NEW TO INDIA · A PRACTICAL PLACE TO BEGIN
A clear way to begin
Start with the decisions that genuinely shape the journey.
A first-time India tour is not difficult because there is too little to see; it is difficult because there is too much. Begin with a sensible geographic shape, recovery time and the experiences that matter more than the number of places covered.
Time
Seven days needs focus. Two weeks allows contrast without turning the route into a checklist.
Interest
Heritage, wildlife, food, spirituality or landscape should determine the route.
Pace
Road distance, early starts and hotel changes matter as much as the headline sights.
Season
The right month depends on region, altitude, wildlife access and heat tolerance.
Choose by time
A considered route for the days you have.
Use these as starting points. Every route can be slowed, shortened or extended after your dates and priorities are understood.

6–8 days
A clear first chapter
Focus on one compact region and protect the pace.Classic Golden TriangleDelhi · Agra · JaipurView journey→Kerala: Backwaters & Tea HillsCochin · Munnar · Thekkady · BackwatersView journey→
9–12 days
Add one meaningful contrast
Pair the classic route with wildlife, sacred India or deeper Rajasthan.Villages, Palaces & TigersGolden Triangle · Karauli · RanthamboreView journey→Royal RajasthanGolden Triangle · Jodhpur · UdaipurView journey→Sacred North IndiaOrchha · Khajuraho · VaranasiView journey→
13–16 days
Let India change character
Use time to create regional contrast rather than constant movement.India North to SouthGolden Triangle · KeralaView journey→Himalayan North IndiaShimla · Dharamshala · AmritsarView journey→Central IndiaChambal · Khajuraho · Tiger CountryView journey→How private travel works
Independent in spirit. Supported in practice.
You are not moved through a group itinerary. The same planning team coordinates the route while local specialists add knowledge where it matters.
We listen first
Your dates, interests, hotel expectations, walking comfort, food preferences and travel history shape the first proposal.
We compose the route
Hotels, guides, road sectors and flights are considered together so each day works operationally as well as emotionally.
We refine it with you
The itinerary changes until the pace, cost and character feel right. Nothing is treated as fixed simply because it appears online.
We remain present
Our New Delhi operations team supports confirmed guests before arrival and while travelling through India.
Plan by destination
Six essential destinations, with three deeper planning guides.
Start with the place that raises the most questions, then use the specialist guides for wildlife, altitude and lesser-known heritage routes.
Gateway cityDelhi
How many nights, where to stay and how to balance Old and New Delhi.
Mughal IndiaAgra
Sunrise, sunset, hotel choices and why one night usually changes the experience.
Royal IndiaJaipur
Forts, palaces, markets and the hotel-location decision that shapes the stay.
Sacred IndiaVaranasi
How to pace dawn, the old city, evening rituals and a visit to Sarnath.
South IndiaKerala Backwaters
Day cruise or overnight, Alleppey or Kumarakom, and who needs more time.
Wild IndiaRanthambore
How many drives, permit realities and why naturalist quality matters.
Questions first-time travellers ask
Practical clarity before the itinerary.
Every answer changes with the traveller, but these principles are a useful place to begin.
How many days are enough for a first journey to India?
Seven days can introduce Delhi, Agra and Jaipur. Ten to twelve days allow a wildlife, Varanasi or Rajasthan extension. Two weeks creates a more relaxed journey or a considered North–South combination.
Which season is best for a first visit?
October to March suits many classic cultural routes. Wildlife, mountain and monsoon journeys follow different seasonal patterns, so the best month depends on the route rather than India as a whole.
Should a first visit include both North and South India?
It can, especially with around two weeks and a willingness to use a domestic flight. Travellers who prefer depth and slower days may find one region more rewarding.
Is India suitable for solo women travellers?
Yes, with thoughtful routing, vetted drivers and guides, carefully chosen hotels and clear on-ground support. The itinerary should reflect personal comfort, arrival times and the level of accompaniment preferred.
Reassurance for a first journey
You are not left to navigate India alone.
First-time travellers often need more than a route. They need help reading markets, food, local customs and unfamiliar situations. These real guest moments show the kind of human support available behind the itinerary.
A note from Sulabh Jain



