India's drug problem is large, and the government has measured it. Its 2019 national survey found that about 16 crore Indians use alcohol, 3.1 crore use cannabis, and roughly 60 lakh people live with an opioid use disorder. If you or someone close to you needs help, the free national de-addiction helpline is 14446. This guide explains how big the problem is, how to spot drug addiction early, what the NDPS law says, and how citizens and agencies together can move India towards a nasha-free future.
Need help now? De-addiction counselling and referral: 14446 (toll-free). To report drug peddling or trafficking, anonymously: MANAS 1933 (toll-free, run by the Narcotics Control Bureau). Both work across India.
Every year on 26 June the world observes the International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking, also called World Drug Day, an observance led by the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC). The day pushes governments and communities to treat drug use as a health and human-rights issue, prioritise prevention, and offer treatment rather than only punishment.
In India the day usually brings a wave of awareness drives, pledges and enforcement updates. The push is sharper now: in January 2026 the Union Home Minister publicly announced a three-year nationwide campaign for a Drug-Free India and asked states to submit anti-drug roadmaps. So searches and conversations around drug abuse are likely to rise steeply around 26 June.
The most reliable national picture comes from “Magnitude of Substance Use in India” (2019), a survey of 4,73,569 people aged 10 to 75 across all states, carried out by AIIMS for the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment. These are its headline findings.
| Substance | Current users (10 to 75 yrs) | Need help / dependent |
|---|---|---|
| Alcohol | 14.6%, about 16 crore | 5.2%, over 5.7 crore (about 1 in 3 users) |
| Cannabis (bhang, ganja, charas) | 2.8%, about 3.1 crore | 0.66%, about 72 lakh |
| Opioids (heroin, opium, pharma) | 2.06% | about 60 lakh with opioid use disorder |
| Sedatives (non-medical) | 1.08%, about 1.18 crore | - |
| Inhalants | Higher among children (1.17%) than adults (0.58%) | 4.6 lakh children + 18 lakh adults |
| Cocaine / ATS / Hallucinogens | 0.10% / 0.18% / 0.12% | - |
Two findings stand out. First, inhalants are the only category where use is higher among children and adolescents than adults, which makes school-age prevention urgent. Second, India has an estimated 8.5 lakh people who inject drugs, a group at high risk of infection.
The hardest number is about help itself: among people dependent on alcohol, only about 1 in 38 report getting any treatment, and among those dependent on illicit drugs only about 1 in 20 have ever received inpatient treatment. The treatment gap, not just the drug, is the crisis.
People use the words loosely, but they are not the same.
Addiction is treatable. It is best understood as a health problem, not a moral failure, which is why early help works far better than shame.
No single sign is proof, but a cluster of these over weeks is worth acting on.
If you notice these in a young person, do not wait for proof. A calm conversation and a call to 14446 is a safer first step than confrontation.
India's main drug law is the Narcotic Drugs and Psychotropic Substances (NDPS) Act, 1985. It is administered by the Department of Revenue (Ministry of Finance), while the Narcotics Control Bureau (NCB), under the Ministry of Home Affairs, is the nodal agency that coordinates enforcement across central and state agencies.
The Act grades punishment by the quantity involved:
Two points matter for ordinary families. Consumption of drugs is itself an offence under Section 27, but the law also recognises addiction as a health problem: under Section 64A, an addict charged with consumption or a small-quantity offence can get immunity from prosecution by volunteering for, and completing, de-addiction treatment at a government-maintained or recognised centre. The immunity can be withdrawn if the person does not complete the treatment. In short, the law leaves a door open for treatment over jail for users who come forward. This is general information, not legal advice; for any specific case you may consider consulting a lawyer.
You do not need to wait for a crisis. Help is free and confidential.
Recovery is rarely one and done. Relapse is common and does not mean failure; it means the treatment plan needs adjusting. Steady support from family matters as much as medicine.
The flagship demand-reduction programme is the Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan (NMBA), launched by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment on 15 August 2020. It began in 272 of the most affected districts, expanded to 372 in 2022, and since 15 August 2023 covers all districts of the country. According to the Ministry, by early 2026 the campaign had reached over 25 crore people, with a strong focus on youth, women and educational institutions.
NMBA rests on a simple division of labour: the NCB curbs supply, the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment drives awareness and demand reduction, and the health system provides treatment. The national plan behind it is the National Action Plan for Drug Demand Reduction (NAPDDR).
A drug-free India needs supply control, demand reduction and treatment to work as one system, not as separate departments. India already has the institutional design for this; the task is to make it deliver on the ground.
What would make this machine work better is not more departments but better wiring: one shared data picture of seizures, hotspots and treatment outcomes; treatment over punishment for users who come forward; steady funding and trained counsellors so de-addiction centres are not empty buildings; and measuring outcomes, not just events and pledges. The publicly announced three-year national mission gives this coordination a clear deadline to deliver against.
Save or print: family early-warning and help checklist
Most of the data and helplines above come from public government sources, and you can ask for more. Under the RTI Act, 2005 you may seek records from your state health or social welfare department on the list and capacity of de-addiction centres, district NMBA activity, or school awareness programmes. Note that the NCB itself is largely exempt from RTI under Section 24, so route such queries to the service-providing departments. To frame a clean request, you can use the AI RTI Drafter.
Drug abuse means using a substance in a way that harms your health, work or relationships, while you can still stop. Drug addiction, or dependence, is a medical condition where a person loses control over use, develops tolerance and withdrawal, and keeps using despite harm. Addiction is treatable with the right help.
Among the substances studied in the 2019 national survey, alcohol is by far the most used, with about 14.6% of people aged 10 to 75, roughly 16 crore, being current users. Cannabis is next at about 2.8%, followed by opioids at about 2.06%.
The national toll-free de-addiction helpline is 14446. Set up by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment, it offers primary counselling and immediate referral to a treatment centre. It is free and available to anyone seeking help for themselves or a family member.
Use the MANAS helpline 1933, the national narcotics helpline run by the Narcotics Control Bureau, launched in July 2024. You can report drug peddling or trafficking anonymously by phone, web portal or app, and the same line can also guide you towards de-addiction help.
Consumption of drugs is an offence under Section 27 of the NDPS Act. However, Section 64A allows an addict charged with consumption or a small-quantity offence to get immunity from prosecution by volunteering for de-addiction treatment at a government-recognised centre and completing it. The law treats addiction partly as a health issue, not only a crime.
Call 14446 for a referral, or ask at your district hospital or nearest government medical college, many of which run de-addiction or psychiatry departments. India had about 648 government-supported de-addiction centres in 2023-24, along with Integrated Rehabilitation Centres for Addicts supported by the Ministry of Social Justice and Empowerment.
Nasha Mukt Bharat Abhiyaan is India's national drug-demand-reduction campaign, launched on 15 August 2020 and now running in every district. It combines community awareness, counselling and the 14446 helpline, and the Ministry says it had reached over 25 crore people by early 2026.
The International Day Against Drug Abuse and Illicit Trafficking falls on 26 June each year. Led by the UN, it pushes for prevention, treatment and a health-first response to drug use. In India it anchors awareness drives and, in 2026, a stepped-up national campaign against drugs.