Top Wheat Varieties: Features and Benefits Explained


1. Sharbati wheat

Features:

  • A popular variety grown in Madhya Pradesh & Rajasthan.
  • High yield, soft texture, good taste.
  • Richer in protein, dietary fibre and certain minerals compared to generic wheat.
  • Good for making traditional Indian breads due to its texture.
sharbati wheat seed - krishicenter

When to use/why choose: If you are looking for wheat for domestic consumption (chapatis/rotis) with good eating quality and moderate yield.


2. Sonalika wheat

sonalika wheat seed - krishicenter
sonalika wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • A high-yielding wheat variety grown in states like Punjab, Haryana and Uttar Pradesh.
  • Known for good taste and texture.
  • Often chosen when yield + quality both matter.

When to use/why choose: Suitable for farmers who want dependable yield and decent market/consumer acceptance.


3. Bhalia wheat

Bhalia wheat seed - krishicenter

Bhalia wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • A long-grain variety from the Bhal region of Gujarat; bears a GI (Geographical Indication) tag. (Wikipedia)
  • Has higher carotene content and amber coloured grains. (Wikipedia)
  • Grown under very specific agro-climates (soil + moisture) – sometimes with minimal irrigation. (Wikipedia)

When to use/why choose: For niche markets or premium grain markets where grain colour and uniqueness matter (rather than only yield).


4. Durum wheat (Triticum durum)

Durum wheat seed - krishicenter

Durum wheat seed - krishicenter

Durum wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • A “hard” wheat species, typically used for pasta, semolina, couscous.
  • Higher gluten strength, amber/yellow‐ish grains.
  • In India, less in area than bread‐wheat but important for certain product types.

When to use/why choose: When your aim is value‐added products (pasta, semolina) or when the product market demands a harder wheat grain.


5. Khapli wheat (Emmer, Triticum dicoccum)

Khapli wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • An ancient wheat type, sometimes called emmer wheat.
  • Higher fibre and protein content; often used in speciality or “heritage grain” markets.
  • May yield less than modern high-yield varieties, but has niche appeal.

When to use/why choose: For speciality farming, health grain markets, or small-scale premium product lines.


6. Kharchia wheat (Landrace salt‐tolerant variety)

Kharchia wheat seed - krishicenter

Various varieties wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • A tall landrace wheat cultivar from Rajasthan (Kharchia region) adapted to sodic / saline soils. (Wikipedia)
  • Red‐grained; used as a base in breeding for salt tolerance. (Wikipedia)
  • Yields lower than typical modern varieties in standard conditions, but shines in challenging soils.

When to use/why choose: When your land has saline or sodic conditions, or when you wish to cultivate wheat in less‐ideal soils and still achieve production.


7. Modern high‐yield/early‐maturity varieties (Bread-wheat improved types)

Image

PBW 872  wheat seed - krishicenter

PBW  wheat seed - krishicenter

Features:

  • Many varieties (e.g., PBW 343) dominate large cultivation areas in India.
  • Released by breeding programs with traits like rust resistance, higher yield, suitability for irrigated conditions.
  • Quick maturity, good tillering, adaptable to major wheat‐zones of India. (APEDA)

When to use/why choose: For large‐scale commercial wheat farming under standard agronomic conditions, where yield + disease resistance matter most.


✅ Summary comparison

Variety TypeKey StrengthsTypical Tradeoffs
Sharbati / SonalikaGood eating quality + decent yieldMay cost more seed / require better inputs
Bhalia / niche grain typesPremium grain, unique marketPossibly lower yield, specific soils/climate
Durum wheatExcellent for pasta / special productsNeeds hard‐grain market; may require different processing
Khapli (Emmer)Heritage / health market appealLower yield, less mainstream
Kharchia (landrace)Adapted to harsh soils (saline)Lower yield, fewer inputs may still needed
Modern improved bread wheatHigh yield, disease‐resistantSeed cost may be higher; input needs higher

🧭 Practical Tips for Choosing / Managing Wheat Seed Varieties

  • Soil & climate fit: Choose a variety suited to your agro‐climatic zone, soil condition (e.g., saline vs good soil).
  • Yield vs quality: If market demands premium grain (colour, texture), go for speciality varieties; if bulk production, choose high-yield bread‐wheat.
  • Resistance & maturity: Check for rust/disease resistance, lodging resistance, maturity time (important if you have late sowing).
  • Seed quality: Ensure certified seed, good germination, purity.
  • Crop management: Varieties differ in tiller count, maturity time, fertilizer response. Adjust your agronomy accordingly.
  • Market demand: If you are selling grain, check what buyers/local mills prefer (soft wheat vs hard wheat vs speciality).