Quick answer. Swadesh Darshan 2.0 (SD 2.0) is the Ministry of Tourism's relaunched destination-development scheme, operational from 2022, designed to shift the unit of intervention from “project” to “destination.” Under SD 2.0 each State / UT prepares a State Perspective Plan (SPP) — a Top-10 list of destinations the State proposes to develop in concurrence with the Centre. The Ministry, in coordination with the State, identifies destinations from this list for sanction. SD 2.0 carries forward the Central Financial Assistance model from SD 1.0 but layers on three operational mandates: (1) Carrying-Capacity Assessment before sanction (a standardised template is shared with States), (2) Visitor-Management Strategies to prevent overtourism + ecological stress, and (3) Operation & Maintenance plans that survive past project completion. The scheme also operates two sub-schemes: Challenge-Based Destination Development (CBDD) for end-to-end destination experiences, and Development of Homestays in Tribal Areas under PM-JUGA (Pradhan Mantri Janjatiya Unnat Gram Abhiyan). For citizens, SD 2.0 sanctions are public records under Section 4(1)(b)(xii) RTI Act, 2005, and the Top-10 SPP framework gives every State Government a structured way to bring overlooked destinations to the central pipeline.
These three mandates are the lessons learned from SD 1.0 (where post-completion gaps were the most-cited shortcoming).
Every State / UT submits an SPP that lists Top-10 destinations it proposes to develop under SD 2.0. The selection is by the State, reflecting state-level tourism priorities. The Ministry of Tourism, in concurrence with the State, then identifies which destinations from this list will receive central support based on:
Destinations not selected in a given cycle remain on the State's pipeline for subsequent cycles.
A competitive shortlisting mechanism for end-to-end destination experiences. States submit themed proposals; the Ministry shortlists. CBDD focuses on Culture & Heritage, Spiritual Tourism, Ecotourism / Amrit Dharohar Sites, and similar narrative themes. Detail: CBDD article.
Under the Pradhan Mantri Janjatiya Unnat Gram Abhiyan, this sub-scheme develops homestay clusters in tribal villages to combine livelihood with responsible tourism. Detail: PM-JUGA article.
For an SD 2.0 destination in your district / state:
If your state's SPP doesn't include a destination you think it should, file an RTI to State Tourism asking what proposals the State has in pipeline for the next SD 2.0 cycle.
→ See the RTI-tracking guide for the full how-to.
2022, by the Ministry of Tourism, Government of India.
SD 1.0 funded projects in 15 thematic circuits. SD 2.0 funds destinations with carrying-capacity + O&M + visitor-management mandates. Different unit of intervention.
State Governments prepare the SPP based on state-level tourism priorities. The Ministry of Tourism evaluates jointly with the State.
Generally no. SD 2.0 funds States. Individual operators access the scheme indirectly (via the destination's broader infrastructure benefits). For tribal-area homestays, the PM-JUGA sub-scheme is the named programme — but State-mediated.
To prevent over-tourism. Especially relevant in fragile destinations (Western Ghats, Himalayan eco-zones, coastal cluster sites). The standardised template estimates maximum sustainable visitor load.
Yes under §6(1) RTI Act read with §4(1)(b)(xii). DPRs are public-authority records of subsidy programmes; routine refusal under §8(1)(d) commercial-confidence has been overturned by CIC and HC orders consistently.
File an RTI to State Tourism Department asking the status of SPP preparation + expected submission timeline. Engage your MP / MLA in parallel.
The Ministry of Tourism has formulated an EFC note for scheme continuation FY 2026-27 to FY 2031-32. Once approved, the Ministry will issue revised guidelines and States may submit fresh proposals.
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Last reviewed: 4 May 2026 — RTI Wiki editorial team. Citizen-information piece based on publicly published scheme guidelines.