The Golden Triangle
Can the Golden Triangle be extended to other regions?
Yes — it is the standard base for extensions into Rajasthan (Udaipur, Jodhpur, Jaisalmer), the Himalayas (Rishikesh, Shimla), Kerala, or wildlife (Ranthambore). Every itinerary we build is modular.
This answer is part of MyTripMyTravel's The Golden Triangle guidance — Delhi, Agra, and Jaipur — the questions travellers ask most. Every itinerary it references is private, chauffeured, escorted, and built bespoke; the answers below cover the rest of what travellers ask on this topic.
More in The Golden Triangle
The other answers in this topic, in full — so this page resolves the whole question, not just one.
What is the Golden Triangle in India?
The Golden Triangle is India's most popular tourist circuit, connecting three cities — Delhi, Agra, and Jaipur — in a roughly triangular route of about 720 km. It covers the Mughal capital and its monuments (Delhi), the Taj Mahal (Agra), and the Rajput Pink City (Jaipur). MyTripMyTravel operates it as a private, chauffeured, escorted mission rather than a packaged group tour.
How many days do you need for the Golden Triangle?
A focused Golden Triangle takes 4–5 days; 6–7 days allows an unhurried pace with Fatehpur Sikri, a Taj sunrise, and a slower Jaipur. Three days is possible as a high-efficiency sprint. We tailor duration to your arrival fatigue and interests.
What is the best order — Delhi, Agra, then Jaipur?
Yes: Delhi → Agra → Jaipur → Delhi is the standard and most efficient sequence. It starts at the main international gateway (Delhi), routes the Agra–Jaipur leg via Fatehpur Sikri as a sightseeing drive, and returns to Delhi for departure. We sequence it around the Taj sunrise and the Friday Taj closure.
Is the Taj Mahal closed on any day?
Yes — the Taj Mahal is closed every Friday for prayers. Our itineraries are built so a Friday is never spent on the Taj, and we arrange escorted near-opening entry for the best light and smallest crowds.
