Random Amplified Polymorphic DNA (RAPD), inter simple sequence repeat (ISSR) and Amplified Fragment Length Polymorphism (AFLP) profiling were evaluated for assessing the extent of genetic variation among the isolates of Ustilago tritici (Pers.) Rostr., which causes the loose smut disease of wheat.Thirty random decamer primers, six random primer pairs, four SSR primers such as (GACA)4, (GATA)4, (CAA)5 and (GTG)5 and nine combinations of AFLP selective primers were used to characterize nine isolates of the fungus. These isolates were collected from infected earheads of seven commercial wheat cultivars grown at eight different locations in Haryana, which is a major wheat growing state in the North-West Plain Zone of India. The RAPD and ISSR primers generated 21 0 scorable amplified fragments, all of which were monomorphic among the isolates.The AFLP primer combinations generated 239 fragments out of which 193 were polymorphic. All the isolates could be precisely differentiated from each other employing AFLP and grouped into two distinct clusters.The molecular classification partly corresponded with geographic distribution and host origin of the isolates. AFLP profiling was found superior to RAPD and ISSR and can be effectively utilized for further characterization of loose smut pathogen.