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How Many Zeros in a Kharab?

A kharab has 11 zeros in the Indian numbering system: 1,00,00,00,00,000 — equal to one hundred billion (100,000,000,000) in the international system, or 1011. One kharab equals 100 arab, 10,000 crore, or 1,000,000 lakh. The kharab is part of the traditional extended Indian numbering scale used in accounting, astronomical, and religious texts across the Indian subcontinent. It is less common in everyday usage than lakh or crore, but appears in discussions of national-scale economics and historical large-number systems. See also: How many zeros in a mahashankh.

A kharab has

11

zeros

Written Form
1,00,00,00,00,000
Scientific
10¹¹
Western
100,000,000,000

How Many Zeros Are in a Kharab?

One kharab has exactly 11 zeros: 1,00,00,00,00,000 in Indian notation. The exponent in 1011 confirms this — 11 zeros follow the leading 1. Each step up the Indian numbering scale adds two zeros (not three, as in the international system), which is why kharab (1011) sits two zeros above arab (109). Learn more about zeros in a padma.

UnitIndian notationZerosInternational equivalent
Arab1,00,00,00,00091 billion
Kharab1,00,00,00,00,00011100 billion
Neel1,00,00,00,00,00,0001310 trillion

How Many Crore Are in One Kharab?

One kharab equals exactly 10,000 crore. Since 1 crore = 107 and 1 kharab = 1011, dividing gives 1011 ÷ 107 = 10,000. This conversion matters in contexts where Indian economic data is expressed in crore but a comparison to kharab-scale figures is needed. For instance, if a national budget is reported as "10,000 crore," that is equivalent to 1 kharab. Learn more about zeros in a crore.

How Does a Kharab Compare to International Numbers?

In the international short-scale system, a kharab equals 100 billion (1011), which is one-tenth of a trillion. To convert kharab to trillion, divide by 10: 1 kharab = 0.1 trillion; 10 kharab = 1 trillion.

KharabInternational equivalentZeros
1 kharab100 billion11
10 kharab1 trillion12
100 kharab = 1 neel10 trillion13

The kharab sits in a range that is relevant for national GDP figures and large government budgets in South Asian economies — numbers large enough to exceed crore-level descriptions but small enough not to require the even larger neel or padma units from the same traditional scale.