengthen civic systems in fast-growing parts of South Bengaluru.
Major Road & Traffic Projects
- Subramanyapura Road widening – ₹20 crore
- Begur Main Road to Begur Koppa Road stretch – ₹40 crore
- Bannerghatta Road (Dairy Circle to NICE Road) – major upgrade planned
- Junction improvements + road widening – ₹50 crore
- Grade separators – feasibility stage at key junctions
Mobility Improvements
- Ejipura Elevated Corridor targeted for completion by September 2026
- 18 skywalks planned under PPP model
- ₹32 crore skywalk near Banashankari for Metro–TTMC connectivity
- Increased focus on pedestrian movement and safer junction design
Flood & Drainage Fixes
- ₹440 crore allocated for stormwater drains
- Sponge parks proposed to absorb rainwater
- Targeting chronic flooding and waterlogging in vulnerable areas
Funding Sources
- ₹1,100+ crore from property tax
- ₹360 crore from Premium FAR
- ₹225 crore from khata conversions
- ₹200 crore from municipal bonds
- ₹126 crore from roadside advertisements
The Reality Check
Key Concerns
- Several major congestion projects still lack clear funding clarity
- Bannerghatta Road repair allocation appears lower than actual requirement
- No strong last-mile connectivity strategy is visible yet
- Execution may depend heavily on land acquisition through TDR model
- Historically, budget announcements do not always translate into timely execution
What It Means Practically
The intent is positive, especially for South Bengaluru’s long-standing civic issues, but the pace of implementation will matter more than the budget headline itself.
What This Means for South Bengaluru Residents
Positives
- Possible relief on roads like Begur, Bannerghatta, and Subramanyapura
- Better pedestrian safety through skywalks and redesigned junctions
- Potential reduction in flooding if drainage works are executed properly
- More attention to long-neglected civic infrastructure in South Bengaluru
Concerns
- Traffic relief may be slow and only partial
- Electronic City and ORR connectivity challenges remain largely unresolved
- Land acquisition and approvals could delay execution
- Ongoing metro construction may continue to affect traffic in the near term
Bottom Line
This is a strong intent-driven infrastructure budget, but not yet a game-changer. The focus on roads, drainage, and mobility is welcome, though South Bengaluru still lacks a complete big-picture traffic solution. The real impact will depend entirely on execution, land availability, and whether the projected revenues actually materialise.








