Udaipur (Rajasthan) [India], July 9: Ask any Delhi or Bangalore traveller planning a Rajasthan trip, and you’ll hear the same complaint. Too many tour operators, too few who actually know the state. Someone books a “heritage tour” and ends up in a cab with a driver who has never set foot in Kumbhalgarh Fort. That gap between promise and ground reality is exactly what Rajasthan Yatra wants to close.
Rajasthan Yatra, a Udaipur-headquartered tour operator, has announced the expansion of its operations into Delhi, Jaipur, Bangalore and Mumbai. The move brings the company’s on-ground Rajasthan expertise directly to metro travellers, starting with a renewed push in Udaipur, the brand’s home base and the city where its story began.
Why This Expansion Matters Right Now
Rajasthan’s tourism numbers explain the timing. The state recorded over 25.44 crore tourist visits in 2025, of which more than 25.25 crore were domestic travellers — a 9.74 per cent year-on-year jump in domestic arrivals (Business Standard, Jan 2026). This growth came even as foreign tourist arrivals across India fell over 12 per cent; Rajasthan’s own decline stayed much smaller, at just 6.4 per cent.
Simply put, more Indians from metro cities are choosing Rajasthan than ever before. And most of them start planning from Delhi, Mumbai, Bangalore, or through agents based in Jaipur. A local Udaipur presence alone can no longer serve that demand.
What’s Changing for Travellers
Here’s the direct answer: Rajasthan Yatra now has dedicated offices and sales teams in four cities, in addition to its Udaipur head office.
- Udaipur (Head Office) — 3 Jog Pole, Inside Delhi Gate, Udaipur, Rajasthan – 313001
- Jaipur Office — Plot No. 09, Ashok Nagar, JDA Thana, Jaisinghpura Khor, Jaipur
- Bangalore Office — AG 1, Solitaire Residency, Hennur Bagalur Road, Bhyrathi Cross, Bangalore – 560077
- Delhi Office — Shop #270, Defence Colony Flyover Market, New Delhi – 110024
- Mumbai — sales and consultation support, with on-ground itinerary execution led from Udaipur and Jaipur
Full contact details for every office are listed on the official contact page.
What this actually means for a family in Bangalore or a corporate group in Mumbai:
- Local-language consultation — no more waiting for a Udaipur callback at odd hours
- Faster itinerary turnaround — city-based sales teams working in your time zone
- In-person planning — walk-in offices for couples, families, and corporate travel desks
- Same ground network — verified drivers, government-authorised guides and heritage hotel tie-ups, unchanged since operations began
The Udaipur-First Philosophy Behind the Expansion
Most metro-based travel companies build Rajasthan itineraries from a spreadsheet in Delhi. Rajasthan Yatra is doing the reverse — expanding outward from Udaipur, the city it knows block by block, palace by palace.
Think of it like this: a Mumbai-based aggregator can sell you a Kumbhalgarh Fort package. But do they know that the fort’s evening light show timing changes seasonally, or that the drive from Udaipur takes closer to two hours on the newer bypass route rather than the three hours older guides quote? That kind of detail only comes from teams who live there.
Rajasthan’s tourism sector holds a prominent place in the state’s economic development, built almost entirely on its forts, palaces, and cultural heritage (Rajasthan Tourism, Government of Rajasthan). That heritage-first identity is exactly why expertise has to sit closer to the ground, not just closer to the customer.

Real Numbers Travellers Should Know
For anyone planning around this expansion, a few practical figures help:
- Rajasthan is home to nine UNESCO World Heritage Sites, including its hill forts and Jantar Mantar
- Entry fees at major monuments like City Palace Udaipur or Amber Fort Jaipur typically range from ₹100–₹300 for Indian nationals, with camera and audio-guide charges separate — always confirm current rates at the counter, as these revise periodically
- Budget-to-mid-range Rajasthan tour packages generally start around ₹2,200–₹4,500 per person per day, while heritage-hotel stays push costs meaningfully higher
- Winter (October–March) remains peak season, though monsoon travel (July–September) is gaining traction for lower crowds and cooler weather
These figures are indicative and subject to change; travellers should always verify current pricing directly before booking.
A Word on What This Expansion Isn’t
Rajasthan Yatra isn’t claiming to be the only credible tour operator in Rajasthan, nor promising guaranteed discounts, fixed pricing, or specific savings through this expansion. What’s on offer is easier access, in more cities, to a team that has operated Rajasthan tours for years from within the state itself.
About Rajasthan Yatra
Founded in Udaipur, Rajasthan, Yatra is a travel agency in Rajasthan specialising in holiday packages, Golden Triangle tours, heritage stays, and corporate travel, with over 39,000 travellers served to date. The company now operates from Udaipur, Jaipur, Bangalore, and Delhi, with Mumbai coverage added in 2026.
Media & Trade Contact: Rajasthan Yatra
Email: [email protected]
Website: rajasthanyatra.in
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