Best Time to Visit Rajasthan – A Month-by-Month Climate and Festival Guide

Kairavipath

The Short Answer

October to March is peak season — and for good reason. Temperatures are comfortable (15-28 degrees C), rain is zero, and the desert light is extraordinary. But that answer misses the nuance. Different months offer entirely different Rajasthan experiences, and picking the wrong month for your specific plan can ruin a trip that should have been great.

I’ve read every “Best Time to Visit Rajasthan” article on the first page of Google. They all say the same thing: “Winter is best, summer is hot, monsoon is green.” That’s technically correct and practically useless.

What they don’t tell you: November in Jaisalmer is 24 degrees C and perfect. November in Mount Abu is 8 degrees C at night and you need a proper jacket. December in Jaipur means hotel prices double for New Year’s week. February means Udaipur is packed with couples because Valentine’s Day has become a national Rajasthan pilgrimage.

Month matters. Here’s what each one actually looks like on the ground.

Month-by-Month Breakdown

October — The Season Opens

The monsoon retreats. The desert cools. Everything is still green from the rains, which is not how you picture Rajasthan but it’s beautiful in a disorienting way.

Temperatures: 25-35 degrees C. Still warm during the day, but evenings become genuinely pleasant. Crowds are low because schools are in session and international tourists haven’t arrived yet. Prices are shoulder-season — 20-30% below peak.

My take: underrated month. You get comfortable weather, manageable crowds, and lower prices. The only downside is that the landscape hasn’t dried into the characteristic desert gold yet.

November — The Sweet Spot

If I had to pick one month for Rajasthan, it’s November.

Temperatures: 20-30 degrees C. Perfect for walking forts, exploring havelis, sitting in desert camps. The Pushkar Camel Fair happens in November — if you time it right, it’s one of India’s most extraordinary cultural events. Jaisalmer Desert Festival also falls here.

Crowds build toward the end of the month as international tourists arrive. Book accommodation 3-4 weeks ahead for Jaipur and Udaipur.

December — Peak Season Begins

Christmas and New Year’s week sees hotel prices spike 2-3x across Rajasthan. If your dates are flexible, the first two weeks of December are significantly cheaper and less crowded than the last two.

Temperatures: 10-25 degrees C. Morning fog in Udaipur and Mount Abu. You’ll need a jacket for early mornings and late evenings. Desert camps in Jaisalmer are at their best — cold nights, bonfire dinners, stargazing that actually works because the air is dry and clear.

January — Cold, Clear, Crowded

The coldest month. Jaipur drops to 5-8 degrees C at night. Jaisalmer is 3-5 degrees C after midnight. This catches people off guard — you’re in a desert, but you’re reaching for a blanket.

The Jaipur Literature Festival happens in late January. The Bikaner Camel Festival typically falls here. Crowds are at their peak. Hotel prices are at their peak. But the weather — cold mornings, warm afternoons, crystal-clear visibility — makes photography extraordinary.

February — Couples Season

Valentine’s Day has turned Udaipur into February’s most booked city in India. Lake Pichola, City Palace, rooftop dinners — it’s genuinely romantic, but prices reflect the demand.

Temperatures begin warming: 12-28 degrees C. The transition from winter to spring brings the best wildflower displays in the Aravalli hills. Holi falls in March, so late February sees pre-Holi events in some cities.

My recommendation: if you’re a couple, book Udaipur for the first week of February, not the second. Same weather, half the crowd, significantly lower prices.

March — The Shoulder Slides

Holi happens. Jaipur and Udaipur have excellent Holi celebrations. Temperatures are climbing (18-32 degrees C) but still manageable. By late March, the desert starts heating up and the window is closing.

This is the last month I’d recommend for first-time visitors. The afternoons are warm enough that fort exploration becomes tiring rather than enjoyable.

April-May — The Furnace

Jaisalmer hits 42-45 degrees C. Jaipur isn’t far behind. Fort walls radiate stored heat. Walking becomes an endurance sport. Most tourists leave, which means rock-bottom prices and empty monuments.

Do I recommend it? Not for first-timers. But if you’ve been before, know what you’re getting into, and want Mehrangarh Fort with zero other tourists and a Rs 1,500/night room — April has a perverse appeal.

Carry 3 litres of water daily. Start sightseeing at 6 AM. Be indoors by noon. Resume at 4 PM.

June — Pre-Monsoon

The hottest, emptiest month. Dust storms are common in the Thar Desert. 43-47 degrees C. Hotels offer 50-60% discounts.

Skip this month. I’m not being dramatic — heat stroke is a real risk for travelers not acclimatised to these temperatures.

July-August — Monsoon

Rain transforms the desert. Jaisalmer, which is sand-coloured for eight months, turns green. The forts look surreal against dark monsoon clouds. Ranthambore’s tigers are more visible because they come to water sources.

Temperatures drop to 28-35 degrees C. Humidity rises. Some roads in western Rajasthan become difficult. But the photography opportunities — rain on sandstone, lightning over forts, peacocks everywhere — are extraordinary.

Most international tourists avoid monsoon. That’s a mistake for photographers.

September — Monsoon Retreat

The rain pulls back. Everything is still green. Temperatures: 28-34 degrees C. Very few tourists. Prices are low. The landscape is at its lushest.

The risk: occasional late-monsoon rain can disrupt plans. But if you’re flexible, September offers Rajasthan at its most unusual — green desert, empty forts, dramatic skies.

Quick Comparison Table

Month Temp Crowds Prices Verdict
October 25-35 C Low Moderate Recommended — underrated
November 20-30 C Medium Moderate-High Best month overall
December 10-25 C High High (spikes at Xmas) Excellent (avoid last week)
January 5-22 C Peak Peak Cold + clear + crowded
February 12-28 C High High (Udaipur spike) Good for couples
March 18-32 C Medium Moderate Last good month, Holi
April-May 35-45 C Very Low Low Experts only
June 38-47 C None Rock bottom Avoid
Jul-Aug 28-35 C Low Low Good for photographers
September 28-34 C Very Low Low Green desert, risky rain

Best Time by Traveler Type

You Are… Go In… Why
First-timer November Perfect weather, cultural festivals, manageable crowds
Couple Early February Romantic without Valentine’s premium
Family with kids October or November Comfortable temps, not peak crowd
Photographer July-August or January Dramatic monsoon or crystal-clear winter light
Budget traveler September-October Lowest prices with bearable weather
Wildlife (Ranthambore) October-June (park closed Jul-Sep) February-May for tiger sightings

What to Pack by Season

Winter (Nov-Feb): Light jacket, scarf, warm layers for morning/evening, sunscreen (winter sun is deceptive).

Summer (Mar-Jun): Cotton everything, wide-brimmed hat, 3-litre water bottle, electrolyte packets, SPF 50.

Monsoon (Jul-Sep): Quick-dry clothes, waterproof bag for electronics, umbrella, mosquito repellent.

Frequently Asked Questions

Can I visit Rajasthan in summer?
Technically yes. Practically, only if you’re experienced with extreme heat. Monuments are empty and prices are low, but the 42+ degree C temperatures make extended outdoor exploration difficult and potentially dangerous.

Does it rain in the Thar Desert?
Yes, during monsoon (July-August). The Thar receives 100-500mm annually. It’s enough to turn the landscape green. The rain is sporadic, not constant.

When is Ranthambore open?
October 1 to June 30. Closed during monsoon. Best tiger sighting chances: February to May (dry season, animals come to water).

Jaipur or Udaipur for a 5-day trip?
Both, with 2-3 days each. If forced to choose: Jaipur for forts and magnitude, Udaipur for lakes and romance. Connected by 6-hour drive or comfortable bus.

Is January too cold?
For sightseeing, no — daytime is 18-22 degrees C and comfortable. For desert camping, be prepared for 3-5 degrees C at night. Bring proper warm layers.

Share This Article
Leave a Comment