How Many Days Do You Need in India? (2026 Guide)

If you are wondering how many days in India you really need, the honest answer is that it depends on which India you want to see. The country is enormous and the regions are wildly different, so trip length is really a question of how much ground you are willing to cover. As a quick answer: the classic Golden Triangle (Delhi, Agra and Jaipur) works in about 5 to 7 days, you want roughly 10 to 14 days to add Rajasthan or Varanasi, and 2 to 3 weeks if you want to combine more than one region. Four days is the bare minimum for a taste of the Golden Triangle. Below is how we, as a destination management company that runs India trips year-round, actually plan it.
The short answer: it depends on the region
India is not a single destination. It is roughly the size of Western Europe, and getting from the deserts of Rajasthan to the backwaters of Kerala or up into the Himalayas means real travel time. The mistake first-timers make is treating it like one city break, then losing two days to a domestic flight or an overnight train they did not budget for.
For a first trip, the standard advice we give is simple: pick one region and do it properly. The North is the obvious starting point because the Golden Triangle packs in three iconic cities within a few hours of each other by road. Trying to bolt on the South or the mountains in the same week almost never pays off. Plan the distances first, then the days.
What to see by trip length
| Trip length | Good for | What you can cover |
|---|---|---|
| 5 days | First-timers, short breaks | The core Golden Triangle: Delhi, Agra (Taj Mahal) and Jaipur at a comfortable pace. |
| 7 days | A relaxed first trip | The Golden Triangle plus an extra stop such as Ranthambore for tigers, or extra time in Jaipur and Delhi. |
| 10–14 days | A proper introduction to the North | Golden Triangle plus deeper Rajasthan (Udaipur, Jodhpur, Jaisalmer) or a side trip to Varanasi on the Ganges. |
If you only have a long weekend, four to five days still gives you the headline sights. The jump from 7 to 10 days is the one that changes the trip most, because it lets you leave the well-worn triangle and see the forts, lake palaces and desert towns that make Rajasthan special.

A recommended 10-day India itinerary
Ten days is our sweet spot for a first trip. It gives you the Golden Triangle without rushing, plus room to add either the romance of southern Rajasthan or the intensity of Varanasi. Here is the version we run most often, the Golden Triangle plus Rajasthan:
- Days 1–2 — Delhi. Old and New Delhi: Jama Masjid, a rickshaw ride through Chandni Chowk, Humayun’s Tomb and Qutub Minar.
- Day 3 — Agra. Drive to Agra; the Taj Mahal at sunrise the next morning, plus Agra Fort.
- Day 4 — Agra to Jaipur. Stop at Fatehpur Sikri en route to the Pink City.
- Days 5–6 — Jaipur. Amber Fort, City Palace, Hawa Mahal and the bazaars.
- Day 7 — Udaipur. Short flight south to the lake city; evening boat ride on Lake Pichola.
- Day 8 — Udaipur. City Palace and a slower day; Udaipur rewards lingering.
- Day 9 — Jodhpur. Mehrangarh Fort towering over the blue city.
- Day 10 — Departure. Fly home from Jodhpur or back via Delhi.
Prefer culture and spirituality over forts? Swap the Rajasthan leg for a flight from Jaipur to Varanasi for two nights, with a dawn boat ride on the Ganges and the evening Ganga Aarti ceremony, then back to Delhi. Same 10 days, very different mood.
Other routes if you have more time
Kerala and the South
If you have closer to two weeks and want a complete change of pace, the South is greener, slower and less crowded than the North. A typical Kerala loop runs Kochi, the tea hills of Munnar, a wildlife reserve such as Periyar, and a night on a houseboat in the Alleppey backwaters. Allow 7 to 9 days for the South on its own, or treat it as a second region on a longer 2 to 3 week trip rather than squeezing it into a Golden Triangle week.
The Himalayas
The mountains are a trip in their own right. Shimla and Manali in Himachal, the Buddhist monasteries and high passes of Ladakh, or the tea estates of Darjeeling each need their own block of time. Ladakh in particular requires acclimatisation, so budget at least 6 to 7 days and never rush the altitude. These are best for a return visit once you have the headline sights behind you.
How many days for…
First-timers
Seven days is the comfortable first-timer number: the Golden Triangle with breathing room. If you can stretch to 10, add Udaipur or Varanasi and you will leave feeling you actually saw India rather than ticked a box.
Families
With kids, plan shorter driving days and build in variety. A 7 to 10 day Golden Triangle with a tiger safari at Ranthambore, an elephant or jeep ride at Amber Fort and a couple of pool afternoons keeps everyone happy. Avoid back-to-back long road transfers; one big sight per day is plenty.
Culture and photography
If you travel for light, faces and architecture, give yourself 12 to 14 days and slow right down. Sunrise at the Taj, the ghats of Varanasi, the blue lanes of Jodhpur and Udaipur’s palaces all reward early starts and a second visit at golden hour. Build in flexible mornings rather than a packed checklist.

When to go and getting around
Timing matters as much as duration. For most of the North, October to March is the sweet spot, with cool, clear days that make sightseeing comfortable. Summer is fierce on the plains, while the monsoon (roughly June to September) is best for the lush South. We break it down month by month in our guide to the best time to visit India.
For getting around, the Golden Triangle is best done by private car and driver, which is how the road distances and rest stops actually work in your favour. Longer hops between regions are quicker by domestic flight, and a single scenic train leg can be a highlight in itself. If you would rather not plan the logistics, our India Golden Triangle group tour handles the routing for you.
Frequently asked questions
Is 7 days enough for India?
Yes, seven days is enough for a satisfying first trip if you focus on one region. It comfortably covers the Golden Triangle (Delhi, Agra and Jaipur) with time to spare for an extra stop. It is not enough to combine the North with the South or the Himalayas.
What is the ideal number of days in India?
For a first visit, 10 to 14 days is the ideal length. That gives you the Golden Triangle plus deeper Rajasthan or Varanasi without rushing. If you want to add a second region such as Kerala, plan for 2 to 3 weeks.
How many days do you need for the Golden Triangle?
The Golden Triangle takes 5 to 7 days at a comfortable pace. Four days is the minimum for a quick taste, while 7 days lets you add a tiger safari at Ranthambore or extra time in each city.
How many days do you need in Rajasthan?
Allow 5 to 7 days for Rajasthan on top of the Golden Triangle to take in Udaipur, Jodhpur and Jaisalmer. A dedicated Rajasthan tour covering the main cities and the desert works best over 10 to 12 days.
Can you see India in 2 weeks?
Two weeks is a great length for India. You can either explore the North in depth (Golden Triangle, Rajasthan and Varanasi) or pair a shorter Golden Triangle with a week in Kerala and the South. Trying to do everything in 14 days, however, leaves you exhausted.
How many days should you spend in India with kids?
For a family trip, 7 to 10 days works well. Keep driving days short, mix sightseeing with a tiger safari or a fort visit, and build in downtime by the pool. One major sight per day is the right pace for travelling with children.
Plan your India trip
However many days you have, the trick is matching the route to the time. We are a Singapore-based destination management company that designs India itineraries for travellers and travel trade alike, from a 5-day Golden Triangle to a three-week multi-region journey. See what we offer on our India DMC page, or contact our team and tell us your dates — we will tell you honestly what fits.
Inline photo: Philip Nalangan, CC BY-SA 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons.
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