Category
page 1Newspapers published in Bengaluru

The Times of India
Indian English-language daily newspaper
The Hindu
English-language daily newspaper in India
Deccan Herald
newspaper

Mid Day
Mid-Day (stylised as mid-day) is a morning daily Indian compact newspaper. Editions in various languages including Gujarati and English have been published out of Mumbai, Delhi, Bangalore and Pune. In 2011, the Delhi and Bangalore editions were closed down. In 2014, Jagran Prakashan shut down the midday Pune edition as well.
Rajasthan Patrika
Hindi Newspaper
Prajavani
Prajavani (Kannada:Voice of the People) is a Kannada-language broadsheet daily newspaper published in Karnataka, India. Having a readership of over 2.13 million, it is one of the largest circulated newspapers in the state.
Udayavani
Udayavani, launched in January 1970 by T. Mohandas Pai and T. Satish U Pai, is a Kannada daily published by Manipal Media Network Ltd. (MMNL). With editions from Manipal, Bengaluru, Mumbai, Hubballi, Davanagere, and Gulbarga, it reaches a combined circulation of over 300,000 copies. Known as the leading newspaper in coastal Karnataka, Udayavani also has a strong presence in Bengaluru and other regions, enjoying wide readership and brand recognition among readers and advertisers. MMNL, established in 1948, has grown from a small printer in Manipal to a key media player in Karnataka's print and
Vijaya Karnataka
Indian newspaper
Vijaya Vani
Vijayavani is a Kannada-language newspaper distributed in the Indian state of Karnataka. It is published by VRL Group owned by logistics tycoon Vijay Sankeshwar.
Kannada Prabha
Indian newspaper
Varthabharathi
Kannada-language daily newspaper
Sanjevani
Sanjevani is a major Kannada afternoon newspaper has its headquarters in Bangalore, Karnataka. It was started on 10 December 1982, thus completing 25 years in 2007. Sanjevani was the first South Indian language newspaper to be put onto the World Wide Web in the year 1998, and was chosen "No. 1 Kannada Newspaper" by a Microsoft survey in 2001.
As of 2010, Sanjevani is published in 10 different centers in the state (Bangalore, Mangalore, Hubli, Gulbarga, Bellary, Raichur, Mysore, Davengere, Tumkur and Shimoga), becoming the first Kannada daily to do so. In April 2010, a mobile version of their w