Our Tech Desk
In a country where finding an address often feels like solving a puzzle, India may have quietly built one of the most transformative pieces of digital public infrastructure since UPI. It is called DIGIPIN — and sitting on top of it is a user-friendly identity layer named DHRUVA.
Developed by the Department of Posts in collaboration with the Indian Institute of Technology Hyderabad and National Remote Sensing Centre under the Indian Space Research Organisation, the system was officially launched on May 27, 2025. Though it has received little public attention so far, experts believe it could fundamentally change the way India manages addresses, deliveries, emergency services, banking verification and digital governance.
At its core, DIGIPIN converts the entire geography of India into a precise digital grid. Every 4 meter by 4 meter square across the country is assigned a unique 10-character alphanumeric code. Whether it is the entrance of a hospital, a village hut, a fishing boat in territorial waters, or a small shop in a crowded urban lane, each location can now be digitally identified with pinpoint accuracy.
But the architects of the system understood one major challenge — nobody wants to remember complicated alphanumeric codes. That is where DHRUVA comes in.
DHRUVA acts as a simple human-readable identity layer over DIGIPIN. Instead of sharing a long location code, a person can use a permanent digital handle such as “rajesh@dhruva”. Even if the individual changes residence, the handle remains the same while only the underlying location code gets updated.
The concept mirrors what India achieved with Unified Payments Interface, popularly known as UPI. Just as UPI replaced long bank account numbers with easy payment handles like “name@ybl”, DHRUVA aims to simplify India’s chaotic address ecosystem.
The need for such a system is enormous. Experts estimate that nearly one-fourth of Indian addresses remain unstructured. Large sections of rural India, tribal belts, slums and unplanned urban colonies either lack proper street names or follow inconsistent address formats. This creates massive inefficiencies across sectors.
Delivery personnel often spend several extra minutes locating homes. Ambulances lose critical time trying to navigate narrow lanes with vague directions. Banks struggle to verify property locations for loans. Insurance claims get delayed due to mismatched addresses across documents. E-commerce and quick-commerce companies lose substantial revenue because of failed deliveries.
DIGIPIN seeks to solve these problems by creating a single open-source addressing standard for the entire country.
In keeping with India’s increasingly successful “digital public infrastructure” model, the source code and technical documentation have reportedly been made openly accessible, allowing government agencies, startups and private companies to integrate the system without licensing costs.
The project now joins a growing list of India’s digital governance platforms, including Aadhaar for identity verification, DigiLocker for document storage and UPI for payments.
While several developed nations already use advanced geo-addressing systems, India’s approach is being viewed as more ambitious and scalable.
The United Kingdom relies on postcode-based systems tied to highly structured urban planning. Dubai uses Makani numbers linked to building entrances, though the system remains largely government controlled. Japan’s addressing model depends heavily on local familiarity and physical block structures.
India’s model, however, combines geo-coded precision, open-source architecture, privacy protection and easy usability in a single framework.
The potential impact could be far-reaching.
Government estimates suggest ambulance response times in unplanned areas could improve dramatically. KYC verification for banking and telecom services may become almost instantaneous. Rural lending could receive a boost as banks gain the ability to verify property locations within seconds. Disaster response teams could identify exact homes during floods, fires or earthquakes. Insurance companies may even be able to calculate risk with greater accuracy based on exact location data.
Privacy advocates also see a significant advantage. Instead of sharing full residential addresses repeatedly, users can simply share their DHRUVA handle, limiting unnecessary exposure of personal information while still enabling accurate navigation.
Many observers recall that India’s digital payment revolution was initially dismissed as an overhyped experiment. Today, UPI processes billions of transactions every month and has become a global benchmark in digital finance.
DIGIPIN and DHRUVA may now be taking the first steps on a similar journey — one that could quietly reshape how India moves, delivers, verifies, and responds in the digital age.
