Bhadohi vs Kashmiri Carpets: Which Indian Rug Tradition Is Right for You
A detailed comparison of India's two great carpet traditions — Bhadohi wool hand-knotted rugs and Kashmiri silk carpets — on quality, price, use case, and longevity.
India produces two of the world's most celebrated carpet traditions, and they are dramatically different from each other. If you are buying Indian handmade carpets — whether for your home, for export, or as a trade buyer — understanding what distinguishes Bhadohi from Kashmir will help you make the right choice for your specific needs.
The Two Traditions at a Glance
Bhadohi (Uttar Pradesh) is India's largest carpet-weaving centre, earning the city the title "Carpet Capital of the World." The tradition is Persian-influenced, primarily using wool pile on a cotton foundation, with high knot counts and large-scale production capacity.
Kashmir is India's other great carpet region. Kashmiri carpets are known worldwide for their pure silk pile, ultra-fine knotting, and jewel-like colour saturation. Production is smaller-scale, predominantly in and around Srinagar.
Material
Bhadohi: Predominantly wool pile — New Zealand wool, Tibetan highland wool, or Indian handspun wool depending on quality tier. Wool-silk blends are also common in premium pieces. Cotton warp and weft foundation.
Kashmir: Famous for pure silk pile (often called "silk on silk" when the foundation is also silk). Some workshops produce wool-pile Kashmiri carpets but these are in the minority — the defining Kashmiri product is silk.
Knot Count
Bhadohi: Typical production runs from 80 to 300 KPSI depending on quality tier. Fine Bhadohi pieces at 200–300 KPSI are among the finest wool rugs in the world.
Kashmir: Kashmiri silk carpets routinely run 300 to 900+ KPSI. The highest densities in the world come from Kashmiri workshops — producing carpets that look more like paintings than floor coverings.
For more on knot density, see our [KPSI guide](/blog/understanding-knot-density-kpsi).
Appearance and Style
Bhadohi carpets tend toward traditional Persian and Indo-Persian motifs — floral all-overs, Herati patterns, medallion designs, hunting scenes. They have a warm, slightly matte appearance with a wool pile that can range from velvet-smooth (tight pile) to slightly lustrous (wool-silk blend).
Kashmiri silk carpets have an unmistakable iridescent sheen — the colour shifts as you view the carpet from different angles. They are typically finer in detail, with miniature-painting-level intricacy in the pattern. Colours are often jewel-bright: ruby, emerald, cobalt, gold.
Durability and Use
Bhadohi wool carpets are among the most durable floor coverings in existence. A good-quality wool hand-knotted rug from Bhadohi will withstand heavy foot traffic for 50–100 years with proper maintenance. They are appropriate for living rooms, dining rooms, hallways, and all high-use spaces.
Kashmiri silk carpets are fragile. Silk pile is not suitable for high-traffic areas. Most Kashmiri silk carpets are best used as wall hangings, low-traffic accent pieces, or collectibles. Walking on them daily will cause pile compression and eventual damage. They are investable objects rather than functional floor coverings.
Price
Bhadohi (8×10 ft, wool, mid-quality, 120 KPSI): ₹40,000–₹80,000 direct from manufacturer
Bhadohi (8×10 ft, wool, fine quality, 200+ KPSI): ₹1,00,000–₹2,50,000
Kashmir (4×6 ft, silk, fine quality, 400+ KPSI): ₹1,50,000–₹5,00,000+
Kashmir (6×9 ft, finest silk, 700+ KPSI): ₹8,00,000–₹30,00,000+
For a full price breakdown, see our [handmade wool rug cost guide](/blog/handmade-wool-rug-cost-price-guide).
Production Volume and Lead Time
Bhadohi has large-scale production capacity with thousands of workshops. Lead times for custom orders are typically 8–16 weeks depending on complexity. Repeat orders and standardised designs can be produced faster.
Kashmir workshops are smaller and highly specialised. Lead times for custom silk pieces can run 6–18 months for fine work. Supply is inherently limited.
Which Should You Choose?
Choose Bhadohi if: - You need a floor-use rug in a high-traffic area - Durability and daily use are the priority - You want traditional Persian-style patterns with wool's natural warmth - Budget is a consideration - You want the option of custom sizing and repeat production
Choose Kashmir if: - You want a wall hanging or low-traffic centrepiece - The iridescent silk sheen and ultra-fine detail are the appeal - You are buying as a collector or investor - The piece will be used decoratively rather than functionally
The AJAYPEE CARPET Perspective
AJAYPEE CARPET is a Bhadohi manufacturer — we have been weaving wool hand-knotted carpets here since 1987, exporting to 40+ countries with OEKO-TEX certification. We do not produce Kashmiri silk carpets, but we produce Bhadohi pieces at quality levels that rival the finest Kashmiri wool production.
Explore our [Bhadohi collection](/rugs/bhadohi) or the full [hand-knotted range](/rugs/hand-knotted). For custom specifications, visit [custom orders](/custom-orders).
Final Thoughts
Both traditions are world-class. The choice depends entirely on use case: Bhadohi wool for living, Kashmir silk for displaying. Neither is better in an absolute sense — they are different tools designed for different purposes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the difference between Bhadohi and Kashmir carpets?
Bhadohi carpets are typically woven from New Zealand wool using the Persian knot (Senneh), feature vivid Indo-Persian patterns, and are produced in large quantities for export. Kashmiri carpets use the traditional Kashmiri knot (Talim weaving) on a silk or wool-silk foundation, often with finer KPSI and more intricate patterns. Kashmir is associated with the finest and most expensive Indian hand-knotted rugs.
Which is more expensive: Bhadohi or Kashmiri carpets?
Kashmiri carpets, especially pure silk or high-KPSI pieces, command significantly higher prices — often 3–5× more per square foot than equivalent Bhadohi wool carpets. However, Bhadohi produces premium pieces at 150–200 KPSI that are competitive with mid-range Kashmir pieces at a lower price point, making them excellent value.
Are Bhadohi carpets GI-tagged?
Yes. The Bhadohi carpet (also known as the Mirzapur-Bhadohi carpet) holds a Geographical Indication (GI) tag. This means the name 'Bhadohi carpet' legally refers only to hand-knotted carpets made in the Bhadohi-Mirzapur region of Uttar Pradesh.
Which is better for export buyers: Bhadohi or Kashmir carpets?
For volume buyers (retail importers, interior designers, hospitality projects), Bhadohi offers better value — larger production capacity, consistent quality, faster turnaround, and competitive pricing. For individual collectors or luxury buyers seeking the finest Indian carpets, Kashmir silk pieces are unmatched.
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