"Kerala’s high literacy, strong public health and dense school networks produce broadly strong readiness, though district gaps and cost pressures remain in some areas."
Kerala leads India on many human development measures: high literacy, strong public health outcomes, and a dense school network that supports early learning and high enrolment. These strengths are underpinned by sustained public investment in social sectors, high female literacy and robust primary care. At the same time, there are district-level differences in outcomes and rising cost pressures in urban centres that can affect family stability and access to supplemental enrichment. Retaining teacher quality and expanding targeted remedial supports remain priorities in districts that lag.
Based on the above factors and the IQ test history, the average IQ in Kerala is 105.
Maintaining Kerala’s advantages means protecting investments that support early childhood, primary schooling and health. Targeted efforts to close district gaps — through remedial literacy programs, expanded after-school supports, and measures that ease urban cost burdens for families — will help. Strengthening vocational pathways, ensuring continued teacher professional development, and monitoring local data can sustain high readiness while making gains more evenly distributed across the state.
[ While IQ alone does not define the full range of human intelligence or potential. IQ is just one of many dimensions of human potential. ]