Jalālābād, town, eastern Afghanistan, on the Kabul River, at an elevation of 1,940 feet (590 metres). It lies on the route from Kabul, the Afghan capital (110 miles [177 km] north-northwest), via the Khyber Pass to Peshawar, Pakistan, and handles much of Afghanistan’s trade with Pakistan and India. The town stands at an important strategic position, commanding the entrances to the Laghmān and Konar (Kunar) valleys. It is a military centre and has an airfield.
The site of Jalālābād has been occupied since the 2nd century bce. Akbar (1542–1605), regarded as the greatest Mughal ruler of India, started the modern town as early as the 1560s. It came under Afghan rule in 1834. During the First (1839–42) and Second (1879–80) Anglo-Afghan Wars, Jalālābād was occupied by the British. After their military intervention in 1979, Soviet forces established a military command near Jalālābād and gained control of the town in early 1980. Afghan mujahideen guerrillas maintained control of the province, and fighting continued intermittently throughout the Afghan War. Several million Afghan refugees and the headquarters of several Afghan guerrilla groups were across the Pakistan border in nearby Peshawar.
The town is surrounded by a large irrigated plain, producing fruit, almonds, rice, and grain. Light industries include a sugarcane refinery and handicraft shops. An urban modernization program to improve water systems and pave the roads has been undertaken. The University of Nangarhār, established in 1963, is located in Jalālābād. Pop. (2006 est.) 168,600; (2020 est.) 271,900.