Destinations India New Delhi

New Delhi.

28° N · 77° E India

Three thousand years of continuous habitation have left at least eight distinct cities buried under New Delhi's soil, and the living one on top refuses to sit still. India's capital is a place where a Mughal emperor's garden tomb and a Bahá'í lotus made of marble concrete share the same skyline, where a Sufi shrine's Thursday qawwali drifts across a park designed by Edwin Lutyens, and where a plate of nihari at dawn near Jama Masjid can rearrange your understanding of what breakfast means. New Delhi is not one city — it is several, stacked and overlapping, arguing and collaborating across centuries.

Ascolta l'audioguida — 47 min Open the map
New Delhi, India
New Delhi · India
35
attrazioni
3-5 days
days suggested
October to March
best season
IT · EN
narration

01 An introduzione

synthesized from 240+ sources ·

NThree thousand years of continuous habitation have left at least eight distinct cities buried under New Delhi's soil, and the living one on top refuses to sit still. India's capital is a place where a Mughal emperor's garden tomb and a Bahá'í lotus made of marble concrete share the same skyline, where a Sufi shrine's Thursday qawwali drifts across a park designed by Edwin Lutyens, and where a plate of nihari at dawn near Jama Masjid can rearrange your understanding of what breakfast means. New Delhi is not one city — it is several, stacked and overlapping, arguing and collaborating across centuries.

The simplest way to read Delhi is as three cities at once. Mughal Old Delhi — Shah Jahan's walled Shahjahanabad — still pulses around Chandni Chowk and the Red Fort, its lanes dense with spice traders, kebab smoke, and parathas fried in ghee older than most nations. Imperial New Delhi, the one Lutyens and Baker drew on paper in 1911 and built in sandstone by 1931, stretches along Kartavya Path from India Gate to Rashtrapati Bhavan with the deliberate symmetry of a capital that wanted to be both Roman and Indian. And then there is the contemporary city — metro-connected, café-fueled, cocktail-literate — where a South Delhi bar can land on Asia's 50 Best list and a Tibetan enclave serves thukpa to college students until midnight.

What holds these layers together is not tidiness but energy. Delhi's cultural calendar runs deep: the National School of Drama's Bharat Rang Mahotsav fills January and February with theater from across India, the India Art Fair draws galleries to Okhla every February, and the Phool Walon Ki Sair — a flower-sellers' procession through Mehrauli that honors both Hindu and Muslim shrines — is one of the few festivals anywhere that celebrates shared devotion as civic identity. In between the big events, places like India Habitat Centre, Triveni Kala Sangam, and the Lodhi Art District keep the city's intellectual and creative metabolism running year-round.

Budget Friendly Photography Hotspot Family Friendly

02 Why New Delhi.

What makes this place worth slowing down for.

Seven Cities, One Address

Delhi has been founded, destroyed, and rebuilt at least seven times across thirteen centuries. Walk from Qutub Minar's 12th-century victory tower to Humayun's Mughal garden tomb to Lutyens' imperial axis along Kartavya Path, and you're crossing civilizations in a single afternoon.

Living Religious Plurality

The Bahá'í Lotus Temple, Gurudwara Bangla Sahib's langar kitchen, the Sufi shrines of Nizamuddin, and Jama Masjid's Mughal courtyard all operate within a few metro stops of each other. Delhi doesn't display its faiths in museums — it practices them in public, loudly, and simultaneously.

Culture Beyond the Monuments

The Mandi House cluster packs the National School of Drama, Triveni Kala Sangam, and Kamani Auditorium into a single neighbourhood. Add Lodhi Art District's open-air murals, NGMA's modern Indian art collection, and India Habitat Centre's nightly programming, and Delhi's contemporary cultural life rivals its heritage one.

Green Pockets in the Chaos

Lodhi Garden at dawn — joggers threading between 15th-century tombs, parakeets overhead — is one of the city's best free experiences. Sunder Nursery, the biodiversity parks along the Yamuna, and the forested Delhi Ridge offer genuine nature breaks without leaving city limits.


04 Neighborhoods.

Where to wander, by quarter — each with its own rhythm.

01

Old Delhi (Shahjahanabad)

Shah Jahan's 17th-century walled city is still the densest, loudest, most flavorful part of Delhi. The Red Fort anchors its eastern edge; Jama Masjid — one of India's largest mosques — commands its center. But the real draw is the lanes: Chandni Chowk for progressive snack crawls through parathas, jalebi, and dahi bhalla; Matia Mahal for Mughlai kebabs and nihari that has been simmering since before dawn; and Mirza Ghalib ki Haveli for a quiet literary pause. Come hungry, wear comfortable shoes, and don't try to eat everything in one visit.

02

Lutyens' Delhi & Kartavya Path

The ceremonial heart of the capital stretches from India Gate along the imperial axis to Rashtrapati Bhavan, the presidential residence that Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker designed as the centerpiece of British New Delhi. The scale is deliberate and enormous — meant to impress, and it does. Rashtrapati Bhavan now offers bookable visitor circuits through its ceremonial rooms and the Amrit Udyan gardens. Jantar Mantar, the 18th-century astronomical observatory, sits nearby as a reminder that Delhi was measuring the sky long before the British arrived. India Gate is strongest after dark, when families and vendors fill the lawns.

03

Nizamuddin & Humayun's Tomb

This is where Delhi's Mughal, Sufi, and garden-city layers converge most intensely. Humayun's Tomb — the subcontinent's first great dynastic garden tomb and a direct ancestor of the Taj Mahal — anchors a complex that includes the often-overlooked Isa Khan's Tomb, a pre-Mughal octagonal gem worth more than a passing glance. Next door, Sunder Nursery is one of Delhi's finest urban parks: restored heritage structures, walking paths, and serious calm. A short walk brings you to Hazrat Nizamuddin Dargah, where Thursday evening qawwali sessions fill the courtyard with devotional music that has not paused for seven centuries.

04

Mehrauli & Qutb Complex

South Delhi's oldest settlement clusters around the Qutub Minar, the 72.5-meter victory tower that marks where the Delhi Sultanate began in the 12th century. But the real discovery is the Mehrauli Archaeological Park beyond the Qutb ticketed area — a sprawling, under-visited landscape layered with Sultanate tombs, Mughal pavilions, British-era follies, and Sufi shrines. Adham Khan's Tomb, locally known as Bhool Bhulaiya for its maze-like corridors, and Chor Minar, a macabre tower studded with holes once used to display severed heads, reward anyone willing to walk beyond the standard circuit.

05

Khan Market & Lodhi Road

Delhi's most polished central neighborhood runs between the bookshops and cafés of Khan Market and the tree-lined paths of Lodhi Garden. The garden is best early morning, when joggers weave between 15th-century Sayyid and Lodi tombs and the light hits sandstone at its warmest. Along the surrounding streets, the Lodhi Art District covers building walls with large-scale murals that have grown into a genuine open-air gallery, not just an Instagram backdrop. The National Crafts Museum — designed by Charles Correa and as much an architectural experience as a collection — is a short ride away.

06

Hauz Khas & South Delhi

The social engine of contemporary Delhi runs through a string of South Delhi neighborhoods: Hauz Khas Village for its medieval tank, Sultanate madrasa ruins, and rooftop bars stacked alongside; Greater Kailash and Aurobindo Market for dining that ranges from casual to ambitious; and Dhan Mill Compound for specialty coffee and design-forward restaurants in converted warehouses. Lair, in nearby Vasant Vihar, was ranked No. 8 on Asia's 50 Best Bars in 2025. Nightlife here starts late — 8:30 PM is early by Delhi standards — and tends to stay in one neighborhood rather than hop across the city.

07

Connaught Place & Mandi House

The white colonnaded circle of Connaught Place is Delhi's commercial center and metro hub, useful for orientation if not always for atmosphere. The real draw is the cultural cluster a few blocks east at Mandi House: the National School of Drama, Kamani Auditorium, Triveni Kala Sangam's galleries and performance spaces, and the Rabindra Bhavan institutions that house the Sangeet Natak Akademi and Lalit Kala Akademi. If Delhi has a cultural district in the European sense, this is it — concentrated, walkable, and programmed year-round.

08

Majnu ka Tila

Delhi's Tibetan colony, tucked along the Yamuna's western bank in north Delhi, is a small grid of lanes packed with monasteries, thangka shops, and some of the city's best cheap eating. Momos, thukpa, laphing, and Tibetan butter tea fill hole-in-the-wall cafés popular with students and budget travelers. The atmosphere is more Dharamsala than Delhi, which is exactly the point — a different rhythm, a different menu, and a reminder of how many communities have made this city their own.

Cronologia storica

Eight Cities, One Capital, Three Thousand Years

From Iron Age settlement to the republic's ceremonial heart

Ancient & Legendary Delhi
c. 950 BCE

First Fires at Purana Qila

Painted Grey Ware shards buried beneath the walls of Purana Qila mark the earliest known human settlement in the Delhi region — an Iron Age community cooking, trading, and dying on a low ridge above the Yamuna floodplain. The site would be continuously inhabited through Mauryan, Kushan, Gupta, and Rajput periods, making it one of the longest archaeological sequences in South Asia. Delhi's story begins not with a king or a battle, but with anonymous potters shaping grey clay.

Rajput Delhi
c. 1052

Anangpal Builds Lal Kot

The Tomara ruler Anangpal II raised Lal Kot, the first clearly historical fortification in the Delhi region, on a rocky spur near Mehrauli. This is the moment Delhi becomes a named, defended, politically significant place rather than just a settlement. The Chauhans would later expand it into Qila Rai Pithora, but Anangpal's walls are the foundation — the first time someone looked at this particular stretch of ridge country and decided it was worth building a city around.

Delhi Sultanate
1192

Prithviraj Falls at Tarain

Muhammad of Ghor's cavalry shattered Prithviraj Chauhan's forces at the Second Battle of Tarain, ending Rajput control of the Delhi region permanently. Within fourteen years Qutb al-Din Aibak would declare himself sultan from Delhi, and the city would become the power center of a new Indo-Islamic political order. The defeat echoes through centuries of Hindi and Rajput oral tradition — and through the physical landscape, where the Quwwat-ul-Islam Mosque rose from the stones of twenty-seven demolished temples.

1206

The Sultanate Is Born

Qutb al-Din Aibak, a former slave-commander, became the first Sultan of Delhi, establishing a dynasty that would transform the city from a regional Rajput stronghold into the political capital of northern India. The Qutb Minar — 72.5 meters of red sandstone and marble, still the tallest brick minaret in the world — began rising at Mehrauli as a victory tower and a call to prayer audible for miles. Delhi would remain the seat of Muslim power in the subcontinent, with interruptions, for the next 651 years.

1253

Amir Khusrow, Delhi's Poet-Soul

Born in Patiali but shaped entirely by Delhi, Amir Khusrow spent seven decades at the courts of successive sultans and at the feet of his spiritual master Nizamuddin Auliya. He invented the sitar (tradition claims), pioneered qawwali, wrote in Persian, Arabic, Turkish, and early Hindavi, and essentially created Delhi's self-image as a cosmopolitan literary city. When he died in 1325, months after Nizamuddin, he was buried beside his master in the dargah complex that remains one of Delhi's most emotionally charged places.

1303

Alauddin Khalji Founds Siri

Under Mongol siege pressure, Sultan Alauddin Khalji built Siri — Delhi's second fortified capital — and the Hauz Khas reservoir to supply it with water. His Alai Darwaza of 1311, with its horseshoe arches and red sandstone inlaid with white marble, remains one of the finest examples of Indo-Islamic architecture from any period. Alauddin turned Delhi from a defensive sultanate capital into an imperial one, controlling territory from Gujarat to Bengal.

1398

Timur Sacks the City

Timur's Central Asian cavalry entered Delhi in December 1398, and the sack that followed was one of the most devastating episodes in the city's history. Accounts describe mass killings, the enslavement of thousands, and the deportation of skilled artisans to Samarkand. The Tughlaq sultanate, already weakened, never recovered. Delhi would spend the next century as a diminished, fragmented place — important symbolically, but stripped of the wealth and population that had made it a great metropolis.

Mughal Delhi
1540

Sher Shah Raises Purana Qila

After defeating the Mughal emperor Humayun, the Afghan warlord Sher Shah Suri rebuilt the citadel at Dinpanah as Shergarh — the massive walls and gates of today's Purana Qila. It was a statement of legitimacy from a man who had risen from nothing to control northern India. Sher Shah's five-year reign also gave India the Grand Trunk Road and a reformed revenue system, but in Delhi, his legacy is architectural: the Qila-i-Kuhna Mosque inside Purana Qila is among the finest Sultanate-era buildings still standing.

1560s

Humayun's Tomb Changes Everything

Commissioned by Humayun's widow Bega Begum and designed by the Persian architect Mirak Mirza Ghiyas, Humayun's Tomb was the subcontinent's first grand Mughal garden tomb — a symmetrical paradise enclosed by char bagh gardens, its double dome rising above the Yamuna plain. It became the architectural template that culminated, a century later, in the Taj Mahal. Today the surrounding Nizamuddin area compresses devotional Sufi music, medieval tombs, and the modern city into a single charged neighborhood.

1648

Shah Jahan Enters the Red Fort

On a chosen auspicious day, Emperor Shah Jahan ceremonially entered his new Red Fort, the sandstone citadel that would serve as the seat of Mughal power for two centuries. Around it rose Shahjahanabad — walled, gated, canal-fed, centered on the great commercial avenue of Chandni Chowk and anchored by the Jama Masjid, completed in 1656 as India's largest mosque. This was the Delhi that European travelers described with astonishment: one of the richest, most densely populated cities on earth.

1739

Nadir Shah Steals the Peacock Throne

After crushing the Mughal army at Karnal on 24 February 1739, the Persian conqueror Nadir Shah entered Delhi and, following a rumor-triggered massacre of his soldiers, unleashed a devastating sack. He departed with the Peacock Throne, the Koh-i-Noor diamond, and treasure so vast that he suspended taxation in Persia for three years. Mughal Delhi never recovered its political credibility. The emperors remained, but as increasingly hollow figures presiding over a city that had lost its ability to defend itself.

Late Mughal & British Conquest
1797

Ghalib, Voice of a Dying World

Mirza Ghalib arrived in Delhi as a young man and spent the rest of his life there, writing the Urdu ghazals that would define the language's literary peak. He witnessed the 1857 uprising from inside the besieged city, recorded the British reprisals with bitter precision, and mourned a civilization that was ending around him. His haveli in Ballimaran still stands in Old Delhi's labyrinth — a small, crowded house for a poet whose words grew larger than the empire he outlived.

1803

The British Take Delhi

On 11 September 1803, General Lake's forces defeated the Marathas at the Battle of Delhi, and the East India Company assumed control of the city. The Mughal emperor Shah Alam II, blind and impoverished, was retained as a pensioned figurehead in the Red Fort — sovereign of nothing beyond its walls. For the next fifty-four years, Delhi occupied a strange liminal status: nominally Mughal, functionally British, emotionally contested.

1857

The Siege That Ended an Empire

From June to September 1857, rebel sepoys held Delhi in the name of the last Mughal emperor Bahadur Shah Zafar while British forces besieged the city from the Ridge. The final assault came through Kashmiri Gate on 14 September, and the retribution was savage — mass executions, demolitions, confiscations. Bahadur Shah was tried in the Red Fort and exiled to Rangoon, where he died writing poetry in 1862. The Mughal dynasty, six centuries of Delhi's identity, was formally extinguished.

New Delhi — Imperial Capital
1911

George V Announces a New Capital

At the Delhi Durbar on 12 December 1911, King-Emperor George V stunned the assembled Indian princes and British officials by announcing the transfer of India's capital from Calcutta to Delhi. The decision was strategic — Delhi sat at the historic crossroads of northern India — and symbolic: the British were claiming continuity with every previous imperial power that had ruled from this ground. Two decades of construction, 700 million bricks, and 30,000 laborers would follow.

1869

Lutyens, Architect of the Imperial Dream

Edwin Lutyens, born in London in 1869, would become the architect most responsible for New Delhi's physical identity. His Viceroy's House (now Rashtrapati Bhavan), with its fusion of Mughal, Buddhist, and classical European forms, remains one of the largest and most ambitious head-of-state residences ever built. The great axial vista from Raisina Hill to India Gate is his composition — a city designed not for habitation but for ceremony, procession, and the projection of imperial permanence that lasted exactly sixteen years.

1931

New Delhi Is Inaugurated

On 13 February 1931, the new imperial capital was formally inaugurated — Viceroy's House complete, India Gate standing at the end of Kingsway (now Kartavya Path), the Secretariat blocks flanking Raisina Hill, Parliament House open since 1927. It was a city of sandstone and symmetry, designed to project British permanence across centuries. Instead, it served the Raj for exactly sixteen years before India's tricolor rose over the same buildings.

Republic of India
1947

Independence and Partition's Refugees

On 15 August 1947, Jawaharlal Nehru raised the Indian flag at the Red Fort, and New Delhi became the capital of independent India. But the city was simultaneously convulsed by Partition: hundreds of thousands of Hindu and Sikh refugees poured in from Pakistan, while Muslim residents fled. Humayun's Tomb, the great Mughal garden tomb, was converted into a refugee camp. The city that Lutyens had designed for perhaps 70,000 imperial administrators was suddenly the capital of 350 million people.

1965

Shah Rukh Khan, Delhi's Gift to Bollywood

Born in Rajendra Nagar, educated at St. Columba's School and Hansraj College, Shah Rukh Khan learned theatre in Delhi's amateur drama circuit before leaving for Mumbai. He would become the most recognized Indian on the planet — but his formative years were shaped by Delhi's particular mix of north Indian street culture, English-medium aspiration, and theatre clubs run out of borrowed auditoriums. The city never fully claims him, and he never fully leaves it behind.

1986

The Lotus Temple Opens

The Bahá'í House of Worship, designed by Iranian-Canadian architect Fariborz Sahba as twenty-seven free-standing marble petals, opened in December 1986 and immediately became one of Delhi's most visited buildings. In a city defined by the religious architecture of successive ruling faiths — Hindu, Islamic, Sikh, Christian — the Lotus Temple offered something different: a space with no images, no sermons, no denominational identity. It draws more visitors annually than the Taj Mahal.

1988

Virat Kohli, Born in Uttam Nagar

Virat Kohli grew up in west Delhi's middle-class Uttam Nagar, trained at the West Delhi Cricket Academy, and was playing for Delhi's senior team by seventeen. His relentless intensity on the cricket field — channeled through the Delhi Ranji Trophy system and later the Indian Premier League's Delhi franchise — made him one of the most watched athletes on earth. He is the city's clearest example of what Delhi's sprawling, competitive, unglamorous outer neighborhoods can produce.

2002

The Metro Arrives

On Christmas Day 2002, Delhi Metro's first corridor opened between Shahdara and Tis Hazari — eight stations, 8.3 kilometers, and the beginning of the most transformative infrastructure project in the city's modern history. Before the Metro, Delhi was a city of buses, auto-rickshaws, and punishing commutes. Within two decades the network would grow to over 390 kilometers, reshaping settlement patterns, property values, and the daily experience of millions of residents.

2010

Commonwealth Games Test the City

Delhi hosted the Commonwealth Games in October 2010, its largest international sporting event. The preparation was chaotic — collapsing bridges, corruption scandals, last-minute construction — but the games themselves came off, and the infrastructure left behind (stadiums, the Airport Express Metro line, upgraded roads) reshaped parts of the city permanently. The episode captured Delhi's essential character: ambitious, messy, somehow functional at the last possible moment.

2023

A New Parliament for a New Century

India's new Parliament building opened in New Delhi in 2023, replacing the circular Council House that Herbert Baker had designed in the 1920s. The new structure, part of the Central Vista redevelopment project, marked the most significant reshaping of Lutyens' imperial core since independence. In the same year, the Yamuna reached a record flood level of 208.66 meters at the Old Delhi Railway Bridge, a reminder that Delhi's geography — built on a floodplain, at the mercy of the monsoon — remains as non-negotiable as its politics.

Oggi

06 Who lived here.

The people who shaped the city — and were shaped by it.

Mughal Emperor 1592–1666

Shah Jahan

Built the city of Shahjahanabad (Old Delhi)

He moved the Mughal capital from Agra to Delhi in 1638 and built everything that defines Old Delhi today — the Red Fort, Jama Masjid, and the walled city of Shahjahanabad. Walk through Chandni Chowk and you're still navigating the bones of his urban plan, nearly four centuries later.

Architect 1869–1944

Edwin Lutyens

Designed New Delhi (1912–1931)

When the British decided to move their capital from Calcutta, Lutyens drew the imperial city from scratch — the grand axis of Kartavya Path, Rashtrapati Bhavan's dome, the geometric gardens. His New Delhi is still the ceremonial heart of the republic, now serving the democracy he never imagined it would house.

Independence leader 1869–1948

Mahatma Gandhi

Assassinated at Birla House (now Gandhi Smriti), New Delhi

Gandhi spent his final 144 days at Birla House in New Delhi, holding prayer meetings on the same lawn where he was shot on January 30, 1948. The site is now Gandhi Smriti, and the concrete footsteps marking his last walk to the prayer ground remain one of the most quietly devastating memorial spaces in any city.

Poet 1797–1869

Mirza Ghalib

Lived and died in Old Delhi

Ghalib wrote his greatest Urdu and Persian verse in the narrow lanes of Old Delhi, watching the Mughal world collapse around him after the 1857 uprising. His haveli in Ballimaran survives as a small museum, and his couplets about love and loss are still quoted in every chai stall conversation that turns philosophical.

First Prime Minister of India 1889–1964

Jawaharlal Nehru

Governed from and lived in New Delhi

Nehru shaped independent India from Teen Murti Bhavan, his official residence that is now a museum and the site of the Nehru Planetarium. He built Delhi into a capital of modernist ambition — the institutions, the diplomatic enclave, the idea that a new nation deserved a city that looked forward, not just back at its Mughal past.

Poet and musician 1253–1325

Amir Khusrau

Lived in Delhi, buried at Nizamuddin

Khusrau is credited with helping create qawwali and inventing the sitar, and his tomb sits beside his spiritual master Nizamuddin Auliya's shrine in one of Delhi's most atmospheric quarters. On Thursday evenings, qawwali singers still perform at the dargah — a living tradition that traces back seven centuries to the man buried a few meters away.

Architect 1930–2015

Charles Correa

Designed major Delhi buildings

Correa's National Crafts Museum near Pragati Maidan is one of Delhi's finest pieces of modern architecture — a building that feels like walking through a village, with courtyards and pathways that blur the line between exhibition and lived space. It's the kind of building that makes you understand why architecture matters more than monuments.

08 Dove mangiare.

Where locals actually book dinner — not the tourist menus.

Chaat

Chaat

Delhi's defining street food category — gol gappé (crisp shells filled with spiced water), aloo tikki, papdi chaat, dahi bhalle. The best versions balance six flavours at once: sour, sweet, salty, spicy, crunchy, cool. Chandni Chowk and Bengali Market are ground zero.

★ local pick
Butter Chicken & Dal Makhani

Butter Chicken & Dal Makhani

Both were invented in Delhi at Moti Mahal in the 1950s. The city still argues over who makes them best. The original combination — smoky tandoori chicken in tomato-cream gravy, slow-cooked black lentils finished with butter — remains the canonical North Indian restaurant meal.

★ local pick
Chole Bhature

Chole Bhature

Spiced chickpea curry with deep-fried puffed bread, eaten as breakfast or lunch with raw onion and pickle on the side. It's heavy, unapologetic, and beloved. Sita Ram Diwan Chand in Paharganj has served a stripped-down version since 1950.

★ local pick
Paranthas of Chandni Chowk

Paranthas of Chandni Chowk

Paranthe Wali Gali is a narrow lane in Old Delhi where shops have fried stuffed flatbreads since the 1870s. Fillings range from potato and cauliflower to rabri and mixed nuts. Eat them with pickle, curd, and the ambient chaos of the lane itself.

★ local pick
Kebabs

Kebabs

Delhi's Mughal-descended kebab tradition runs deep — seekh kebabs from the tandoor, galouti kebabs so soft they dissolve, and kakori kebabs spiced with saffron and cardamom. Jama Masjid's surrounding lanes are the densest concentration, best navigated after sunset.

★ local pick
Nihari

Nihari

A slow-cooked meat stew originally eaten before dawn by labourers, now a weekend morning institution in Old Delhi. The gravy is rich with bone marrow and layered spice, served with sheermal bread. Haji Shabrati's near Jama Masjid opens before sunrise for it.

★ local pick

09 Insider tips.

Small things that change how the city treats you.

Get the Tourist Card

DMRC's 1-day (₹150) or 3-day (₹300) metro tourist card gives unlimited rides and saves you from queuing for tokens at every station. Buy one at any metro counter on arrival.

Graze, Don't Sit

Chandni Chowk rewards small portions across many stalls — parathas here, jalebi there, dahi bhalla around the corner. Arriving hungry and eating light at each stop is how locals do it.

Ignore Airport Touts

Use the prepaid taxi booth or Airport Express Metro (25 min to New Delhi station) instead of accepting help from unsolicited 'guides' at arrivals. Delhi Police runs a 'May I Help You' counter if you need directions.

Time Your Visit Right

October to March is the sweet spot — cool mornings, mild days, outdoor comfort. April to June hits 40°C regularly, and July–September brings monsoon humidity and flooding risks.

Cash Plus UPI

UPI dominates everyday payments, and foreign visitors can now get UPI One World wallets at the airport with just a passport and visa. Keep some cash for auto-rickshaws and smaller street vendors.

Monday Closures Matter

Lotus Temple and Akshardham are both closed on Mondays. Plan your itinerary around this or you'll waste a half-day trip to a locked gate.

Use One Delhi App

The government's One Delhi app shows live bus ETAs, metro routes, and sells discounted bus tickets (10% off). It's the closest thing Delhi has to a single transport planner.

Think in Three Delhis

Old Delhi (Mughal lanes and food), Lutyens' Delhi (imperial boulevards and memorials), and South Delhi (cafés, art, parks) are practically different cities. Budget at least a half-day for each.

12 Domande frequenti

Is New Delhi worth visiting?

Absolutely — Delhi layers 1,000 years of history into one sprawling, chaotic, rewarding city. Three UNESCO World Heritage Sites (Red Fort, Humayun's Tomb, Qutub Minar), a world-class street food scene anchored in Old Delhi's Mughlai traditions, and a growing contemporary art and café culture make it one of Asia's densest cities for things to do per square kilometer. It's not a relaxing destination, but it's an extraordinary one.

How many days do you need in New Delhi?

Three to four full days covers the essential layers: one day for Old Delhi (Red Fort, Jama Masjid, Chandni Chowk food crawl), one for Mughal monuments (Humayun's Tomb, Qutub Minar), one for Lutyens' Delhi and museums (India Gate, Rashtrapati Bhavan, Gandhi Smriti, National Crafts Museum), and optionally a fourth for Akshardham, South Delhi parks, or a day trip to Agra. Five days lets you breathe and discover the less-touristed Mehrauli archaeological landscape and Nizamuddin quarter.

How to get from Delhi airport to city center?

The Airport Express Metro from Terminal 3 reaches New Delhi Railway Station in about 25 minutes (runs 4:45 AM–11:30 PM). Terminal 1 connects via the Magenta Line. Prepaid taxis and Uber/Ola are available 24/7 at all terminals — use the official prepaid booth, not drivers who approach you in arrivals. An inter-terminal shuttle runs every 20 minutes around the clock if you need to switch terminals.

Is Delhi safe for tourists?

Delhi is generally safe for tourists who take standard urban precautions. Use prepaid taxis or ride-hailing apps rather than hailing cabs, stay alert in crowded markets and transport hubs, and keep valuables secure. Delhi Police operates a tourist-focused helpline and airport assistance counters. The emergency number is 112, and India's 24/7 multilingual tourist helpline at 1363 covers 12 languages including English.

What is the best month to visit New Delhi?

November and February are the sweet spots — warm days around 24–28°C, cool mornings, and almost no rain. October and March are also excellent. December and January can dip to 7–8°C at night with dense morning fog that delays flights, so pack layers. Avoid May–June (40°C heat) and July–August (monsoon downpours averaging 200+ mm per month).

What food is New Delhi famous for?

Delhi's signature dishes run from butter chicken (born here, origin still contested between Moti Mahal and Daryaganj) to chole bhature, nihari, seekh kebabs, and the full Chandni Chowk street-food repertoire of stuffed parathas, jalebi, and dahi bhalla. In winter, hunt for daulat ki chaat — a fragile milk-foam sweet that vanishes from stalls by late morning. Karim's near Jama Masjid and the Pandara Road restaurant strip are two landmark eating destinations.

How to get around New Delhi without a car?

The Delhi Metro (374 km, 271 stations) is the backbone — fast, air-conditioned, and covers most tourist areas. Supplement with Uber/Ola for last-mile trips, and use auto-rickshaws for short hops in Old Delhi where streets are too narrow for cars. The One Delhi app combines bus tracking, metro routing, and ticket purchases in one place. A 3-day metro tourist card at ₹300 is the best-value transit investment for visitors.

Can you use credit cards in Delhi?

Credit and debit cards work at hotels, restaurants, and larger shops, but Delhi runs heavily on UPI digital payments. Foreign visitors can set up a UPI One World wallet at the airport with their passport and visa. Keep ₹2,000–3,000 in cash for street food, auto-rickshaws, and smaller vendors who only accept cash or UPI.

Ready to book?

13Before you go

Informazioni pratiche

Flight

Getting There

Indira Gandhi International Airport (DEL) handles most traffic. Terminal 3 connects to central Delhi via the Airport Express Metro (Orange Line) in about 25 minutes; Terminal 1 links to the Magenta Line. New Delhi Railway Station and Old Delhi Railway Station are the main rail hubs, with Hazrat Nizamuddin serving southern routes. National highways NH-44, NH-48, and NH-24 connect Delhi to Agra, Jaipur, and points east.

Directions transit

Getting Around

The Delhi Metro (DMRC) covers 374 km across 271 stations on multiple colour-coded lines — the Yellow, Violet, and Magenta lines hit most visitor sites. A 1-day Tourist Card costs ₹150 and a 3-day card ₹300, both including a ₹50 refundable deposit. DTC and cluster buses blanket the city (543 routes); the One Delhi app gives live tracking and a 10% ticket discount. Uber and Ola work reliably. Auto-rickshaws remain the classic last-mile option — insist on the meter or agree on a fare before climbing in.

Thermostat

Climate & Best Time

October through March is the sweet spot: daytime highs of 20–33°C, minimal rain, and manageable air quality. December and January mornings can dip to 7–8°C with dense fog that delays flights — pack a layer. April to June is punishingly hot (regularly 37–40°C), and the monsoon from July to September brings 80% of annual rainfall. November and February often combine the best weather with thinner crowds than the peak December–January holiday season.

Translate

Language & Currency

Hindi dominates daily life, but English works reliably at hotels, metro stations, restaurants, and tourist sites. The Indian Rupee (₹/INR) is the currency; UPI digital payments are ubiquitous — foreign visitors can get a UPI One World wallet at the airport with passport and visa. Keep some cash for auto-rickshaws, street food, and smaller shops. Tipping around 10% at restaurants is standard when no service charge is included.

Shield

Safety

Use prepaid taxi counters or app-based cabs from the airport — ignore touts offering 'special deals' on hotels or tours. Crowded metro cars and busy markets like Chandni Chowk are prime spots for pickpockets; keep phones and wallets in front pockets. Dial 112 for emergencies, 1091 for women's distress, or 1363 for the 24/7 multilingual tourist helpline (covers English, Hindi, and ten other languages).

Take New Delhi with you

47 minutes of New Delhi,
downloaded once.

0 places, one continuous walking route. Free with your first city.

Get this guide on the app Open in browser