NW NyaayWatch
Viewing Andaman and Nicobar Islands
Andaman and Nicobar IslandsAndhra PradeshArunachal PradeshAssamBiharChandigarhChhattisgarhDadra and Nagar Haveli and Daman and DiuDelhiGoaGujaratHaryanaHimachal PradeshJammu and KashmirJharkhandKarnatakaKeralaLadakhLakshadweepMadhya PradeshMaharashtraManipurMeghalayaMizoramNagalandOdishaPuducherryPunjabRajasthanSikkimTamil NaduTelanganaTripuraUttar PradeshUttarakhandWest Bengal
ANDAMAN AND NICOBAR ISLANDS · UPDATED 25 April 2026

THE WAIT

How long is the wait for justice in Andaman and Nicobar Islands?

8,722 cases are waiting in Andaman and Nicobar Islands's district courts. The middle of the backlog has already been waiting about 49 months. A backlog this big is not going to move on its own.

8,722
pending cases
i

Every one of these is a person waiting for their day in court.

~49mo
typical wait
i

Half the cases pending today have been waiting longer than this.

90
cleared per 100 filed
i

For every 100 new cases, only 90 are being cleared. The backlog keeps growing.

3
districts flagged
i

Where the backlog is heaviest, or the wait is longest, or the pace is slowest.

What the pressure means.

These numbers add scale and persistence to the headline backlog. They are scenarios and signals from the same published data, not predictions.

INVESTIGATION PATH

Follow the union territory trail.

Start with the headline pressure, then inspect districts, snapshot movement, comparisons, and citation-ready exports for Andaman and Nicobar Islands.

01

Scan districts

Sort by backlog, clearance pace, typical wait, or file-clear gap to find the first pressure signal worth inspecting.

Open district workspace

02

Check movers

Compare the two most recent published snapshots when history is available, so a one-month change does not get lost in the table.

Open movers

03

Open evidence

Use the district page for history, caveats, citations, downloadable CSVs, and the metric definitions behind each number.

Inspect top district

04

Reuse safely

Use the public data, API, and press kit instead of raw capture files or unpublished runs.

Open press kit

Three districts to inspect first

A district lands here when its backlog, its waiting time, or its pace of work is out of line with the rest of the union territory. These are signals for closer inspection, not findings.

No. 1

Port Blair

Port Blair has 8,722 cases waiting. A typical pending case falls around 1461 days old, and the district cleared 89.8% as many cases as it received last month. It stays on the list of districts to watch in this snapshot.

Cases waiting
i
8,722
Typical wait
i
~49 mo
Cleared per 100
i
90

Why it is flaggedNew cases are coming in faster than this district is clearing them, and the queue is already among the state's biggest.

No. 2

Nicobars

Nicobars has no pending cases in the latest data, and the source didn't report a pending-age distribution or recent filings-vs-clearances for this district.

Cases waiting
i
0
Typical wait
i
~0 mo
Cleared per 100
i
0

Why it is flaggedThe latest data doesn't show pending-case age or recent filings-vs-clearances for this district.

No. 3

North And Middle Andaman

North And Middle Andaman has no pending cases in the latest data, and the source didn't report a pending-age distribution or recent filings-vs-clearances for this district.

Cases waiting
i
0
Typical wait
i
~0 mo
Cleared per 100
i
0

Why it is flaggedThe latest data doesn't show pending-case age or recent filings-vs-clearances for this district.

How the territory-wide backlog has moved

Each bar is a previously published territory-wide snapshot. It shows how the backlog has moved across publication dates, not a continuously refreshed surface.

  1. Apr 2026 8,722
  2. Apr 2026 8,722
  3. Apr 2026 8,722

Why this site exists

NyaayWatch is an independent view of public court aggregates. This Union Territory page covers Andaman and Nicobar Islands. The national homepage lives at /, and the switcher links 35 other approved lower-court pages. It publishes reviewed snapshots instead of a continuously refreshed surface, so citizens, reporters, and civic groups can inspect the numbers, cite them, and ask sharper questions.