From Sanskrit plaque entrance to a medal room : Inside Neeraj Chopra’s ₹30-crore home in Khandra
The exterior is white and beige, simple and clean, with just enough warmth from touches of red and brown to keep it from feeling cold.

- Jun 2, 2026,
- Updated Jun 2, 2026 2:58 PM IST
Most people who win Olympic gold move on. Bigger city, better address, a life that matches the posters.
Neeraj Chopra never quite did that. India's first Olympic gold medallist in athletics still comes home to Khandra — a small village in Panipat district, Haryana, where he grew up, where his family still is, and where he has built a three-storey bungalow now valued at around ₹30 crore, according to media reports.
The exterior is white and beige, simple and clean, with just enough warmth from touches of red and brown to keep it from feeling cold. At the entrance, a golden "Chopra" nameplate. Beside it, a black plaque with a Sanskrit inscription — "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam."
Inside, the rooms are uncluttered. The living area has brown sofas, cream curtains, and natural light. Nothing about it screams wealth. The garden outside is generous — full of trees and plants, with outdoor seating and a black swing.
Then there is the trophy room.
It is the one space in the house where the scale of what Chopra has achieved truly lands.
The garage has filled up too — a Range Rover Sport, a Ford Mustang GT, a Toyota Fortuner, a Harley-Davidson 1200 Roadster, a Bajaj Pulsar, and a tractor.
But people who have spent time around Chopra tend to bring up none of this. What they mention instead is how little he has changed. The village is not a backdrop he uses for interviews. The family is not a talking point. It is just his life, the same one he had before the medals, running alongside everything that came after.
His home in Khandra holds all of it together — the trophies and the swing, the Mustang and the tractor, the gold medal and the Sanskrit plaque at the front door. It is not trying to tell you a story. It just does.
Most people who win Olympic gold move on. Bigger city, better address, a life that matches the posters.
Neeraj Chopra never quite did that. India's first Olympic gold medallist in athletics still comes home to Khandra — a small village in Panipat district, Haryana, where he grew up, where his family still is, and where he has built a three-storey bungalow now valued at around ₹30 crore, according to media reports.
The exterior is white and beige, simple and clean, with just enough warmth from touches of red and brown to keep it from feeling cold. At the entrance, a golden "Chopra" nameplate. Beside it, a black plaque with a Sanskrit inscription — "Vasudhaiva Kutumbakam."
Inside, the rooms are uncluttered. The living area has brown sofas, cream curtains, and natural light. Nothing about it screams wealth. The garden outside is generous — full of trees and plants, with outdoor seating and a black swing.
Then there is the trophy room.
It is the one space in the house where the scale of what Chopra has achieved truly lands.
The garage has filled up too — a Range Rover Sport, a Ford Mustang GT, a Toyota Fortuner, a Harley-Davidson 1200 Roadster, a Bajaj Pulsar, and a tractor.
But people who have spent time around Chopra tend to bring up none of this. What they mention instead is how little he has changed. The village is not a backdrop he uses for interviews. The family is not a talking point. It is just his life, the same one he had before the medals, running alongside everything that came after.
His home in Khandra holds all of it together — the trophies and the swing, the Mustang and the tractor, the gold medal and the Sanskrit plaque at the front door. It is not trying to tell you a story. It just does.
