Published by RPV Wisy | Authorised Distributor of WISY Germany Rainwater Filters | Erode, Tamil Nadu
India’s Worst-Hit Metro for Groundwater Depletion
Hyderabad — home to over 10 million residents and India’s second-largest IT hub — is now officially the worst-hit metro in the country for groundwater depletion. A recent groundwater assessment report has flagged Hyderabad as the worst-affected metro in India for groundwater depletion, with 26 mandals classified as “critical” or “over-exploited.” The city’s heavy dependence on borewells — estimated to be around 10 lakh — has further strained water resources.
The scale of daily demand for emergency water tells its own story. Hyderabad’s water crisis deepened with a record 15,200 tanker bookings in a single day. By May 2026, groundwater levels in nearly 80 percent of areas across Hyderabad had fallen beyond a depth of 10 metres, with Quthbullapur recording levels below 32 metres.
This guide covers the full crisis — what is causing it, what HMWSSB now legally requires, and how WISY Vortex Filters from RPV Wisy can help every Hyderabad building recharge groundwater effectively.
The Numbers Behind Hyderabad’s Crisis
| Metric | Figure |
|---|---|
| Mandals classified critical/over-exploited | 26 |
| Tanker bookings in a single day (record) | 15,200 |
| Estimated borewells in the city | ~10 lakh |
| Areas with groundwater below 10m depth | ~80% of Hyderabad |
| Groundwater depth in Quthbullapur | Below 32 metres |
| Monthly groundwater drop in West Hyderabad | Up to 2.97 metres BGL |
| Rainfall that actually recharges groundwater (NGRI study) | Only 15% |
| Increase in groundwater usage over 30 years | Tripled |
Why It’s Happening Even After Good Monsoons
The most alarming part of Hyderabad’s crisis is that it is happening despite decent rainfall. Though Hyderabad received substantial rainfall during the last monsoon season, groundwater monitoring through piezometers showed the water table starting to decline from December itself.
A study by the National Geophysical Research Institute (NGRI), conducted over 18 years, found that only 15 percent of rainwater actually seeps into the ground in Telangana, while groundwater usage has tripled in the last 30 years. Hyderabad’s rocky, semi-arid Deccan terrain limits natural percolation, while unchecked high-rise construction in areas like Gachibowli, Madhapur, and Serilingapally has eliminated remaining recharge zones.
This means engineered recharge — through properly filtered rainwater harvesting pits — is not optional in Hyderabad. It is the only realistic path to improving the city’s groundwater table.
HMWSSB’s Mandatory Rainwater Harvesting Rules
Hyderabad’s water board has moved from encouragement to enforcement. The Hyderabad Metropolitan Water Supply and Sewage Board (HMWSSB) mandated that at least 17,000 water consumers within the Greater Hyderabad area must install or repair rainwater harvesting pits, based on a survey of 39,000 properties by 18 NGOs.
Property owners who do not have functional rainwater harvesting pits are charged double for tankers from the water board, and HMWSSB will not issue new water connections to structures without an integrated rainwater harvesting pit. A rainwater harvesting plan is also compulsory for any building plot over 200 sq. m under GHMC Building Bye-laws.
Why Most Hyderabad RWH Pits Fail to Actually Recharge Groundwater
HMWSSB’s own field data reveals the core problem: thousands of “completed” rainwater harvesting pits are non-functional. The reasons mirror what we’ve documented in Chennai and Bangalore:
- ❌ Pits built once during construction and never inspected again
- ❌ Inlet filters using basic mesh or no filtration at all — allowing silt to settle and block percolation
- ❌ No first-flush mechanism — roof debris and dust enter the pit directly with the first rain
- ❌ Hyderabad’s rocky terrain means even a partially silted pit drastically reduces recharge efficiency
- ❌ High-rise buildings often have undersized pits relative to their massive roof catchment area
Given that only 15 percent of rainwater currently reaches the aquifer across Telangana, every poorly functioning recharge pit represents a significant lost opportunity in a state where every drop matters.
The WISY Solution for Hyderabad’s Rocky Terrain & High-Rise Construction
WISY Vortex Filters from RPV Wisy directly address the two structural problems unique to Hyderabad: a slow-percolating granite terrain that demands clean, silt-free recharge water, and high-rise buildings with large roof catchment areas that need high-capacity filtration.
- ✅ Self-cleaning, zero-maintenance filtration — works through every monsoon and pre-monsoon shower without intervention
- ✅ Recharge-pit safe output — critical in hard-rock terrain, where a silted pit barely percolates at all
- ✅ Built-in first-flush function — automatically diverts dust and debris from high-rise rooftops
- ✅ High-capacity options for towers — WFF 300 systems handle large catchment areas of 20–40 floor developments
- ✅ HMWSSB compliance ready — meets the mandatory rainwater harvesting pit requirement
- ✅ 280-micron stainless steel mesh — maximises the limited 15% natural percolation rate
- ✅ 10+ year lifespan — built for Hyderabad’s semi-arid climate
Which WISY Filter Is Right for Your Hyderabad Building?
| Building Type | Hyderabad Context | Recommended WISY System |
|---|---|---|
| Independent homes & villas | Plots under 200 sq m | WISY WFF 100 or WFF 150 |
| Gated community villas | Plots over 200 sq m — RWH plan mandatory | WISY WFF 150 + Multisiphon Inlet |
| High-rise apartments (10–40 floors) | Gachibowli, Madhapur, Kondapur towers | WISY WFF 300 |
| IT campuses & SEZs | Large catchment area, HMWSSB compliance | WISY WFF 300 with 60T load-rated lid |
| Existing buildings — retrofit | Non-functional pits needing repair | WISY Downpipe Filter |
Explore our complete WISY product range:
- WISY WFF 100 — For independent homes
- WISY WFF 150 — For mid-size villas and gated communities
- WISY WFF 300 — For high-rises, IT campuses & institutions
- WISY Downpipe Filter — For repairing non-functional RWH pits
- Inlet, Suction & Multisiphon — Complete recharge pit management
- WISY Filtering Principle — How the technology works
Read the Full Hyderabad Groundwater Crisis Guide
Our complete expert guide on the RPV Enterprises blog covers:
- ✅ Full data on Hyderabad’s groundwater collapse — mandals, localities, NGRI study findings
- ✅ Why Telangana’s rocky terrain and high-rise construction compound the crisis
- ✅ Complete HMWSSB and GHMC compliance requirements, penalties & Occupancy Certificate risk
- ✅ Locality-by-locality groundwater depletion data — Gachibowli, Madhapur, Quthbullapur & more
- ✅ WISY product selection guide for every Hyderabad building type
- ✅ A 6-point action checklist for Hyderabad property owners before summer peaks
🔗 Also Read
- Bangalore Groundwater Crisis 2026: 7,000 Borewells Have Run Dry
- Chennai Groundwater Crisis 2026: How Day Zero Happened & The WISY Fix
- Tamil Nadu’s Rainwater Harvesting Policy: Homeowner’s Guide 2026
Get a Free HMWSSB Compliance Check
Is your existing rainwater harvesting pit actually recharging groundwater, or has it been silted and non-functional for years? Our team at RPV Wisy provides free consultations on HMWSSB compliance and the right WISY filter system for your building size, terrain conditions, and recharge pit capacity — with same-day quotes and pan-India delivery.
📞 +91 81223-00301
📧 info@rpvwisy.in
📍 L 330, Periyar Nagar, Erode-9, Tamil Nadu
🌐 www.rpvwisy.com
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