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Delhi

32-million-inhabitant megacity, millennial capital — 3 UNESCO sites (Red Fort, Qutub Minar, Humayun's Tomb), classic entry point for the Golden Triangle and North India journey.

4.40Delhi & Rajasthan

Delhi is India's millennial capital and the world's most populous urban agglomeration — 32 million inhabitants (Delhi NCR National Capital Region), surpassing Tokyo since 2023. Politically, it's the seat of the Indian government. Historically, it's one of the world's oldest continuously inhabited cities — at least 7 successive "Delhis" identified by archaeologists.

Geographically, Delhi organises into two complementary entities. Old Delhi (Shahjahanabad): the Mughal old town founded by Shâh Jahân in 1639, densely populated, alley labyrinth, markets (Chandni Chowk), temples, mosques, chaotic and authentic atmosphere. New Delhi: the British capital planned by Edwin Lutyens and Herbert Baker in the 1910s-1920s, inaugurated 13 February 1931, wide geometric avenues (Rajpath/Kartavya Path between India Gate and Rashtrapati Bhavan), classical buildings of imperial dimensions.

The must-see sites spread across both quarters. Old Delhi: Red Fort (Lal Qila, UNESCO 2007, Mughal fortified palace built by Shâh Jahân 1639-1648), Jama Masjid (India's largest mosque, 1656 by Shâh Jahân, 25,000 worshippers), Chandni Chowk (main street of Old Delhi laid out 1650, fragrant chaotic markets, legendary street food), Raj Ghat (Gandhi's memorial). New Delhi: India Gate (1931 memorial inspired by Paris Arc de Triomphe), Rashtrapati Bhavan (Indian Presidential residence), Connaught Place, Lotus Temple (Baha'i temple).

The UNESCO sites: Qutub Minar (UNESCO 1993) — 73 m minaret, world's tallest brick minaret, erected by Qutb-ud-din Aybak from 1192. The complex also hosts the Iron Pillar (4th century, 7 m, metallurgical mystery, virtually no rust for 1,600 years). Humayun's Tomb (UNESCO 1993) — Mughal mausoleum built 1565-1572, architectural and ideological precursor of the Taj Mahal. Red Fort (UNESCO 2007).

What we love

  • 3 UNESCO sites: Red Fort (Mughal palace Shâh Jahân 1639), Qutub Minar (73 m minaret, 1192), Humayun's Tomb (1572, Taj Mahal precursor)
  • Golden Triangle entry: ultramodern IGI Terminal 3 international airport, Air France and Air India direct Paris 8h, metro to city centre
  • Exceptional gastronomic diversity: Mughal Lane Old Delhi, Connaught Place restaurants, cooking classes
  • Delhi Metro (10 lines, 286 stations) — one of the world's most modern, air-conditioned, clean, economical (10-60 INR)
  • Shopping: Janpath Market, Khan Market, Sarojini Nagar, Connaught Place — one of India's top shopping destinations

What to know

  • EXTREME air pollution in winter (AQI 300-500), eye and throat burning, FFP2 mask mandatory
  • World capital of tourist scams: fake tourist office, fake station drivers, fake guides, fake students
  • Maximum sensory chaos: noise, crowds, aggressive begging, constant commercial harassment
  • Variable safety outside tourist zones (pickpocketing frequent in markets)
  • Maximum cultural shock on arrival — Delhi can discourage first days

Situation

Où se situe Delhi ?

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Frequently asked questions

How many nights in Delhi?+
2-3 nights minimum. One night technically suffices to visit Red Fort + Jama Masjid + Qutub Minar but it's very frustrating given the cultural shock and tourist density. 2-night plan: D1 Old Delhi (Red Fort + Jama Masjid + Chandni Chowk), D2 South Delhi UNESCO (Qutub Minar + Humayun's Tomb + Lotus Temple). Ideal 3-night plan: add D3 New Delhi (India Gate, Rashtrapati Bhavan with 5-day advance booking for interior visit, National Museum, Connaught Place for shopping, gourmet dinner Khan Market). 4-night plan: add Agra excursion (Taj Mahal by Shatabdi Express train, evening return).
How to avoid air pollution in Delhi?+
Air pollution in Delhi in winter (November-February) reaches extremely dangerous levels — AQI frequently 300-500 (considered "hazardous" above 150). Consequences: eye and throat burning, headaches, asthma exacerbation. Precautions: mandatory FFP2 or KN95 mask for any outdoor outing, limit morning outings (pollution peak 6-10am), choose hotels with air purifiers in rooms (Imperial New Delhi, Taj Mahal Hotel, Oberoi, ITC Maurya offer this), avoid prolonged outdoor outings, prefer covered sites (museums, malls). SAFAR-Air or IQAir app for real-time AQI tracking. Sensitive travellers (asthmatic, children under 5, seniors): avoid Delhi between November and February, prefer March-April or October.
What are the classic Delhi scams?+
Delhi is the world capital of tourist scams. Main scams: fake "Government of India Tourist Office" at Connaught Place (actually private agency overcharging 5-10x — the real one is at Janpath 88), fake drivers at Old Delhi and New Delhi Railway Station exits ("your hotel burned/moved", "your train is cancelled, I'll take you elsewhere"), fake students "improvised guides" paid retro-commissions by shops, exchange scams, unmetered taxis with inflated fares 3-5x, fake "police officer" checking passports then asking "fine" (real uniformed police never ask for money). Workarounds: use exclusively Uber or Ola (reliable apps, transparent meter), book via your 4-5 star hotel or recognised French agency, beware of anyone approaching you at station/airport exit, refuse politely but firmly, never give your passport (only certified photocopy).
Where to stay in Delhi safely and comfortably?+
Staying in a 4-5 star hotel is strongly recommended for Delhi (recovery from cultural shock, safety, air quality with purifiers). Recommended quarters: Central Delhi — Connaught Place, Janpath, Chanakyapuri (embassy quarter, quietest): Imperial New Delhi (€250-450/night, iconic Art Deco hotel 1936), Taj Mahal Hotel New Delhi (Janpath, €300-500/night), Lutyens' Bungalow Country House (€250-400/night, colonial charm). South Delhi — Greater Kailash, Defence Colony, Hauz Khas: ITC Maurya (Diplomatic Enclave, €280-500/night, classic 5-star), Aman New Delhi (Lodhi Road, €800-1,500/night, ultra-luxury), Oberoi New Delhi (€400-700/night). Airport area: Lemon Tree Premier (€200-300/night). Budget: Bloomrooms@New Delhi Railway Station (€50-100/night). AVOID Paharganj (backpacker quarter near New Delhi Railway Station — variable quality, scams).
What UNESCO sites in Delhi not to miss?+
Delhi concentrates 3 major UNESCO sites. Red Fort (Lal Qila, UNESCO 2007) — Mughal fortified palace built by Shâh Jahân between 1639 and 1648. Red sandstone, 2 km of walls, Mughal gardens, Diwan-i-Khas (private audience hall with famous Peacock Pavilion and inscription "If paradise exists on Earth, it is here"), Hall of Public Audience. Foreigners rate 600 INR. Evening sound and light show 60-100 INR. Closed Monday. 2-3h visit. Qutub Minar (UNESCO 1993) — complex south of Delhi (15 km from centre, Qutub Minar metro): 73 m minaret erected from 1192 by Qutb-ud-din Aybak (Delhi Sultanate founder), world's tallest brick minaret. Also on site: Iron Pillar 4th century (metallurgical mystery no rust for 1,600 years), Quwwat-ul-Islam Mosque (India's oldest, built from materials of 27 destroyed temples), Iltutmish's Tomb. Foreigners rate 600 INR. 1h30-2h. Humayun's Tomb (UNESCO 1993) — Mughal mausoleum built 1565-1572 by Emperor Humayun's widow, Taj Mahal architectural precursor. Magnificently restored by Aga Khan Trust. Foreigners rate 600 INR. 1h30-2h.

Our verdict

Delhi is essential as entry point for the classic Indian journey — India's main international airport (Indira Gandhi T3), Golden Triangle starting point to Agra (Taj Mahal) and Jaipur, and one of the country's densest UNESCO heritage concentrations (3 UNESCO sites). But it's also the most exhausting stop — extreme winter air pollution, world capital of tourist scams, maximum sensory chaos. Our advice: 2-3 nights minimum, 4-5 star hotel for recovery (Imperial New Delhi €250-450/night, Taj Mahal Hotel New Delhi €300-500/night, ITC Maurya €280-500/night), certified guide for first 1-2 days, FFP2 mask mandatory in winter, Uber/Ola exclusively. Optimal itinerary: D1 Old Delhi (Red Fort, Jama Masjid, Chandni Chowk by cycle-rickshaw), D2 South Delhi (Qutub Minar, Humayun's Tomb, Lotus Temple), D3 New Delhi morning (India Gate, Rashtrapati Bhavan, Connaught Place, National Museum). Avoid November-February if possible (pollution), prefer October-March or April. The city isn't for everyone but it's the unavoidable first stop of any classic North India trip.

Nearby

The Editors
The Editorsauteur principal✓ Verified

"Janvier : haute saison, pollution maximale (AQI 350-500), brume matinale, fraîcheur."

Expert on Delhi · 1 contributions

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