The Kochi Municipal Corporation is the municipal corporation that governs the Indian city of Kochi in the state of Kerala. The Corporation manages 94.88 km2 of Kochi city and has a population of 677,381 within that area. It is the most densely populated city corporation in the state. Kochi Municipal Corporation has been formed with functions to improve the infrastructure of town.
Kochi Municipal Corporation | |
|---|---|
Logo of Kochi Municipal Corporation | |
| Type | |
| Type | Municipal Corporation |
Term limits | 5 years |
| History | |
| Founded | 1967 |
| Leadership | |
Mayor | Adv.Minimol V K, INC |
Deputy Mayor | Deepak Joy, INC |
Municipal Corporation Secretary | P.S.Shibu |
| Structure | |
| Seats | 76 |
Political groups | Government (48) UDF (48)
Official Opposition (20)
Other Opposition (9)
|
| Committees | 8
|
| Elections | |
Last election | 9 December 2025 |
Next election | December 2030 |
| Meeting place | |
| Old Corporation Office at Park Avenue, Ernakulam | |
| Website | |
| kochicorporation | |
History
The port at Kozhikode held superior economic and political position in medieval Kerala coast, while Kannur, Kollam, and Kochi, were commercially important secondary ports, where the traders from various parts of the world would gather. The arrival of the Portuguese at Kappad, Kozhikode in 1498, during the Age of Discovery, opened a direct sea route from Europe to India. However with the arrival of Portuguese, the power of Zamorin began to decline and Kochi began to emerge as the largest port city on the coast.
The Fort Kochi had its first municipality established under Dutch influence on 18 April 1664 which was limited within Dutch occupied Kochi Stormburg Fort (Immanuel Fort), which was the oldest municipality in the Indian sub-continent. However, with the handing over of Kochi to the British as part of Anglo-Dutch treaty, the municipality of Fort Kochi was disbanded and much of the local administration were then carried out by Pandara officials (Revenue department of Cochin Kingdom). The Ernakulam town was under the direct protection of the British Resident of Kochi. A municipality under the chairmanship of British Resident was commissioned in 1823 to administer Ernakulam town. However it didn't have local representation, rather constituted by military officials of the British East India Company.
Fort Kochi, which was a part of Malabar District until 1956, was made a municipality on 1 November 1866, along with Kannur, Thalassery, Kozhikode, and Palakkad, according to the Madras Act 10 of 1865 (Amendment of the Improvements in Towns act 1850) of the British Indian Empire. Its first Municipal Council seating contest was conducted in 1883. This was first modern municipality in the region and also the first native (not under British India) municipality of the country. Much of Kochi's progress in local administration came under reign of Maharaja Rama Varma along with support of Diwan Sankunni Menon. In the year 1873, Mattancherry areas were demarcated out of Fort Kochi and a new municipal board was formed. In 1896, the Maharaja announced establishment of a municipal board for Ernakulam town, constituted by 4 members from palace, 2 members from local communities, one Englishman and 2 members from other religious minorities. The mayor was nominated by Maharaja. These were the first steps towards establishing a modern municipalities in the city.
After independence, these 3 municipalities remained and was brought under Indian laws. In 1956 the erstwhile Elamkulam Panchayat and a portion of Cheranallur Panchayat (Pachalam - Vaduthala) were amalgamated to the Ernakulam Municipality. In 1962 a portion of Palluruthy Panchayat (Mundamveli area) was amalgamated to the then Mattancherry Municipality. Edappally Panchayat was formed in 1946 and Palluruthy and Vyttila in 1953. The idea behind the formation of Kochi Municipal Corporation was first shaped in the Mattancherry Municipal Council. The Council passed a resolution requesting the Government to form Cochin Municipal Corporation amalgamating the Municipalities of Ernakulam, Mattancherry and Fort Kochi, on 9 July 1960. However, the erstwhile Fort Kochi Municipal Council was strongly opposed to this proposal.
Kerala State Assembly approved the proposal of Cochin Municipal Corporation. The Government of Kerala, as per their order G.O. (MS) 276/67/DD dt. 27/9/67, notified the formation of the Municipal Corporation of Kochi by amalgamating the three historical Municipalities of the state (Ernakulam, Mattancherry and Fort Kochi) with the Willingdon Island, four Panchayats (Palluruthy, Vennala, Vyttila and Edappally) and the small islands of Gundu Dweepu, Ramanthuruth. The new Corporation came into existence on 1 November 1967, having a total area of 83.524 km2. The name of the Corporations was later changed to Kochi Municipal Corporation, to reflect the local name.
Structure
The corporation is headed by a mayor. The current mayor is VK Minimol of the Indian National Congress, seconded by Deepak Joy as Deputy Mayor. Former mayors and deputy mayors include Mercy Williams and C.K. Manisankar. The city is divided into 74 administrative wards, from which the members of the corporation council are elected for a period of five years. The corporation has its central office situated in Ernakulam and has zonal offices at Fort Kochi, Mattancherry, Palluruthy, Edappally, Vaduthala and Vyttila.
For the purpose of administration, the corporation is divided into different departments, each catering to a different aspect of the city's development and welfare. The Personal Department takes care of the general administration of the city. The various departments include that of Town Planning, Health, Engineering, Revenue, Accounts and the Council Section. The corporation has a Janasevanakendram (meaning centre for people's service), that addresses the issues of the public. The corporation also operates eight maternity and child welfare centers in the city.
Wards
After the ward delimitation in 2025, the number of wards in Kochi Municipal Corporation increased from 74 to 76.
Office holders
| Office | Name | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Mayor | V. K. Minimol (INC) | Elected Mayor; serving first half of term after 2025 council elections; Councillor from Palarivattom division |
| Deputy Mayor | Deepak Joy (INC) | Elected Deputy Mayor; serving first part of term. |
| Chairperson, Finance Standing Committee | Deepak Joy | |
| Chairperson, Development Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Chairperson, Welfare Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Chairperson, Health Standing Committee | Deepthi Mary Varghese (INC) | |
| Public Works Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Town Planning Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Tax Appeal Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Education & Sports Standing Committee | Vacant | |
| Corporation Secretary | P.S. Shibu | appointed official. |
Executive Officers
| Kochi Municipal Corporation Leadership | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Position | Name | Division | Party | Alliance | ||
| Mayor | Adv. Minimol V. K. | Palarivattom (33) | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||
| Deputy Mayor | Deepak Joy | Ayyappankavu (19) | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||
Current members
The 76 wards of the Kochi Municipal Corporation and their councillors are listed below in the serial wise order.
| Assembly | Ward Details | Councillor | Party | Alliance | Remarks | |||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| No. | Name | |||||||
| Kochi | 1 | Fort Kochi | Shiny Mathew | Indian National Congress | UDF | Mayor-designate (Term 2) | ||
| 2 | Kalvathy | Fausia Mohammed | Indian Union Muslim League | UDF | ||||
| 3 | Earavely | Rahina Rafeeq | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 4 | Karippalam | Manaf K. A. | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 5 | Cheralayi | Pravitha Vijayakumar | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | ||||
| 6 | Mattanchery | Sheeja Navas | Indian Union Muslim League | UDF | ||||
| 7 | Chakkamadam | Suhana Subair | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 8 | Karuvelippady | Kavitha Harikumar | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| Ernakulam | 9 | Island North | Padmakumari T. | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | |||
| 10 | Ravipuram | S. Sashikala | Independent | |||||
| 11 | Ernakulam South | K. V. P. Krishnakumar | Indian National Congress | UDF | Deputy Mayor-designate (Term 2) | |||
| 12 | Gandhi Nagar | Nirmala Teacher | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 13 | Kathrikadavu | Riya Lawrence | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 14 | Ernakulam Central | Sudha Dileepkumar | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | ||||
| 15 | Ernakulam North | Augustine Sebastian P. M. | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 16 | Kaloor South | Aristotle M. G. | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| Thrikkakara | 17 | Kaloor North | Ashraf T. K. | Indian Union Muslim League | UDF | |||
| Ernakulam | 18 | Thrikkanarvattom | Dr. Jalaja S. Acharya | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | |||
| 19 | Ayyappankavu | Deepak Joy | Indian National Congress | UDF | Deputy Mayor | |||
| 20 | Pottakuzhy | Brigith Ashin | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 21 | Elamakkara South | V. R. Sudheer | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 22 | Pachalam | Albert Ambalathingal | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 23 | Thattazham | Sibi John | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 24 | Vaduthala West | Jismi Gerald | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 25 | Vaduthala East | Henry Austin | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 26 | Elamakkara North | Beena Mahesh | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 27 | Puthukkalavattam | Seena Teacher | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 28 | Kunnumpuram | Jagadambika | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| Thrikkakara | 29 | Ponekkara | Nimmi Mariyam | Indian National Congress | UDF | |||
| 30 | Edappally | Abdul Latheef | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 31 | Changampuzha | Sini Anand | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 32 | Dhevankulangara | Vijayakumar | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 33 | Palarivattom | Adv. Minimol V. K. | Indian National Congress | UDF | Mayor | |||
| 34 | Stadium | Adv. Deepthi Mary Varghese | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 35 | Karanakkodam | Girly Robert | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 36 | Puthiyaroad | Molly Charlie | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 37 | Padivattam | Shibi Soman | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 38 | Vennala | Sabu Koroth | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 39 | Chakkaraparambu | Adv. P. M. Naseema | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 40 | Chalikkavattam | Bindu Viju | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 41 | Thammanam | Divya Rajesh | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 42 | Elamkulam | Nisha P. D. | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 43 | Girinagar | P. D. Martin | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 44 | Ponnurunni | M. X. Sebastian | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 45 | Ponnurunni East | Beena Divakaran | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 46 | Vyttila | V. P. Chandran | Independent | UDF | UDF Independent | |||
| 47 | Poonithura | Xavier P. Antony | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 48 | Vyttila Janatha | Anju K. Thankachan | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 49 | Kadavanthra | Jison George | Kerala Congress | UDF | ||||
| 50 | Panampilly Nagar | Antony Painuthara | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| Ernakulam | 51 | Perumanoor | K. X. Francis | Indian National Congress | UDF | |||
| 52 | Konthuruthy | Abhishek K. S. | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 53 | Thevara | Elizabeth Teacher | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 54 | Island South | Shakrutha | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| Thrippunithura | 55 | Kadebhagam | Ashwathi Joshi | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | |||
| 56 | Palluruthy East | N. P. Shanthini | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 57 | Thazhuppu | Sujatha Sabu | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 58 | Eadakochi North | K. J. Basil | Congress (Secular) | LDF | ||||
| 59 | Edakochi South | Lasitha Peter | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 60 | Perumbadappu | Likitha N. X. | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 61 | Konam | C. R. Biju | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 62 | Palluruthy Kacheripady | V. A. Sreejith | Communist Party of India (Marxist) | LDF | ||||
| 63 | Nambyapuram | Rashida Hussain | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| Kochi | 64 | Palluruthy | Geetha Prabhakaran | Indian National Congress | UDF | |||
| 65 | Pullardesam | Hema Teacher | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 66 | Tharebhagam | Lavitha Nelson | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 67 | Thoppumpady | Joseph Sumith | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 68 | Mundamvely East | K. J. Prakashan | Independent politician | OTH | ||||
| 69 | Mundamvely | Lisi Sumi | Indian National Congress | UDF | ||||
| 70 | Manassery | Nisha Joseph | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 71 | Moolamkuzhy | Joseph Fernandes (Josykutty) | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 72 | Chullickal | Bastin Babu | Independent | UDF | UDF Independent | |||
| 73 | Nasrathu | Yesudas (P. J. Dasan) | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
| 74 | Panayappilly | Aswathy Gireesh | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | ||||
| 75 | Amaravathy | Adv. Priya Prashanth | Bharatiya Janata Party | NDA | ||||
| 76 | Fortkochi Veli | Manjula Anil Kumar | Communist Party of India | LDF | ||||
Ward Breakdown by Assembly Constituency
| Assembly Constituency | Total Wards | UDF | LDF | NDA | OTH | Leading Alliance |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Thrikkakara | 23 | 22 | 1 | 0 | 0 | UDF |
| Ernakulam | 23 | 15 | 4 | 3 | 1 | UDF |
| Kochi | 21 | 10 | 7 | 3 | 1 | UDF |
| Thrippunithura | 9 | 1 | 8 | 0 | 0 | LDF |
| Total | 76 | 48 | 20 | 6 | 2 | UDF |
Demography
The Kochi City has a population of 596,473 as per Indian Census 2001. Kochi witnessed a rapid population growth during the past 30 years. The average decadal growth in Kochi Corporation is 7.83% whereas the nearby municipal areas registered decadal average of 18.65%, and the adjoining panchayaths had an average decadal growth of 12.13%. The Sub-urban areas around the city is showing high rate of population growth and also fast developing trends. The literacy rate is 95.5%.
Revenue sources
The following are the Income sources for the Corporation from the Central and State Government.
Revenue from taxes
Following is the Tax related revenue for the corporation.
- Property tax.
- Profession tax.
- Entertainment tax.
- Grants from Central and State Government like Goods and Services Tax.
- Advertisement tax.
Revenue from non-tax sources
Following is the Non Tax related revenue for the corporation.
- Water usage charges.
- Fees from Documentation services.
- Rent received from municipal property.
- Funds from municipal bonds.
- Fees and user charges
- Sale and hire charges
Election history
Corporation Election 2025
| S.No. | Party name | Party symbol | Number of Corporators | Change | Map |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | UDF | 48 | 18 | ||
| 2. | LDF | 20 | 9 | ||
| 3. | BJP | 06 | 1 | ||
| 4. | IND | 02 | 8 |
Corporation Election 2020
| S.No. | Party name | Party symbol | Number of Corporators | Change |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1. | UDF | 30 | 8 | |
| 2. | LDF | 29 | 6 | |
| 3. | OTHERS | 10 | 1 | |
| 4. | BJP | 05 | 3 |
2015 Local body elections
Soumini Jain from the Indian National Congress served as the mayor of Kochi Corporation in 2015. On the council, Soumini represented the municipal corporation's 36th division (Elamkulam).
| S.No. | Political Front/Party | Number of Corporators |
|---|---|---|
| 1 | United Democratic Front (UDF) | 38 |
| 2 | Left Democratic Front (LDF) | 23 |
| 3 | National Democratic Alliance (NDA) | 02 |
| 4 | Others | 11 |
Issues
One of the main issues that the Kochi Municipal Corporation faces is that much of the modern city has developed outside the official city limits which was last defined in 1967. As a result, the extended urban agglomeration grew much more than any other city of India, leaving the corporation dry in resources. As Kochi is a major industry and thriving modern port-city, it required much more strong leadership and plans, which till now never materialized. The city grew in unplanned way without any masterplan creating more problems. As most of the town-planning agencies like transport, electricity, water distribution were managed by Kerala Government, the Kochi Corporation failed in co-ordinating various agencies implementing various projects. Apart from all these, much of the infrastructural development funds for the city were given to Greater Cochin Development Authority which often creates administrative clashes and issues over implementation.
One of the major issue which the city faced earlier was waste management which aggravated in 2002, which was partially solved by commissioning of the Brahmapuram Waste Management Plant in 2008. However this was gradually converted into a dumping yard. In 2023, a major fire broke out at the Brahmapuram plant resulting in major parts of Kochi city getting engulfed in smoke.
See also
- Kochi metropolitan area
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