During the
British Raj, Bhuntar had a bazaar and a branch office for post and telegraphs. In 1905, Duff Dunbar, a British forest officer posted in Kullu, got a suspension bridge constructed at Bhuntar over the Beas River. The bridge connected the
Kullu valley to the
Parvati valley. The bridge was rendered unserviceable by heavy floods in September 1947. Thakur Beli Ram, a local leader from Kullu, had to take care of this and other simultaneous issues in the wider Kullu region soon after
India's Independence. Bhuntar was electrified alongside
Kullu town in 1957. By 1961, Bhuntar already had an airstrip. Bhuntar was first categorized as a town by the
Census of India 1981. == Geography ==