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Northeast India Travel Guide: 7 States, 7 Unique Experiences

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Northeast India travel is the closest thing the country has to a different world that still uses the rupee. Wedged between Bhutan, China, Myanmar and Bangladesh, and joined to the rest of India by a corridor barely 20 kilometres wide, this is a region of eight states where the food, faces, festivals and forests look almost nothing like the India most travellers know. You can hike to a living root bridge grown by hand over a century, watch a one-horned rhino graze at dawn, and wake to a view of the world’s third-highest mountain — all within one trip.

This guide does something specific: it takes seven of these states and pairs each one with a single, unmistakable experience worth planning a journey around. Along the way you will get the practical scaffolding that makes Northeast India travel work — which states need permits, when to go, how to get around, what it costs, and the mistakes that quietly ruin first trips. The aim is to help you plan a realistic route rather than an impossible bucket list.

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Note: Sources used for this guide: Government of India ILP/PAP rules via state portals (eilp.arunachal.gov.in, ilp.nagaland.gov.in) and the e-FRRO portal; Nagaland Tourism for Hornbill Festival 2026 dates; Airports Authority of India for connectivity; UNESCO’s World Heritage tentative list for Meghalaya’s living root bridges; and India Brand Equity Foundation (IBEF) tourism data. Permit rules, fees and seasonal road conditions in the Northeast change frequently — always confirm with the official state portal before you book.
📌 Key Takeaways
  • Northeast India is officially eight states: the seven “sister” states (Arunachal Pradesh, Assam, Manipur, Meghalaya, Mizoram, Nagaland, Tripura) plus Sikkim. This guide features seven of them. Indian citizens need an Inner Line Permit (ILP) for Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and Manipur — but no permit at all for Assam, Meghalaya or Tripura. The best time to visit Northeast India is October to April, when the rain eases and the big parks and passes open. Guwahati is the main air gateway; new airports at Itanagar (Donyi Polo) and Sikkim’s Pakyong have shortened old road routes. One realistic trip covers two or three neighbouring states well — not all eight. The Hornbill Festival runs 1–10 December 2026 in Nagaland, and is the single best week to see Northeast culture in one place.

Northeast India Travel at a Glance: The Seven States

Before you fall for any single photograph, it helps to see how the states line up. Each one has a different “headline” experience, a different season that suits it best, and different paperwork. The table below is the map of this entire guide — read it once, and the rest of your Northeast India travel planning becomes a question of picking two or three rows that sit next to each other.

StateSignature experienceBest seasonPermit for IndiansNearest airport
MeghalayaLiving root bridges & Dawki’s clear riverOct–Apr (Sep for waterfalls)NoneGuwahati (GAU)
AssamKaziranga rhinos & endless tea gardensNov–Apr (park closed in monsoon)NoneGuwahati / Jorhat / Dibrugarh
Arunachal PradeshTawang Monastery & high HimalayaOct–AprILP requiredDonyi Polo, Itanagar (HGI)
NagalandHornbill Festival (1–10 Dec)December for the festivalILP requiredDimapur (DMU)
SikkimMonasteries & Kanchenjunga viewsMar–May, Oct–DecNone for towns; PAP for border zonesBagdogra (IXB) / Pakyong (PYG)
MizoramBlue hills & the Chapchar Kut festivalOct–MarILP requiredLengpui, Aizawl (AJL)
ManipurLoktak Lake’s floating islandsOct–MarILP requiredImphal (IMF)

One honest note on the “7 states” framing: the seventh sister, Tripura — known for the Ujjayanta Palace and the rock carvings at Unakoti — is the one state this guide does not give a full section to, simply because most first trips orbit the six states above plus Sikkim. If you have been to the others, Tripura is a quiet, rewarding addition.

Best Time to Visit Northeast India

If you take only one planning decision from this guide, make it the timing. The best time to visit Northeast India is broadly October to April, the dry window when roads hold, skies clear and the headline sights are open. The region’s rain is not a detail — Cherrapunji and Mawsynram in Meghalaya are among the wettest inhabited places on earth, and the monsoon from June to September can wash out the very roads you need.

That said, “best” depends on what you came for. The table below breaks the year into honest seasons so your Northeast India travel dates match your goal rather than a generic recommendation.

SeasonMonthsWhat it’s good forWhat to watch
Post-monsoonOct–NovGreen hills, clear views, festivals begin, Kaziranga reopensBooks up fast around festivals
WinterDec–FebHornbill Festival, dry roads, best wildlife sightingsCold nights; high passes may have snow
SpringMar–AprRhododendrons, Sikkim & Arunachal at their best, tea flush beginsHaze building by late April
MonsoonMay–SepWaterfalls in full roar, fewest crowds, lowest pricesLandslides, road closures, parks shut

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Tip: If you only have one window, aim for late October to early December. You catch reopened national parks, dry roads, the start of the festival calendar, and — if you time it right — the Hornbill Festival, all in a single stretch.

7 Unique Places to Visit in Northeast India

Here is the heart of the guide: seven states, seven experiences. Each of these places to visit in Northeast India is something you cannot do anywhere else in the country, which is exactly why it earns a spot on the list. Read these as standalone anchors — you choose two or three, then build a route around them rather than trying to tick every one.

Meghalaya — Living Root Bridges and the Wettest Place on Earth

Meghalaya is the easiest state to fall for and the easiest to reach, sitting just a few hours by road from Guwahati. Its signature experience is the jingkieng jri, the living root bridges of the Khasi and Jaintia hills — handrails and walkways grown over decades by training the aerial roots of rubber fig trees across streams. The double-decker bridge at Nongriat, below Cherrapunji (Sohra), is the famous one, reached by a steep descent of roughly 3,000 steps. These bridges have been on UNESCO’s World Heritage tentative list since 2022.

Beyond the bridges, Meghalaya gives you Mawlynnong (often called the cleanest village in Asia), the glass-clear Umngot river at Dawki where boats appear to float on air, and Shillong’s easygoing café-and-music culture. Crucially for planning, Indian citizens need no permit at all to travel in Meghalaya.

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Warning: The Nongriat root-bridge trek is far harder than its photos suggest — it is around 3,000 stone steps down and the same back up, often in humidity. Carry water, start early, and budget a full day. People with knee problems should consider an overnight homestay at the bottom rather than a same-day return.

Assam — Kaziranga Rhinos and Endless Tea Gardens

Assam is the flat heart of the region, the Brahmaputra valley that almost everyone passes through. Its signature experience is Kaziranga National Park, a UNESCO World Heritage Site that holds the world’s largest population of the greater one-horned rhinoceros. A jeep or elephant safari here, with the river mist still hanging over the grassland, is one of the great wildlife mornings in Asia. Kaziranga is typically open from November to April and closes during the monsoon when the park floods.

Assam’s second act is tea. The state produces a large share of India’s tea, and a stay on a working tea estate near Jorhat or Dibrugarh — colonial bungalows, mist, and endless green rows — is a gentler companion to the safari. Add Majuli, one of the world’s largest river islands and the home of Assam’s neo-Vaishnavite satras (monastic centres), and Assam alone justifies a week. No permit is needed for Indians.

Arunachal Pradesh — Tawang Monastery and the High Himalaya

Arunachal Pradesh is the wild, vertical frontier — India’s easternmost and least-visited large state, where the first sunrise in the country lands. Its signature experience is Tawang, in the far north-west near the Bhutan border: a 17th-century Buddhist monastery that is the largest in India, perched at over 3,000 metres with snow peaks behind it. Getting there means a long, spectacular drive over the Sela Pass, which is itself part of the experience.

The state rewards slow Northeast India travel — the Ziro valley of the Apatani people (on UNESCO’s tentative list and home to the September Ziro Festival of Music), the meadows of Mechuka, and tribal cultures that differ from one valley to the next. Itanagar now has its own airport, Donyi Polo (opened November 2022), with IndiGo flights to Delhi, Kolkata and other metros, which has cut hours off the old road approach.

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Warning: Indian citizens must carry an Inner Line Permit for Arunachal Pradesh, and a single ILP may not cover every district — if you plan both Tawang (West Kameng) and Ziro (Lower Subansiri), make sure both are listed. Some border points like Bumla Pass need a separate military clearance. Apply online at eilp.arunachal.gov.in a few days before travel and carry a printed copy.

Nagaland — The Hornbill Festival

Nagaland’s signature experience has a fixed date. The Hornbill Festival runs from 1 to 10 December 2026 at Kisama Heritage Village, about 12 kilometres from the capital Kohima, and 2026 marks the festival’s 25th year. Often called the “Festival of Festivals,” it gathers Nagaland’s major tribes into one place, each with its own morung (traditional dormitory), for ten days of war dances, log-drum rituals, folk music, indigenous games, crafts and food. Daily entry is modest, roughly ₹50–₹100.

If you can only witness one thing in the entire region, this is a strong candidate, because it compresses the cultural diversity of the whole Northeast into a single walkable site. The nearest airport and railhead is Dimapur, about 74 kilometres from Kohima. Beyond the festival, Nagaland offers the Dzukou valley trek and, for the adventurous, the Konyak villages of Mon near the Myanmar border.

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Tip: Accommodation in and around Kohima sells out weeks before the Hornbill Festival, and prices spike. Book your stay and your Inner Line Permit (online at ilp.nagaland.gov.in) at least three to four weeks ahead. A homestay near Kisama beats a far-off hotel for atmosphere and morning access.

Sikkim — Monasteries and Kanchenjunga Views

Sikkim is the polished, organised exception in the Northeast — clean, calm and astonishingly scenic. Its signature experience is the combination of Buddhist monasteries and the constant presence of Kanchenjunga, the world’s third-highest mountain at 8,586 metres, visible from Pelling, Gangtok and a dozen ridgelines between. Rumtek and Pemayangtse monasteries, the old capital of Yuksom, and the sacred Tsomgo Lake form a classic loop.

Sikkim earned a separate kind of fame as India’s first fully organic state, a status recognised internationally with the FAO’s Future Policy Gold Award in 2018. For Northeast India travel logistics, Sikkim is reached via Bagdogra airport (IXB) or the New Jalpaiguri railhead in West Bengal, both a four-to-five-hour drive from Gangtok; the state’s own Pakyong airport (PYG) operates weather permitting.

Sikkim is also the region’s gentlest introduction for nervous first-timers and families: roads are good, towns are tourist-ready, English is widely spoken, and Indian citizens need no permit for the main towns of Gangtok, Pelling, Namchi and Ravangla. It is the place to start if the rest of the Northeast feels daunting.

Mizoram and Manipur — Blue Hills and a Floating Lake

Two states round out the seven, both deeply offbeat. Mizoram is a quiet land of blue, folded hills and one of India’s highest literacy rates; its Chapchar Kut spring festival and the bamboo-dance traditions of Aizawl reward travellers who want culture without crowds. Manipur’s signature experience is Loktak Lake, the largest freshwater lake in the Northeast, famous for its phumdis — floating islands of vegetation. One of them holds Keibul Lamjao, the only floating national park in the world and the last refuge of the endangered sangai (brow-antlered deer).

Both states require an Inner Line Permit for Indian citizens, and both reward travellers who treat them as the second or third leg of a longer Northeast India trip rather than a quick stop. Imphal and Aizawl (Lengpui) both have airports with regular connections via Guwahati and Kolkata.

Permits, Flights and Getting Around: Planning Your Northeast India Travel

This is where most first trips succeed or stumble. The single biggest source of confusion in Northeast India travel is the assumption that the whole region follows one rule. It does not — three states are permit-free for Indians, four need an Inner Line Permit, and Sikkim sits in between. Get this right and almost everything else falls into place.

For Indian citizens, the Inner Line Permit (ILP) is required for Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and Manipur (Manipur was added in 2019). It is an online, low-cost document, usually valid for around 15 days and extendable, that you should apply for on the relevant state portal a few days before you travel. Foreign nationals need a Protected Area Permit (PAP) instead, generally arranged through a registered tour operator. The table below summarises who needs what.

StateIndian citizensHow to applyForeign nationals
Assam, Meghalaya, TripuraNo permitNo permit
Arunachal PradeshILP requiredeilp.arunachal.gov.in (online)PAP via tour operator
NagalandILP requiredilp.nagaland.gov.in (online)PAP (often relaxed at Hornbill)
MizoramILP requiredState portal / entry gatePAP via tour operator
ManipurILP required (since 2019)Manipur ILP portalPAP via tour operator
SikkimNone for towns; PAP for North/East border zonesTour operator / e-FRRO (digital since Jan 2026)RAP via e-FRRO, then zone PAPs

On flights: Guwahati’s Lokpriya Gopinath Bordoloi airport (GAU) is the undisputed gateway, handling the bulk of the region’s traffic with direct links to Delhi, Mumbai, Kolkata, Bengaluru and more. From there you fan out — to Imphal, Dibrugarh, Jorhat, Silchar, Agartala, Aizawl, Dimapur, and the newer airports at Itanagar (Donyi Polo, 2022) and Sikkim’s Pakyong. The Northeast has expanded from nine airports in 2013 to seventeen today, which is the quiet revolution that has made independent Northeast India travel realistic for ordinary travellers.

On the ground, plan for shared sumos and jeeps, hired cars with local drivers, and slow mountain roads. Distances on the map lie — a 150-kilometre hill drive can take six hours. The table below shows the practical ways to reach each anchor.

DestinationFly toThenRough road time
Shillong / Cherrapunji (Meghalaya)GuwahatiShared taxi or hired car3–4 hrs to Shillong
Kaziranga (Assam)Jorhat or GuwahatiHired car1.5 hrs (Jorhat) / 5 hrs (Guwahati)
Tawang (Arunachal)Guwahati or Tezpur2-day drive via Bomdila & Sela Pass10–12 hrs total
Kohima / Hornbill (Nagaland)DimapurShared taxi to Kohima2.5–3 hrs
Gangtok (Sikkim)Bagdogra or PakyongShared sumo or hired car4–5 hrs from Bagdogra

Building a Northeast India Itinerary

The most common mistake — covered properly in the next section — is trying to see everything. A realistic Northeast India itinerary picks one cluster of neighbouring states and goes deep. Because the region splits naturally into a western Himalayan side (Sikkim, then Arunachal) and a central-eastern hill-and-valley side (Meghalaya, Assam, Nagaland), most good routes stay on one side per trip.

Below are three field-tested shapes for a Northeast India itinerary, sorted by how much time you have. Treat the day counts as minimums; add a buffer day for the weather, which has the final say in the mountains.

ItineraryDaysRouteBest for
Meghalaya–Assam loop7Guwahati → Shillong → Cherrapunji → Dawki → Kaziranga → GuwahatiFirst-timers, no permits, easy roads
Hornbill culture trip8–9Dimapur → Kohima (Hornbill) → Khonoma → Dzukou → KazirangaDecember festival travellers
Sikkim Himalaya7–8Bagdogra → Gangtok → Tsomgo/Nathula → Lachung/Yumthang → PellingMountains, monasteries, families
Arunachal frontier9–10Guwahati → Dirang → Tawang → Bomdila → Ziro → ItanagarAdventurous, slow, high-altitude travel

What about the famous “all 7 states in 14 days” route you will see advertised? It exists, and it can be done, but it is mostly movement — long drives, short stops, little depth. If your goal is to feel the place rather than photograph a checklist, two clusters across two separate trips will serve you far better than one breathless fortnight.

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Tip: Anchor your dates to the one thing that cannot move — a festival, a park’s open season, or a flight deal — and build outward from there. For most travellers that anchor is either the Hornbill Festival in early December or Kaziranga’s reopening in November.

Common Mistakes in Northeast India Travel

Almost every disappointing trip to the region traces back to one of a handful of avoidable errors. Read this list before you book anything — it is the cheapest insurance you will buy. These are the recurring mistakes that derail Northeast India travel, in rough order of how often they bite.

1. Assuming one permit rule fits all. Three states need nothing, four need an ILP, Sikkim is split. Check each state on your route separately.

2. Trying to cover all eight states in one trip. It turns a holiday into a road marathon. Pick a cluster and go deep.

3. Carrying only a phone copy of your permit. Checkpoint officers may refuse digital copies — always print your ILP and keep your ID name matching exactly.

4. Booking flights before checking the season. Kaziranga is shut in the monsoon and high passes can be snowbound; confirm the sight is open before you lock in dates.

5. Leaving festival stays to the last minute. Hornbill accommodation around Kohima vanishes weeks ahead and prices climb steeply.

6. Underestimating road times. Hill roads run at 20–30 km/h. A “short” 150-km hop can eat an entire day.

7. Ignoring altitude. Tawang, Nathula and North Sikkim sit above 3,000 metres — ascend gradually, hydrate, and don’t sprint on day one.

8. Running out of cash. ATMs are sparse and unreliable in the hills, and mobile signal drops out. Carry more cash than you think you need.

9. Treating sacred and tribal spaces as photo backdrops. Ask before photographing people, monasteries and rituals; many communities have firm preferences.

10. Skipping travel insurance and a buffer day. Weather closes roads without notice; a spare day and decent cover save the trip when it does.

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Note: Disclaimer: Permit rules, fees, festival dates, flight routes and road conditions across Northeast India change often and vary by district and season. This guide reflects the position as of June 2026 and is for general planning only — always confirm current requirements on the official state government portals (and the e-FRRO portal for foreign nationals) before booking flights, stays or permits.
Frequently Asked Questions
Do I need a permit for Northeast India travel?

It depends on the state. Indian citizens need no permit for Assam, Meghalaya or Tripura. An Inner Line Permit (ILP) is required for Arunachal Pradesh, Nagaland, Mizoram and Manipur, applied for online a few days before travel. Sikkim's towns are permit-free for Indians, but its border zones (North and East Sikkim) need a Protected Area Permit. Foreign nationals need a PAP for the ILP states.

What is the best time to visit Northeast India?

October to April is the broad sweet spot — dry roads, clear views and open parks. December brings the Hornbill Festival and the best wildlife sightings; March–April brings rhododendrons and the finest Sikkim and Arunachal weather. Avoid the June–September monsoon unless you specifically want waterfalls, low prices and empty trails, and can tolerate road closures.

How many days do I need for a Northeast India itinerary?

Plan at least seven days for one cluster — for example, the Meghalaya–Assam loop or a Sikkim Himalayan circuit. Covering two clusters or reaching Tawang in Arunachal pushes you to 9–11 days. Trying to do all states in under two weeks is possible but exhausting; most travellers enjoy the region far more across two separate trips.

Is Northeast India safe for tourists, including solo female travellers?

The main tourist circuits — Meghalaya, Assam's parks, Sikkim, and Nagaland during Hornbill — are generally considered safe and welcoming, with famously warm hosts and a strong homestay culture. As anywhere, take normal precautions, avoid travelling remote roads after dark, respect local customs, and keep an eye on official advisories for the few border districts that occasionally see disturbances.

Which airport should I fly into for Northeast India?

Guwahati (GAU) is the main gateway and the right choice for Meghalaya, Assam and as a hub for onward flights. Fly to Dimapur for Nagaland, Imphal for Manipur, Aizawl for Mizoram, Itanagar's Donyi Polo for central Arunachal, and Bagdogra (or Pakyong, weather permitting) for Sikkim.

Do Indians need a permit for Sikkim?

Not for the main towns — Gangtok, Pelling, Namchi and Ravangla are permit-free for Indian citizens. You do need a Protected Area Permit for high-altitude and border zones such as Nathula, Tsomgo Lake, Zuluk and North Sikkim (Lachung, Yumthang, Gurudongmar), normally arranged through a registered Sikkim tour operator. The state moved to a fully digital permit system in January 2026.

How much does a Northeast India trip cost?

As a rough 2026 guide, budget travellers can manage on around ₹1,500–₹2,500 per day for homestays, shared transport and local food; mid-range comfort runs ₹3,500–₹6,000 per day; and a comfortable, car-and-good-hotels trip sits above that. Return flights from major Indian cities to Guwahati typically range from ₹8,000 to ₹16,000 depending on season and how early you book.

Can I combine the Hornbill Festival with other experiences in one trip?

Yes — that is the smart way to do December. Fly into Dimapur, spend two or three days at the Hornbill Festival near Kohima, then drive across to Kaziranga in Assam for a rhino safari before flying home from Guwahati. It pairs the region's biggest cultural event with its biggest wildlife draw in about a week.

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