Ask someone outside Gujarat to describe the difference between papad and khakhra, and you'll likely get a blank stare. Both are thin, round, and crispy. Both are Gujarati staples. Both end up in the same section of every Indian supermarket. But to a Gujarati, they are completely different products with different ingredients, different purposes, and different places in the food culture. This guide settles the papad vs khakhra debate once and for all.
Papad is a thin lentil or grain wafer that needs to be cooked (fried, roasted, or microwaved) before eating. Khakhra is a roasted flatbread made from wheat flour that comes pre-cooked and ready to eat straight from the pack. They're both crispy, but that's where the similarity ends.
Papad (also called papadum outside Gujarat) is made from a thin dough of lentil flour: typically urad dal, moong dal, or chana dal: mixed with spices and dried into flat, round wafers. Raw papads need heat to become crispy and edible. The most common preparation methods are:
Gujarati papads come in many varieties. Jeera Mari Papad (cumin and pepper) is the most popular. Double Mari Papad (extra pepper) suits spice lovers. Single Mari Papad is the milder everyday option.
Khakhra is a roasted thin flatbread made from wheat flour (typically whole wheat or multigrain) mixed with spices, rolled very thin, and roasted on a tawa (griddle) until crispy. Unlike papad, khakhra is fully cooked during manufacturing: you eat it straight from the pack, no preparation needed.
Khakhra originated as a travel food for Jain communities, where the requirements were simple: no oil (roasted not fried), no garlic or onion, long shelf life, and portable. It succeeded on all counts. Today, khakhra comes in dozens of varieties: methi (fenugreek), masala, jeera, cheese, and more.
| Feature | Papad | Khakhra |
|---|---|---|
| Base ingredient | Lentil flour (urad dal, moong, chana) | Wheat flour (whole wheat or multigrain) |
| Cooking needed? | Yes: fry, roast, or microwave | No: eat straight from pack |
| Texture | Very thin, airy, blisters when cooked | Flat, uniform crunch, no blistering |
| Thickness | Thinner | Slightly thicker, more substantial |
| Flavour | Lentil base with spice flavour | Wheat base with spice flavour |
| Protein content | Higher (lentil base) | Lower (wheat base) |
| Traditional use | Meal accompaniment, thali | Standalone snack, travel food |
| Shelf life | 6-12 months (raw), 2-3 days (cooked) | 3-6 months (ready-to-eat) |
| Origin | Pan-India (varies by region) | Gujarat (Jain communities) |
Papad is primarily a meal accompaniment. In Gujarat, no thali is complete without a papad on the side: typically fried or roasted, served alongside dal, sabji, and rotli. The crunch and spice of papad cuts through the richness of dal and ghee, providing a textural counterpoint to soft, cooked dishes.
Papad is also an ingredient in dishes like papad ki sabji (a curry made with fried papad pieces) and masala papad (topped with onion, tomato, and chutneys as a starter). You can't do either of these with khakhra.
Khakhra is primarily a standalone snack: something to eat on its own, at any time of day. It's become the go-to healthy snack alternative to chips and namkeen, particularly among health-conscious urban Indians. Its portability (no cooking required, doesn't crumble as easily as papad) makes it popular for offices, travel, and school tiffins.
The wheat base makes khakhra more substantial and filling than papad. A few khakhras are a genuine snack; a few papads are just an amuse-bouche.
Both can be healthy, but in different ways. Papad made from urad dal or moong dal is higher in protein and lower in carbohydrates than khakhra. However, fried papad adds significant fat. Roasted or microwaved papad is much lighter. Khakhra, made from whole wheat, is higher in dietary fibre and more filling, but lower in protein. For calorie-watchers, roasted papad and khakhra are roughly equivalent.
In most contexts, no. If a recipe calls for papad (like papad ki sabji), khakhra won't work: it doesn't have the same frying behaviour. If you want a ready-to-eat snack, raw papad isn't suitable without preparation. They serve genuinely different purposes and are both worth having in your pantry.
Handmade, preservative-free Jeera Mari, Double Mari, and Single Mari Papad from Charotar. Pan India delivery.
Shop Papad โPapad and khakhra are two of Gujarat's greatest contributions to Indian snack culture: but they fill different roles. Keep papad for meals and cooking, khakhra for on-the-go snacking. If you had to choose just one for your pantry, papad wins on versatility; khakhra wins on convenience. The honest answer: you don't have to choose. They're both worth having.