Fully a third of India’s very considerable public debt is debt of the states, a large fraction by the standards of other federal economies. State debts vary from less than 20 percent of state GDP in Odisha, Maharashtra and Gujarat to nearly 50 percent in Punjab. The recent evolution of these variables points to continued divergence in debt burdens across lightly and heavily indebted states and bodes difficulties for the latter in meeting all but essential expenditures. In the last ten years, half of India’s larger states have added more than 10 percentage points to their debt-to-state-GDP ratios. Of the rest, about half have exhibited fiscal prudence, while the other half have exhibited moderate levels of debt increase. Under the business-as-usual scenario, a majority of states will become even more indebted, and the financial condition of more and less indebted states will continue to diverge. We point to reforms to strengthen fiscal discipline at the state level and address risks associated with the states’ relatively high level of public debt.