Pushkar Mela First-Timer's Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before the Fair in Rajasthan
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 10, 2026, 07:20 IST
Pushkar Mela First-Timer's Guide: Everything You Need to Know Before the Fair in Rajasthan
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
The Pushkar Mela draws half a million people to a small desert town in Rajasthan every November, and first-timers almost always get it wrong. Here is what the fair actually looks like on the ground, the camel trading at dawn, the ghats at dusk, the camping options, and the one week inside it that most visitors never find.
What the Mela Actually Is (Versus What Instagram Tells You)
The religious event is separate again. Pushkar is one of the few towns in India with a Brahma temple, the Brahma Mandir on the main bazaar road, and the ghats on Pushkar Lake are considered among the holiest bathing sites in the country. During Kartik Purnima, the full moon night that closes the Mela, pilgrims wade into the lake before sunrise. That bathing ritual has been happening here for centuries. The camel fair and the pilgrimage share a date on the calendar but almost no physical space. Knowing this before you arrive saves you from spending your best morning in the wrong part of town.
When to Go and Where to Stay
Accommodation splits into three tiers. The tent camps on the fairground itself are the most atmospheric option and the most variable in quality. Some are run by Rajasthan Tourism and are genuinely comfortable. Others are tarpaulin and a cot. Book directly through the Rajasthan Tourism Development Corporation website rather than through a third-party aggregator, the RTDC camps are priced fairly and the quality is consistent. The second tier is guesthouses in the Pushkar bazaar area, which fill up three to four weeks before the fair opens. The third option, which locals rarely mention to tourists, is staying in Ajmer, 14 kilometres away, and commuting by auto or bus each day. Ajmer has proper hotels at half the price. The road between the two towns runs frequently enough that you can be at the fairground by 6 a.m. and back in a real bed by midnight.
The Camel Ground at Dawn
Do not photograph herders or their animals without asking. Most will agree. Some will ask for a small payment, which is fair. A few will decline, and that answer is final. The best photographs from the camel ground are taken from a low angle in the first twenty minutes of light, when the smoke from the fires is still low and the colour of the sky has not yet gone white.
Navigating the Ghats and the Bazaar
The bazaar runs parallel to the lake on the eastern side. It sells the usual mix of silver jewellery, Rajasthani textiles, and painted pottery. The better buys are the things aimed at herders rather than tourists: embroidered camel accessories, heavy wool blankets, brass water vessels. These are sold in the lanes behind the main bazaar road, in the section that faces the livestock ground. Prices here are not inflated for tourists because tourists rarely find the lane.
What to Eat and What to Skip
The rooftop cafes on the lake-facing side of the bazaar serve passable coffee and good lassi. They are also where most of the foreign tourists congregate, which means the food is calibrated for foreign palates and the prices are double what you will pay in the lanes. Eat your main meals in the lanes. Use the rooftops for the view at sunset, which is genuinely worth the premium on the lassi.
The Mela generates a specific kind of crowd fatigue that sets in around day three: too much dust, too much noise, too many people moving in every direction at once. The antidote is not leaving early. It is waking up before the crowd does, spending the best two hours of the day at the camel ground, and saving the bazaar for late afternoon when the light is better and the tour groups have gone back to their hotels. Pushkar at 6 a.m. and Pushkar at 4 p.m. are two entirely different towns. The one at noon, in the full heat with the full crowd, is the version most first-timers remember as the whole trip.