Why the Deccan Odyssey Train Route Through Maharashtra Deserves to Be on Your Booking List
Aishwarya Kapoor | Times Life Bureau | Jul 05, 2026, 07:17 IST
Why the Deccan Odyssey Train Route Through Maharashtra Deserves to Be on Your Booking List
Image credit : Times Life Bureau
The Deccan Odyssey runs one of India's most underbooked luxury train routes, a slow arc through Maharashtra that covers Ajanta, Ellora, Nashik, and the Konkan coast. Most Indians default to the Rajasthan circuit. This route delivers the same luxury, half the crowds, and a Deccan that most booking searches never surface.
The Route Nobody Picks
The Deccan Odyssey was launched by Maharashtra Tourism Development Corporation in 2004 in partnership with Indian Railways. It was built to do for the Deccan what the Palace on Wheels did for Rajasthan. Twenty years on, the Rajasthan circuit is oversubscribed and the Deccan route runs at occupancy rates that make last-minute booking genuinely possible, which almost never happens on comparable Indian luxury trains.
What Aurangabad Actually Gives You
The train also stops at Daulatabad Fort, a 12th-century hilltop fortification that most Maharashtra itineraries skip because it adds a half-day detour. On this route, the detour is built in.
Nashik, Which Earns Its Place Here
The Practical Side of Booking It
The train runs on a fixed seasonal calendar, typically October through March, avoiding the monsoon. Departures happen roughly fortnightly. The Konkan extension, which adds Goa and coastal Karnataka to the Maharashtra loop, runs on a separate schedule and is the longest of the available routes. Booking opens months in advance, but given the occupancy patterns on the Maharashtra route specifically, last-minute windows do appear, something that cannot be said for the Rajasthan equivalents.
Why the Deccan Gets Passed Over
The train's slower rhythm is not a limitation. A road trip covering the same sites would require four to five days of driving on Maharashtra's state highways, with the logistics of hotels, drivers, and entrance queues at each stop. The Deccan Odyssey absorbs all of that. You move while you sleep, wake up at the next site, and hand back the planning entirely.
The Ajanta caves and the Sula vineyards and the Trimbakeshwar Jyotirlinga are not waiting to be discovered, they have been there for centuries. What the train does is place them in a sequence that makes the Deccan legible as a single continuous idea rather than a list of disconnected day trips.