Discover the ancient marvels of Hampi on this immersive 2-day tour that takes you through the remnants of the Vijayanagara Empire. Marvel at iconic sites like the Virupaksha Temple and the Vijaya Vittala Temple, where the famed stone chariot rests. Enjoy stunning views from Hemakuta Hill, explore the serene banks of the Tungabhadra River, and capture the captivating sunset at Malyavanta Raghunatha Temple. With an expert guide at your side, you’ll gain deep insights into the rich history and culture of this UNESCO World Heritage site.
- Duration: 2 days, ideal for history enthusiasts and culture seekers
- Explore key attractions and hidden gems, including royal enclosures and sacred shrines
- Includes transportation, accommodation, meals, expert guidance, and all entrance fees
- Private tour for just you and your group
If you are unable to enter your location, do let us know. We pick up from all locations within a 12 km radius of the city centre.
Your journey begins before dawn, slipping out of Bangalore at 6:30 AM as the city stirs. The seven-hour drive unspools like a slow revelation — flat Deccan plains giving way to lush countryside and charming villages that offer glimpses into local culture and a quieter way of life. Midway, we pause at a beloved highway stopover for a traditional breakfast before the landscape truly transforms: rust-red boulders stacked impossibly high, banana groves threading between ancient walls, the glint of a sacred river in the distance. By afternoon, you arrive in Hampi — checked in, unhurried, and ready for lunch — the journey itself already part of the experience.
This afternoon, Hampi doesn't ease you in gently. It overwhelms you immediately. You'll enter through the Virupaksha Temple — not a monument frozen in time, but a living, breathing place of worship that has stood without interruption for over a thousand years. Priests chant. Elephants bless. Pilgrims mill about beneath a towering gopuram that has watched empires rise and crumble around it.
From here, we climb Hemakuta Hill — a scattered garden of early Shaivite temples that most visitors walk past entirely. The views over Hampi's boulder landscape are quietly staggering, and the monuments here carry an intimacy that the larger complexes cannot.
Then come the giants. The Sasivekalu Ganesha — named for a mustard seed, which is what his belly is said to contain — sits serenely within a small pavilion, carved from a single boulder with remarkable refinement. Not far away, the Kadalekalu Ganesha (named for a Bengal gram, visible in his rounded stomach) is larger still, one of the biggest Ganesha figures in the region, tucked quietly against a hillside. These are the Ganeshas Hampi does not put on its brochures. They should. The Lakshmi Narasimha monolith stops you cold. Four metres of fierce divinity carved from a single rock — the lion-faced avatar of Vishnu, cross-legged in yogic posture, colossal yet somehow composed. Beside it once sat a Shiva Linga that is now more famous in absence than presence.
The Hazara Rama Temple is the gem that rewards those who look closely. Its outer walls are an unbroken frieze of the Ramayana in stone — thousands of figures marching in procession, dancing, warring, grieving. This was the private temple of the king. It shows.
We close the day at Malyavanta Raghunatha Temple Sunset Point, perched on a dramatic boulder outcrop above a bend in the Tungabhadra. The light here at dusk is the colour of embers. Dinner and overnight rest at your hotel, with the stars and the silence doing the rest.
If the morning sky is clear, there are few finer ways to begin a day than walking the banks of the Tungabhadra — the sacred river that gave this civilisation its lifeblood. Watch coracle boats drift past ancient bathing ghats. Feel the strange, tender intimacy of a place that once fed an empire.
Then, the masterpiece. The Vijaya Vittala Temple complex is where Vijayanagara's ambition peaked. The iconic stone chariot. The Musical Pillars — each one ringing a different note when struck. The vast ruined bazaar where once merchants sold diamonds by the fistful. This is the Hampi that haunts you long after you leave.
The Elephant Stables are vast, vaulted, and unexpectedly elegant — eleven domed chambers that once housed the royal war elephants, arranged with a symmetry that suggests their occupants were treated as the royalty they were. Nearby, the Lotus Mahal is an architectural puzzle — a building that is neither purely Hindu nor purely Islamic, built perhaps for the queens of the court, its arches and turrets an elegant negotiation between two worlds.
The Royal Enclosure gathers the secular heart of the empire. The Mahanavami or Dasara Dibba is a towering ceremonial platform built to commemorate a military victory — its base carved with scenes of war, sport, and court life in layered relief. Tucked in the enclosure's corner, the Pushkarini or Stepped well. It's five-tiered tank was never rain-fed — Vijayanagara's engineers supplied it via aqueducts, managing pressure across distance. Easy to miss, impossible to forget once you ask how. Queens Bath are marvels of hydraulic engineering and aesthetic refinement, its balconied galleries and central pool a testament to how seriously this civilisation took both water and beauty.
After a traditional lunch, we begin the long, satisfied drive back to Bangalore — carrying the particular quiet that only ancient places leave behind. Hampi is not a place you visit. It's a place that visits you — and doesn't entirely leave.
For a full refund, cancel at least 24 hours before the scheduled departure time.
You can cancel up to 24 hours in advance of the experience for a full refund.
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