If you're looking for the Delhi Mumbai Expressway on a map, you're in the right place. NE-4 spans 1,386 km across six states, and understanding the full route — which sections are open, where the interchanges are, and how to navigate using Google Maps — is essential before driving.
This guide covers the full NE-4 route map, the state-by-state alignment, interchange locations, and practical tips for finding and using the expressway on digital maps.
Interactive NE-4 Map
The fastest way to see all interchanges and current operational status is our interactive Entry & Exit Points map — it shows all 33 interchanges plotted on a live map with colour-coding:
- Blue — Start/end terminus (Delhi and Navi Mumbai)
- Green — Operational interchange
- Orange — Toll plaza
- Grey — Under construction
Click any marker to see the interchange name, state, and whether it's currently open to traffic.
Delhi Mumbai Expressway Route: State by State
Here is the full alignment of NE-4 from north to south, as it appears on any map:
Delhi — Northern Terminus
NE-4 begins at the DND Flyway intersection in south Delhi, near Mithapur/Ballabhgarh. On a map, this appears as the point where the expressway connects to the Delhi–Faridabad corridor. The 24 km stretch from Mithapur to Ballabhgarh is operational.
Coordinates (approximate northern terminus): 28.47°N, 77.31°E
Haryana — ~80 km
From Delhi, the expressway passes through Faridabad, Palwal, and Sohna. On a map, you'll see it running parallel to (but east of) NH-48. The section exits Haryana near Sohna, which is also the first major interchange after Delhi.
Rajasthan — ~525 km
Rajasthan contains the longest stretch of NE-4 on the map. The alignment passes through:
- Alwar district (entering from Haryana)
- Dausa — first major Rajasthan interchange
- Sawai Madhopur — near Ranthambore Tiger Reserve
- Kota — major industrial city interchange
- Jhalawar — the southernmost Rajasthan district before MP
On Google Maps, you can visually identify the wildlife corridor stretch between Sawai Madhopur and Kota — the highway curves slightly to avoid core forest zones, and the elevated wildlife overpasses appear as distinctive crossings on satellite view.
Madhya Pradesh — ~244 km
The MP section is straight and clean on the map, running roughly east-to-west through Neemuch, Mandsaur, and Ratlam districts. This is the most complete stretch — the entire 244 km has been operational since September 2023. On satellite imagery, the wide 8-lane alignment is clearly visible cutting through agricultural land.
Gujarat — ~430 km
Gujarat has the most complex map segment because of the number of cities near the route:
- Godhra — interchange near Vadodara approach
- Vadodara — major interchange, where NE-1 (Ahmedabad–Vadodara Expressway) connects
- Bharuch — interchange near the Narmada river
- Surat area — the expressway passes east of Surat
- Kim and Enna — southern Gujarat interchanges
On a map, the Gujarat section is notable for crossing the Narmada River near Bharuch — a major bridge visible on satellite view.
Maharashtra — Southern Terminus
The Maharashtra section (currently under construction) runs south through Thane district to JNPT (Jawaharlal Nehru Port Trust) in Navi Mumbai. On a map, this section connects to the Mumbai–Pune Expressway and Mumbai–Nagpur Expressway corridor.
Coordinates (approximate southern terminus): 18.94°N, 72.95°E
How to Find NE-4 on Google Maps
The Delhi–Mumbai Expressway now appears on Google Maps under the name "National Expressway 4" or "NE-4". Here's how to navigate using it:
Search tips:
- Search "Delhi Mumbai Expressway" — Google Maps will show the route and highlight NE-4
- Search "NE-4 interchange [city name]" to find a specific entry point, e.g., "NE-4 interchange Dausa"
- Use the satellite view in Google Maps to see the physical road alignment — the 8-lane greenfield alignment is easily distinguishable from older roads
Getting directions on NE-4: When requesting directions from Delhi to a city served by NE-4 (such as Kota, Ratlam, or Vadodara), Google Maps will typically route you via NE-4 if the relevant section is open. If it routes you via an older highway, try manually adding a waypoint near an NE-4 interchange to force the route onto the expressway.
Note: Google Maps may not always show NE-4 as the default route for recently opened sections. If you know a section is open (check the Construction Status page), you can manually drag the route onto the expressway on the map.
Distance Between Key Cities on NE-4
| Segment | Distance on NE-4 | |---|---| | Delhi → Sohna | ~55 km | | Delhi → Dausa | ~210 km | | Delhi → Kota | ~465 km | | Delhi → Ratlam (MP) | ~690 km | | Delhi → Vadodara | ~940 km | | Delhi → Bharuch | ~1,010 km | | Delhi → Mumbai (full route) | ~1,386 km |
The NE-4C Spur: Jaipur Branch
One detail easy to miss on the map is the NE-4C branch — a ~67 km spur connecting Bandikui (on NE-4) to Jaipur. On a map, it branches off from the main NE-4 alignment near Dausa and heads west into Jaipur city. This gives Jaipur — Rajasthan's capital — a direct expressway connection to both Delhi and the southern corridor.
The NE-4C spur has its own toll plazas, visible on the Toll Rates page under the Rajasthan spur section.
Interconnecting Highways Visible on the Route Map
NE-4 is part of a much larger highway network. At key points on the map, you'll see it intersecting with:
- NH-44 / DND Flyway at the Delhi end
- Western Peripheral Expressway (KMP) in Haryana
- NE-1 (Ahmedabad–Vadodara Expressway) at Vadodara
- Mumbai–Nagpur Expressway (Samruddhi Mahamarg) near the Mumbai end
- Mumbai–Pune Expressway at the southern terminus
These connections make NE-4 the backbone of India's western expressway grid.
For live interchange locations and real-time construction status, use the interactive NE-4 map on this site. For official information, visit nhai.gov.in.