The present study investigates the longitudinal variability of equatorial electrojet (EEJ) and counter electrojet (CEJ) phenomena using concurrent data from three equatorial and low‐latitude paired stations/sites at 5°, 15°, and 20° longitudinal separation in the Indian sector: (i) Minicoy (72°E, dip latitude 01.32°) and Alibag (72°E, dip latitude 14.06°), (ii) Vencode (77°E, dip latitude 01.02°) and Hyderabad (77°E, dip latitude12.34°), and (iii) Campbell Bay (93°E, dip latitude −0.79°) and Nabagram (93°E, dip latitude 06.79°). The observations, over a period of 12 months, at 72°E and 77°E, and 10 months at 93°E, for the year 2015, reflect the variability in both amplitude and occurrence phenomena at close spatial scales. Significant day‐to‐day variability of EEJ and CEJ is observed, with increasing spatial separation. The closely spaced sites, MNC and VEN, show expected similarity but present striking differences in certain monthly averaged patterns. Concurrent observations from three longitudes reveal increasing EEJ amplitudes from west to east and a new observation of increasing CEJ amplitudes from east to west. From these longitudinal trends, we confirm that EEJ strengths are controlled by the large‐scale DE3 nonmigrating tide. A marked difference in CEJ amplitude between MNC and VEN suggests that scale lengths of CEJ and EEJ are different, and we infer that CEJ are primarily generated by short‐scale length variations in the middle atmosphere caused by localized interactions of planetary and gravity waves and are also influenced by the DE3 nonmigrating tide.