Planning a Goa trip in 2026?

Goa is India’s most consistently satisfying domestic holiday destination – beach, food, culture, nightlife, water sports, and heritage all in one state the size of a large district. A budget trip costs ₹8,000 to ₹15,000 per person for 4 days. A mid-range trip for a family of 4 runs ₹45,000 to ₹80,000 for 5 nights. The best time to visit is November to March. And the single most useful planning decision you will make is whether to base yourself in North Goa (energy, water sports, nightlife, more to do) or South Goa (quiet, family-friendly, beautiful beaches, slower pace)  or ideally, both.

Goa is the rare destination that manages to be all things to all people without being particularly good at any single one  and somehow that works. It is where a 24-year-old on a first solo trip and a family of five celebrating their grandparents’ anniversary and a honeymooning couple from Rajasthan and a group of corporate colleagues on a team offsite are all, simultaneously, having exactly the holiday they came for. The beaches hold everyone. The food accommodates everyone. And the particular quality of a Goan evening, the light going golden over the sea, a cold beer or a coconut water, the sound of the waves – belongs equally to all of them.

This guide covers the practical reality of planning a Goa trip in 2026 – verified costs, the North vs South decision, a 6-day itinerary that works for multiple traveller types, the best beaches, what to eat, how to get around, and the mistakes that trip up first-timers.


North Goa vs South Goa: The Most Important Decision

Most first-time Goa visitors do not realise these are essentially two different destinations with different personalities. Understanding the difference before you book your hotel saves a lot of post-arrival disappointment.

Factor North Goa South Goa
Vibe Energetic, busy, social — the Goa of movies, parties, and water sports Calm, quiet, unhurried — the Goa of long walks and empty beaches
Best beaches Baga, Calangute, Anjuna, Vagator, Morjim, Mandrem, Ashwem Palolem, Agonda, Colva, Benaulim, Butterfly Beach
Nightlife Excellent — Tito’s, Club Cubana, Café Mambo, Saturday Night Market, Anjuna Flea Market Minimal — quiet beach shacks and some live music at Palolem
Water sports Concentrated at Baga, Calangute, Anjuna — parasailing, jet ski, banana boat, scuba Limited — mostly at Grande Island tours from Palolem or Cavelossim
Family friendliness Decent — but crowded beaches and party-heavy evenings can be overwhelming for young children Excellent — calm beaches, less crowd, cleaner water, peaceful atmosphere
Hotels and prices Wider range — budget guesthouses to luxury resorts, all price points More resorts and boutique properties, fewer budget options
Heritage and culture Closer to Old Goa churches, Panaji, Fontainhas Latin Quarter Closer to Cabo de Rama Fort, Cotigao Wildlife Sanctuary
Best for First-time visitors, young couples, groups of friends, solo travellers, corporate offsites Families with young children, honeymoon couples wanting quiet, repeat visitors, wellness travel

💡 The best answer for most 5 to 7-day trips: do both. Spend 3 to 4 nights in North Goa and 2 to 3 nights in South Goa. The drive between them takes 1 to 1.5 hours. This combination gives you the energy and activities of the north and the peace and beauty of the south — and it is the itinerary structure TravelDham recommends for most family and couple trips.


Best Time to Visit Goa in 2026

Season Months Weather Beach Conditions Prices Verdict
Peak season November to February Cool and dry, 22–32°C, low humidity Calm, clear — ideal for swimming and water sports Highest — 40–60% premium over off-season ✅ Best overall — perfect weather, all shacks and activities open
Shoulder October, March Warm, occasional cloud, 26–34°C Generally good, calming down from monsoon or warming up 15–25% lower than peak ✅ Good value — decent weather, fewer crowds
Summer April to May Hot and humid, 30–38°C Good for swimming — sea still calm 30–40% lower than peak ⚠️ Hot but manageable. Good budget option — beaches less crowded.
Monsoon June to September Heavy rain, 25–30°C, high humidity Rough seas — swimming not advisable, water sports closed Cheapest — 40–60% lower than peak ⚠️ Lush and green, dramatically beautiful, but beaches are closed and most shacks shut. Budget travellers who don’t need beach access find it atmospheric.

For Indian school holidays, the October half-term and December–January window both fall in ideal weather seasons. October is excellent value — the monsoon is ending, hotels have post-season pricing, and the beaches are clearing and calming. December–January is the best weather but also the most expensive — book 2 to 3 months in advance for Christmas and New Year specifically, when Goa hotel prices double or triple.


Goa Trip Cost 2026: What You Actually Spend

Expense Budget (per person, 5 nights) Mid-Range (per person, 5 nights) Premium (per person, 5 nights)
Return flights from Delhi/Mumbai ₹4,000–₹8,000 ₹8,000–₹15,000 ₹15,000–₹30,000
Accommodation (5 nights) ₹3,000–₹5,000 (₹600–₹1,000/night) ₹10,000–₹20,000 (₹2,000–₹4,000/night) ₹25,000–₹60,000 (₹5,000–₹12,000/night)
Meals (5 days — beach shacks + restaurants) ₹2,000–₹4,000 ₹5,000–₹10,000 ₹12,000–₹25,000
Scooter/bike rental (5 days) ₹1,500–₹2,000 ₹2,000–₹3,000 ₹3,000–₹5,000 (car hire)
Water sports (parasailing, jet ski, banana boat) ₹1,500–₹3,000 ₹3,000–₹6,000 ₹6,000–₹12,000
Sightseeing and entry fees ₹500–₹1,000 ₹1,000–₹2,500 ₹2,500–₹5,000
Shopping and miscellaneous ₹1,000–₹2,000 ₹3,000–₹8,000 ₹10,000–₹30,000
Total per person (5 nights) ₹13,500–₹25,000 ₹32,000–₹64,500 ₹73,500–₹1,67,000

The single biggest cost variable in Goa is accommodation — and the biggest cost trap is booking a hotel that is far from the beach and then spending heavily on taxis to get everywhere. The best Goa accommodation strategy is to pay slightly more for a hotel within walking distance of your chosen beach. You save the taxi costs, gain the ability to walk back from dinner, and the beach experience is simply better when you are genuinely close to it.

💡 Scooter vs taxi: Renting a scooter (₹300 to ₹400 per day) is by far the best way to explore Goa — you can stop anywhere, park everywhere, and reach beaches that taxis will overcharge to take you to. Taxis in Goa (Goa-specific local taxis) do not use meters — always agree on a price before getting in. App-based taxis (Rapido, Ola) operate in Goa but availability varies. For families with young children or elderly members, a hired car for the day (₹1,500 to ₹2,500) is the more comfortable option.


Best Beaches in Goa 2026: The Honest Guide

North Goa Beaches

Baga Beach — The most commercially developed beach in Goa. Wide, accessible, and packed with water sports operators, beach shacks, and nightlife. Great energy but not for solitude seekers. Best for: first-timers who want the full Goa experience of water sports, shack food, and buzzy atmosphere.

Calangute Beach — Adjacent to Baga and the most tourist-dense beach in Goa. Has everything — water sports, shacks, shops, touts. Very commercial but also very convenient. Best for: families who want everything within walking distance and do not mind crowds.

Anjuna Beach — Famous for the Wednesday Flea Market and a more alternative-traveller vibe. Rocky in parts, with dramatic cliffs at the northern end. Good sunset viewing from the cliff-side. Best for: those who want a more creative, international atmosphere and the legendary Anjuna Flea Market experience.

Vagator Beach — One of the most dramatically beautiful beaches in North Goa — two coves separated by a headland, red laterite cliffs, and the ruins of Chapora Fort visible above. Significantly less crowded than Baga and Calangute. Best for: couples and travellers who want scenic beauty with some nightlife options nearby.

Morjim, Mandrem, and Ashwem — The quieter far-northern beaches, progressively less developed as you go north. Morjim is a nesting site for Olive Ridley sea turtles (nesting season October to February — check for beach restrictions). Mandrem has a beautiful river estuary behind the beach. Ashwem is among the most peaceful accessible beaches in North Goa. Best for: travellers who want North Goa’s location without North Goa’s crowds.

South Goa Beaches

Palolem Beach — The most popular South Goa beach — a perfect crescent of sand in a sheltered cove, with calm water, a relaxed atmosphere, and a good selection of beach huts and restaurants. Best for: couples, families with young children, and anyone who wants beautiful beach conditions with some dining options.

Agonda Beach — Arguably the most beautiful beach in Goa — long, wide, clean, and deliberately low-key. Almost no water sports, minimal commercialisation, and a conservation ethic (Olive Ridley turtles nest here in season). The beach huts here are among the most atmospheric places to stay in all of Goa. Best for: couples wanting genuine peace, slow travellers, yoga and wellness visitors.

Colva and Benaulim — Long stretches of white sand with a more family-oriented, domestic-tourist character. Less party-focused than North Goa. Good infrastructure and accessible from the Madgaon rail junction. Best for: families travelling by train, budget-conscious visitors, and those who want a traditional beach holiday without the party scene.


Top Things to Do in Goa 2026

Water Sports

Goa has the most developed water sports infrastructure of any Indian beach destination. Most operators are concentrated at Baga, Calangute, and Anjuna beaches in the north.

Activity Price (per person) Duration Best Beach
Parasailing ₹700–₹1,200 10 min Baga, Calangute
Jet Ski ₹700–₹1,200 15 min Baga, Anjuna
Banana Boat ₹400–₹600 per person 15 min Baga, Calangute
Bumper Ride ₹400–₹600 per person 15 min Baga
Snorkelling ₹1,000–₹1,500 Half day Grande Island, Bat Island
Scuba Diving ₹3,500–₹5,000 Full day Grande Island
Kayaking ₹500–₹800 per hour Flexible Mandrem, Palolem
Dolphin cruise ₹400–₹700 per person 1.5–2 hours Calangute, Palolem

💡 Book water sports directly at the beach — not through hotels or agents who add 30 to 50% commission. Walk to the water sports operators at the beach, compare prices across two or three, and book directly. Always insist on a life jacket and do not participate in activities that seem poorly maintained.

Heritage and Culture

Old Goa — The UNESCO Heritage Churches — Old Goa, 10 km east of Panaji, contains a remarkable concentration of Portuguese colonial churches from the 16th and 17th centuries. The Basilica of Bom Jesus (which houses the mortal remains of St Francis Xavier), Se Cathedral (the largest church in Asia), and the Church of St Francis of Assisi are all free to enter and genuinely extraordinary. Half a day is ideal. Dress modestly — covered shoulders and knees required inside churches.

Fontainhas Latin Quarter (Panaji) — Goa’s capital Panaji has one of India’s most charming heritage neighbourhoods — narrow lanes of Portuguese-era houses painted in mustard yellow, terracotta red, and cobalt blue. The neighbourhood is entirely walkable and genuinely feels like being transported to a small Mediterranean town. Free to explore. Combine with the Mandovi River cruise (₹200 to ₹400 per person) for a full Panaji day.

Chapora Fort — The laterite fort above Vagator Beach, made famous by the Bollywood film Dil Chahta Hai. Free entry, short walk from the road, panoramic views over the northern Goa coastline. Best visited at sunset. Go on a weekday to avoid weekend crowds.

Dudhsagar Waterfall — One of India’s tallest waterfalls at 310 metres, located on the Goa-Karnataka border. Accessible by jeep tour from Collem (approximately ₹2,500 to ₹3,500 per jeep, shared among 6) or by train with a short trek. Only accessible during and just after monsoon (June to October) — the falls are dry or minimal in peak tourist season (November to February). If your trip falls in October, Dudhsagar is a spectacular detour.

Markets

Anjuna Flea Market (Wednesday, all day) — The original Goa market, running since the 1970s. A mix of Kashmiri handicrafts, clothing, jewellery, souvenirs, antiques, and international food stalls. Bargain hard — first prices are always inflated. Best visited in the morning before it gets crowded and hot.

Arpora Saturday Night Market — The most vibrant night market in Goa, running Saturday evenings from approximately 6 PM to midnight during peak season (November to March). Live music, international food, artisan stalls, and a general atmosphere that captures what draws creative people to Goa.

Mapusa Friday Market — The most authentic local market in North Goa — primarily a food and produce market with vegetables, spices, Goan sausages, and fresh seafood. A contrast to the tourist-facing flea markets and genuinely interesting for food lovers.

Food — Goa’s Best Experiences

Goan cuisine is one of India’s most distinctive — Portuguese, Konkan, and Indian influences layered over 500 years into something entirely its own. Do not leave without eating:

  • Fish curry rice — the Goan everyday meal. A bowl of spiced coconut-based fish curry (usually kingfish or pomfret) over steamed rice. Available at any local dhaba for ₹80 to ₹150.
  • Prawn balchão — a hot, tangy prawn pickle preparation. Intensely flavoured and very different from any North Indian prawn dish.
  • Pork vindaloo — the original vindaloo (not the British version) — pork slow-cooked in a sharp, sour, spiced marinade of vinegar and Kashmiri chilies. Available at restaurants in Panaji and Old Goa.
  • Bebinca — the iconic Goan dessert, a multi-layered egg and coconut pudding that takes hours to make. Available at restaurants and bakeries across Goa. Try Confeitaria 31 de Janeiro in Panaji for arguably the best in Goa.
  • Goan sausage (choriz) — spiced pork sausages unique to Goa, available at the Mapusa Friday Market and incorporated into rice dishes, bread toasties, and pasta at restaurants across the state.
  • Local beach shack breakfast — every beach shack in Goa serves a breakfast menu of toast, eggs, fruit, and fresh juices. Eating breakfast at a shack with your feet in the sand, watching the morning waves, is one of the quintessential Goa experiences.

Goa has excellent vegetarian food across all cuisines — South Indian, North Indian, continental, and local Goan vegetarian options (coconut-based curries, bhaji, xitt kodi without fish) are available everywhere. Pure vegetarian restaurants are also plentiful in Panaji and Mapusa.


6-Day Goa Itinerary for 2026 (Family and Couples)

Day 1 — Arrival + North Goa Base + Evening at Vagator

  • Arrive at Goa International Airport (Dabolim) or Mopa Airport (North Goa’s newer airport, closer to most North Goa hotels)
  • Check in at your North Goa hotel — Calangute, Baga, Anjuna, or Candolim depending on your preference and budget
  • Afternoon: first beach visit — let the pace shift
  • Evening: drive to Vagator Beach, climb to Chapora Fort for sunset views over the coast
  • Dinner at a Vagator beach shack — fish curry rice if you eat seafood, kokam juice regardless

Day 2 — North Goa Water Sports + Baga Beach

  • Morning: Baga or Calangute beach for water sports — parasailing, jet ski, banana boat. Go before 11 AM when it is cooler and less crowded.
  • Dolphin watching cruise — most operators offer morning cruises from Calangute and Baga (₹400 to ₹700 per person, 1.5 to 2 hours)
  • Afternoon: rest at hotel or beach shack. Goa afternoons are hot — this is reading and swimming time, not sightseeing time.
  • Evening: Anjuna Beach sunset, then explore the lanes of Anjuna village for dinner

Day 3 — Old Goa + Panaji + Fontainhas

  • Morning: Old Goa — Basilica of Bom Jesus, Se Cathedral, Church of St Francis of Assisi. Free entry. Allow 2 to 2.5 hours.
  • Late morning: drive 10 km to Panaji — Fontainhas Latin Quarter heritage walk, Church of Our Lady of the Immaculate Conception (the white wedding-cake church on the hillside that is Panaji’s most photographed building)
  • Lunch at a Panaji restaurant — try Viva Panjim (famous for Goan fish curry) or Cafe Bodega for a relaxed, atmospheric lunch
  • Afternoon: Mandovi River cruise (₹200 to ₹400 per person) — cultural show on board, 45 minutes, departs from Panaji jetty
  • Evening: return to North Goa. Saturday Night Market at Arpora if it is a Saturday during peak season.

Day 4 — Anjuna Flea Market + Morjim + Spice Plantation

  • Morning (Wednesday only): Anjuna Flea Market — browse, bargain, buy
  • If not a Wednesday: scooter ride north to Morjim and Ashwem — quieter beaches with excellent beach cafes and a different energy
  • Afternoon: spice plantation visit near Ponda (approximately 30 km from North Goa hotels, 45 minutes drive) — guided walk through a working spice plantation, traditional Goan lunch included in the tour price (approximately ₹500 per person). Recommended for families — children find it engaging and the lunch is excellent.
  • Evening: sunset at your favourite North Goa beach before packing for the South Goa move tomorrow

Day 5 — Move to South Goa + Palolem Beach

  • Morning: check out from North Goa hotel, drive to South Goa (approximately 60 to 70 km, 1.5 hours)
  • Check in at Palolem or Agonda beach accommodation
  • Afternoon: Palolem Beach — the contrast with North Goa’s busier beaches is immediate. The cove is sheltered, the water is calm, the atmosphere is unhurried.
  • Sunset kayaking at Palolem — the cove is perfect for kayaking at sunset. Rentals available on the beach (₹500 to ₹800 per hour)
  • Evening: dinner at a Palolem beach restaurant — fresh catch grilled whole, served at a table on the sand

Day 6 — Agonda + Cabo de Rama + Departure

  • Early morning: walk from Palolem to Agonda Beach (3 km each way along the cliff path — one of the most beautiful short walks in Goa). Or drive the 9 km road if walking is not practical.
  • Agonda is the antidote to everything crowded — a 3-km stretch of pale sand with almost no development beyond a line of beach huts. Spend the morning here.
  • Late morning: Cabo de Rama Fort — a ruined Portuguese fort on a dramatic headland above the sea. Free entry. Extraordinary coastal views south toward Karnataka. Almost no tourists even in peak season.
  • Afternoon: transfer to airport for departure

How to Get Around Goa

Transport Cost Best For Notes
Scooter rental ₹300–₹400 per day Couples, solo travellers, groups of 2 Best way to explore Goa. Valid driving licence required. Wear a helmet.
Royal Enfield / bike rental ₹500–₹800 per day Bike enthusiasts Good for longer rides to South Goa or spice plantations
Local Goa taxi (no meter) Negotiate per trip — ₹200–₹600 typical Families with luggage, those who don’t ride scooters Always agree on price before getting in. No meters used.
App taxi (Rapido, Ola) Meter-based — generally honest pricing All traveller types Availability varies by area — better in Panaji and Mapusa
KTCL public buses ₹10–₹50 Budget travellers, those comfortable with local transport Slow but very cheap. Connects all major towns.
Hired car + driver (full day) ₹1,500–₹2,500 per day Families, elderly travellers, full-day sightseeing Most comfortable option for a full heritage or plantation day

Practical Tips for a Goa Trip in 2026

Book December–January accommodation 2 to 3 months early. Christmas and New Year week in Goa sees hotel prices double or triple from standard rates. The best beach-adjacent properties sell out weeks in advance. If you are travelling over the holiday window, book early — the later you leave it, the worse your options and the higher your price.

Rent a scooter rather than relying on taxis. Goa’s local taxi system (non-metered, tourist pricing) adds up quickly over 5 days. A scooter at ₹300 to ₹400 per day gives you complete freedom and saves ₹1,000 to ₹2,000 in taxi costs. Valid licence required — always wear a helmet.

Eat at beach shacks and local dhabas, not hotel restaurants. Hotel restaurant food in Goa is typically overpriced and generic. The best Goa food is at beach shacks (excellent grilled fish, cold beer, sand underfoot) and the local Goan restaurants in Panaji and Mapusa that serve authentic fish curry rice and pork vindaloo.

Visit Old Goa and Fontainhas. An enormous number of Goa visitors skip the heritage completely and spend the entire trip at the beach. The UNESCO churches of Old Goa and the Portuguese lanes of Fontainhas are genuinely extraordinary and take a half-day combined. The contrast with the beaches makes the whole trip richer.

Avoid peak hours at busy beaches. Baga and Calangute between 11 AM and 3 PM in peak season are genuinely unpleasant — crowded, hot, and loud. Go early (before 9:30 AM) or in the late afternoon (after 4 PM) when the light is beautiful and the crowds have thinned. Use the midday hours for lunch, a rest, or sightseeing.

Water safety. Goa beaches are subject to rip currents and rough conditions, particularly in the shoulder months. Always swim within flagged zones. Obey lifeguard signals. Never swim at unsupervised beaches after dark. Do not enter the water during the monsoon (June to September) — the sea is genuinely dangerous during this period.

Respect dress codes at churches and temples. Covered shoulders and knees are required inside all churches and temples in Goa. A scarf or light shawl takes no space and saves the awkward conversation at the entrance.


Frequently Asked Questions — Goa Trip 2026

What is the best time to visit Goa?

November to March is the best time to visit Goa — cool and dry weather (22 to 32°C), calm seas perfect for swimming and water sports, all beach shacks and activities fully operational. December to January is peak season with the best atmosphere but highest prices. October is an excellent shoulder month with post-monsoon freshness and lower prices. The monsoon months of June to September bring dramatic natural beauty but rough seas, closed shacks, and limited activities — suitable for travellers who want Goa’s quieter side at the lowest prices.

How much does a Goa trip cost in 2026?

A budget Goa trip costs approximately ₹8,000 to ₹15,000 per person for 4 days including travel, guesthouse accommodation, local food, and some water sports. A mid-range 5-night trip costs ₹32,000 to ₹65,000 per person including flights, a good beach-adjacent hotel, restaurant meals, and activities. For a family of 4 at mid-range, budget ₹1.2 to ₹2.5 lakh for a 5-night trip all-in. Peak season (December to January) commands 40 to 60% premiums over other months — book 2 to 3 months in advance for the best rates.

How many days are enough for a Goa trip?

4 to 5 days is sufficient to cover the main highlights of Goa comfortably. 5 to 7 days is ideal for exploring both North and South Goa without rushing — typically 3 to 4 nights in North Goa for beaches, water sports, and nightlife, and 2 to 3 nights in South Goa for quieter beaches and relaxation. Anything under 3 nights feels rushed and does not allow you to settle into Goa’s distinctive pace.

Is North Goa or South Goa better?

North Goa is better for first-timers, young travellers, groups of friends, water sports, nightlife, and those who want the maximum activity and energy. South Goa is better for families with young children, honeymooners wanting peace and privacy, wellness travel, and repeat visitors looking for Goa’s quieter side. The best 5 to 7-day trip combines both — 3 to 4 nights in North Goa and 2 to 3 nights in South Goa — which is the structure TravelDham recommends for most family and couple itineraries.

What is the best beach in Goa?

There is no single best beach — the right beach depends on what you want. For energy and water sports: Baga or Calangute. For dramatic scenery and a more alternative atmosphere: Vagator or Anjuna. For quiet and beauty in North Goa: Morjim or Ashwem. For a perfect sheltered cove in South Goa: Palolem. For genuine peace and undeveloped beauty: Agonda. For a family-friendly atmosphere in South Goa with infrastructure: Colva or Benaulim.

Is Goa safe for families with children?

Yes — Goa is a safe and enjoyable destination for families with children of all ages. South Goa beaches are particularly well-suited for families — calm water, clean sand, and a peaceful atmosphere. North Goa’s more commercial beaches (Baga, Calangute) are family-accessible but busier. The main safety considerations are water safety — always swim in flagged zones and obey lifeguard instructions — and road safety when renting scooters. For families with young children, a hired car is safer and more comfortable than scooters.

What are the best things to do in Goa beyond beaches?

Beyond beaches, Goa’s best experiences are: the UNESCO heritage churches of Old Goa (Basilica of Bom Jesus, Se Cathedral — genuinely world-class), the Fontainhas Latin Quarter in Panaji (India’s most charming heritage neighbourhood), a working spice plantation tour near Ponda (excellent for families, includes a traditional lunch), the Anjuna Wednesday Flea Market and Arpora Saturday Night Market, a Mandovi River cruise from Panaji, and Dudhsagar Waterfall (accessible October to January, one of India’s most spectacular waterfalls).

Is Goa good for a honeymoon?

Yes — particularly South Goa. Agonda and Palolem offer the combination of beautiful beaches, private beach hut accommodation, excellent seafood dinners on the sand, and a genuinely romantic atmosphere. South Goa avoids the party-heavy energy of North Goa that some honeymooners find intrusive. For couples who want both romance and activities, a split itinerary of 2 nights in North Goa for water sports and energy, followed by 3 to 4 nights in South Goa for peace and privacy, works very well. TravelDham plans Goa honeymoon packages with beach hut accommodation, candlelight dinner arrangements, and private transfers.


Plan Your Goa Trip with TravelDham

Goa looks simple to plan and mostly is — but the difference between a Goa trip that exceeds expectations and one that feels generic comes down to a few specific decisions: the right area for your group’s personality, accommodation that is genuinely close to the beach rather than a taxi ride away, a day-by-day structure that balances beach time with culture and does not over-schedule, and dining choices that go beyond the obvious tourist spots.

TravelDham plans customised Goa trips for families, honeymooners, couples, groups of friends, and corporate teams. We match your group to the right area (North, South, or a split itinerary), select beach-adjacent hotels at the right value for your budget, build an itinerary that works for your travel style, and arrange airport transfers, car hire, and activity bookings so you arrive with everything organised.

Domestic travel within India is one of TravelDham’s core specialisations — we plan Goa trips alongside destinations like Kashmir, Kerala, Rajasthan, Andaman, and the Northeast, and we bring the same attention to detail to a 5-day Goa trip as to a 14-day Europe package.

Contact TravelDham today for a free Goa itinerary and quote. Tell us your group size, travel dates, and what kind of Goa experience you are looking for — we will have a plan ready within 24 hours.