FlyerTalk Forums - View Single Post - Planes or trains within India?
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Old Feb 6, 2009, 11:39 pm
  #3  
jbalmuth
 
Join Date: Oct 2004
Location: NYC
Programs: AS MVP Gold, BA Silver, AA Gold, Marriott Titanium, Hyatt Globalist
Posts: 1,619
Originally Posted by azj
I'm just wondering what the most economical (money and time) way to travel around India would be? I know India has an incredibly comprehensive national railway (website is impossible). It seems that jet Airways has a visit India pass that allows unlimited travel within the country as well.

I'm going to visit some dear friends in Ahmedabad and was either considering using that place as a base and then visit Mumbai, Delhi, Agra and possible down south to Goa. I was also considering arriving in Mumbai and then continuing my journey to the above mentioned places and then ending up in Ahmedabad for the remaining days of my trip.

I'm trying to figure out logistics and was wondering if planes or trains or a combination of both might be the best way to go? I realize India is a large country with so much to see... perhaps I should scale back my plans. I've got between 14-20 days to play with here.
I strongly advise mixing and matching ---- i.e. one-way flights for the lengthier distances, trains for the shorter trips. My favorite airline in India is Kingfisher, and they offer one-ways from Mumbai to Ahmedabad for $55 all in, as an example. Regarding advance train planning from overseas, I strongly recommend http://www.cleartrip.com/. I've successfully reserved, purchased and refunded train e-tickets at http://www.irctc.co.in/, and recommend it highly. [none of my credit cards seemed to work successfully at cleartrip.]

One important caveat ---- while Kingfisher, a private India airline, is generally vastly superior in airport and inflight service to anything available in the U.S., Indian trains are not to everyone's liking. While Kingfisher has personnel awaiting your arrival outside the terminals, escorts to check-in and through security, inflight service that includes tasty hot meals on even the shortest of flights, and personnel at baggage retrieval anxious to be of help, Indian trains typically offer very little of this kind of customer service hand-holding. If you're likely to be at all squeamish about very crowded, and sometimes quite dirty, train stations, I'd emphasize the planes over the trains....
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