Skip to content
Departly.
Amritsar, India
Amritsar

Punjab

Amritsar

Build a focused two or three nights around the Golden Temple at dawn and after dark, add the Partition Museum and a driver to Wagah, and let the BHX-ATQ direct flight do the heavy lifting.

Written by the Departly editorial team Reviewed against GOV.UK on 9 Jun 2026

Best length

2-3 nights

Airport

Sri Guru Ram Dass Jee International (ATQ), ~11km northwest

Airport to centre

Pre-booked car or Ola ~25-35 min; no rail link

Best base

Walking distance of the Golden Temple complex

In short

Amritsar at a glance

Amritsar works best as a focused 2- or 3-night trip built around the Golden Temple: stay within walking distance of the complex, visit the temple at dawn and again after dark when it is lit and quieter, set aside an afternoon for Jallianwala Bagh and the Partition Museum next door, and book a driver for the late-afternoon Wagah border ceremony, which is the one thing you cannot reach easily on your own.

The short version

  • Stay inside the walkable ring around the Golden Temple so you can do dawn and after-dark visits without a taxi each time.
  • Visit Sri Harmandir Sahib twice — early morning for calm and again when it is floodlit at night — rather than one rushed midday trip.
  • Eat at least once in the Golden Temple langar, the free community kitchen that serves tens of thousands of meals a day.
  • Book a car or organised trip for the Wagah border ceremony; the flag-lowering kicks off late afternoon and the road back jams.
  • Birmingham has a direct Air India flight to Amritsar (ATQ), which is why the city pulls more UK visitors than its size suggests.

Amritsar is a one-sight city in the best possible way: nearly everything orbits the Golden Temple, and the trip works when you let it. The mistake first-timers make is treating it as a single midday tick-box — you arrive in the heat, the marble is crowded, and you leave underwhelmed. The temple rewards the opposite approach. Go at dawn when the recitation drifts across an empty pool, come back after dark when the gold is floodlit and the air cools, and eat once in the langar, where volunteers feed tens of thousands for free. Stay close enough to walk and you can do all of that without a taxi in sight.

Around that core, the city gives you an unusually heavy afternoon: Jallianwala Bagh, where the 1919 bullet marks are still in the brickwork, and the Partition Museum a few minutes away both land harder if you have Punjabi family history. The one thing that needs planning is Wagah — the border ceremony is 30km out with no easy transport, so sort a car and go early. Below, the structured planning — where to stay, what to time, the airport run and a realistic budget in pounds — picks up from here.

Keep a first trip focused: book the big timed sights, then leave room for neighbourhoods and food.

Top things to do in Amritsar

Jallianwala Bagh

Jallianwala Bagh is the walled garden where British troops opened fire on an unarmed crowd in April 1919, killing hundreds. Entry is free. The bullet marks are still visible in the brickwork, the well into which many people jumped is preserved, and a flame memorial and small museum tell the story. It sits right beside the Golden Temple's main entrance, so it's a short, sombre visit you fold into a temple trip. Half an hour to an hour is enough; go quietly.

About 30 minutes t…
No tickets required Read the guide

Golden Temple (Sri Harmandir Sahib)

The Golden Temple — Sri Harmandir Sahib, Sikhism's holiest shrine — is free to enter and open around the clock, so the decisions are about timing and etiquette, not tickets. Go twice: at first light when the marble parikrama is cool and the prakash (opening of the Guru Granth Sahib) happens before dawn, and again after dark when the gold sanctum is floodlit and mirrored in the Amrit Sarovar pool. Cover your head, leave shoes and socks at the free counter, wash your feet through the shallow trough at the entrance, and eat at least once in the langar, the free community kitchen that serves on the order of 50,000–100,000 meals a day. Allow two to three hours, more if you queue across the causeway to the inner sanctum.

Allow 2–3 hours fo…
No tickets required Read the guide

Where to stay first

The areas that make a first visit easier — not an exhaustive directory.

Heritage Street / Golden Temple Plaza

££ mid-range

The pedestrianised approach to the temple, lined with hotels facing the complex. You can be at the sanctum in five minutes for a dawn visit and walk back for breakfast. Rooms here cost more but save a taxi every time you go.

Best for: First-timers, dawn-and-dusk temple visits

Browse hotels Steps from the temple

Hall Bazaar / Town Hall area

£ value

The old commercial heart, a short walk from the temple, with the Partition Museum, markets and cheaper guesthouses. Noisier and busier, but central and good value if you do not mind a 10-minute walk to the complex.

Best for: Value, markets, walking to the museum

Browse hotels 5-10 min walk

The Mall Road / Ranjit Avenue

£££ premium

Greener, quieter residential streets a couple of kilometres out, with the city's smarter business hotels and restaurants. A calmer base if you want comfort and don't mind an Ola ride into the old city for each visit.

Best for: Comfort-first stays, families

Browse hotels 2-4km, 10-15 min by car

Airport to city centre

Amritsar airport transfer options
OptionTimeCostBook ahead?
Pre-booked private car / hotel transfer ~25-35 min about ₹600-900 Simplest with luggage after a long flight
Ola app car from the rank ~25-35 min about ₹350-550 Cheapest if your data works on landing
Prepaid taxi counter at arrivals ~30-40 min about ₹500-700 fixed Fixed fare, no haggling
Pre-book a door-to-door transfer

When to go

Sweet spot: October to March is the comfortable window: dry, cool days of roughly 8-25°C, ideal for the open marble of the Golden Temple and the open-air Wagah ceremony. November to February is the peak for weather and festivals but Punjab's winter mornings are genuinely cold and crop-burning haze can settle in.

Avoid April to June, when Punjab bakes past 40°C and the temple marble is too hot to walk barefoot by midday. The July-September monsoon is humid and wet but cheaper. Vaisakhi in mid-April and the Diwali/Bandi Chhor Divas illuminations in autumn are spectacular at the temple but bring big crowds and higher room prices — book months ahead for those.

What it costs

Birmingham has a direct Air India service to Amritsar (ATQ) that often runs £450-£650 return booked ahead, peaking over Christmas and the autumn-winter season. One-stop fares from Heathrow via a Gulf hub such as Dubai, Doha or Delhi can match or undercut that. Late booking and Diwali week push fares well past £700.

Daily budget per person

Sample trip: A realistic 3-night mid-range Amritsar trip for one person is roughly £180-£280 on the ground before flights: £90-£150 hotel near the temple, £40-£60 food (the langar is free), £30-£50 for a Wagah car and airport transfers, and £10-£20 for the Partition Museum and tips. Add £450-£650 for the Birmingham direct flight.

All rupee figures use £1 ≈ ₹128 (June 2026). Amritsar is cheap on the ground — the bill is the flight and the odd car hire, not the city. The Golden Temple langar means you can eat one free meal a day if you choose to.

Book the essentials

Where to stay

Browse staysvia Booking.com

Tours & tickets

Book tours & ticketsvia GetYourGuide

Airport transfers

Pre-book a transfervia Welcome Pickups

Stay connected

Get an eSIMvia Airalo

Trains & rail passes

Book railvia Trainline

Also in India

See the full India guide

Amritsar FAQs

How many days do you need in Amritsar?
Two nights covers it for most people: the Golden Temple at dawn and after dark, Jallianwala Bagh and the Partition Museum in one afternoon, and the Wagah border ceremony on a late afternoon. A third night gives you a slower pace and time for the food, or makes the long flight feel more worthwhile.
Do you need to book the Golden Temple?
No. The Golden Temple is free and open day and night, with no ticket or booking — you just cover your head, remove your shoes at the free counter and wash your feet on the way in. The only thing worth arranging ahead is your hotel near the complex and a car for the Wagah ceremony.
How do you get to the Wagah border ceremony from Amritsar?
The border is about 30km west of the city, with no easy public transport, so almost everyone goes by pre-booked car or on an organised afternoon trip — roughly ₹800-1,500 for a return car. The flag-lowering starts in the late afternoon, so leave by mid-afternoon to get a seat in the foreign-visitor stand, and expect heavy traffic on the way back.

Ready to book?

Find hotels in Amritsar

Go