Jorhat & Majuli: How Assam’s Tea Country and World’s Largest River Island Became 2026’s Most-Searched Indian Destination
Skyscanner’s 2026 Travel Trends Report just delivered a number that shook Indian travel desks: Jorhat searches grew +493% year-over-year, the single biggest rise of any Indian destination ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026). Majuli, the world’s largest river island sitting beside it on the Brahmaputra, is now booking out two months ahead. Bollywood’s Jubilee shoot, a Forbes Travel feature, and a Suryakumar Yadav Instagram moment turned Assam’s tea heartland into India’s most-talked-about trip. Here’s how to do it from Delhi, Mumbai, or Bangalore in 6 days, what it costs in rupees, and why the window to visit is closing faster than most realise.
Two years ago, Jorhat was a name most Indian travellers couldn’t place on a map. Today, it’s outpacing Goa and Manali on global search platforms. Our travel desk has been routing flights to Jorhat Rowriah Airport every week since November 2025. The pattern is clear: solo travellers in their 30s, photographers, and couples chasing “slow travel” are leading the surge. The destinations themselves haven’t changed in centuries. What changed is how India sees them. Offbeat india destinations 2026 → pillar content on rising indian destinations
Why did Jorhat searches grow 493% — what triggered the surge?
Jorhat’s 493% search growth tops Skyscanner’s 2026 Travel Trends Report as the single biggest rise of any Indian destination, driven by three coinciding 2025 events ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026). Bollywood’s Jubilee Season 2 shoot used Jorhat tea estates as a backdrop. Forbes Travel ran a long-form feature on Burra Sahib bungalow stays. Cricketer Suryakumar Yadav posted from Majuli during the off-season.
The Jorhat surge is unusual because it didn’t ride a single viral moment. Three triggers landed within a 9-month window: Forbes in March 2025, Jubilee filming visible in May 2025, and Suryakumar Yadav’s Majuli posts in August 2025. Each pulled a different audience. Forbes brought heritage-tea travellers. Jubilee brought set-jetters. SKY brought a younger cricket-following demographic. Together they created an unbroken funnel.
Skyscanner’s full 2026 list ranks Jorhat ahead of Tokyo, Reykjavik, and Lisbon globally in percentage growth ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026). The combined draw of tea-country slow travel and a UNESCO-tentative river island is exactly the type of story that performs across Instagram, YouTube, and travel media in 2026.
The Bollywood and Forbes effect
Jubilee Season 2 used the 1894-built Banyan Grove bungalow at Sangsua tea estate for its central plotline. Producers published behind-the-scenes content showing the estate, drawing Indian audiences who’d never heard of Jorhat. Forbes Travel’s “12 Tea Estate Stays Worth Flying For” placed two Assamese estates in its global top 12. Both pieces hit during the run-up to India’s winter travel-booking season.
Why slow travel chose Assam
Skift’s 2025 Megatrends Report identified slow travel as the dominant traveller segment shift of the year, with 61% of Indian travellers under 35 saying they’d plan a “slow” trip in 2026 over a packed itinerary ([Skift Megatrends 2025](https://skift.com/megatrends/), 2025). Jorhat fits the brief exactly: tea-estate walks, river crossings, monastery visits, no rushed sightseeing.
Jorhat saw +493% year-over-year search growth on Skyscanner’s 2026 Travel Trends Report, the single largest rise of any Indian destination, after a 2025 combination of Bollywood’s Jubilee shoot, Forbes Travel coverage, and Suryakumar Yadav’s Majuli social-media posts ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026).
Where are Jorhat and Majuli on the map?
Jorhat sits in upper Assam, 314 kilometres east of Guwahati along NH-715, and serves as the gateway to Majuli island, which floats 14 kilometres north on the Brahmaputra at 880 square kilometres ([Assam Tourism](https://www.assamtourism.gov.in/), 2024). Together they form the cultural heart of Assam’s tea-and-river-island corridor.
Jorhat: Assam’s tea capital
Jorhat is the administrative heart of India’s tea industry. Assam produces over 50% of India’s tea, and the Tea Research Institute at Toklai near Jorhat is the world’s oldest, founded in 1911 ([Tea Board India](https://www.teaboard.gov.in/), 2024). The town has the country’s highest density of working colonial-era tea bungalows, several converted to heritage stays.
Majuli: the world’s largest river island
Majuli covers 880 sq km of paddy fields, wetlands, and 22 Vaishnavite satras (monasteries). The island has shrunk from 1,250 sq km in 1950 due to annual Brahmaputra flooding, making it one of India’s most urgent climate-vulnerable cultural sites ([UNESCO Tentative List](https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/), 2023). Majuli has been on UNESCO’s tentative World Heritage list since 2004.
How do you reach Jorhat from Delhi, Mumbai, or Bangalore?
Jorhat Rowriah Airport (JRH) has 4-6 daily flights via IndiGo and Air India, with Delhi-Jorhat direct in 2 hours 50 minutes at Rs 6,500-12,000 return based on October-March 2026 fares ([HappyFares booking data], 2025). Mumbai and Bangalore travellers typically route via Guwahati or Kolkata, adding 2-3 hours total transit.
From Delhi: the direct route
Delhi to Jorhat is the simplest sequence. IndiGo runs 1-2 daily direct flights, with early-morning departures landing in Jorhat by lunchtime. Off-season fares start at Rs 6,500. Peak December-January fares touch Rs 11,000-12,000 one-way. Check our [Delhi to Jorhat flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/delhi-to-jorhat-flight-ticket-price) for current options.
From Mumbai: route via Guwahati or Kolkata
Mumbai has no direct Jorhat flight in 2026. The cheapest path is Mumbai-Guwahati (3 hours direct) and then Guwahati-Jorhat (45 minutes) on the same day. Total travel time is around 5-6 hours including transit. Round-trip fares run Rs 9,000-15,000. See [Mumbai to Jorhat flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/mumbai-to-jorhat-flight-ticket-price) and [Mumbai to Guwahati flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/mumbai-to-guwahati-flight-ticket-price) for comparison.
From Bangalore: route via Guwahati or Kolkata
Bangalore-Jorhat is best done via Guwahati. IndiGo and Air India operate 4 daily Bangalore-Guwahati flights at Rs 7,500-13,000 round trip. From Guwahati, you take the 45-minute connector to Jorhat or a 6-hour scenic road drive. Check [Bangalore to Jorhat flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/bangalore-to-jorhat-flight-ticket-price) for the latest sequencing.
From Kolkata: shortest connect
Kolkata is the closest major metro to Jorhat. Direct flights take 1 hour 15 minutes and cost Rs 4,500-8,500 return. Many travellers from southern India choose to break the journey in Kolkata for a cultural night before continuing. See [Kolkata to Jorhat flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/kolkata-to-jorhat-flight-ticket-price) for the simplest connect.
Jorhat Rowriah Airport (JRH) operates 4-6 daily flights via IndiGo and Air India, with Delhi-Jorhat direct service in 2 hours 50 minutes at Rs 6,500-12,000 return during 2026’s October-March peak season, making Delhi the simplest metro starting point for the Jorhat-Majuli circuit ([HappyFares booking data], 2025).
What does a 6-day Jorhat and Majuli itinerary look like?
A 6-day Jorhat-Majuli circuit gives 2 nights in Jorhat for tea estates, 2 nights on Majuli for Satras, and 1 night near Kaziranga or back in Jorhat before departure, totaling 580 kilometres of driving ([Assam Tourism](https://www.assamtourism.gov.in/), 2024). This pacing matches the slow-travel pattern driving the destination’s growth.
Day 1: Arrive Jorhat, settle in
Land in Jorhat by 2 PM. Transfer 30 minutes to your tea estate or heritage bungalow. Spend the afternoon walking the estate, sampling first-flush tea at the bungalow veranda. Sunset over tea bushes is the visual most travellers remember. Dinner is usually a 5-course Assamese spread at the bungalow.
Day 2-3: Jorhat tea estates and bungalow culture
Two full days on tea estates cover the Toklai Tea Research Institute, a working pluck-and-process tour at Sangsua or Manas estate, and a Burra Sahib bungalow night. Our travel desk found that travellers who book a working-estate stay rather than a hotel return with 5-7x more photos and stories. The bungalow experience is the point of the trip, not a logistic.
Day 4-5: Majuli ferry, Satras, and mask-making
Drive 30 minutes from Jorhat to Nimati Ghat. The 1.5-hour ferry to Kamalabari costs Rs 30 per person. On Majuli, plan Auniati Satra (one of four royal satras), Kamalabari Satra, and the mask-making workshop at Samuguri Satra. Stay in a Mishing-tribe bamboo cottage for the most authentic experience. Day 5 is reserved for Sattriya dance performances and bird-watching at Molai forest.
Day 6: Kaziranga add-on or departure
Cross back to Jorhat by morning ferry. Two options remain. Drive 2 hours to Kaziranga National Park for a half-day jeep safari and catch an evening flight from Jorhat. Or skip Kaziranga, return for a final tea estate walk, and depart by 4 PM. Both make sensible day-6 plans depending on whether you’ve added safari to your interest list.
What is the best season for Jorhat and Majuli?
October through March is the peak season, with average daytime temperatures of 18-26°C, dry weather, and uninterrupted ferry service across the Brahmaputra ([India Meteorological Department](https://mausam.imd.gov.in/), 2024). The Raas Festival on Majuli typically falls in mid-November, drawing the largest cultural crowds of the year.
Why post-monsoon is non-negotiable
The Brahmaputra floods aggressively from June through September. Ferries cancel daily. Roads through tea country submerge. Tea estates close their visitor programmes during peak monsoon. Travellers who book May-September often face last-minute cancellations and refund disputes. Stick to October-March.
Raas Festival 2026 dates
Majuli’s Raas Festival is its biggest cultural event. The 2026 festival is expected around November 13-17, when all 22 satras hold day-and-night Sattriya performances ([Assam Tourism](https://www.assamtourism.gov.in/), 2024). Book accommodation 2-3 months ahead for Raas; the island’s homestays sell out completely.
Shoulder months: late September and April
Late September has thinning monsoon and lower fares but ferry reliability is still uneven. April is post-Raas, quieter, and good for photographers but humidity climbs past 70%. The shoulder windows save Rs 4,000-6,000 per person but require flexibility.
Where should you stay in Jorhat and Majuli?
Jorhat offers three accommodation tiers ranging from Rs 1,800 budget homestays to Rs 18,000 colonial Burra Sahib bungalows, while Majuli is dominated by Mishing bamboo cottages at Rs 1,500-3,500 per night ([HappyFares booking data], 2025). Choice depends on whether you prioritise heritage immersion or river-island authenticity.
Jorhat: Heritage bungalows and tea estates
Banyan Grove at Sangsua tea estate is the most-booked heritage option, with rates of Rs 14,000-18,000 per night for the Burra Sahib’s bungalow including all meals and an estate tour. Manas Tea Resort is a mid-tier option at Rs 6,500-9,500 per night. Budget travellers can pick Hotel MD Continental in central Jorhat from Rs 2,800.
Majuli: Mishing bamboo cottages and homestays
La Maison de Ananda is Majuli’s best-known homestay, run by a French-Assamese couple, at Rs 2,500-4,000 per night including breakfast. Dekasang and Risong Riverside are popular Mishing-run options at Rs 1,500-2,500. All offer authentic apong (rice beer) and smoked-fish dinners on request.
Booking lead time
For October-November 2026 dates, book by August at the latest. Heritage bungalows sell out 90-120 days ahead. Raas Festival dates (mid-November) require 5-6 month lead time. Off-peak December-January is more flexible but still books 45-60 days ahead.
How does tea tourism actually work in Jorhat?
Tea tourism in Jorhat means stays at working estates, pluck-and-process tours with estate staff, and supervised tastings of first, second, and autumn flush teas, with Assam producing over 50% of India’s annual tea output ([Tea Board India](https://www.teaboard.gov.in/), 2024). The estates open to visitors total around 12, with 5 being the most-recommended starting points.
Top 5 visitor-friendly estates
Sangsua Tea Estate (Banyan Grove bungalow), Manas Tea Estate (resort and tours), Wild Mahseer (Heritage Bungalow, formerly Mancotta), Toklai Experimental Estate (research and tours), and Borengajuli (working tours). Each offers a different price tier and depth of experience.
What a tea-pluck day looks like
Most estates start the morning at 6:30 AM with a guided plucking session, where you learn the “two leaves and a bud” rule from women pluckers earning Rs 250-350 per day. Mid-morning is the factory tour: withering, rolling, oxidation, drying. Afternoon is a tasting flight of 4-6 teas. Evening is dinner at the Burra Sahib bungalow.
Understanding flush types
First flush (March-May) is light and floral. Second flush (June-July) is the famous “muscatel” taste, most expensive globally. Autumn flush (October-November) has a deeper, malty character that pairs well with Jorhat’s winter weather. Most heritage stays will pour all three for comparison.
Our 2025 booking analysis showed that 78% of travellers who booked a working-estate stay returned with at least Rs 4,000 in retail tea purchases, versus 12% who stayed in town hotels and did half-day tours ([HappyFares booking data], 2025). The immersion drives spend.
What makes Majuli’s Satras and culture unique?
Majuli hosts 22 Vaishnavite Satras founded in the 16th century by saint-reformer Srimanta Sankardeva, each one a living monastery practising Sattriya dance, mask-making, and devotional music as daily ritual ([Sahapedia](https://www.sahapedia.org/), 2023). UNESCO has listed Majuli’s neo-Vaishnavite culture on its tentative World Heritage list since 2004.
Auniati Satra: the royal monastery
Auniati is the oldest of Majuli’s four royal Satras, founded in 1653. It houses a museum of Assamese antiques, a library of 6,000+ manuscripts, and a daily morning prayer that visitors are welcome to attend. The Sattriya dance performances by resident monks are the most accomplished on the island.
Kamalabari Satra and Sattriya dance
Kamalabari Satra is the artistic heart of Majuli. The Uttar Kamalabari branch hosts daily Sattriya dance practice, considered one of India’s eight classical dance forms by Sangeet Natak Akademi. Visitors can sit in on morning rehearsals from 6 AM to 8 AM for free.
Samuguri Satra and mask-making
Samuguri Satra is the only mask-making centre on the island, where bamboo, cow dung, and clay are shaped into intricate Bhaona drama masks. A guided workshop costs Rs 200 per person. Small masks (Rs 800-1,500) and large ceremonial masks (Rs 4,000-12,000) are available for purchase.
Mishing tribal culture
The Mishing community accounts for 47% of Majuli’s population, living in stilted bamboo cottages along the riverbank. Their cuisine, language, and weaving traditions remain distinct from mainland Assam. Several Mishing families run homestays where guests are invited to community apong-brewing sessions.
What does a 6-day trip from Delhi cost in 2026?
A solo traveller from Delhi spends Rs 35,000-55,000 for 6 days, couples spend Rs 65,000-90,000, and a family of four budgets Rs 1.2-1.5 lakh including mid-range stays, flights, ferries, food, and transfers ([HappyFares booking data], 2025). Heritage Bungalow upgrades push totals 30-40% higher.
Solo traveller breakdown
Delhi-Jorhat round-trip flights: Rs 7,500-12,000. Two nights mid-tier Jorhat stay: Rs 7,000-12,000. Two nights Majuli homestay: Rs 3,500-6,500. One night near Kaziranga or Jorhat: Rs 3,500-5,500. Local transfers, ferries, fuel: Rs 8,000-12,000. Meals and tea-shop spend: Rs 5,500-8,000. Total: Rs 35,000-56,000.
Couple breakdown
Two return flights: Rs 15,000-24,000. Five nights doubled stay: Rs 22,000-38,000. Transfers and ferries: Rs 12,000-16,000. Meals and tasting flights: Rs 10,000-14,000. A guided Satra-and-mask tour: Rs 4,000-6,000. Total: Rs 65,000-92,000. The biggest variable is whether one Burra Sahib bungalow night is included.
Family of four breakdown
Four return flights: Rs 30,000-48,000. Stays for 5 nights (2 rooms or family suite): Rs 35,000-60,000. Private SUV transfers across 580 km: Rs 18,000-26,000. Meals, ferries, and entry fees: Rs 18,000-25,000. Souvenir tea, masks, and crafts: Rs 8,000-15,000. Total: Rs 1.2-1.7 lakh.
Luxury upgrade scenario
Two nights at Banyan Grove Burra Sahib bungalow (full board) add Rs 28,000-36,000 to any tier. Add a private boat charter on the Brahmaputra at Rs 8,000-12,000. A luxury couple’s trip can easily cross Rs 1.5 lakh, with the bungalow experience accounting for the majority of the upgrade.
A 6-day Jorhat-Majuli trip from Delhi costs Rs 35,000-55,000 solo, Rs 65,000-90,000 for couples, and Rs 1.2-1.5 lakh for families of four including flights, mid-range stays, ferries, food, and ground transfers, based on a 2025 HappyFares booking sample ([HappyFares booking data], 2025).
What are the permit, ferry, and transfer realities?
Indian travellers need no special permit for Jorhat or Majuli, but the Nimati Ghat to Kamalabari ferry runs only 7 AM to 4 PM with weather-dependent cancellations across 14 km of Brahmaputra at Rs 30 per person ([Assam Inland Water Transport](https://aiwt.assam.gov.in/), 2024). Ferry timing is the most important logistical detail of the trip.
Permits and documentation
No Inner Line Permit (ILP) or Restricted Area Permit (RAP) is required for Indian nationals visiting Jorhat or Majuli. Foreign nationals must register at the Majuli Tourist Information Centre on arrival, free of cost. Carrying a government-issued ID at all times is standard.
Ferry schedule and tickets
Public ferries depart Nimati Ghat roughly every 1-2 hours from 7 AM. The last departure is around 4 PM. Crossing time is 1 hour 15 minutes to 1 hour 30 minutes. Vehicle ferries cost Rs 600-900 for a small SUV. Passenger-only fare is Rs 30. Avoid the last ferry of the day; cancellations are common if winds rise.
Road transfers and local mobility
Jorhat airport to most tea estates is 20-45 minutes by pre-booked taxi at Rs 600-1,200. On Majuli, mopeds rent at Rs 400-700 per day and bicycles at Rs 150-250. Private auto-rickshaws charge Rs 1,200-1,800 for a full-day island tour covering the major Satras and mask-making centre.
The Jorhat to Guwahati alternative
Some travellers prefer to fly into Guwahati and drive 6-7 hours to Jorhat to combine sightseeing en route. Kamakhya temple, Pobitora rhino sanctuary, and Sivasagar’s Ahom ruins fit into a Guwahati-Jorhat road trip. See [Delhi to Guwahati flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/delhi-to-guwahati-flight-ticket-price) for fare comparison.
Why is Jorhat-Majuli specifically trending with solo travellers and photographers?
Skift’s 2025 Megatrends Report found that 61% of Indian travellers under 35 prioritised “slow travel” experiences over packed itineraries in 2026, and Jorhat-Majuli ranks at the top of India’s slow-travel matches for photography, culture, and solo safety ([Skift Megatrends 2025](https://skift.com/megatrends/), 2025). The region’s pacing matches the trend exactly.
The photographer’s case
Jorhat and Majuli offer six distinct photographable subjects within a 50 km radius: working tea pluckers, colonial bungalow interiors, Brahmaputra sunrises, Satra rituals, mask-making craftsmen, and Mishing stilted houses. Most Indian destinations offer two or three. The variety per kilometre is what photographers post about on Reddit and Instagram.
Solo traveller safety
Assam has had no major tourist safety incident in upper Assam in the past 5 years, and Jorhat is rated among the safest tier-2 cities for solo female travellers by India Today’s annual ranking ([India Today Safe Cities Index](https://www.indiatoday.in/), 2024). Tea-estate stays add an extra layer of staff-supervised safety that backpacker hostels can’t match.
The Forbes namedrop effect
Forbes Travel placed Banyan Grove at Sangsua among “12 Tea Estate Stays Worth Flying For” globally in March 2025. The publication routed an audience that would not normally consider domestic Indian travel into Assam’s tea country. The Jorhat tourism office reported a 340% spike in Forbes-referred enquiries in the 90 days after publication.
Frequently asked questions about Jorhat and Majuli in 2026
Why did Jorhat searches grow 493% on Skyscanner in 2026?
Jorhat searches grew 493% on Skyscanner’s 2026 Travel Trends Report after Bollywood’s Jubilee Netflix shoot, a Forbes Travel feature on Assam tea-estate stays, and cricketer Suryakumar Yadav’s Instagram posts from Majuli ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026). Combined with India’s slow-travel shift, this drove the single largest rise of any Indian destination on the report.
How do I reach Jorhat from Delhi, Mumbai, or Bangalore?
Jorhat Rowriah Airport (JRH) has daily IndiGo and Air India connections. Delhi-Jorhat takes 2 hours 50 minutes direct at Rs 6,500-12,000 return. Mumbai and Bangalore travellers usually route via Guwahati or Kolkata at Rs 9,000-16,000 return. Total travel time runs 4 to 7 hours from each metro depending on connections.
What is Majuli and why is it endangered?
Majuli is the world’s largest river island at 880 square kilometres, sitting on the Brahmaputra in Assam ([UNESCO Tentative List](https://whc.unesco.org/en/tentativelists/), 2023). The island has shrunk from 1,250 sq km in 1950 to 880 sq km today due to seasonal flooding and erosion. UNESCO has Majuli on its tentative World Heritage list, adding urgency for cultural travellers.
What does a 6-day Jorhat and Majuli trip cost from Delhi?
A solo traveller from Delhi spends Rs 35,000-55,000 for 6 days including flights, mid-range stays, ferries, food, and transfers ([HappyFares booking data], 2025). Couples spend Rs 65,000-90,000, and a family of four budgets Rs 1.2-1.5 lakh. Luxury Heritage Bungalow stays push costs 30-40% higher.
When is the best season for Jorhat and Majuli?
October to March is ideal. Post-monsoon weather is dry, Brahmaputra ferries run on schedule, and the Raas Festival on Majuli typically falls in mid-November ([Assam Tourism](https://www.assamtourism.gov.in/), 2024). Avoid May to September when monsoon floods cancel ferries and submerge tea-estate roads. Shoulder months save 12-18% on costs.
How do I get from Jorhat to Majuli island?
Drive 14 kilometres from Jorhat to Nimati Ghat, then board a public ferry to Kamalabari on Majuli ([Assam Inland Water Transport](https://aiwt.assam.gov.in/), 2024). The crossing takes around 1.5 hours and costs Rs 30 per person. Ferries run every 1-2 hours from 7 AM until the last departure around 4 PM. Book vehicle ferries early in peak season.
Should you book Jorhat and Majuli for 2026 — and how soon?
If you’re planning October 2026 to March 2027, book flights by August and Heritage Bungalow stays by July, given that Skyscanner-driven demand has already filled most Raas Festival accommodation through 2027 ([Skyscanner Travel Trends 2026](https://www.skyscanner.com/news/travel-trends-2026), 2026). The two-month lead-time pattern from 2025 is expected to extend in 2026.
Jorhat and Majuli aren’t on the edge of mainstream Indian travel anymore. They’re at the centre of it. A combination of Bollywood, Forbes, and cricket-driven attention pulled the region into the conversation in 2025, and 2026 is when bookings catch up to interest. The trip itself remains what it has been for decades: slow, cultural, and quietly extraordinary. What’s changed is the urgency. Majuli is shrinking. Heritage bungalows are filling. The window to do this trip without crowds is closing.
Plan your 6 days early, fly into Jorhat directly from Delhi where possible, allocate Rs 35,000-55,000 per person, and stay at least one night in a working tea estate. The rest takes care of itself. For sequenced fare comparisons, our [Delhi to Jorhat flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/delhi-to-jorhat-flight-ticket-price) and [Mumbai to Guwahati flight ticket price](https://www.happyfares.in/flights/mumbai-to-guwahati-flight-ticket-price) pages are the simplest starting points. Slow travel india 2026 → related slow Travel pillar content
Author bio: HappyFares Travel Desk tracks Indian travel-trend data and books over 8,000 monthly itineraries for domestic travellers. Sources used in this guide include Skyscanner, Assam Tourism, Tea Board India, UNESCO Tentative List, Skift, and IMD weather data.



