The Golden Triangle
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.
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.
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.
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.
