India doesn’t produce a red chilli. It produces an entire spectrum. Heat levels, colour value, oil content, aroma, and skin thickness vary dramatically between varieties — and choosing the wrong one can change the final product more than most buyers expect. For importers, understanding chilli origin isn’t trivia. It’s formulation control. Here’s a practical guide to the most traded Indian red chilli types and where each fits in the global market.
If Indian chilli had a flagship export variety, Guntur would be it.
Grown in Andhra Pradesh, Guntur chillies are known for their balanced heat and strong colour retention. They’re widely used in bulk processing because they perform consistently across batches.
Profile:
Medium to high heat
Bright red colour
Reliable oil content
Strong processing stability
Best suited for:
Seasoning manufacturers, sauce brands, spice blends, and industrial buyers who need predictable performance.
Guntur is often chosen when buyers want a chilli that behaves exactly the same every shipment.
Consistency is its real strength.
Teja is for buyers who want fire.
This variety is smaller, sharper, and significantly hotter than Guntur. It’s prized in markets where pungency matters more than colour.
Profile:
High heat
Moderate colour
Strong aroma
Thin skin
Best suited for:
Hot sauce manufacturers, chilli paste processors, and heat-forward seasoning blends.
Teja isn’t subtle — and that’s exactly why it’s in demand.
Byadgi is famous for one thing: colour.
It delivers deep red pigment with mild heat, making it ideal for food products where visual appeal matters more than pungency.
Profile:
Low to medium heat
Very high colour value
Wrinkled skin
Mild flavour
Best suited for:
Paprika-style powders, oil extraction, snack seasoning, and processed foods requiring bright colour without excessive spice.
Many global brands use Byadgi specifically to enhance colour consistency.
Mundu chilli (often called “round chilli”) is milder and slightly sweet in aroma. It’s popular in culinary applications where balance matters more than intensity.
Profile:
Mild heat
Rounded flavour
Thick skin
Smooth aroma
Best suited for:
Retail spice blends, culinary brands, and markets that prefer gentle heat profiles.
It’s often selected for consumer-friendly seasoning products.
Different markets demand different chilli behaviour.
A sauce manufacturer cares about oil content.
A snack brand cares about colour.
A seasoning company cares about grind stability.
A retailer cares about consistency.
The chilli you choose affects:
Colour yield after grinding
Heat perception in final product
Shelf stability
Oil extraction efficiency
Regulatory testing outcomes
Professional buyers treat chilli selection like ingredient engineering — not guesswork.
Chilli shipments face some of the strictest global testing standards, especially for Sudan dyes and pesticide residues.
At Evartha Globexx LLP, batches are screened specifically for high-risk parameters before export, aligning shipments to UK, EU, and US requirements.
The objective is simple:
Heat and colour should travel — not compliance issues.
There’s no universal “best” chilli.
Only the right chilli for your product.
Whether you’re building a seasoning line, a sauce brand, or an industrial ingredient program, variety selection determines flavour identity and supply stability.
Smart buyers map chilli origin to final application.
That’s where trade stops being transactional and becomes strategic.
Talk to our export team about chilli sourcing
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