
This 25×25 ft hoarding is located at Bidupor Bazaar in Dilawarpur Hemati, Bihar. Positioned in a local bazaar area, this advertising space offers visibility to both local residents and visitors engaged in daily commercial activities. With a monthly rental of ₹7,500, this hoarding provides an affordable outdoor advertising solution for brands targeting semi-urban and rural markets in Bihar's Vaishali district region.
Bidupor Bazaar serves as a local commercial hub in Dilawarpur Hemati, situated in the Vaishali district of Bihar. The area functions as a marketplace where surrounding villages and residential clusters converge for daily essentials, groceries, agricultural supplies, and services. The locality experiences moderate commercial activity typical of bazaar areas in rural Bihar, with shops, small businesses, and service providers catering to agricultural communities.
The surrounding region is characterized by agricultural land use, with residential settlements interspersed along connecting roads. Road connectivity links Bidupor Bazaar to nearby villages and larger towns in the district. The area sees a mix of pedestrian movement and vehicular traffic, including two-wheelers, auto-rickshaws, tractors, and occasional commercial vehicles serving the bazaar.
Estimated Daily Vehicle Traffic: Approximate estimates suggest 3,500–8,000 vehicles/day along the bazaar road, including two-wheelers, auto-rickshaws, and light commercial vehicles. Reliable public measurements are unavailable.
Estimated Daily Footfall: The bazaar area may experience 2,000–6,000 pedestrians/day, with higher activity during morning and evening market hours.
Peak Activity Periods: Based on typical bazaar patterns, peak times are likely 7:00 AM–10:00 AM and 4:00 PM–7:00 PM, when local residents visit for shopping and services.
Primary Audience: Local residents, farmers, rural households, small business owners, traders, and daily wage workers from surrounding villages.
Advertising Potential: The bazaar location provides repeated exposure to a concentrated local audience engaged in commercial activity, making it effective for mass-market products, agricultural brands, FMCG, financial services, and community-focused messaging.
The estimated daily vehicle traffic (3,500–8,000), pedestrian footfall (2,000–6,000), and weekly unique reach figures provided are approximate estimates for the surrounding bazaar locality based on typical commercial activity patterns in rural Bihar. These are not measured statistics of the hoarding itself. Actual exposure may vary based on seasonal factors, market days, and local events.