varanasi travel guide (2026) - everything you need to know before visiting
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27 min read
·updated
tl;dr: the complete varanasi travel guide. best time to visit, where to stay, must-visit places, ghats, temples, food, shopping, scams to avoid, sample itineraries, and budget breakdown.
tldr: varanasi is india’s oldest living city and its spiritual capital. visit between october and march. stay near the ghats for atmosphere or in cantonment/sigra for comfort. the ganga aarti at dashashwamedh ghat is unmissable. budget rs 1,500-5,000 per day depending on your style. allow 3 days minimum. this guide covers everything: getting there, where to stay, what to see, what to eat, what to buy, scams to avoid, and sample itineraries.
i haven’t been to varanasi yet. this guide is based on extensive research - travel blogs, youtube documentaries, local forums, and recommendations from people who know the city intimately. every recommendation here has been cross-referenced across multiple sources. when i do visit, this guide gets updated with first-hand experience.
why varanasi
varanasi is not just a city. it’s an argument that some places transcend their geography.
this is the oldest continuously inhabited city in the world. people have been living here, on these same ghats, performing these same rituals, for over 3,000 years. when mark twain visited in 1897, he wrote: “benares is older than history, older than tradition, older even than legend, and looks twice as old as all of them put together.” that observation still holds.
varanasi is the spiritual capital of hinduism. it’s where hindus believe moksha (liberation from the cycle of rebirth) can be achieved. it’s where the ganga is considered most sacred. it’s where the evening aarti ceremony draws thousands every single night. it’s where the cremation ghats have been burning continuously for over 3,000 years.
but varanasi is also a living, breathing, chaotic indian city. the lanes are so narrow that google maps gives up. the morning begins with temple bells and ends with the smell of paan and incense. the food is extraordinary. the silk weaving tradition produces some of the finest textiles in the world. the music tradition has produced legendary musicians. and the ghat waterfront, stretching 6 kilometers along the ganga, is one of the most visually stunning urban landscapes on earth.
varanasi is intense. it confronts you with life and death simultaneously. it’s not a “relaxing vacation” destination. it’s a city that changes people. that’s why it belongs on every serious traveler’s list.
best time to visit varanasi
month-by-month breakdown
| month | weather | temperature | festivals | crowds | hotel prices | verdict |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| january | cool, foggy mornings | 8-20 C | makar sankranti, republic day | moderate | moderate | good |
| february | pleasant, warming | 12-25 C | maha shivaratri (some years) | moderate | moderate | good |
| march | warm | 18-32 C | holi, mahashivaratri (some years) | high (holi) | moderate-high | good (holi is special here) |
| april | hot | 25-40 C | hanuman jayanti, chaitra navratri | low | low | okay (getting hot) |
| may | very hot | 30-43 C | buddha purnima | low | low | avoid if possible |
| june | extreme heat + monsoon starts | 32-45 C | ganga dussehra | very low | lowest | avoid |
| july | monsoon, heavy rain | 27-35 C | guru purnima | very low | lowest | avoid |
| august | monsoon peak | 26-33 C | independence day, janmashtami | very low | lowest | avoid |
| september | monsoon ending | 25-33 C | ganesh chaturthi | low | low | okay (late sept) |
| october | pleasant | 22-33 C | navratri, dussehra, diwali (some years) | rising | rising | excellent |
| november | perfect | 15-28 C | diwali (some years), dev deepawali, kartik purnima | high | high | best month |
| december | cool | 10-22 C | christmas/new year crowds | high | high | excellent |
the best windows
november to february is the best period overall. the weather is comfortable (cool mornings, pleasant afternoons), the major festivals fall in this window, and the ghat experience is enjoyable without sweating through your clothes.
november is arguably the single best month. dev deepawali (diwali of the gods, 15 days after diwali) lights up every ghat with thousands of earthen lamps. kartik purnima brings pilgrims for sacred bathing. the weather is perfect. the malaiyo (winter cloud dessert) season begins.
october and march are shoulder months that offer good weather with slightly lower prices and crowds.
april to september is the off-season. april-may are brutally hot (40-45 degrees). june-august bring the monsoon, the ganga floods, the lower ghats are submerged, and the humidity is suffocating. locals will tell you: don’t come in summer unless you absolutely have to.
festivals worth planning around
| festival | when | why it matters |
|---|---|---|
| dev deepawali | 15 days after diwali (nov) | every ghat lit with thousands of diyas, spectacular |
| maha shivaratri | feb/march | varanasi is shiva’s city, massive celebration |
| holi | march | legendary holi celebrations, thandai with bhang |
| ganga mahotsav | november | 5-day cultural festival, music, dance, art |
| kartik purnima | november | sacred bathing, thousands of pilgrims |
| diwali | oct/november | the city of light on the festival of lights |
| chhath puja | nov (6 days after diwali) | enormous in varanasi, dedicated ganga worship |
how to get to varanasi
by air
lal bahadur shastri international airport (VNS) is about 25 km from the city center (cantonment area) and 30 km from the ghats. direct flights from delhi (1.5 hours), mumbai (2 hours), bengaluru, kolkata, hyderabad, and several other cities. indigo, air india, spicejet, and akasa air operate regular flights.
| route | airlines | frequency | approximate fare |
|---|---|---|---|
| delhi to varanasi | indigo, air india, spicejet, vistara | 8-10 flights daily | rs 2,500-6,000 |
| mumbai to varanasi | indigo, air india, spicejet | 4-6 flights daily | rs 3,000-7,000 |
| bengaluru to varanasi | indigo, air india | 2-3 flights daily | rs 3,500-8,000 |
| kolkata to varanasi | indigo, air india | 2-3 flights daily | rs 2,500-5,500 |
airport to city: prepaid taxi from the airport costs rs 600-800 to the cantonment area, rs 800-1,200 to the ghats. ola/uber available but sometimes unreliable. the drive takes 45-90 minutes depending on traffic.
by train
varanasi is excellently connected by rail. two main stations:
varanasi junction (BSB) is the primary station, located in the cantonment area, about 4-5 km from the main ghats. most trains terminate here.
mughal sarai junction (now pt. deen dayal upadhyaya junction, DDU) is 17 km from varanasi. many trains from south and west india stop here. auto/taxi from DDU to the ghats costs rs 300-500.
| train | route | duration | class options |
|---|---|---|---|
| kashi vishwanath express | delhi to varanasi | 12-13 hours | sleeper, 3AC, 2AC |
| mahamana express | delhi to varanasi | 10 hours | chair car, 3AC, 2AC |
| vande bharat express | delhi to varanasi | 8 hours | chair car, executive |
| shiv ganga express | delhi to varanasi | 12 hours | sleeper, 3AC, 2AC, 1AC |
| vibhuti express | mumbai to varanasi | 24 hours | sleeper, 3AC, 2AC |
the vande bharat express (delhi-varanasi) is the best train option: fast, comfortable, and well-maintained. book early as it fills up quickly.
tip: book trains on IRCTC at least 2-3 weeks in advance, especially during festival season (october-march). tatkal bookings open 1 day before at 10 am for AC classes and 11 am for sleeper.
by road
varanasi is connected by NH-2 (grand trunk road) and several state highways. distances:
| from | distance | drive time |
|---|---|---|
| lucknow | 320 km | 6-7 hours |
| allahabad (prayagraj) | 125 km | 2.5-3 hours |
| patna | 290 km | 6-7 hours |
| kolkata | 680 km | 12-14 hours |
| delhi | 830 km | 12-14 hours |
UP state transport (UPSRTC) buses run from lucknow and prayagraj. private volvo buses are available from delhi (overnight, 12-14 hours, rs 800-1,500). for shorter distances like prayagraj, shared autos and buses are the cheapest options.
where to stay in varanasi
the “where to stay” question in varanasi is really about one choice: do you want to be near the ghats or away from them?
area guide
| area | vibe | best for | drawbacks | price range |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| assi ghat area | backpacker-friendly, cafes, yoga studios | long stays, budget travelers, first-timers | far from main ghats/temples | rs 500-4,000 |
| dashashwamedh ghat area | chaotic, intense, heart of varanasi | short stays, photographers, the full experience | extremely noisy, narrow lanes | rs 800-5,000 |
| old city / vishwanath area | ancient lanes, temple proximity | pilgrims, cultural immersion | very narrow lanes, no vehicle access | rs 500-3,000 |
| cantonment (cantt) area | modern, organized, spacious | comfort seekers, families, business travelers | 4-5 km from ghats | rs 1,500-8,000 |
| sigra | mid-range, residential, some restaurants | mid-budget travelers wanting peace + proximity | no character, generic | rs 1,000-4,000 |
| lanka / BHU area | student area, cheap eats | budget travelers, BHU visitors | far from ghats (7-8 km) | rs 400-2,000 |
budget (rs 500-1,500/night)
hostels and basic guesthouses. the assi ghat area has the highest concentration of budget stays. the ghat-area guesthouses offer atmosphere (ganga views, rooftop terraces) in exchange for basic amenities (thin walls, inconsistent hot water, no AC in some).
for hostel recommendations, see the best hostels in varanasi guide.
what to expect: dorm beds rs 300-600, private rooms rs 800-1,500. wifi is often unreliable. hot water is seasonal. the ghat-area places trade comfort for location.
mid-range (rs 1,500-4,000/night)
hotels in sigra and cantonment offer modern amenities (AC, wifi, clean bathrooms) without the ghat-area chaos. some mid-range options near assi ghat give you both location and comfort.
what to expect: AC rooms, attached bathrooms, daily housekeeping, restaurant on-site. the cantonment hotels feel like any other indian city hotel. the ghat-area mid-range options (ganpati guest house, palace on ganges) offer ganga views with better amenities.
luxury (rs 5,000+/night)
varanasi has a growing luxury segment. the tajview and ramada plaza represent the big-chain options in the cantonment area. brijrama palace at darbhanga ghat is the standout luxury option, a restored 18th-century palace directly on the ganga with rooms starting at rs 8,000-12,000. suryauday haveli at shivala ghat is another heritage luxury option with ganga views.
my recommendation for first-timers: stay near assi ghat for 2-3 nights. it gives you the ghat experience, walking distance to many ghats, cafes and restaurants nearby, and a backpacker-friendly vibe that makes meeting other travelers easy. if the chaos is too much, move to cantonment for the remaining nights.
must-visit places in varanasi
1. kashi vishwanath temple
the most important temple in varanasi and one of the 12 jyotirlingas of shiva. the original temple was destroyed multiple times by mughal invaders. the current structure dates to 1780, built by ahilyabai holkar.
the kashi vishwanath corridor (inaugurated 2021 by PM modi) has transformed access to the temple. what was once a cramped approach through narrow lanes is now a wide, clean, well-organized corridor. the corridor connects the temple directly to the ghats and has dramatically improved the visitor experience.
visiting tips:
- free entry, but long queues during peak hours and festivals
- early morning (4-5 am) or late evening for shorter queues
- no phones, cameras, bags, or leather items allowed inside
- lockers available outside for storing belongings (rs 10-20)
- dress conservatively (knees and shoulders covered)
- the darshan itself is brief (1-2 minutes at the shivling)
2. dashashwamedh ghat
the most famous ghat in varanasi. this is where the evening ganga aarti happens every night. the ghat is ancient, its name means “where brahma sacrificed ten horses.” it’s the busiest, most photographed, and most iconic ghat on the waterfront.
for a detailed guide to the aarti ceremony, see ganga aarti varanasi: complete guide.
visiting tips: arrive 30-45 minutes before sunset for a good spot. the aarti lasts about 45 minutes. morning visits (5-6 am) are quieter and beautiful for photography.
3. assi ghat
the southernmost major ghat and a favorite among travelers. the name comes from the river assi that meets the ganga here (though the confluence is now largely symbolic). every morning at sunrise, a smaller aarti ceremony takes place. the ghat has a large shiva lingam under a peepal tree where locals worship.
why it’s special: assi ghat has developed into the traveler hub of varanasi. cafes, yoga studios, music schools, and guesthouses line the ghat. it’s less intense than dashashwamedh and better for spending extended time.
4. manikarnika ghat
the primary cremation ghat of varanasi. this is where hindus believe cremation leads to moksha (liberation from the cycle of death and rebirth). the fires here have been burning continuously for thousands of years. an estimated 80-100 cremations happen here daily.
important etiquette:
- absolutely no photography or video at the cremation pyres
- maintain respectful distance from ongoing cremations
- do not stare or treat it as a spectacle
- decline any “guide” who approaches you offering a tour of the ghat (common scam)
- it’s okay to observe from a distance or from a boat
- some areas of the ghat are accessible to all, but stay away from the active pyre area unless invited
manikarnika is not a tourist attraction. it’s a sacred space where families are saying goodbye to loved ones. approach it with the seriousness it deserves.
5. sarnath
located 10 km from varanasi, sarnath is where buddha gave his first sermon after attaining enlightenment. it’s one of the four holiest sites in buddhism. the dhamek stupa (built 500 CE, 43 meters tall) is the main structure. the sarnath museum houses the original lion capital of ashoka (the national emblem of india).
what to see:
- dhamek stupa (the iconic structure)
- chaukhandi stupa (marks where buddha met his five disciples)
- sarnath museum (lion capital, buddhist art)
- mulagandha kuti vihar (modern temple with beautiful frescoes)
- deer park (where buddha preached, still has deer)
- archaeological ruins of ancient monasteries
visiting tips: half-day trip from varanasi. hire an auto (rs 300-500 round trip with waiting) or take a shared auto from varanasi junction. museum entry rs 25 for indians, rs 200 for foreigners. closed on fridays.
6. ramnagar fort
across the ganga from the main ghats, ramnagar fort is the ancestral home of the kashi naresh (king of varanasi). built in the 18th century in mughal style with chunar sandstone. the fort houses a museum with vintage cars, palanquins, weapons, and an astronomical clock that tells the time, day, month, and year.
visiting tips: take a boat across the ganga (rs 50-100) or drive via the bridge (30-40 minutes). the fort is mildly interesting but the boat ride makes it worthwhile. the ramlila of ramnagar (during navratri/dussehra) is one of the oldest theatrical performances in india.
7. BHU campus (banaras hindu university)
one of the largest residential universities in asia, BHU was founded by pandit madan mohan malaviya in 1916. the campus is a peaceful contrast to the chaos of the old city: wide roads, colonial architecture, gardens, and the new vishwanath temple (birla temple) on campus.
what to see:
- new vishwanath temple (birla temple) - marble temple open to all castes (unlike the old vishwanath temple historically)
- bharat kala bhavan museum - excellent collection of miniature paintings, sculptures, and textiles
- the campus itself - beautiful for walks, especially in winter
8. alamgir mosque (beni madhav ka dera)
situated on panchganga ghat, this mosque was built by mughal emperor aurangzeb in the 17th century, reportedly on the site of a vishnu temple. the mosque’s minarets are visible from across the ganga and form part of varanasi’s iconic skyline. it’s one of the structures that embodies the complex hindu-muslim history of the city.
food in varanasi
varanasi has one of the most extraordinary food cultures in india. the city’s food is predominantly vegetarian, deeply tied to religious traditions, and features dishes that exist nowhere else.
for the complete food overview, read the varanasi food guide.
the must-eat dishes
| dish | what it is | where to find it | price |
|---|---|---|---|
| tamatar chaat | tomato-based chaat unique to varanasi | kashi chat bhandar, dashashwamedh | rs 30-40 |
| kachori-sabzi | deep-fried pastry with potato curry | ram bhandar, kachori gali | rs 15-25 |
| blue lassi | thick fruit yogurt in earthen pot | blue lassi shop, kachouri gali | rs 50-80 |
| malaiyo | winter cloud dessert (november-february) | morning street vendors near godowlia | rs 30-50 |
| thandai | almond-saffron cold drink | godowlia area stalls | rs 30-60 |
| banarasi paan | betel leaf with sweet/savoury fillings | every paan stall in the city | rs 20-50 |
| rabri-jalebi | sweet cream with fried spiral | any sweet shop | rs 40-60 |
| chena dahi bada | soft dumplings in yogurt | dashashwamedh ghat area | rs 30-40 |
detailed food guides on rahul.biz
- best restaurants in varanasi - sit-down dining options across the city
- best street food in varanasi - the full street food crawl
- best cafes in varanasi - rooftop cafes, lassi shops, bakeries
- best biryani in varanasi - the non-veg side of varanasi
- best chaat in varanasi - tamatar chaat and beyond
shopping in varanasi
varanasi is a serious shopping destination. banarasi silk sarees are the headline item, but the city produces remarkable brassware, wooden toys, gulabi meenakari jewelry, and religious items.
for the complete shopping overview, read the best shopping in varanasi guide. for the in-depth silk saree buying guide, see the banarasi silk saree buying guide.
quick shopping reference
| item | where to buy | price range | bargain? |
|---|---|---|---|
| banarasi silk saree | vishwanath gali, weaver cooperatives | rs 3,000-50,000+ | yes (except cooperatives) |
| wooden toys | vishwanath gali, godowlia | rs 50-500 | yes |
| brassware | thatheri bazaar (UNESCO heritage) | rs 200-5,000 | yes |
| gulabi meenakari | chowk area | rs 500-5,000 | yes |
| rudraksha beads | near vishwanath temple | rs 50-2,000 | yes (buy from established shops) |
| thandai masala | godowlia area | rs 100-300 | some |
| silk scarves/stoles | vishwanath gali | rs 200-2,000 | yes |
scams and safety in varanasi
varanasi is safe but scam-heavy. the most common issues:
auto/rickshaw overcharging
the single most common problem for tourists. auto drivers near the station and ghats will quote 3-5x the fair price. metered autos are rare in varanasi.
solution: agree on price before getting in. use ola/uber where available (coverage is limited in ghat areas). from varanasi junction to dashashwamedh ghat should be rs 80-120 by auto, not rs 300-500 as initially quoted.
fake guides at manikarnika ghat
men will approach you near manikarnika ghat claiming to be “official guides” who will take you to see the cremation ceremonies, then demand rs 500-2,000 for the “tour” and pressure you to donate to a “wood fund” for cremations.
solution: there are no official guides at manikarnika. decline firmly. you can observe from a respectful distance without any guide. the “wood fund” donation requests are scams.
silk saree scams
shops near the ghats and vishwanath gali sell machine-made silk as handloom at inflated prices. some mix polyester with silk.
solution: read the banarasi silk saree buying guide. buy from weaver cooperatives or government emporiums for guaranteed authenticity. always check the reverse side of the saree (handloom sarees have equally clean reverse patterns).
boat ride overcharging
boat operators at the ghats will quote rs 500-2,000 for a one-hour ride that should cost rs 100-300.
solution: negotiate firmly. a shared boat for the aarti should be rs 100-150 per person. a private boat for 1 hour should be rs 300-500 for the entire boat (not per person). negotiate and agree before boarding.
hotel/guesthouse touts
at the railway station and airport, touts will tell you your booked hotel is “closed” / “flooded” / “had a fire” and try to redirect you to a commission-paying hotel.
solution: call your hotel directly to confirm. use google maps to navigate. don’t trust anyone at the station who “helpfully” offers to take you to a “better” hotel.
the puja scam
on the ghats, someone will offer to perform a “special puja” (prayer ceremony) for you, then demand rs 500-5,000 afterward.
solution: politely decline. if you want a genuine puja experience, arrange it through your hotel or a temple, not through random ghat-side solicitors.
getting around varanasi
| mode | best for | cost | notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| walking | ghat area, old city | free | the only way to navigate the narrow lanes |
| auto rickshaw | station to ghats, inter-area | rs 50-200 per ride | negotiate before riding, no meters |
| e-rickshaw | short distances, cantonment | rs 10-30 | shared or private |
| cycle rickshaw | short distances, old city edges | rs 20-50 | being phased out but still around |
| ola/uber | airport transfers, cantonment | metered | limited coverage near ghats |
| boat | ghat to ghat, aarti viewing | rs 100-500 | essential experience |
| local bus | cantonment to lanka/BHU | rs 10-20 | crowded but cheap |
the walking reality: the ghat area and old city are essentially pedestrian-only. no vehicle can enter the narrow lanes. from assi ghat to dashashwamedh ghat along the waterfront is about 3 km of walking. from dashashwamedh to manikarnika is another 1 km. comfortable walking shoes are non-negotiable.
sample itineraries
2-day varanasi (the essentials)
day 1: ghats and aarti
| time | activity | notes |
|---|---|---|
| 5:00 am | sunrise boat ride on the ganga | rs 200-300 for a shared boat, 1-1.5 hours |
| 6:30 am | kachori-sabzi breakfast at ram bhandar | rs 15-25 |
| 8:00 am | walk the ghats: assi to dashashwamedh | 3 km, take your time |
| 10:30 am | blue lassi at blue lassi shop | rs 50-80 |
| 11:30 am | kashi vishwanath temple | 1-2 hours including queue |
| 1:00 pm | lunch at a ghat-side cafe | rs 200-400 |
| 3:00 pm | rest / explore old city lanes | the lanes ARE the experience |
| 5:30 pm | evening ganga aarti at dashashwamedh | arrive early for a good spot |
| 7:30 pm | dinner + paan | rs 200-400 + rs 20 for paan |
day 2: temples and culture
| time | activity | notes |
|---|---|---|
| 6:00 am | morning aarti at assi ghat | smaller, more intimate |
| 7:30 am | breakfast at brown bread bakery | rs 200-300 |
| 9:00 am | sarnath day trip | auto rs 300-500 round trip |
| 12:30 pm | lunch in cantonment or sigra | more restaurant options |
| 2:30 pm | shopping at vishwanath gali / thatheri bazaar | see shopping guide |
| 4:30 pm | BHU campus + new vishwanath temple | peaceful contrast to old city |
| 6:30 pm | sunset at assi ghat | quieter than dashashwamedh |
| 7:30 pm | farewell dinner | splurge on a rooftop restaurant |
3-day varanasi (recommended)
add this day between the two above:
day 2 (middle day): deep exploration
| time | activity | notes |
|---|---|---|
| 5:30 am | walk from manikarnika to raj ghat (north ghats) | quieter, fewer tourists |
| 7:30 am | tamatar chaat breakfast at kashi chat bhandar | rs 30-40 |
| 9:00 am | explore the silk weaving workshops | ask your hotel to arrange |
| 11:00 am | thatheri bazaar (UNESCO brassware market) | shopping + watching artisans |
| 1:00 pm | lunch at a local restaurant | try a thali |
| 3:00 pm | ramnagar fort (boat across the ganga) | 2-3 hours including travel |
| 6:00 pm | evening ganga aarti from a boat | different perspective from day 1 |
| 8:00 pm | dinner + thandai | rs 300-500 |
5-day varanasi (the deep dive)
days 1-3 as above, plus:
day 4: spirituality and music
| time | activity | notes |
|---|---|---|
| 5:00 am | subah-e-banaras at assi ghat (if running) | cultural morning event |
| 8:00 am | yoga class | many options near assi ghat, rs 300-500 |
| 10:00 am | bharat kala bhavan museum at BHU | art and textiles |
| 1:00 pm | lunch at a cafe | rs 200-400 |
| 3:00 pm | attend a classical music concert (if available) | ask your hotel, check local listings |
| 5:00 pm | boat ride at sunset | different route, go north toward raj ghat |
| 7:00 pm | dinner in the lanes | explore a different area |
day 5: day trip and departure
| time | activity | notes |
|---|---|---|
| 6:00 am | final sunrise on the ghats | make this a meditative experience |
| 8:00 am | breakfast and packing | |
| 10:00 am | chunar fort day trip (40 km) or vindhyachal (80 km) | if departing late |
| or 10:00 am | revisit favorite spots, final shopping | |
| 4:00 pm | departure | allow 1-2 hours to reach station/airport |
budget breakdown
daily cost estimates
| category | backpacker | mid-range | luxury |
|---|---|---|---|
| accommodation | rs 400-800 (dorm/basic) | rs 1,500-3,500 (hotel) | rs 5,000-15,000 (heritage/5-star) |
| food | rs 200-400 (street food) | rs 500-1,000 (restaurants) | rs 1,500-3,000 (fine dining) |
| transport | rs 100-200 (walking + shared auto) | rs 300-600 (auto + boat) | rs 800-1,500 (private car + boat) |
| activities | rs 100-200 (free ghats + boat) | rs 300-800 (guided tours) | rs 1,000-3,000 (private guides) |
| shopping | rs 0-500 | rs 500-2,000 | rs 2,000-20,000 |
| daily total | rs 800-2,100 | rs 3,100-7,900 | rs 10,300-42,500 |
cost of specific activities
| activity | cost |
|---|---|
| ganga aarti (watching from ghat) | free |
| shared boat for aarti | rs 100-150 per person |
| private boat (1 hour) | rs 300-500 for the boat |
| sunrise boat ride (shared) | rs 100-200 per person |
| kashi vishwanath temple | free |
| sarnath (auto + entry) | rs 350-550 |
| ramnagar fort entry | rs 15-25 |
| yoga class (drop-in) | rs 300-500 |
| silk weaving workshop visit | usually free (they want to sell) |
practical tips
temple etiquette
- remove shoes before entering any temple (leave them outside or in the shoe counter)
- no leather items (bags, belts) inside temples
- dress conservatively: knees and shoulders covered
- some temples don’t allow non-hindus in the inner sanctum
- photography rules vary by temple, ask before shooting
ghat etiquette
- do not photograph people bathing without permission
- absolutely no photography at cremation ghats (manikarnika, harishchandra)
- the ghat steps can be slippery, especially near the water
- remove shoes when stepping on the lower ghats near the water
- early morning (5-7 am) is when the ghats feel most alive
photography at manikarnika ghat
this deserves its own section because it’s the most common mistake tourists make. manikarnika is a cremation ground. families are performing last rites. taking photos or videos of cremations is deeply disrespectful and can lead to confrontation. keep your camera/phone away. observe from a distance. if someone tells you not to photograph something, listen immediately.
what to pack
- comfortable walking shoes (you’ll walk 5-10 km daily on uneven surfaces)
- slip-on sandals (for temple visits where you remove shoes constantly)
- scarf/dupatta for women (temple visits)
- light, modest clothing (conservative city)
- warm layers in winter (december-february mornings are cold on the ghats)
- hand sanitizer and wet wipes (essential for street food)
- a small daypack (leave big bags at the hotel)
- power bank (long days out)
health and water
- drink only bottled or filtered water
- street food is generally safe if it’s freshly prepared and the stall has high turnover
- the kachori stalls that sell out by 8 am are safe because the oil is fresh and the turnover is constant
- avoid cut fruits from street carts
- carry basic medication (oral rehydration salts, antacids, paracetamol)
the ganga: a note
the ganga in varanasi is sacred. it’s also polluted. these two facts coexist.
millions of hindus bathe in the ganga every day with full faith in its purifying power. the namami gange programme has invested thousands of crores in cleaning the river. the water quality has improved in recent years, but it’s still not safe to drink or swim in by western standards.
as a tourist, you’ll be on the ganga in boats. you don’t need to bathe in it. but if you want to participate in a ritual dip (many visitors do), a brief, symbolic dip is common. avoid swallowing the water. shower afterward.
respect both the faith and the reality. don’t mock people for bathing in water you wouldn’t drink. don’t pretend the pollution doesn’t exist. varanasi lives with this contradiction daily.
varanasi for different travelers
solo travelers
varanasi is excellent for solo travel. the assi ghat area has a strong backpacker community where meeting people is easy. hostels and cafes facilitate connections. the ghats are social spaces. solo women travelers should exercise standard precautions (avoid isolated areas at night, dress conservatively) but generally report feeling safe.
couples
varanasi is not a conventional romantic destination, but it has its own kind of magic. sunrise boat rides, rooftop dinners overlooking the ganga, evening aarti together. the intensity of the city can bring people closer. stay at a heritage property like brijrama palace for a special experience.
families
varanasi works for families with older children who can handle walking and crowds. the narrow lanes and uneven ghat steps make it challenging for very young children or elderly family members with mobility issues. cantonment hotels with car access are better for families than ghat-area guesthouses.
spiritual seekers
varanasi is the destination. attend morning and evening aartis, visit temples, take yoga classes near assi ghat, explore sarnath for the buddhist dimension, and simply sit on the ghats and watch the river. many visitors come for a few days and end up staying weeks.
more on rahul.biz
this is the hub page for varanasi content. here’s everything else:
food:
- varanasi food guide - the complete food overview
- best restaurants in varanasi - sit-down dining
- best street food in varanasi - the full crawl
- best cafes in varanasi - rooftop cafes and lassi shops
- best biryani in varanasi - the non-veg side
- best chaat in varanasi - tamatar chaat and beyond
shopping:
- best shopping in varanasi - markets and what to buy
- banarasi silk saree buying guide - the definitive silk guide
experiences:
- ganga aarti varanasi: complete guide - the most important varanasi experience
- best ghats in varanasi - all 15 major ghats covered
stay and work:
- best hostels in varanasi - backpacker and budget stays
- best coworking spaces in varanasi - digital nomad guide
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