Stories In Transit

Bharat Gaurav Tourist Trains are giving travellers a new way to see India—through journeys rooted in culture, heritage, spirituality, and regional discovery

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Supplied : Bharat Gaurav trains are designed around themed travel

There was a time when train journeys in India were simply about getting somewhere. You packed steel tiffins, fought over window seats, bought chai at stations you barely remembered, and measured distance in overnight halts and changing landscapes. Even today, in an era dominated by flights and expressways, trains continue to hold a different kind of appeal. Not because they are faster, but because they allow travellers to experience India gradually, one landscape and one story at a time. That is exactly where Bharat Gaurav Tourist Trains have found their place in India’s changing tourism story.

Launched by Indian Railways under the “Dekho Apna Desh” initiative, Bharat Gaurav trains are designed around themed travel circuits that bring together heritage, pilgrimage, culture, and regional exploration. Operated primarily by IRCTC as all-inclusive packages, these journeys combine train travel, accommodation, meals, sightseeing, transfers, tour managers, insurance, and onboard services into one itinerary. The larger idea is to make India’s cultural and historical circuits more accessible and easier to experience for domestic travellers.

The timing works perfectly with how Indian tourism has evolved over the last two decades. Travellers today are looking beyond checklist holidays. They want journeys tied to stories, spirituality, food, and local culture. Bharat Gaurav trains tap directly into this growing demand for experience-led travel.

Journeys With Context

The routes themselves show the scale and diversity of the initiative. The Shri Ramayana Yatra travels through destinations associated with the epic, including Ayodhya, Chitrakoot, Nasik, Hampi, and Rameswaram. The Buddhist Circuit links Bodhgaya, Nalanda, Sarnath, Kushinagar, and Lumbini across an eight-day spiritual journey. Meanwhile, the North East Discovery tour covers Shillong, Cherrapunji, Kaziranga, Kohima, Agartala, and Aizawl, opening up regions many Indian travellers are only beginning to explore more actively.

Other circuits focus on Jain heritage, Jyotirling temples, Sikh pilgrimage sites, Rajasthan’s historic cities, Gujarat’s coastal routes, and even cross-border journeys into Nepal and Bhutan. Together, these itineraries reflect the many layers of India’s travel landscape—spiritual, historical, regional, and cultural.

Part of the appeal also lies in rail travel itself. Flights reduce destinations to arrival points; trains allow travellers to witness the transition between them. Landscapes change outside the window, dialects shift at stations, and meals begin to taste different as the journey moves across states. For travellers seeking a stronger sense of place, that experience matters.

Tourism On Rails

The Bharat Gaurav initiative has also upgraded the onboard travel experience significantly. IRCTC currently operates 12 Bharat Gaurav rakes with mixed coach compositions ranging from Sleeper to AC II and AC III categories. The trains include modified pantry cars with flameless kitchens capable of serving nearly 750 passengers per meal, centralized public announcement systems, CCTV coverage, charging points, onboard housekeeping, security staff, and upgraded washrooms.

The focus is on making long-distance tourism more comfortable and organised, especially for families and senior citizens who may hesitate to plan complex multi-city itineraries independently. The all-inclusive format removes much of the stress associated with arranging hotels, road transfers, meals, and sightseeing across several destinations.

A significant part of travel is in the adventure of the journey for many
A significant part of travel is in the adventure of the journey for many Photo: Supplied
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Affordability remains another major factor behind the initiative’s popularity. Packages begin at approximately INR 1,800 per person per day for Sleeper class categories, while AC III and AC II options offer higher comfort levels. For journeys spanning a week or more across multiple cities, the pricing positions these tours as an accessible way to explore large parts of the country.

Growing Travel Story

The numbers reflect how strongly the concept has resonated with travellers. Since inception, Bharat Gaurav Tourist Trains have operated 629 trips and served more than 6.09 lakh tourists till March 2026. Operations have grown from just 15 trips in FY 2022–23 to 237 trips in FY 2025–26, carrying over 1.62 lakh tourists in a single year.

The initiative also mirrors a larger shift within domestic tourism. Travellers are exploring beyond familiar metro circuits and popular weekend destinations, showing growing interest in pilgrimage routes, heritage trails, and culturally rich regions that were once considered difficult to plan independently.

In many ways, Bharat Gaurav Tourist Trains are doing more than connecting destinations. They are making India’s stories more reachable, through journeys that bring together heritage, spirituality, regional discovery, and the enduring charm of travelling by rail.

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