Economy of Kandahar
Kandahar is the commercial capital of southern Afghanistan — a trading city first, an agricultural powerhouse second, and increasingly a hub for transport and light industry.
Agriculture
The irrigated Arghandab belt produces the province's famous pomegranates, plus grapes and raisins, apricots, figs, almonds and melons. Wheat and vegetables dominate elsewhere. Raisin-drying houses (kishmish khana) dot the vineyards, and cold storage has expanded around the export trade. Details on the agriculture page.
Trade and transport
The city sits on Highway 1 and on the main corridor to Quetta via Spin Boldak — one of Afghanistan's two busiest border crossings. Wholesale markets redistribute Pakistani, Iranian and Chinese goods across the south, while fruit, dried fruit and wool move outward. Kandahar International Airport, one of the country's largest, handles passenger and cargo traffic. Read more under trade.
Industry and crafts
Manufacturing is small-scale: fruit juice and packing plants, marble and gemstone cutting, metal workshops and construction materials. Craft economies remain significant — khamak embroidery supports thousands of home-based women workers, alongside carpet weaving and coppersmithing in the bazaars.
Urban development
Aino Mena, a large planned township on the city's southern edge, is one of Afghanistan's biggest private real-estate projects and has shifted the city's growth southward. Land values, housing and services are covered on its dedicated page.
Challenges
The economy contends with water scarcity as the Dahla reservoir silts, electricity shortfalls, banking constraints, and dependence on the politics of the Pakistan border — each of which shows up directly in bazaar prices and export volumes.
- AgricultureCrops, irrigation, karez systems and the export chain.
- Trade & the border economySpin Boldak, transit routes and the wholesale bazaars.
- Aino MenaInside the south's largest planned township.