Introduction
The National Disaster Response Force, or NDRF, is India’s specialized force for disaster response. It was raised in 2006 after the enactment of the Disaster Management Act, 2005, and functions as the dedicated national force for responding to natural and man-made disasters. Its official role is specialist response to threatening disaster situations and disasters.
Legal basis
The legal foundation of the NDRF lies in the Disaster Management Act, 2005. The Act created the institutional framework for disaster management in India and provided for the constitution of a National Disaster Response Force for specialist response. This places the NDRF within the wider disaster-governance framework led by the National Disaster Management Authority.
Administrative position
The NDRF functions under the broader disaster-management structure of the Ministry of Home Affairs. It works in close coordination with:
• National Disaster Management Authority
• Ministry of Home Affairs
• State governments
• State Disaster Response Forces
• district administration and local authorities
This makes it a central operational arm in India’s disaster-response system, especially for severe and specialized rescue operations.
Composition
According to the official NDRF profile updated in December 2024 and parliamentary replies from March 2026, the NDRF currently comprises 16 battalions drawn from different Central Armed Police Forces and allied forces, namely:
• BSF
• CISF
• CRPF
• ITBP
• SSB
• Assam Rifles
Each battalion consists of 18 specialized search and rescue teams, each with 47 members, and each battalion has a total strength of 1,149 personnel.
Deployment pattern
The battalions are stationed across different parts of India according to the vulnerability profile of regions so that response time is minimized. Official material states that the force also has:
• 28 Regional Response Centres across the country
• 24 Tactical Pre-positioning Locations as of the 2025 Raising Day release
• presence at 68 locations in total, according to the same 2025 official note
This shows that NDRF is no longer only battalion-based in a narrow sense. It now operates through a wider forward-positioned network for faster disaster response.
Main role
The NDRF is trained and equipped to handle a wide range of disasters, including:
• floods
• cyclones
• earthquakes
• landslides
• building collapse
• industrial accidents
• chemical emergencies
• biological and radiological emergencies
• urban search and rescue
• mountain and water rescue
Its core purpose is immediate, specialized, field-level response.
Nature of specialization
The force is not just a general rescue force. Its teams include specialized personnel such as:
• structural engineers
• technicians
• electricians
• canine squads
• medical and paramedic staff
This multidisciplinary structure makes the NDRF especially suited for collapsed-structure rescue, flood rescue, and technically demanding emergency operations.
Humanitarian role
The official NDRF website states that, since inception, the force has saved more than 1,59,293 lives and evacuated more than 8,64,316 stranded persons from disaster-hit areas in India and abroad. It also notes that its response in disasters such as the Japan Triple Disaster of 2011, the Nepal Earthquake of 2015, the Türkiye Earthquake of 2023, and the Myanmar Earthquake of 2025 earned global recognition.
This shows that the NDRF has developed not only domestic but also international humanitarian relevance.
Importance in India’s disaster architecture
The NDRF is important because India faces high multi-hazard vulnerability. Official disaster-management material highlights that large parts of India are vulnerable to earthquakes, drought, floods, cyclones, cloudbursts, and other hazards. In this context, the NDRF provides trained, centrally mobilized, specialist capability that states alone may not always possess at sufficient scale.
Its importance lies in:
• rapid deployment
• technical rescue capability
• standardized training
• inter-state mobility
• coordination with civil administration
• support to SDRFs and local responders
Relationship with SDRF
A common confusion is between NDRF and SDRF.
The NDRF is the specialized national force for response operations.
The SDRF usually refers to State Disaster Response Force, meaning state-level response capability.
So, NDRF is the centrally raised specialist response force, while SDRFs operate at the state level and provide local or state-specific response support. This distinction follows from official disaster-management usage and NDRF’s own institutional description.
Why it matters
The NDRF matters because disaster response is the most visible and immediate face of disaster management. Prevention and mitigation are critical, but when a major flood, earthquake, cyclone, or building collapse occurs, survival often depends on the speed and competence of field rescue teams. The NDRF fills that role at the national level. This understanding is reinforced in disaster-management training material that calls response the most visible component of the disaster-management cycle.
Conclusion
The National Disaster Response Force is India’s premier specialist disaster-response force. Created under the Disaster Management Act, it forms the operational backbone of India’s emergency rescue capability during major disasters. Its importance lies in speed, specialization, national reach, and its ability to save lives in the most difficult disaster situations.
