🇮🇳 Hindi

Hindi Numbers in Devanagari

Hindi numbers are notoriously unique — each number from 1 to 100 has its own distinct name, unlike the predictable patterns in English or Chinese. This makes learning them a genuine memorization challenge, but also deeply rewarding. This guide covers the essential numbers in both Devanagari script and romanization, with the Devanagari numerals and India’s unique counting system.

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Numbers 1 to 10

The first ten numbers are the foundation. Each has a Devanagari numeral and a word form.

HindiEnglish
Pronunciation
१ — एक1 (one)
ek
२ — दो2 (two)
do
३ — तीन3 (three)
tín
४ — चार4 (four)
chár
५ — पाँच5 (five)
pánch
६ — छह6 (six)
chhah
७ — सात7 (seven)
sát
८ — आठ8 (eight)
áṭh
९ — नौ9 (nine)
nau
१० — दस10 (ten)
das
Pro Tip

Hindi numbers are completely unique words — unlike Chinese (where 11 is "ten-one") or English (where most teens follow a pattern). Every number from 1 to 100 must be learned individually. Start with 1–20, then add 10 more each week.

Numbers 11 to 20

This is where Hindi’s uniqueness becomes clear. Each of these numbers has its own distinct form.

HindiEnglish
Pronunciation
११ — ग्यारह11
gyárah
१२ — बारह12
bárah
१३ — तेरह13
terah
१४ — चौदह14
chaudah
१५ — पंद्रह15
pandrah
१६ — सोलह16
solah
१७ — सत्रह17
satrah
१८ — अठारह18
aṭhárah
१९ — उन्नीस19
unnís
२० — बीस20
bís

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The Tens: 20 to 100

The tens have their own distinct names. Unlike English (“twenty, thirty, forty...”), the Hindi tens do not always closely resemble the single digits they are based on.

HindiEnglish
Pronunciation
२० — बीस20
bís
३० — तीस30
tís
४० — चालीस40
chálís
५० — पचास50
pachás
६० — साठ60
sáṭh
७० — सत्तर70
sattar
८० — अस्सी80
assí
९० — नब्बे90
nabbe
१०० — सौ100
sau

India’s Unique Number System

India uses a distinctive grouping system for large numbers that differs from the Western system:

After the thousands place, commas are placed every two digits, not three: ₹10,00,000 (ten lakh rupees) instead of ₹1,000,000. This system is used across all Indian languages and in everyday business.

Pro Tip

To practice Hindi numbers, use them for everyday counting: price tags, phone numbers, addresses, and ages. Indian currency (rupees) gives you constant real-world practice if you travel in India.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why are Hindi numbers so irregular?

Unlike English (where you can predict "twenty-one, twenty-two..."), Hindi numbers have unique names for almost every number up to 100. This is because Hindi numbers evolved from Sanskrit and retained individual words rather than developing a simple combination system. The good news: once you learn them, they become second nature.

Are Devanagari numerals still used in India?

Yes, Devanagari numerals (१, २, ३...) are used in Hindi-language publications, government documents, and signs. However, the international numerals (1, 2, 3...) are also widely used, especially in science, business, and English-medium contexts. Most educated Indians can read both systems.

How do you count money in Hindi?

India uses a unique grouping system: after thousands, numbers are grouped by hundreds (not thousands). So 100,000 is एक लाख (ek lákh) and 10,000,000 is एक करोड़ (ek karoṛ). This is the standard system used in all Indian languages.

Is there a pattern to Hindi numbers at all?

Yes, there are partial patterns. Numbers ending in the same digit share some similarity: numbers ending in 1 (11=gyárah, 21=ikkís, 31=ikatís) have a recognizable -ís ending from 21 onward. But the stems change, so each number still needs individual memorization.