Heavy showers were also witnessed in parts of West Bengal, Uttar Pradesh, Rajasthan, Himachal Pradesh and Delhi.
In Gujarat, Chief Minister Vijay Rupani conducted an aerial survey in parts of the inundated Surendranagar district to take stock of the situation.
Rains lashed parts of Banaskantha, Sabarkantha and Valsad districts, a release by the State Emergency Operations Centre (SEOC) said.
Rescue operations have been initiated in Kalol of Gandhinagar and Deodar of Banskantha as both places received 8 inches of rain during last 24 hours, an official said.
Transport was brought to a standstill in the state as nineteen state highways and 102 roads were closed due to waterlogging.
The MeT department here predicted more showers at several places during the next two days, including extremely heavy rain in Banskantha, Sabarkantha, Patan and Mehsana districts tomorrow.
In Assam, almost 60,000 people are still affected across nine districts, even though the overall flood situation improved in the state, a report by the Assam State Disaster Management Authority (ASDMA) said.
The ASDMA said 224 villages and over 16,000 hectares of crop area were still inundated.
Meanwhile, incessant rains in Gangetic West Bengal led to flooding of several low-lying areas, even as the Met department warned the wet spell would continue till Tuesday.
Some rivers in the state are flowing above the danger mark, West Bengal Irrigation Minister Rajiv Banerjee said, adding that the irrigation department is monitoring embankments round the clock.
The Met department also advised fishermen to not venture into the sea.
Heavy rains are expected in the coastal state of Odisha in the next 24 hours due to the development of a low-pressure area.
Fishermen have been advised to be cautious while venturing into sea off the Odisha coast due to rough seas with wind speeds gusting up to 55 kmph, the Met department said.
Bihar received light to moderate showers at several places, with state capital Patna recording 21.2 mm of rain.
In the national capital Delhi, the humidity level shot up after showers, hovering between 97 per cent to 65 per cent.
Rain or thundershowers are likely at most places in the eastern parts of the state and at some places in western Uttar Pradesh, it said.
Most parts of Haryana and Punjab witnessed sultry weather, but rain or thundershowers are predicted over the next two days.
Moderate to heavy rains also lashed parts of Himachal Pradesh. The local MeT department has predicted rains in the region for the next six days.
Rajasthan capital Jaipur recorded 43.1 mm rainfall while several other places in the state also experienced showers during the last 24 hours, Met officials said.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content
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