The localPashto name of the city is Nowkhār, which means "New City". It was translated into Dari Persian and Urdu as Nowshehra, which is a word with the same meaning.
Nowshera District is bordered by Peshawar District to the west, Mardan District to the north, Charsadda District to the northwest, Swabi District to the northeast, Kohat District to the south, Orakzai Agency to the southwest, and Attock District to the east. Generally, winters are cold from November to February, and summers are hot from June to August.
Demography
is the native language of the majority of residents. Hindko is also spoken in the city and parts of surrounding villages. Urdu, being the national language of Pakistan, is also widely understood. According to the 1998 census of Pakistan the population was 874,373. The male population was 455,598, while the female population was 418,775, a population density of 500.2 persons per km². The population of Urban dwellers was 227030 and that of Rural dwellers was 647343. The annual growth rate was 2.9%. The literacy rate was 89%.
Transportation
Nowshera is well connected with the rest of the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province and other provinces of Pakistan through airports, railways, and roads.
Air
in Peshawar and Islamabad International Airport in Islamabad are situated at a drive of around 1 hour and 2 hours, respectively.
, or N-5, is Pakistan’s longest highway running from the port city of Karachi to the border crossing at Torkham. Its total length is 1,756 km and it runs north from Karachi located in Sindh province to Hyderabad, Moro and Khairpur before crossing into Punjab province where it passes through Multan, Sahiwal, Lahore, Sheikhupura District, Gujranwala, Gujrat, Jhelum and Rawalpindi. At Rawalpindi, it turns eastwards and passes through Attock Khurd before crossing the Indus River into Khyber Pakhtunkhwa to continue through Nowshera and Peshawar before entering the Khyber Pass and reaching the border town of Torkham. The M-1 motorway in Punjab and Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan. It is 155 km long, with 67 km in Punjab and the remaining 88 km in Khyber-Pakhtunkhwa. It has become a vital link to Afghanistan and Central Asia and is expected to take much traffic off the highly used N5. It is part of Pakistan’s Motorway Network. M1 begins northeast of Peshawar as it moves in an eastern direction, crossing over the Kabul River. From here it passes through Charsadda, Risalpur, Swabi and Rashakai before crossing the Indus River. The historical Grand Trunk Road also passes through Nowshera. Swat Motorway also starts nearby Nowshera and ends at near Swat.
Economic Zone
After the launch of CPEC project, Rashakai village of Nowshera is now an Economic Zone of KPK.