Telangana continued to lead India in organ donation by recording 205 deceased donors in 2025. The state achieved over 5 donations per million population, giving hope to many patients. Neighboring Andhra Pradesh had a higher donor count of 300. The Jeevandan Cadaver Transplantation Programme data showed private hospitals contributed 197 donations, or 96.1%, while government hospitals added 8 donations. Non-trauma brain death cases slightly outnumbered trauma cases with 112 versus 93 donors. Male donors formed 78.04% of the total with 160, and female donors were 45. A total of 763 organs were used for transplant, including 604 major and 159 minor organs and tissues. This included 291 kidneys, 186 livers, 95 lungs, 32 hearts, 2 small intestines, 154 corneas, and 3 skin grafts. Over the last decade, donations in Telangana rose steadily from 41 in 2013 to 205 in 2025, with 188 in 2024 and 134 in 2023. Jeevandan officials credited the success to efficient coordination, early brain death identification, smooth organ allocation, and strong teamwork among hospitals, police, NGOs, and coordinators. This ensured ethical and effective donation processes that saved many lives.