The first major mango of the Pakistani season — large, oval, pale-skinned, with juicy lemon-gold flesh; often called the 'Queen of Mangoes' to complement Chaunsa's 'King' status.
Named after Sindhri, a village near Mirpur Khas in southern Sindh, where the cultivar was first selected in the early 20th century. The name literally means 'of Sindh' (the province).
Sindhri is the great early-season mango of Pakistan, the first major cultivar to ripen each year and the cultural counterweight to the country's late-season flagship Chaunsa. Where Chaunsa is the "King of Mangoes" in Pakistani popular framing, Sindhri is unanimously the "Queen". The cultivar is named after Sindhri, a village near Mirpur Khas in southern Sindh, where the first commercial plantings were established in the early 20th century. The variety received Geographical Indication-style protection within Pakistan in 2019 under the Sindh provincial agricultural authority.
Sindhri cultivation is concentrated in Sindh province — Mirpur Khas, Tando Allahyar, Hyderabad, and the surrounding alluvial plain of the lower Indus — with smaller plantings extending into southern Punjab. The Sindhi growing region's hot dry summer, deep alluvial soils, and traditional flood-irrigation system from the Indus produce the cultivar's signature character: large fruit, mild balanced sweetness, and a relatively long shelf life that makes Sindhri the workhorse of Pakistan's early-season export trade.
A ripe Sindhri is unmistakable: a large oval fruit, often 400–700 g (the cultivar is one of Pakistan's largest by typical weight), with a thin, smooth, pale yellow-green skin that ripens to a clean lemon-gold. The flesh is uniform pale yellow rather than the deep saffron of Chaunsa or Alphonso, juicy, fibre-free, with a medium-sized stone. Brix sits at 18–22°, lower than Chaunsa's 22–26° — Sindhri is sweet but never cloying, and its restraint is part of its appeal in the punishing heat of a Sindhi summer.
Sindhri's role in Pakistan's mango calendar is structural. It opens the season in mid-May, fills the market through June while Chaunsa is still developing, and provides the first ripe fruit at Aam Parties and family gatherings. The unripe green Sindhri is the canonical Pakistani aam panna base, charred and blended with cumin and salt as a summer cooler. Ripe Sindhri goes into mango shakes (with less added sugar than Chaunsa requires), into mango lassi, and into sorbet and ice cream where the milder flavour profile lets cream and dairy shine. Sindhri also opens Pakistan's export season — the first crates of the year ship to the UK, UAE, Saudi Arabia, and the Gulf in late May, beating the Indian and Mexican supply waves into those markets.