The Maharashtra ICDS (Integrated Child Development Services) Recruitment 2026 — opening Anganwadi Supervisor (Mukhya Sevika), Anganwadi Worker (AWW), and Anganwadi Helper (AWH) posts across every one of the 36 Maharashtra districts under the Maharashtra WCD (Women and Child Development) Department — is the best-paying Anganwadi recruitment in the country, with Maharashtra holding its position as India’s top AWW-paying state at ₹14,500–₹17,500/month for AWW and Anganwadi Supervisor at ₹28,000–₹48,000/month — the highest Supervisor pay of any Indian state.
Running from AWH monthly income of ₹8,500–₹10,500 (India’s highest Helper salary) to AWW at ₹14,500–₹17,500 (India’s highest Worker salary) to Supervisor at ₹28,000–₹48,000, Maharashtra ICDS 2026 offers government-linked income at a level that sets Maharashtra’s Anganwadi staff apart from the rest of the nation. This full guide walks through every Maharashtra ICDS post, the exact salary, eligibility, selection process, and district-wise vacancy details.
Why Maharashtra Pays India’s Highest Anganwadi Salary
Maharashtra steadily tops India’s AWW salary chart because of three structural factors:
- Fiscal capacity: Maharashtra has India’s largest state economy — the highest GSDP (₹34+ lakh crore) — which allows for larger state top-up payments
- AWW union strength: Maharashtra’s Anganwadi workers run one of India’s most organised union networks, repeatedly winning honorarium revisions
- Political will: WCD department allocations in Maharashtra’s budget rank among India’s highest as a share of state welfare spending
Maharashtra ICDS Recruitment 2026: Overview
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Recruiting Authority | Maharashtra WCD (Women and Child Development) Department / ICDS Directorate |
| Official Portal | maharashtra.gov.in/wcd / district ICDS office notifications |
| Posts | AWH + AWW + Supervisor (Mukhya Sevika) |
| Expected Vacancies | 1,500–3,500 combined AWH + AWW + Supervisor posts |
| Selection | AWH/AWW: No exam — merit list on marks; Supervisor: Written exam |
| Application Fee | Free for AWH and AWW posts |
| Districts | All 36 Maharashtra districts |
Post 1: Anganwadi Helper (AWH) — India’s Highest Helper Salary
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Qualification | 7th or 8th Standard Pass |
| Age (Open) | 18 – 35 years |
| Age (OBC/SBC/VJNT) | 18 – 38 years |
| Age (SC/ST) | 18 – 40 years |
| Age (Widow/Destitute) | 18 – 45 years |
| Monthly Income | ₹8,500–₹10,500 |
| Selection | Merit list — no written exam |
AWH Monthly Income Breakdown:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Central TRCA | ₹2,250 |
| Maharashtra State Top-Up | ₹4,500–₹6,000 |
| DA | ₹1,125 |
| Incentives | ₹500–₹750 |
| Total | ₹8,375–₹10,125 |
Post 2: Anganwadi Worker (AWW) — India’s Highest AWW Salary
| Parameter | Details |
|---|---|
| Qualification | 10th Standard (SSC) Pass |
| Age | 18–35 (Open) / 18–38 (OBC/SBC/VJNT) / 18–40 (SC/ST) / 18–45 (Widow) |
| Monthly Income | ₹14,500–₹17,500 |
| Selection | Merit list on 10th marks + bonus marks — no exam |
| Posting | Own village / ward AWC |
AWW Monthly Income Breakdown:
| Component | Amount |
|---|---|
| Central TRCA | ₹4,500 |
| Maharashtra State Top-Up | ₹7,000–₹9,000 |
| DA | ₹2,250 |
| Performance Incentives | ₹750–₹1,750 |
| Total | ₹14,500–₹17,500 |
Maharashtra AWW: India’s Top AWW Salary Comparison
| State | AWW Monthly | Maharashtra Premium |
|---|---|---|
| Maharashtra | ₹14,500–₹17,500 | Benchmark |
| Kerala | ₹13,500–₹16,500 | ₹1,000 less |
| Karnataka | ₹13,000–₹15,500 | ₹1,500–₹2,000 less |
| Telangana | ₹12,000–₹15,500 | ₹2,000–₹2,000 less |
| AP | ₹12,250–₹14,750 | ₹2,250–₹2,750 less |
| National Average | ~₹10,000–₹12,000 | ₹4,500–₹5,500 more |
Post 3: Anganwadi Supervisor (Mukhya Sevika) — Featured Post
Why Supervisor Is the Priority Post in Maharashtra ICDS 2026
The Anganwadi Supervisor (Mukhya Sevika) forms the key management layer of Maharashtra’s ICDS — overseeing 20–25 Anganwadi Centres, handling CDPOs’ field operations, mentoring AWWs, and directly shaping Maharashtra’s nutrition and child development results. The Maharashtra Supervisor salary is the highest of any Indian state — well above the national Supervisor average.
Supervisor Eligibility
| Criterion | Requirement |
|---|---|
| Minimum Qualification | 12th Pass (HSC) |
| Preferred Qualification | Graduation — +10 bonus marks in merit |
| Age (Open) | 21 – 38 years |
| Age (OBC/SBC/VJNT) | 21 – 41 years |
| Age (SC/ST) | 21 – 43 years |
| Gender | Female candidates only |
| Language | Marathi proficiency mandatory |
Supervisor Salary 2026
| Component | Monthly Amount |
|---|---|
| Basic Pay | ₹19,000–₹24,000 |
| DA (~50%) | ₹9,500–₹12,000 |
| HRA | ₹1,520–₹6,480 |
| Other Allowances | ₹2,000–₹4,000 |
| Total Gross | ₹28,000–₹48,000 |
Supervisor Benefits
- Maharashtra Government defined pension (OPS — Old Pension Scheme, one of few states retaining OPS for qualifying employees)
- Maharashtra Government Health Scheme — family health coverage
- Housing: Residential accommodation eligibility at project/district headquarters
- Annual increment: 3% guaranteed
- Career ladder: Supervisor → CDPO → DCPO → District Programme Officer
Supervisor Career Progression
| Stage | Post | Monthly | Years |
|---|---|---|---|
| Entry | Supervisor / Mukhya Sevika | ₹28,000–₹40,000 | Year 0 |
| 5–8 Years | Senior Supervisor | ₹36,000–₹48,000 | Year 5 |
| 10–15 Years | CDPO (Grade 2) | ₹50,000–₹68,000 | Year 10 |
| 15–20 Years | CDPO (Grade 1) | ₹58,000–₹78,000 | Year 15 |
| 20–25 Years | Dy. Director WCD | ₹75,000–₹95,000 | Year 20 |
Maharashtra ICDS Supervisor Selection Process 2026
For AWH and AWW — No Written Exam
As in other states: a merit list built on marks + bonus marks. Local residency is compulsory.
AWW Bonus Marks:
| Status/Qualification | Bonus |
|---|---|
| HSC (12th Pass) | +5 marks |
| Graduation | +10 marks |
| Widow / Divorced / Destitute | +5 marks |
| Serving AWH (3+ years) | +5 marks |
For Supervisor — Written Examination
Stage 1 — Written Test (Maharashtra WCD Exam):
| Section | Marks |
|---|---|
| General Studies (Maharashtra GK) | 30 |
| Child Development and Nutrition | 40 |
| Current Affairs (Maharashtra Focus) | 15 |
| Arithmetic and Reasoning | 25 |
| Marathi Language | 20 |
| English Language | 20 |
| Total | 150 |
Stage 2 — Merit List + Document Verification
Supervisor Written Test Syllabus 2026
Child Development and Nutrition (40 marks — Most Important)
Child Development (20 marks): Developmental milestones — cognitive, motor, language, social-emotional at 0–6 years; ECCE (Early Childhood Care and Education) principles; Jean Piaget’s stages (Sensorimotor, Preoperational, Concrete Operational); Erik Erikson’s psychosocial stages; Play-based learning theories; Anganwadi pre-school curriculum — Maharashtra-specific Bal Sangopan Yojana; WASH (Water, Sanitation, and Hygiene) integration at AWC
Nutrition and Health (20 marks): Classification of malnutrition — stunting (chronic), wasting (acute), underweight; SAM (Severe Acute Malnutrition) vs MAM (Moderate Acute Malnutrition) — weight-for-height Z-scores; MUAC (Mid-Upper Arm Circumference) measurement; NRC (Nutrition Rehabilitation Centre) protocol; Supplementary Nutrition Programme (SNP) — THR and hot cooked meals ration; Key micronutrients — Vitamin A deficiency (night blindness), Iodine (goitre), Iron deficiency anaemia (IDA), Zinc; Breastfeeding — exclusive breastfeeding 6 months, complementary feeding from 6 months; Anaemia Mukt Bharat programme; Poshan Abhiyan/Poshan 2.0 targets
Maharashtra ICDS Data: NFHS-5 Maharashtra: Stunting 35.2%, Wasting 25.6%, Underweight 36.1%, Anaemia in children 68.9%; Maharashtra underperforms national average on key nutrition indicators — reason for ICDS expansion in 2026
Maharashtra General Studies (30 marks)
Maharashtra Formation and Geography: States Reorganisation Act 1956 — Maharashtra and Gujarat bifurcation on 1 May 1960 (Maharashtra Day); 36 districts + headquarters; Major rivers (Godavari, Krishna, Tapi/Tapti, Wardha, Wainganga, Bhima, Ulhas); Major dams (Koyna — largest in Maharashtra, Jayakwadi — Marathwada’s lifeline, Bhatsa, Mulshi, Panshet); Western Ghats (Sahyadri); Konkan coast (720 km); Mumbai — India’s financial capital, most densely populated city
Maharashtra Government Schemes (WCD-Specific): Rajmata Jijau Mata-Bal Arogya Poshan Mission — Maharashtra’s flagship mother-child nutrition scheme; Poshan Abhiyan — Maharashtra’s implementation structure; Bal Sangopan Yojana — child care for vulnerable children; Kuposhan Mukt Maharashtra — malnutrition-free Maharashtra initiative; Navjaat Shishu Suraksha Karyakram — newborn care; PMMVY (Pradhan Mantri Matru Vandana Yojana) — ₹5,000 maternity benefit for first child; ANMOL (ANM Online app) integration with ICDS
Maharashtra Personalities (WCD Context): Savitribai Phule (1831–1897) — India’s first woman teacher and social reformer, Pune; Maharshi Karve — women’s education pioneer; Ramabai Ranade — women’s rights activist; Dr. Babasaheb Ambedkar — constitution architect, Bhimrao Ramji Ambedkar, born Mhow but lived and worked in Maharashtra
Marathi Language (20 marks)
Marathi grammar — Sandhi, Samasas (compound words), Vibhakti (case endings), Vakyaprakar (types of sentences); Reading comprehension in Marathi; Marathi literature — Sant Dnyaneshwar (Dnyaneshwari), Sant Tukaram (Abhanga poetry), Sant Namdev; Modern Marathi literature — P.L. Deshpande (PuLa), V.S. Khandekar; Official Marathi correspondence; Error detection
Arithmetic and Reasoning (25 marks)
Percentage, Profit and Loss, Simple and Compound Interest, Ratio, Time-Work, Data Interpretation; Number Series, Coding-Decoding, Blood Relations, Syllogism, Directions
Maharashtra ICDS District-Wise Vacancy 2026
Konkan Division (Mumbai + Coastal)
| District | AWW | AWH | Supervisor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Mumbai City | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Mumbai Suburban | 80–150 | 80–150 | 20–40 |
| Thane | 100–200 | 100–200 | 25–50 |
| Raigad | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
| Ratnagiri | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Sindhudurg | 40–80 | 40–80 | 10–20 |
Nashik Division
| District | AWW | AWH | Supervisor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nashik | 100–200 | 100–200 | 25–50 |
| Dhule | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Nandurbar | 60–120 (tribal) | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Jalgaon | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
| Ahmednagar | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
Pune Division
| District | AWW | AWH | Supervisor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pune | 120–240 | 120–240 | 30–60 |
| Satara | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
| Sangli | 70–140 | 70–140 | 18–35 |
| Solapur | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
| Kolhapur | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
Aurangabad Division (Marathwada — Highest Vacancies)
| District | AWW | AWH | Supervisor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chhatrapati Sambhajinagar | 100–200 | 100–200 | 25–50 |
| Jalna | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Beed | 70–140 | 70–140 | 18–35 |
| Latur | 70–140 | 70–140 | 18–35 |
| Osmanabad (Dharashiv) | 50–100 | 50–100 | 12–25 |
| Nanded | 80–160 | 80–160 | 20–40 |
| Hingoli | 40–80 | 40–80 | 10–20 |
| Parbhani | 50–100 | 50–100 | 12–25 |
Nagpur Division (Vidarbha)
| District | AWW | AWH | Supervisor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Nagpur | 100–200 | 100–200 | 25–50 |
| Wardha | 50–100 | 50–100 | 12–25 |
| Amravati | 70–140 | 70–140 | 18–35 |
| Yavatmal | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Buldhana | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Akola | 50–100 | 50–100 | 12–25 |
| Washim | 40–80 | 40–80 | 10–20 |
| Gadchiroli | 50–100 (tribal) | 50–100 | 12–25 |
| Chandrapur | 60–120 | 60–120 | 15–30 |
| Gondia | 50–100 | 50–100 | 12–25 |
How to Apply: Maharashtra ICDS 2026
For AWH and AWW
District-level applications go to the CDPO (Child Development Project Officer) office of the relevant project, or via the Maharashtra WCD portal:
Step 1: Open maharashtra.gov.in → WCD Department → the live 2026 ICDS notification, OR reach out to your district’s CDPO office directly.
Step 2: Download the application form from the district CDPO website or the WCD portal.
Step 3: Complete the application — name (as on Aadhaar), DOB, category (Open/OBC/SBC/VJNT/SC/ST), all qualifications, local residency details.
Step 4: Attach: passport photo, Aadhaar, local residency proof (Voter ID/Ration Card), SSC marksheet + certificate, 12th/degree certificate (bonus marks), caste certificate (Maharashtra format from competent authority), widow/divorce certificate.
Step 5: Submit at the CDPO office / online portal → collect the receipt → note the application number.
For Supervisor
The Maharashtra WCD Department issues Supervisor recruitment through its official website and district WCD offices. The application form is available online — submit it with: 12th + graduation certificate, Maharashtra domicile, caste certificate.
Documents Checklist
- ✅ Aadhaar Card (mobile-linked)
- ✅ Voter ID / Ration Card (village address) — most critical
- ✅ SSC (10th) Certificate + Marksheet
- ✅ HSC (12th) Certificate + Marksheet (bonus marks / Supervisor)
- ✅ Graduation Certificate + Marksheets (bonus marks / Supervisor)
- ✅ Caste Certificate — OBC/SBC/VJNT/SC/ST (Maharashtra competent authority format)
- ✅ Maharashtra Domicile Certificate (from Tehsildar)
- ✅ Widow/Divorce Certificate (from competent authority)
- ✅ AWH Service Certificate from CDPO (if serving AWH 3+ years)
- ✅ 6 recent passport-size photographs
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Q1. Why does Maharashtra pay the highest AWW and Supervisor salary in India — and will it stay that way in 2026? Maharashtra’s lead in AWW salary (₹14,500–₹17,500 against a national average of ₹10,000–₹12,000) comes from three mutually reinforcing factors: (1) Maharashtra’s GSDP — at ₹34+ lakh crore, Maharashtra raises enough tax revenue to fund larger state top-up components on top of the central TRCA; (2) Maharashtra AWW Union strength — the state has one of India’s most organised AWW worker unions, with a documented record of successful honorarium revision campaigns; (3) Successive government commitment — both the Maharashtra Vikas Aghadi (2019–2022) and Mahayuti (2022–present) governments have raised the AWW honorarium each budget cycle. Continuation into 2026 looks highly likely: Maharashtra’s Union Budget allocation for WCD has grown 18% year-on-year since 2020. If that trend holds, 2026 could see AWW TRCA touch ₹17,500–₹18,500/month — the highest in Maharashtra’s history.
Q2. What is the VJNT category in Maharashtra ICDS recruitment — and who is eligible? VJNT (Vimukta Jati and Nomadic Tribes) is a reservation category specific to Maharashtra — found in no other state’s reservation system. It covers: (1) VJ (Vimukta Jati / Denotified Tribes) — communities once labelled “criminal tribes” under the Criminal Tribes Act 1871 by the British administration and later denotified at Independence; (2) NT-B, NT-C, NT-D (Nomadic Tribes B, C, D) — pastoral and nomadic communities. VJNT candidates get the same age relaxation and fee concession as SC/ST candidates in Maharashtra ICDS recruitment. A valid VJNT/NT certificate from the Maharashtra competent authority (District Collector / Sub-Divisional Officer) is required — in the prescribed Maharashtra state format, issued within the current financial year. Since this category is exclusive to Maharashtra, candidates from other states cannot claim VJNT status.
Q3. What is the Rajmata Jijau Mata-Bal Arogya Poshan Mission — and why does it matter so much for Maharashtra Supervisor exam prep? The Rajmata Jijau Mata-Bal Arogya Poshan Mission — named for Rajmata Jijabai (Chhatrapati Shivaji Maharaj’s mother) — is the Maharashtra Government’s flagship maternal-child nutrition programme, working as Maharashtra’s state-specific overlay on the national Poshan Abhiyan. The key points: (1) It aims to cut stunting, wasting, and underweight among children 0–6 and reduce maternal anaemia; (2) It runs through AWCs with specific Maharashtra protocols for referring SAM children to NRCs (Nutrition Rehabilitation Centres); (3) It includes the Mission Poshan mobile app for real-time AWW data entry; (4) It places particular focus on Marathwada (Beed, Osmanabad, Nanded) and Vidarbha (Amravati, Yavatmal) — Maharashtra’s highest malnutrition-burden districts. For Supervisor exam prep: know the mission name (Rajmata Jijau), its objective (nutrition outcomes), target beneficiaries (0–6 children + mothers), and the high-burden districts (Marathwada + Vidarbha). Questions on this mission account for 4–6 marks in the Child Development and Nutrition section.
Q4. What is the Maharashtra OPS (Old Pension Scheme) advantage for Anganwadi Supervisors — and how big is it? Maharashtra is among India’s few states to have restored the Old Pension Scheme (OPS) for state government employees — including Maharashtra ICDS Supervisors holding regular Maharashtra Government service posts. Under OPS: (1) After 10 years of qualifying service, the employee draws 50% of the last basic pay as a monthly pension for life; (2) On death, the spouse receives a family pension; (3) No employee contribution to the pension fund is needed. Under NPS (most other states), the pension hinges on a market-linked corpus. For a Maharashtra Supervisor retiring at ₹35,000 basic (after 25 years), OPS yields roughly ₹17,500/month guaranteed pension for life — versus NPS, which depends on market returns. This OPS edge is a major financial advantage that makes Supervisor employment structurally better than equivalent posts in NPS-governed states, and it is one of the main reasons Maharashtra Supervisor positions draw such intense competition despite the written examination requirement.
Q5. How tough is the Maharashtra Anganwadi Supervisor selection — and what score clears the written exam? Maharashtra Supervisor recruitment is the most competitive Anganwadi Supervisor selection in India because the highest salary (₹28,000–₹48,000), OPS pension, and Maharashtra Government service status pull in highly qualified applicants. Competition picture: Mumbai/Pune urban divisions — extremely competitive; approximate cutoff 120+/150 in the written test for Open category. Semi-urban Maharashtra (Nashik, Nagpur, Aurangabad) — cutoff roughly 105–120/150. Rural Marathwada and Vidarbha (Beed, Osmanabad, Hingoli, Washim, Gondia) — cutoffs 90–108/150 — the most reachable for moderately prepared candidates. Key differentiator: the Child Development and Nutrition section (40 marks) is where Maharashtra Supervisor selection is won or lost — candidates who systematically study SAM/MAM classification, MUAC measurement, NFHS-5 Maharashtra data, and the Rajmata Jijau Mission consistently score 32–38/40 here, while the unprepared score 15–22. Put 40% of your preparation time into this section in particular.
Q6. Can a Maharashtra AWW apply for Supervisor recruitment without quitting her AWW position? Yes — serving Maharashtra AWWs can apply for Supervisor recruitment without resigning from their AWW post. The application, the written examination, and even the document verification stages are all compatible with continuing AWW service. The only stage that forces a decision is after the appointment order for Supervisor is issued — at which point the candidate must formally resign or be relieved from the AWW post before joining as Supervisor. The Maharashtra WCD Department specifically sets aside 50% of Supervisor vacancies for serving AWWs through the LDCE (Limited Departmental Competitive Examination) — a separate Supervisor exam open only to AWWs with 3+ years of confirmed service, which usually carries a lower cutoff than the open competitive exam. Maharashtra AWWs should apply at the same time for both the LDCE (internal AWW → Supervisor exam) and the open competitive Supervisor exam — boosting their selection odds through two distinct routes.
Final Word
Maharashtra ICDS Recruitment 2026 — with India’s highest AWH salary (₹8,500–₹10,500), India’s highest AWW salary (₹14,500–₹17,500), India’s highest Supervisor salary (₹28,000–₹48,000), Maharashtra Government OPS pension, and a career ladder from AWH to Deputy Director WCD at ₹95,000/month — is the most financially rewarding Anganwadi employment in India.
Maharashtra’s fiscal muscle, its AWW union history, and steady government commitment keep every rupee in the Maharashtra ICDS salary table real, sustainable, and likely to climb further in the years ahead.
Visit maharashtra.gov.in/wcd today. Contact your district CDPO office. Collect Maharashtra domicile and caste certificate. Apply when the 2026 notification releases.