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India rewards a little preparation. It is the most stimulating country most people will ever visit — louder, brighter, kinder and more overwhelming than any description prepares you for — and a little context turns that from exhausting into exhilarating.
This guide answers the practical questions UK travellers ask most before a trip to India, so you arrive feeling ready rather than uncertain.
If a question here is not covered, our team — part UK-based, part on the ground in India — is always happy to help.
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India is generally safe for travellers, and travelling in a small guided group removes most of the friction. Your guide is with you throughout, which changes the experience entirely.
The things to be aware of are opportunistic: overcharging, persistent touts around the major monuments, and the well-practised scams at railway stations. Keep valuables secure and be politely firm. Women travellers are advised to dress modestly and to take extra care after dark, and we plan accordingly.
The other adjustment is sensory rather than physical. The noise, the crowds and the sheer press of people can be a lot on day one, and entirely normal by day three.
Standard travel sense still applies: keep your documents safe and take out travel insurance before you go.
British citizens travelling for tourism do need a visa for India. Most travellers apply for an e-Visa online before departure, which is straightforward but does take a few days, so do not leave it to the last week. You will need a passport valid for at least six months with two blank pages.
Rules can change, so always confirm the latest requirements with the UK government's India travel advice and the High Commission of India in the UK before you travel. Different British nationality types, or longer stays for work or study, have different rules.
October to March is the classic season across most of India — dry, clear and comfortable, and the right window for Rajasthan, the Golden Triangle and the south. This is when we run most of our departures.
April to June - very hot, often well above 40C in the north. Hard work.
Monsoon (roughly June to September) - dramatic, green and much quieter, though travel can be disrupted.
The Himalayan north reverses all of this: Ladakh and the mountains are at their best in summer, when the plains are unbearable.
One candid note: December and January mornings in Delhi and Agra can be genuinely foggy, which occasionally delays trains and flights and can veil the Taj at sunrise.
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Our India tours involve a moderate amount of walking — forts, palaces, bazaars and temple complexes, often with steps, often in heat, and frequently in crowds. Expect a few hours on your feet on a typical day.
You do not need to be especially sporty, but you should be comfortable walking for a few hours and carrying a small day bag.
The other demand is the travelling itself: India is enormous, and some road and rail journeys are long. We break them up where we can, and the train days are an experience in their own right.
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Indian food is the reason a great many people come, and it is nothing like the version we eat at home — it changes completely every few hundred miles, from the rich, meaty north to the coconut and curry leaf of the south. Street snacks, fresh breads, thalis that keep arriving. Come with an open mind and an empty stomach.
Good news: India is arguably the best country in the world to be vegetarian. A vast proportion of the food is naturally meat-free, and being vegetarian is completely unremarkable. Vegans do well too, though ghee and paneer are everywhere, so it is worth flagging.
As for the water: drink bottled or filtered, and let your guide steer you to the busy street stalls rather than the quiet ones. High turnover is the best hygiene there is.
If you have a serious allergy you must tell us at the time of booking. We'll do everything we can, but cross-contamination can't be fully guaranteed in every kitchen, so please plan accordingly.
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Plenty of our guests travel solo — a small group is one of the easiest, most sociable ways to see India on your own.
You can choose to share a room with another solo traveller of the same gender, or book a single room for an additional fee.
Our reviews are full of travellers who arrived alone and left with friends.
Currency is the Indian rupee (INR); carry cash for markets, tips and small purchases
Cards and UPI are widely accepted in cities and hotels — India's digital payment system is genuinely excellent
ATMs are everywhere in towns and cities
A local SIM or eSIM is very cheap and coverage is good
Tipping is woven into daily life — small amounts, given often, are expected and appreciated
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Comfortable, characterful hotels chosen for atmosphere as much as for the room — India is one of the few places where the hotel is genuinely part of the trip.
On some itineraries you will stay in a heritage haveli or a converted royal residence in Rajasthan: courtyards, painted ceilings, and a scale that no modern hotel could imitate.
Some trips include a night in a simple village homestay, which is the sharpest and warmest window into everyday Indian life you will get. On the Rajasthan routes you may also spend a night in a desert camp under the stars.
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Getting there: Flights are around 9-10h direct to Delhi or Mumbai, or longer with one stopover. See our recommendations.
Time difference: India is 4.5-5.5 hours ahead of the UK (5.5 in winter, 4.5 in summer); no daylight saving
Currency: Indian rupee (INR)
Plugs: Types C, D & M, 230V — bring an adapter
Language: Hindi, English and 20-odd other official languages; English is widely used
Visa: required — apply for an e-Visa online well before you travel
Best time to travel: October to March for most of the country — see our India tours
Our team can help with anything this guide did not cover.
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