thumb|200px|Woman playing pulluvan veena
Musical instruments of the Indian subcontinent can be broadly classified according to the Hornbostel–Sachs system into four categories: chordophones (string instruments), aerophones (wind instruments), membranophones (drums) and idiophones (non-drum percussion instruments).
Chordophones
Plucked strings
{|
|width="150" valign="top"|
- Ancient Veena
- Bulbul Tarang
- Dilruba
- Dotar, Dotora, or Dotara
- Ektara
- Getchu Vadyam or Jhallari
- Gopichand, Gopiyantra or Khamak
- Gottuvadhyam or Chitravina
- Katho
- Sarod
- Sitar
- Surbahar
- Surshringar
- Swarabat
- Swarmandal
- Tambura
- Tritantri Veena
|width="300" valign="top"|
- Tumbi
- Tuntuna
- Hansa Veena
- Mohan Veena
- Nakula Veena
- Nanduni
- Pamiri rubab
- Rudra Veena, also called Bīn in North India
- Sagar Veena
- Saraswati Veena
- Vichitra Veena
- Yazh
- Ranjan Veena
- Mayuri Veena
- Rubab (instrument)
- Triveni Veena
|}
Bowed strings
- Chikara
- Dhantara
- Dilruba
- Ektara
- Esraj
- Kingri
- Mayuri veena or Taus
- Onavillu
- Behala
- Pena
- Pinaka veena
- Pulluvan veena - one-stringed violin
- Ravanahatha
- Sarangi
- Sarinda
- Tar Shehnai
- Villu - arched musical bow
Other string instruments
- Gethu or Jhallari – struck tanpura
- Gubguba or Jamuku (khamak)
- Pulluvan kutam
- Santoor – Hammered dulcimer
Aerophones
Single reed
- Pepa
- Pungi or Been
thumb|200px|Snake charmer playing pungi
thumb|200px|Bansuri player at [[Mehrangarh Fort at Jodhpur.]]
thumb|200px|Indian [[Harmonium]]
Double reed
- Kuzhal
- Mukhavina
- Nadaswaram
- Shehnai
- Sundari
- Tangmuri
Flute
- Alghoza – double flute
- Bansuri
- Venu (Carnatic flute) Pullanguzhal
Bagpipes
- Mashak
- Titti
- Sruti upanga
Free reed
- Gogona
- Morsing
Free reed and bellows
- Shruti box
- Harmonium (hand-pumped)
Brass
- Bigul – see Bugle
- Ekkalam
- Karnal
- Kombu (instrument)
- Ramsinga
- Kahal
- Nagfani
- Turi
- Tutari
Membranophones
Hand drums
thumb|200px|Learning to play [[tabla]]
thumb|200px|Tumbaknaer, drum from Jammu and Kashmir for accompanying devotionals
thumb|200px|[[Chenda (top) and Chande (below) are different drums]]
thumb|200px|[[Chande of Yakshagana]]
{|
|width="100" valign="top"|
- Dhad
- Damru
- Dimadi
- Dhol
- Dholak
- Dholki
- Duggi
- Ghat singhari or Gada Singari
- Ghumot
- Gummeta
- Kanjira
- Khol
- Kinpar and Dhopar (Tribal Drums)
- Madal
- Mardala
- Maddale
- Maram
- Mizhavu
- Mridangam
- Naal
|valign="top"|
- Pakhavaj
- Pakhavaj Jori – Sikh instrument similar to Tabla
- Panchamukha vadyam
- Pung cholom
- Shuddha Madalam or Maddalam
- Tabala / Tabl / Chameli – goblet drum
- Tabla
- Tabla Tarang – set of Tablas
- Tamate
- Thanthi Panai
- Thimila
- Tumbak, Tumbaknari, Tumbaknaer
- Tumdak'
- Udukku
|}
Hand frame drums
- Daf, duf, or dafli – medium or large frame drum without jingles, of Persian origin
- Dubki, dimdi or dimri – small frame drum without jingles
- Kanjira – small frame drum with one jingle
- Kansi – small drum without jingles
- Patayani thappu – medium frame drum played with hands
Stick and hand drums
- Chenda
- Davul
- Dhak
- Dhimay
- Dhol
- Dholi
- Dollu
- Idakka
- Thavil
- Udukai
- Urumi (drum)
Stick drums
thumb|right|[[Chennakeshava Temple, Belur|Chennakeshava Temple, 12th century A.D. Goddess playing an hourglass drum, possibly an udukai.]]
- Chande
- Davul
- Kachhi Dhol
- Nagara – pair of kettledrums
- Pambai – unit of two cylindrical drums
- Parai thappu, halgi – frame drum played with two sticks
- Sambal
- Stick daff or stick duff – daff in a stand played with sticks
- Tamak'
- Tasha – type of kettledrum
- Thavanadai, Davandai
- Timki
- Urumee
Idiophones
thumb |A medieval instrument, labeled nagaveena (snake veena), is a type of musical scraper.
- Chimta – fire tong with brass jingles
- Chengila – metal disc
- Elathalam
- Geger – brass vessel
- Ghanti – Northern Indian bell
- Ghatam and Matkam (Earthenware pot drum)
- Ghungroo
- Khartal or Chiplya
- Manjira or jhanj or taal
- Nut – clay pot
- Sankarjang – lithophone
- Thali – metal plate
- Thattukazhi mannai
- Yakshagana bells
Melodic
thumb|right|[[Jaltarang]]
- Jal tarang, ceramic bowls with water
- Kanch tarang, a type of glass harp
- Loh tarang (लोह तरंग), a set of tuned gongs
- Kashtha tarang, a type of xylophone
Hand harmonium
Dwarkanath Ghose (Dwarkin) modified the French pedal harmonium.
Electronic
- Roland HandSonic
- Electronic tanpura
- Electronic (digital) tabla
- Talameter
- Musical instrument of Tamil nadu
- List of Indian dance
