50+ Places to Visit in Kerala

Branded "God's Own Country" by Kerala Tourism, the southwestern coastal state strings together palm-fringed Arabian Sea beaches, the 900 km Kerala backwaters, the 1,600 m tea-clad hills of Munnar, and Ayurveda spas that built the global wellness reputation of the state. Use this guide to plan an Alleppey houseboat cruise, a Munnar-Thekkady-Periyar hill loop, or a Fort Kochi heritage walk through India's oldest European church and synagogue district.

Best time Sep–Mar (peak)
Currency Indian Rupee (₹)
Languages Malayalam, English, Hindi
Main airport COK (Cochin International)
Climate Tropical, 22–35 °C

Why visit Kerala?

Kerala drew roughly 2.18 crore (21.8 million) domestic tourists and 6.5 lakh foreign tourists in 2023 per the Kerala Tourism Department's annual statistics — the highest foreign arrivals among Indian states after Tamil Nadu and Maharashtra. The state packs 50+ of its most-visited sights into a 580 km-long strip squeezed between the Arabian Sea and the Western Ghats: backwaters, beaches, tea hills, wildlife sanctuaries, and one of India's oldest continuous Christian, Jewish and Hindu heritage trails. This guide groups every major sight by category so you can plan a 5-day Munnar–Alleppey loop or a 12-day deep dive without guesswork.

Best time to visit: September to March is the cool, dry main season — ideal for backwaters, hills, beaches and wildlife. April–May is hot and humid (~32–35 °C). June–August is the southwest monsoon — the cheapest months, considered the most auspicious for Ayurvedic treatments (open pores, hydrated air) and breathtakingly green, but expect daily heavy rain.
Weather summary: Tropical: 22–32 °C in winter (Nov–Feb), 28–35 °C in summer (Mar–May), 24–30 °C with heavy rain in monsoon (Jun–Sep). Hill stations like Munnar drop 10 °C cooler.

Find cheapest flights to Kerala

Kerala has three international airports — Cochin (COK, the main gateway), Trivandrum (TRV) and Calicut (CCJ). Cochin International is the busiest, with direct flights from every major Indian metro and most Gulf cities. Bangalore to Cochin is the shortest hop (~1 hour) and typically among the cheapest origins. Use the search above for live fares. Cheapest months: typically June, July and September (monsoon); most expensive: late December to early January and the Onam week in August/September.

Best Beaches in Kerala (8)

Kerala has roughly 580 km of Arabian Sea coastline with 30+ named beaches, but the famous ones cluster around two zones — the Trivandrum coast (Kovalam, Varkala, Poovar) in the south and the Malabar coast (Bekal, Kappad, Muzhappilangad) in the north. Varkala is the only natural cliff beach in southern India; Muzhappilangad in Kannur is one of the few "drive-in" beaches you can take a car onto at low tide. Most beaches are calmest October to March.

Varkala Beach (Papanasam Beach)

Beach

Thiruvananthapuram district, ~55 km north of Trivandrum

Southern India's only natural cliff beach — a long crescent of golden sand at the base of red laterite cliffs, with cliff-top cafes, yoga shalas and a holy bathing-spot temple at the north end.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • 15 m laterite cliffs (only one of its kind in south India)
  • Janardanaswamy temple at the north end
  • Cliff-top yoga and Ayurveda retreats
  • Sunset paragliding (in season)

Tip: Helipad cliff path is the safest cliff walk after dark — the main cliff edge has no railings.

Kovalam Beach

Beach

Thiruvananthapuram district, 16 km from Trivandrum

A three-cove crescent (Lighthouse, Hawa and Samudra beaches) ~16 km from Trivandrum — Kerala's most famous beach since the 1930s, with the working Vizhinjam lighthouse and dense Ayurveda-resort cluster.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • Three connected coves (Lighthouse, Hawa, Samudra)
  • 36 m Vizhinjam lighthouse (climbable)
  • Dense cluster of Ayurveda resorts
  • Catamaran sailing and surfing (Oct–Mar)

Tip: Lighthouse opens roughly 1:30 pm to 5 pm; small entry fee — climb just before sunset for best views.

Marari Beach

Beach

Alappuzha (Alleppey) district, ~11 km from Alleppey town

A long, quiet fishing-village beach near Mararikulam (Alappuzha district) — the calmer alternative to Kovalam, anchored by Marari Beach Resort and a stretch of family-run beach huts.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • Active Marari fishing village mornings
  • 5-star CGH Marari Beach Resort
  • Calm shallow waters for swimming
  • Easy combine with Alleppey houseboat

Tip: Watch the morning fish auction on the beach (~6:30–7:30 am) — locals welcome respectful visitors with phones down.

Cherai Beach

Beach

Vypin Island, Ernakulam district (~25 km from Kochi)

A 15 km-long beach on Vypin island in greater Kochi — the closest "real" beach to Fort Kochi, with calm waters separated from the backwaters by a thin spit of palm land.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • 15 km uninterrupted beach
  • Sea-and-backwater views on the same strip
  • Dolphin sightings (occasional)
  • Easy half-day from Fort Kochi via Vypin ferry

Bekal Beach

Beach

Kasaragod district, North Kerala (~16 km from Kasaragod town)

A long, lightly-developed beach in Kasaragod district anchored by the 17th-century Bekal Fort — the location of the song "Tu Hi Re" from the film Bombay.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree (beach); fort separate
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • Bekal Fort backdrop
  • Quiet, low-development beach
  • Pallikere Beach (cleaner alternative just south)
  • "Tu Hi Re" filming location

Kappad Beach

Beach

Kozhikode district (~16 km north of Calicut)

The beach where Vasco da Gama is recorded to have landed in May 1498, opening the Europe–Asia sea route — a quiet, rocky stretch in Kozhikode district with a small commemorative pillar.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • Vasco da Gama landing site (1498)
  • Historic commemorative pillar
  • Quiet, rocky-and-sand mix
  • Kappad Beach Resort nearby

Muzhappilangad Drive-in Beach

Beach

Kannur district, North Kerala

Asia's longest drive-in beach — a 4 km hard-packed sand strip in Kannur district where cars and bikes are permitted at low tide. Featured in BBC's "Top 6 Drive-in Beaches in the World".

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree; small vehicle entry sometimes charged
TimingDaylight hours; drive only at low tide
  • 4 km hard-packed drive-in stretch
  • Asia's longest drive-in beach
  • Featured in BBC's Top 6 Drive-in Beaches list
  • Calm swimming inside the lagoon side

Tip: Check the tide table — driving on the beach is only safe in the 3-hour window around low tide.

Payyambalam Beach

Beach

Kannur town, North Kerala

Kannur town's main beach — a kilometre-long clean stretch with a sculpture park, a children's park, and beach-front memorials of Kerala chief ministers.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • Kannur town beach
  • Sculpture park and children's play area
  • Memorial gardens of late Kerala CMs
  • Calm evenings, family-friendly

Historic Forts of Kerala (3)

Kerala's forts trace three powers — the indigenous Nayar/Travancore kingdoms (Anjengo, Pallippuram), the Portuguese (Pallippuram is the oldest surviving European fort in India, 1503), and the later Tipu Sultan/British era (Bekal). Bekal Fort in Kasaragod is the largest and best-preserved — a 35 m laterite stone giant on the Arabian Sea, made famous by the song "Tu Hi Re" from Bombay. Most forts charge a nominal ASI fee.

Bekal Fort

Fort

Kasaragod district, North Kerala

Kerala's largest and best-preserved fort — a 17th-century laterite stone fort sprawling over 40 acres on a headland into the Arabian Sea. Featured in the song "Tu Hi Re" from the film Bombay.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹25 per adult (Indian); foreigners higher ASI rate
Timing8:00am to 5:30pm
  • 40-acre laterite stone fort
  • 17th-century construction
  • ASI-protected monument
  • "Tu Hi Re" filming location

Pallippuram Fort

Fort

Vypin Island, Ernakulam district

A small hexagonal Portuguese fort built in 1503 on Vypin island — the oldest surviving European fort in India, predating the more famous British coastal forts by over 200 years.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree (ASI-protected)
TimingDaylight hours
  • Built 1503 — oldest European fort in India
  • Hexagonal Portuguese architecture
  • Currently ASI-protected
  • Easy combine with Cherai Beach

Anjengo (Anchuthengu) Fort

Fort

Thiruvananthapuram district, ~12 km south of Varkala

A 17th-century English East India Company fort on a thin coastal spit south of Varkala — one of the earliest English settlements on the Malabar Coast and the spot where the Travancore-EIC relationship began.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingDaylight hours
  • 1696 English East India Company fort
  • Old British cemetery inside
  • Sea-and-backwater double frontage
  • Quiet, almost-empty fort

Heritage Churches & Synagogues (4)

Kerala has the oldest Christian and Jewish heritage in India — St. Thomas the Apostle is traditionally said to have landed at Muziris (Kodungallur) in AD 52, and the Cochin Jewish community traces back to roughly the same period. St. Francis Church in Fort Kochi (1503) is the oldest European-built church in India and once held the grave of Vasco da Gama. The 1568 Paradesi Synagogue in Jew Town is still in active use. Most heritage sites are free or charge a nominal entry.

St. Francis Church, Fort Kochi

Church

Fort Kochi, Ernakulam district

Originally built in 1503 by Portuguese Franciscan friars — the oldest European church building in India. Vasco da Gama died in Kochi in 1524 and was buried here for 14 years before his remains were taken to Lisbon.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
Timing7:00am to 6:30pm (Sun: services from 8:00am)
  • 1503 — oldest European church in India
  • Original Vasco da Gama burial site
  • Active Anglican-tradition parish
  • Walking distance from Chinese Fishing Nets

Santa Cruz Cathedral Basilica, Fort Kochi

Church

Fort Kochi, Ernakulam district

A late-19th-century Roman Catholic basilica built on the site of an earlier 1505 Portuguese church — one of only nine churches in India to hold Basilica status from the Vatican.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
Timing9:00am to 1:00pm and 3:00pm to 6:30pm
  • Papal Basilica status (1984)
  • Hand-painted ceiling murals
  • Founded 1505 (rebuilt 1887–1905)
  • Walking distance from St. Francis Church

Paradesi Synagogue, Jew Town (Mattancherry)

Church

Mattancherry (Jew Town), Ernakulam district

The 1568 synagogue at the heart of Kochi's 400-year-old "Jew Town" — the oldest active synagogue in the Commonwealth, with hand-painted 18th-century Chinese floor tiles and a Belgian chandelier.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹10–20 per person
Timing10:00am to 12:00pm and 3:00pm to 5:00pm; closed Fridays, Saturdays and Jewish holidays
  • Built 1568 — oldest active synagogue in Commonwealth
  • 18th-century hand-painted Chinese floor tiles
  • Belgian glass chandeliers
  • 400-year-old Jew Town antique street outside

Tip: Closed Fridays, Saturdays and on all Jewish holidays — check the Kerala Tourism calendar before visiting.

Cherai (St. Gervasius & Protasius) Heritage Area

Church

Vypin Island, Ernakulam district

The St. Gervasius & Protasius forane church on Vypin island and the surrounding heritage zone — one of the older Latin Catholic parishes of the Kochi diocese, near Cherai beach.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
TimingDaylight hours (services on Sundays)
  • Old Latin Catholic parish church
  • Combine with Cherai Beach
  • Quiet heritage zone
  • Easy access via Vypin ferry

Hill Stations, Waterfalls & Wildlife (5)

The Western Ghats running through Kerala are a UNESCO World Heritage Site (2012) and one of the world's 8 hottest biodiversity hotspots. Five tiger reserves and a dozen wildlife sanctuaries together protect Asiatic elephants, Bengal tigers, Nilgiri tahr, leopards, and 500+ bird species. Hill stations cluster at altitudes between 900 m (Wayanad, Thekkady) and 1,700 m (Munnar Top Station). Athirapally — at 80 m drop — is Kerala's largest waterfall.

Eravikulam National Park (Rajamala)

Wildlife

Idukki district, near Munnar

A 97 km² high-altitude national park near Munnar — home to roughly 50% of the world's Nilgiri Tahr population (an endangered mountain goat) and the Anamudi peak, South India's highest.

Best timeOctober to March (closed during tahr calving Feb-Mar — check dates)
Entry~₹125 per adult + bus shuttle ticket
Timing7:30am to 4:00pm
  • ~700+ Nilgiri Tahr (endangered, easy sightings)
  • Anamudi peak (2,695 m — South India's highest)
  • Mandatory KSRTC shuttle from gate
  • Neelakurinji blooming zone (every 12 years)

Tip: Booking via the Kerala Forest Department online portal beats walking up — slots are capped at peak season.

Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary (Muthanga & Tholpetty)

Wildlife

Wayanad district

345 km² protected sanctuary contiguous with Karnataka's Bandipur and Nagarhole reserves — part of the larger Nilgiri Biosphere, with elephants, gaur, sambar deer, leopards and tigers.

Best timeOctober to May
EntryForest jeep safari ~₹600–1,200 per jeep + entry; varies by gate
TimingSafari slots: typically 7:00–10:00am and 3:00–5:00pm
  • Part of Nilgiri Biosphere (UNESCO)
  • Frequent elephant sightings
  • Two safari gates: Muthanga and Tholpetty
  • Tiger and leopard (rare, possible)

Thekkady (Periyar Tiger Reserve)

Wildlife

Idukki district (Thekkady–Kumily), ~190 km from Cochin

925 km² tiger reserve around Periyar Lake in the Western Ghats — one of India's first declared Project Tiger reserves (1978). Famous for boat safaris with elephant-and-bison lake-shore sightings.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryBoat safari ~₹300–500/adult; reserve entry separate
TimingBoat safaris: typically 4 daily slots between 7:30am and 4:00pm
  • Periyar Lake boat safari
  • Project Tiger reserve since 1978
  • 40+ tigers, 1,000+ elephants
  • Border Hiking and Bamboo Rafting (KTDC eco-tours)

Tip: KTDC sometimes capacity-constrains the lake boats — book 24–48 hrs ahead via the official Periyar Tiger Reserve portal.

Athirapally Waterfalls

Waterfall

Thrissur district, ~70 km from Cochin

Kerala's largest waterfall — a 80 m, 100 m-wide curtain on the Chalakudy river, often called the "Niagara of India". The setting of multiple South Indian films including Bahubali.

Best timeJune to October (full flow); year-round still flowing
Entry~₹40–60 per adult + parking
Timing8:00am to 6:00pm
  • 80 m drop, 100 m wide
  • Kerala's largest waterfall
  • Vazhachal Falls 5 km upstream
  • Used as filming location in Bahubali

Tip: Don't walk down to the falls base in monsoon — rocks are slippery and people have died from sudden surges.

Silent Valley National Park

Wildlife

Palakkad district

A 237 km² wilderness in Palakkad district — one of the last contiguous tropical rainforests in India. Famously saved from a hydroelectric project in the 1980s through a national environmental movement.

Best timeNovember to March
Entry~₹50 per person + guide and jeep fees
TimingDay-permit only; typically 8:00am–1:00pm entry slot
  • Lion-tailed macaque habitat
  • Untouched tropical rainforest
  • Visit only via Forest Department permit
  • Sairandhri watchtower viewpoint

Tip: Permits are capped per day — apply via the Mannarkkad Forest Office at least 2–3 days in advance.

Hindu Temples of Kerala (5)

Kerala has roughly 1.4 lakh registered Hindu temples (Devaswom Board figures) — many in a distinctive sloped-roof, gold-clad Kerala style very different from the gopuram temples of Tamil Nadu. Padmanabhaswamy Temple in Thiruvananthapuram became internationally famous in 2011 when six hidden vaults were found to contain treasure estimated at over US$22 billion, making it the richest religious institution in the world. Several major shrines (Padmanabhaswamy, Guruvayur) admit only Hindus and enforce strict dress codes.

Sree Padmanabhaswamy Temple

Temple

East Fort, Thiruvananthapuram

Thiruvananthapuram's 16th-century temple of Lord Vishnu reclining on the serpent Anantha — the wealthiest religious institution in the world after the 2011 vault discovery (estimated treasure of over US$22 billion per court filings).

Best timeSeptember to March
EntryFree; special darshan tickets vary
Timing3:30am–4:45am, 6:30am–7:00am, 8:30am–10:00am, 10:30am–11:10am, 11:45am–12:00pm, 5:00pm–6:15pm, 6:45pm–7:20pm (typical; verify on the day)
  • World's richest religious institution
  • Hindu-only entry; strict dress code
  • Gold-clad gopuram and inner sanctum
  • Court-supervised vault history

Tip: Men must wear a mundu (dhoti) — bare chest customary; women in saree or salwar with head covered. Mundu rentals available outside the temple.

Guruvayur Sri Krishna Temple

Temple

Thrissur district (~80 km from Cochin)

A 5,000-year-old Vaishnavite temple in Thrissur district dedicated to Sri Krishna — one of the four sacred Vishnu shrines of southern India ("Dakshina Dwaraka") and the centrepiece of Kerala's temple-elephant tradition.

Best timeSeptember to March (festival in Feb–Mar)
EntryFree; special darshans separate
Timing3:00am to 1:00pm and 4:30pm to 9:30pm (typical; varies on festival days)
  • Hindu-only entry; strict dress code
  • "Dakshina Dwaraka" — one of 4 sacred Vishnu temples
  • Punnathur Kotta elephant sanctuary nearby
  • Annual 10-day Utsavam festival (Feb–Mar)

Tip: Men in mundu, no shirts in the inner sanctum; women in saree or set-mundu. Photography is banned inside the temple.

Sabarimala (Ayyappa Temple)

Temple

Pathanamthitta district, inside Periyar Tiger Reserve

The pilgrimage temple of Lord Ayyappa on a 1,200 m hill in the Periyar Tiger Reserve — one of the largest annual pilgrimages in the world, drawing roughly 4–5 crore (40–50 million) pilgrims per Mandala-Makaravilakku season.

Best timeMid-November to mid-January (Mandala-Makaravilakku); also open one day per Malayalam month
EntryFree; queue-management Virtual Q passes via the official Sabarimala portal
TimingOpen only during Mandalam-Makaravilakku and the first 5 days of each Malayalam month
  • 40–50 million pilgrims per season
  • 41-day Vratham (austerity) traditionally required
  • "Irumudi" sacred bundle to be carried up
  • Open only seasonally — confirm dates

Tip: Check the latest Supreme Court / temple board entry rulings before planning — eligibility rules have changed in recent years.

Vadakkunnathan Temple, Thrissur

Temple

Thrissur city centre

An ancient Shiva temple at the centre of Thrissur city — a UNESCO Asia-Pacific Cultural Heritage award winner (2015) and the focal venue of the world-famous Thrissur Pooram festival.

Best timeSeptember to May (Thrissur Pooram in April/May)
EntryFree
Timing4:00am to 10:30am and 5:00pm to 8:30pm
  • UNESCO Cultural Heritage award (2015)
  • Centre of Thrissur Pooram festival (Apr–May)
  • Hindu-only entry
  • Classical Kerala roof and gopuram architecture

Tip: Thrissur Pooram (typically April–May) is a 36-hour elephant-and-percussion spectacle — book Thrissur hotels 6+ months ahead.

Attukal Bhagavathy Temple, Thiruvananthapuram

Temple

Thiruvananthapuram

A temple of Goddess Bhadrakali in Thiruvananthapuram famous for the annual Attukal Pongala — recognized by Guinness as the largest religious gathering of women in the world (3–5 million participants in a single day).

Best timeSeptember to March (Attukal Pongala in Feb–Mar)
EntryFree
Timing4:00am to 12:00pm and 5:00pm to 9:00pm (typical)
  • Attukal Pongala — world's largest women-only religious gathering (Guinness)
  • 3–5 million participants in a single day
  • "Women's Sabarimala" reputation
  • Walking distance from Padmanabhaswamy

Markets & Cultural Experiences (3)

Kerala's culture is built around three things foreign tourists travel for: Ayurveda, Kathakali theatre, and the spice trade. The Kochi Kathakali Centre runs nightly performances of the 17th-century classical dance-drama. Jew Town Road in Fort Kochi is a 400-metre antique-and-spice market that has been a continuous trading street since the 1500s. Thekkady is the spice-capital cardamom and pepper markets in the Western Ghats. Theyyam — North Kerala's ritual trance performance — runs nightly in Kannur temples between October and May.

Jew Town Market, Mattancherry

Market

Mattancherry (Jew Town), Ernakulam district

A 400-metre antique-and-spice market street in Mattancherry that has been a continuous trading lane since the 1500s — antiques, brassware, hand-painted tiles, and the spice traders that started Kerala's global trade.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
Timing~10:00am to 6:00pm; many shops closed Saturdays
  • 400+ years of continuous trading
  • Spice and antique specialists
  • Adjacent to Paradesi Synagogue
  • Bargaining expected (40–60% off opening price typical)

Tip: Most shops shut by 6 pm and many close all day Saturday for the Jewish Sabbath — go on a weekday morning.

Connemara Market (Palayam Market), Trivandrum

Market

Palayam, Thiruvananthapuram

Trivandrum's central produce-and-spice market — a busy weekday-morning market dating to the British era, with vegetables, fish, spices, flowers and Kerala-style street-food stalls.

Best timeOctober to March (weekday mornings)
EntryFree
TimingRoughly 6:00am to 1:00pm (busiest); some shops re-open evening
  • British-era central market
  • Spices, produce, fish, flowers
  • Walking distance from Padmanabhaswamy
  • Authentic local life — not tourist-priced

Thekkady (Kumily) Spice Market

Market

Kumily (Thekkady), Idukki district

The cardamom-and-pepper trading streets of Kumily town (adjacent to Periyar Tiger Reserve) — the spice capital of South India, with wholesalers selling directly to plantations in the surrounding hills.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryFree
Timing~9:00am to 7:00pm (most shops)
  • Cardamom, pepper, clove direct from plantations
  • Better prices than airport / Fort Kochi
  • Combine with Periyar boat safari
  • Sample tea-shop spice infusions

Tip: Buy single-estate cardamom from a Spices Board–registered shop — chain shops in tourist towns mark up 3–5x.

More Things to Do in Kerala (23)

Beyond the backwater-hill-beach circuit, Kerala has signature experiences few other Indian states can match: an Alleppey houseboat overnight on the Vembanad lake system, a Kerala-style Ayurvedic Panchakarma course at a NABH-accredited centre, a sunset Kathakali performance with the makeup-and-music explanation before the show, a tea plantation walk in Munnar, and the centuries-old martial art of Kalaripayattu (recognized as one of the world's oldest fighting systems).

Alleppey (Alappuzha) Backwaters

Attraction

Alappuzha district

Kerala's most famous backwater system — a 900 km network of canals, lagoons and lakes around the rice-bowl region of Kuttanad. Branded the "Venice of the East" by Lord Curzon in 1900.

Best timeSeptember to March
EntryHouseboat charters vary; day-cruises typically ₹600–1,500 per person
TimingHouseboats typically board 12 noon, disembark 9 am next day
  • Overnight houseboat cruises
  • Vembanad Lake (India's longest lake)
  • Nehru Trophy Snake Boat Race (Aug–Sep)
  • Kuttanad — farming below sea level

Tip: Book a houseboat for an overnight, not a day-cruise — backwater life starts at sunset and sunrise.

Kumarakom Backwaters

Attraction

Kottayam district, Vembanad Lake (~14 km from Kottayam)

A cluster of small islands on the eastern shore of Vembanad Lake — quieter, more upscale alternative to Alleppey, with the Kumarakom Bird Sanctuary and high-end resort houseboats.

Best timeNovember to March (peak bird season)
EntrySanctuary ~₹50 per person; houseboats separate
TimingSanctuary 6:00am to 5:00pm
  • Kumarakom Bird Sanctuary (180+ species)
  • Premium resort houseboats
  • Vembanad Lake on three sides
  • Quieter than Alleppey

Tip: Wake up for the 6 am bird walk in the sanctuary — peak winter migrants are visible only at sunrise.

Ashtamudi Lake (Kollam Backwaters)

Attraction

Kollam district

A 16 km-long palm-shaped lake with eight branching arms ("ashta-mudi" literally means "eight braids") — the gateway to the southern backwaters and a major Ramsar-listed wetland.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryHouseboats and ferries — varies
TimingKerala state water ferry: typically 10:30am Kollam to Alleppey (~8 hours)
  • 8-hour Kollam–Alleppey state ferry (cheapest backwater experience)
  • Ramsar-listed wetland
  • Less touristy than Alleppey
  • Quilon Beach + Thangassery lighthouse nearby

Tip: The DTPC Kollam–Alleppey 8-hour ferry is the cheapest legitimate backwater day-trip in Kerala (~₹500–800/person).

Vembanad Lake

Attraction

Alappuzha–Kottayam–Ernakulam districts

India's longest lake (~96 km) stretching across three districts — Alappuzha, Kottayam and Ernakulam. The setting for Alleppey houseboats, Kumarakom resorts, and the August snake-boat races.

Best timeSeptember to March
EntryFree (lake); houseboats/cruises priced separately
TimingOpen 24 hours
  • India's longest lake (~96 km)
  • Connects Alleppey, Kumarakom and Kochi
  • Nehru Trophy Snake Boat Race (Punnamada Lake)
  • Migratory waterfowl in winter

Kuttanad — Rice Bowl of Kerala

Attraction

Alappuzha and Kottayam districts

A rare farming region that cultivates rice 1–3 m below sea level — designated by FAO as a Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System (GIAHS, 2013).

Best timeNovember to March
EntryFree (open agricultural region)
TimingDaylight hours
  • Below-sea-level rice farming
  • FAO GIAHS-designated heritage region
  • Backwater villages by canoe
  • Local Kuttanadan duck-and-rice cuisine

Alleppey Houseboat (Kettuvallam) Cruise

Other

Alappuzha (main jetty: Punnamada / Finishing Point)

The signature Kerala experience — a converted rice-and-spice barge fitted with bedrooms, kitchen and deck, cruising the backwaters with on-board Kerala meals.

Best timeSeptember to March
Entry~₹8,000–15,000/night for 1BR; ~₹15,000–30,000 for 2BR (peak; varies hugely by season and operator)
TimingStandard: board 12pm, disembark 9am next day
  • On-board chef cooks fresh Kerala meals
  • Canoe village-tour included with most boats
  • AC bedrooms in mid-range and up
  • Solar-electric boats now available (eco upgrade)

Tip: Book via Kerala Tourism's Gold/Silver-star classified-houseboat list — verifies safety and waste-disposal standards.

Munnar

Attraction

Idukki district, ~130 km from Cochin

Kerala's most popular hill station — a former British tea-planters' summer retreat at 1,600 m altitude, surrounded by some of the world's highest tea estates and the once-in-12-years Neelakurinji bloom.

Best timeSeptember to March
EntryFree (town); attractions priced separately
TimingTown open 24 hours
  • 1,600 m altitude tea hills
  • Tea Museum (Kannan Devan)
  • Top Station viewpoint (1,700 m)
  • Neelakurinji bloom (next: 2030)

Tip: Stay in a tea-estate bungalow (Lockhart, Tata's Tall Trees) for the original colonial planter experience.

Wayanad

Attraction

Wayanad district, ~270 km north of Cochin

A green, plateau-shaped district in north Kerala (~900 m altitude) — Edakkal Caves, Banasura Sagar dam, spice plantations and the Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary all sit within a 40 km radius.

Best timeOctober to May
EntryFree (district); attractions priced separately
TimingDistrict open 24 hours
  • Edakkal prehistoric rock carvings (8,000-yr-old)
  • Banasura Sagar (India's largest earth dam)
  • Wayanad Wildlife Sanctuary
  • Pookot freshwater lake

Periyar Lake & Spice Plantations (Thekkady)

Attraction

Idukki district (Thekkady)

The reservoir at the heart of Periyar Tiger Reserve, surrounded by cardamom, pepper and clove plantations — the gateway to Kerala's spice trade.

Best timeOctober to March
EntryPlantation tours ~₹300–600 per person
TimingPlantation tours typically 9:00am–4:00pm
  • 26 km² artificial lake (built 1895)
  • Guided cardamom-and-pepper estate walks
  • Spice market in Kumily town
  • Combine with Periyar boat safari

Vagamon

Attraction

Idukki–Kottayam districts (~100 km from Cochin)

A rolling-hills station between Idukki and Kottayam districts (~1,200 m) — known for grasslands, pine forests, paragliding and the Vagamon Hot Air Balloon and Glamping festivals.

Best timeOctober to May
EntryFree (town); paragliding ~₹2,500–4,000 per flight
TimingAdventure operators 9:00am–5:00pm
  • 1,200 m green meadows
  • Paragliding hub of Kerala
  • Annual Vagamon Hot Air Balloon Festival
  • Quieter alternative to Munnar

Idukki Arch Dam & Reservoir

Attraction

Idukki district

Asia's first parabolic double-curvature arch dam — a 168 m concrete arch across the Periyar river, surrounded by the Idukki Wildlife Sanctuary.

Best timeSeptember to March
EntryVisitor permits required (issued via KSEB / Idukki tourism office)
TimingPermit-controlled hours; check before visit
  • 168 m parabolic arch dam (1976)
  • Asia's first double-curvature arch
  • Idukki Wildlife Sanctuary nearby
  • Boat rides on reservoir (when permits open)

Tip: Dam access is restricted on security grounds — apply for the visitor permit via the Idukki District Tourism Promotion Council in advance.

Fort Kochi Heritage Walk

Attraction

Fort Kochi & Mattancherry, Ernakulam district

A 2 km self-guided walking route covering the Chinese Fishing Nets, St. Francis Church, Santa Cruz Basilica, Mattancherry Palace, Pardesi Synagogue and the antique-shops of Jew Town Road — Kerala's densest heritage zone.

Best timeOctober to March (cooler mornings)
EntryFree (some monuments charge nominal entry)
TimingWalkable any daylight hours
  • Cantilevered Chinese Fishing Nets (14th-century)
  • Mattancherry "Dutch" Palace (1555)
  • Vasco da Gama Square
  • 4 religious heritage sites in 2 km

Mattancherry Palace (Dutch Palace)

Museum

Mattancherry, Ernakulam district

Originally built by the Portuguese in 1555 as a gift to the Kochi Raja, later renovated by the Dutch — famous for some of the finest preserved Hindu mural paintings in India, depicting scenes from the Ramayana.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹10–20 per person; foreign nationals separate ASI rate
Timing9:45am to 4:45pm; closed Fridays
  • Hindu murals of the Ramayana
  • Portuguese-built (1555), Dutch-renovated (1663)
  • Royal regalia of Kochi Rajas
  • Adjacent to Jew Town and Synagogue

Napier Museum, Thiruvananthapuram

Museum

Museum Park, Thiruvananthapuram

An 1855 Indo-Saracenic-architecture museum at the heart of Trivandrum's Museum Park — Kerala's flagship state museum with bronzes, ivory carvings, the Sree Chitra Art Gallery and the Zoological Park adjoining.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹20 per adult (Indian); separate ticket for zoo and art gallery
Timing10:00am to 4:45pm; closed Mondays and Wednesday mornings
  • Indo-Saracenic Robert Chisholm building (1855)
  • Bronzes, ivory and temple art
  • Adjoining Trivandrum Zoo (oldest in India)
  • Sree Chitra Art Gallery (Raja Ravi Varma paintings)

Hill Palace Museum, Tripunithura (Kochi)

Museum

Tripunithura, Ernakulam district (~10 km from Kochi)

The largest archaeological museum in Kerala — the former residence of the Kochi royal family (built 1865), now displaying royal regalia, weapons, oil paintings and a deer park on a 54-acre estate.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹40 per adult; camera fee separate
Timing9:00am to 12:30pm and 2:00pm to 4:30pm; closed Mondays
  • 54-acre former royal estate
  • Kerala's largest archaeological collection
  • Deer park inside the grounds
  • Original Kochi royal regalia

Indo-Portuguese Museum, Fort Kochi

Museum

Bishop's House, Fort Kochi

A small but well-curated museum at Bishop's House in Fort Kochi — sculptures, vestments, processional crosses and altarpieces that document Kerala's 500 years of Indo-Portuguese Christian art.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹40 per adult
Timing9:00am to 1:00pm and 2:00pm to 5:00pm; closed Mondays
  • Indo-Portuguese Catholic art
  • 500-year heritage of Latin Catholicism in Kerala
  • Five themed galleries
  • Walking distance from St. Francis Church

Kerala Ayurveda — Kovalam & Varkala Wellness Belt

Other

Kovalam, Varkala, Kumarakom, Tiruvalla and others

Kerala is the global home of Ayurvedic medicine — the state government runs a Green Leaf / Olive Leaf classification for verified Ayurveda centres. Kovalam and Varkala have the densest cluster of NABH and Green Leaf-classified spas.

Best timeJune to September (monsoon = traditional Ayurveda season)
EntryTreatments from ₹1,500 (single therapy) to ₹3–6 lakh (21-day Panchakarma at premium centres)
TimingTreatment hours vary by centre
  • Kerala Govt Green Leaf / Olive Leaf classification
  • Monsoon = traditional Ayurveda season
  • Panchakarma (21-day) is the flagship programme
  • NABH-accredited centres recommended

Tip: Look for the Green Leaf or Olive Leaf certificate displayed at the entrance — it's issued by Kerala Tourism after physical inspection.

Kathakali Performance — Kochi Kathakali Centre

Other

Fort Kochi (multiple venues)

A nightly 1.5-hour performance of Kerala's 17th-century classical dance-drama — preceded by an open makeup-and-costume session and an English-narrated mythology preview.

Best timeSeptember to May (year-round)
Entry~₹400–600 per person
TimingMakeup ~5:00pm; performance ~6:30pm to 8:00pm (typical)
  • 17th-century classical dance-drama
  • Makeup session open to audience
  • English narration of the night's story
  • 90-minute family-friendly format

Kalaripayattu Martial Arts Show

Other

Fort Kochi (multiple kalari schools)

Kerala's ancient martial art — believed to be one of the oldest fighting systems still practiced. Nightly demonstrations in Fort Kochi cover unarmed combat, sword-and-shield, urumi (flexible sword), and oil-and-massage healing practices.

Best timeSeptember to May
Entry~₹300–500 per person
TimingEvening shows typically 6:30pm to 7:30pm
  • One of the oldest martial arts in continuous practice
  • Includes urumi (flexible-blade sword)
  • Healing-and-massage tradition shown
  • Often pairs with a Kathakali ticket

Munnar Tea Plantation Tour & Tea Museum

Other

Nallathanni Estate, Munnar

A factory-and-estate tour at the Kannan Devan / Tata Tea Museum in Munnar — covers tea-plucking, sorting and tasting, with a small museum tracing 130 years of Munnar's tea-planter history.

Best timeSeptember to March
Entry~₹100–200 per adult
Timing9:00am to 4:30pm; closed Mondays
  • 130-year planter history
  • Working tea factory tour
  • Tea-tasting at the end
  • Estate walks bookable separately

Thekkady Spice Plantation Tours

Spice Plantation

Kumily/Thekkady, Idukki district

Guided walking tours through cardamom, pepper, vanilla, clove, nutmeg and cinnamon plantations around Kumily/Thekkady — typically 1.5–3 hours with a sample-and-buy ending.

Best timeOctober to March
Entry~₹300–800 per person
TimingTours typically 9:00am–4:00pm
  • Hands-on identification of 15+ spices
  • Pepper-and-cardamom estate walks
  • Combine with Periyar boat safari
  • Direct-from-estate purchase

Theyyam Ritual Performances (North Kerala)

Other

Kannur and Kasaragod districts (various Theyyam shrines/kavus)

A ritual dance-and-trance ceremony unique to North Kerala (mainly Kannur and Kasaragod) — performed in temple courtyards between October and May. Performers wear elaborate face paint, ornate headdresses up to 6 m tall, and embody specific village deities.

Best timeOctober to May (seasonal — no Theyyam in monsoon)
EntryFree (temple-hosted ritual; donations welcomed)
TimingMostly overnight (midnight to dawn); some afternoon performances
  • Live, ritual performance — not a tourist show
  • Face paint, costume and headdress preparation visible
  • 6 m headdresses in some forms
  • Most authentic Indian ritual theatre experience

Tip: Theyyam is a religious ritual, not a performance — dress modestly, no flash photography during invocation, follow temple custodian guidance.

Kerala Backwater Canoe / Shikara Village Tour

Other

Alappuzha (Kuttanad villages)

A 2–3 hour paddle-canoe or motor-shikara through the narrow canals of Kuttanad — the part of the backwater system houseboats can't enter. Stops at coir-making, toddy-tapping and rice-paddy villages.

Best timeSeptember to March
Entry~₹500–1,500 per person
Timing~8:00am–6:00pm (multiple slots)
  • Narrow canals (no houseboats allowed)
  • Coir-making and toddy-tapping demos
  • Village-life view
  • Cheaper alternative to a full houseboat

Things to Know Before Visiting Kerala

Practical, locally-known travel tips that aren’t obvious from a brochure. Bookmark this list before you book.

Kerala Travel FAQ

Answers to the questions most travellers ask before booking. Each answer is intentionally specific so you can compare Kerala against other destinations in seconds.

What is the best time to visit Kerala?

September to March is the sweet spot — cool, dry, full backwater and hill-station season, and the most pleasant beach weather. April–May is hot and humid (32–35 °C). June to August is the southwest monsoon — heavy rain, the cheapest hotel rates of the year, lush green hills, and the traditional Ayurveda season. October to February is peak tourist season and the most expensive window.

How many days are enough for Kerala?

A 5–6-day trip covers the classic Cochin → Munnar → Thekkady → Alleppey loop comfortably. 7–8 days lets you add Kovalam or Varkala beach. The "full" Kerala experience — including Wayanad in the north and a longer Ayurveda programme — typically needs 10–12 days. Most foreign tourists do 8–10 days; Indian-domestic trips often run 5–7.

Which is better — Munnar, Wayanad, or Thekkady?

Munnar (1,600 m) is the most famous and the most photogenic — tea plantations, Eravikulam, Top Station. Thekkady (~900 m) is the wildlife-and-spice pick — Periyar Tiger Reserve, boat safaris, cardamom hills, and the easiest combine with Alleppey. Wayanad (~900 m, in the north) is the off-the-beaten-track pick — Edakkal caves, Banasura dam, and quieter wildlife sanctuaries. Most 7–9 day itineraries do Munnar + Thekkady; Wayanad is a separate trip.

How do I reach Kerala from Delhi, Mumbai or Bangalore?

Cochin International (COK) is the main gateway. Delhi (DEL → COK) is ~3 hours, fares from ~₹5,500 in shoulder months. Mumbai (BOM → COK) is ~2 hours, fares typically ₹3,500–6,000. Bangalore (BLR → COK) is the shortest hop at ~1 hour 15 mins and often the cheapest at ₹3,000–4,500. Chennai, Hyderabad and Pune also have direct flights. Train (Bangalore/Chennai overnight Konkan/Ernakulam routes) is a viable alternative.

Is Kerala safe for solo female travellers?

Kerala is widely considered one of the safest Indian states for solo female travellers — high literacy, low violent-crime rates, strong public-transport coverage, and an established foreign-tourist economy in Kovalam, Varkala, Fort Kochi and Munnar. Standard precautions apply: pre-book your first night, avoid isolated late-night beach walks, use Uber/Ola in cities, and prefer Kerala Tourism Gold-Star houseboat operators with verified crew.

What is special about Kerala backwaters?

Kerala's backwaters are a 900 km network of interconnected canals, rivers, lakes and lagoons running parallel to the Arabian Sea — uniquely supporting below-sea-level rice farming in Kuttanad (FAO Globally Important Agricultural Heritage System, 2013). Alleppey houseboats are converted from traditional kettuvallam rice barges. Vembanad Lake is India's longest at ~96 km. The August Nehru Trophy snake-boat race is one of the largest team-rowing events in the world.

Can I visit Kerala during monsoon?

Yes — many travellers prefer it. June–August monsoon brings full waterfalls (Athirapally is spectacular), green tea hills, the traditional Ayurveda treatment season, and 30–60% lower hotel rates. Catches: heavy daily rain, rough seas, beach shacks shut, occasional road closures in Munnar/Wayanad due to landslides, and some wildlife sanctuaries operate reduced safari slots. Skip monsoon if your primary plan is beach time; pick it if your plan is Ayurveda, waterfalls and slow stays.

What is the houseboat experience in Alleppey like?

A standard 1-bedroom houseboat boards around noon and disembarks 9 am the next morning. On-board chef cooks three Kerala meals fresh. The crew docks for the night at a permitted mooring; some cruise hours are typically 12 noon to 5–6 pm and 7 am to 9 am next day. AC bedrooms run from mid-range upward. Insist on a Kerala Tourism Gold/Silver Star classified boat — these have verified safety, septic tanks and licensed crew. Peak (Dec–Jan) rates can be 2–3x off-season.

Is Kerala expensive to visit?

Kerala is mid-priced by Indian standards. Backpackers can do Kerala on roughly ₹1,800–3,000 per person per day (hostel + KSRTC bus + thali meals). Mid-range hotels with breakfast typically run ₹3,500–7,500/night. 5-star resorts (Taj Bekal, Kumarakom Lake Resort, Brunton Boatyard) regularly cross ₹15,000–35,000/night in peak season. Houseboats run ₹8,000–30,000/night depending on size and season. May–August can be 30–50% cheaper across all tiers.

Do I need a permit to visit Sabarimala?

No paper permit is needed, but Sabarimala uses an online queue-management system (Virtual Q / spot booking) via the official Sabarimala portal. The temple is open only during Mandalam-Makaravilakku (mid-November to mid-January) and the first five days of each Malayalam month. Pilgrims traditionally observe a 41-day Vratham (austerity) and carry the Irumudi sacred bundle. Eligibility and access rules have been amended by courts in recent years — check the latest temple board notification before travel.

What is Ayurveda in Kerala — how do I choose a good centre?

Kerala is the global home of Ayurvedic medicine — the 5,000-year-old Indian system of holistic health. Look for centres certified by Kerala Tourism with the Green Leaf (premium) or Olive Leaf (basic) classification — both are physically inspected by the state for qualified vaidyas, clean facilities and authentic protocols. Monsoon (June–September) is considered the most auspicious season for treatments. A full Panchakarma course runs 14–28 days; shorter rejuvenation programmes are 5–7 days.

What's the cheapest month to fly to Kerala?

June, July and September are typically the cheapest months — peak southwest monsoon means lower domestic and international demand. Round-trip Delhi/Mumbai/Bangalore fares to Cochin can drop to ₹5,000–7,500 in these months versus ₹12,000–20,000 in peak December–January. The most expensive windows are 23 December–5 January, the long-weekend bridges (Onam in August/September), and the May summer-holiday peak from north India.