Overview

Discover the best places to visit in Srinagar - Dal Lake houseboats, Mughal Gardens, Tulip Garden Asia's largest, Shankaracharya Temple, Old City & more. Complete 2026 guide with timings, prices & itineraries.

Complete Guide

15 Best Places to Visit in Srinagar 2026

The top places to visit in Srinagar are Dal Lake, the three Mughal gardens (Shalimar Bagh, Nishat Bagh, and Chashme Shahi), Shankaracharya Temple, Hazratbal Shrine, and the Tulip Garden. 3 full days covers all major Srinagar tourist places. The best time for Srinagar sightseeing is March to August.

After visiting Srinagar across all four seasons for 12 consecutive years—and planning Srinagar sightseeing itineraries for over 500 groups—we can say this with confidence: no list, no photograph, and no reel does this city justice until you experience it yourself. This guide covers every major Srinagar tourist place worth your time—from Srinagar's famous places like Dal Lake and Shalimar Bagh to lesser-known picnic spots in Srinagar that most tourists miss entirely. Whether you have 2 days or 5, we will show you exactly what to see, in what order, with honest timings and entry fees.

Quick Overview: Srinagar at a Glance

DetailInformation
🏔️ Altitude1,730 meters (5,676 feet)
🌡️ Best TimeMarch to October (pleasant), December-February (snow)
✈️ Nearest AirportSrinagar International Airport (SXR) - 14 km from city
🚂 Nearest RailwayJammu Tawi (290 km, 8-9 hours drive)
🏨 Suggested Stay3-5 days minimum
💰 Daily Budget₹2,500-3,500 (budget), ₹5,000-8,000 (mid-range), ₹10,000+ (luxury)
🎫 Main AttractionsDal Lake, Mughal Gardens, Tulip Garden, Shankaracharya Temple

Dal Lake — The Most Famous Place in Srinagar

Dal Lake is not simply a lake—it is an 18 sq km ecosystem where 50,000 people live, work, shop, and travel entirely by water. It is the most iconic of all Srinagar's famous places and the single experience that every Kashmir trip must include. We have visited Dal Lake over 60 times across 12 years, in every season and every light condition. It is different every single time.

_"Dal Lake at 6 am, when the mist sits low on the water and the first shikaras emerge carrying flower sellers, remains one of the most quietly magical scenes we have ever witnessed in 12 years of travel across India."_

What Can You Do at Dal Lake?

  • Sunrise Shikara Ride — The Best Srinagar Sightseeing Experience: A private shikara at 6 am is the single most rewarding hour of any Kashmir sightseeing trip. Your boatman paddles you past floating vegetable markets where farmers trade lotus roots and tomatoes from boat to boat before dawn, through stretches of lotus garden, past anchored houseboats with smoke rising from their chimneys, and into quiet side channels where the only sound is the dip of the oar. Book your shikara the night before for the 6 am slot—late bookings get the 9 am slot when crowds appear.
  • ₹600–₹1,200 per hour | Best: 6–7 am daily | Year-round

  • Traditional Houseboat Night — Kashmir's Most Unique Hotel Experience: Sleeping on a traditional Kashmiri houseboat on Dal Lake or Nagin Lake is a bucket-list experience with no equivalent anywhere else in India. These intricately carved cedar-wood floating homes — many over a century old — have private bedrooms, sit-out balconies, carved wooden interiors, and attached bathrooms. You wake up to mountain views and the sound of water. Over 12 years, we have stayed on more than 40 different houseboats. We hand-pick the ones in every Srinagar package we build.
  • ₹2,000–₹15,000 per night | Dal Lake & Nagin Lake | Book 4–6 weeks ahead in peak season

  • Floating Vegetable Market & Lotus Gardens: Dal Lake has a floating post office; a floating vegetable market best visited between 6 and 8 am; and vast lotus gardens that bloom June to August. A shikara through the lotus gardens in full bloom—acres of pink and white flowers over still water—is genuinely surreal. The Dalgate area at the lake's southern end gives the best access to the market lanes and is a wonderful base for walking and shikara exploration.
  • Free to view | Lotus bloom: Jun–Aug | Best by shikara

    Dal Lake Quick Facts: Area: 18 sq km · Altitude: 1,583m · Connected to: Nagin Lake, Anchar Lake · Famous for: houseboats, shikaras, floating gardens, lotus blooms · Distance from airport: 18 km (40 min)

    → Full guide: Dal Lake Srinagar — houseboats, shikara rides & complete guide

    The Mughal Gardens — Srinagar's Royal Sightseeing Circuit

    When Mughal emperors chose Kashmir as their summer retreat, they left behind three extraordinary garden masterpieces: Shalimar Bagh, Nishat Bagh, and Chashme Shahi. These are the most visited Srinagar tourist places after Dal Lake, and rightly so. All three sit within 5 km of each other on the eastern shore of Dal Lake, and we always recommend covering them in a single half-day of Srinagar local sightseeing.

  • Shalimar Bagh — The Grandest Mughal Garden in Srinagar: Built by Emperor Jahangir in 1619 for his queen Nur Jahan, Shalimar Bagh (also known as Shalamar Bagh or Shalimar Garden) is the grandest and most historically significant of the three Mughal gardens in Srinagar. Four terraced levels rise from the lake's edge, connected by a central water channel with cascading fountains. The 400-year-old chinar trees lining the central avenue are magnificent — enormous, ancient, and turning blood-red in October. The Sound & Light show on summer evenings is theatrical and worth staying for.
  • Entry: ₹24 Indians / ₹600 foreigners | 9 am – 7 pm daily | Best in spring & October

  • Nishat Bagh — Kashmir's Garden of Joy: The largest Mughal garden in Kashmir, Nishat Bagh (also called Nishat Garden or Nishant Garden), was built by Asif Khan—Nur Jahan's brother—in 1633. Twelve terraced levels rise 137 meters from Dal Lake to the mountainside, and the view from the top—Dal Lake spread below, snow peaks behind—is one of the finest panoramas in all of Srinagar. The garden blooms with tulips, irises, and roses in spring, and the chinar trees turn the terraces golden-red in October. Also known locally as Nishat Bagh, Srinagar.
  • Entry: ₹24 Indians / ₹600 foreigners | 7 am – 8 pm daily | 12 terraced levels

  • Chashme Shahi — The Royal Spring Garden: The smallest but most intimate of the Srinagar Mughal gardens, Chashme Shahi (also written Cheshmashahi, Chashma Shahi, or Chashm e Shahi), is built around a natural spring whose water is said to be medicinal. Built by Shah Jahan in 1632, it has three terraces and a beautiful central cascade. The spring water is cold, clean, and slightly carbonated—locals swear by it for digestion. It is the least crowded of the three gardens and the best for peaceful photography and a quiet hour with a view over Dal Lake.
  • Entry: ₹24 Indians | 9 am – 7 pm daily | Quietest of the three gardens

    Pro Tip — Mughal Garden Circuit: Visit all three gardens in one afternoon. Start at Chashme Shahi (opens early, least crowded), move to Nishat Bagh (walk the 12 terraces for the full view), and end at Shalimar Bagh for the Sound & Light show in summer evenings. A private cab for the circuit costs ₹800–₹1,200. The best times to visit are in spring (April–May) for the flowers and in October for the chinar color.

    → Full guide: Srinagar Mughal gardens — visitor guide with timings & entry fees

    → Detailed: Shalimar Bagh Srinagar — history, timings & photos · Nishat Garden Srinagar guide · Chashme Shahi Garden guide

    Tulip Garden Srinagar — Asia's Largest & Kashmir's Spring Crown

    The Indira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden—known as Tulip Garden Srinagar or Tulip Garden Kashmir—is the centerpiece of Srinagar, Kashmir, tourism in the spring. Spread across 30 hectares on the Zabarwan hillside overlooking Dal Lake, it hosts over 1.5 million tulips across 60+ varieties. When it blooms every March and April, the hillside erupts in a patchwork of red, yellow, pink, white, purple, and orange that draws visitors from across the country.

    When Does the Tulip Garden Open in Srinagar?

    The Tulip Garden typically opens in the last week of March and closes by mid-April—a window of just 3–4 weeks. The exact opening date varies by 7–10 days each year depending on winter snowfall and spring temperature. The Tulip Festival of Kashmir is held in the first week of April with cultural performances. Visit in the first two weeks of April for peak bloom. By late April, the blooms fade rapidly.

    DetailInformation
    Full NameIndira Gandhi Memorial Tulip Garden
    LocationZabarwan hills, opposite Dal Lake, Srinagar
    Tulip Varieties60+ varieties, 1.5 million+ tulips
    Open SeasonLate March to mid-April (3-4 weeks only)
    Timings9:00 AM to 7:30 PM
    Entry Fee₹50 (Adults) · ₹25 (Children) · ₹200+ (Foreigners)
    Distance from Dal Lake2 km (10 min by road)
    Tulip FestivalAnnual festival held in April with cultural programs

    Important — Plan Your Dates Around This: The Tulip Garden is open only 3–4 weeks a year. If you want to see the tulip season in Kashmir, your travel dates must align precisely. Contact Namaste Yatra Travels for the exact tulip garden opening date for 2026—we track this every season.

    → Full guide: Tulip Garden Srinagar — timings, ticket price, best time & photos

    Shankaracharya Temple — The Best View in Srinagar

    If you want to see all of Srinagar spread below you—Dal Lake, the houseboats, the Jhelum River, the Mughal gardens, and on clear days the distant Himalayan ranges—you must climb Shankaracharya Hill. This ancient Shiva temple, perched 1,000 feet above the valley floor on Takht-e-Sulaiman hill, is one of the best tourist places in Srinagar for its combination of religious significance and panoramic city views.

    The temple itself dates to the 9th century CE, though the hilltop has been a sacred site for far longer. The approach is 243 stone steps from the road or a short drive to the midpoint. The atmosphere at the summit — quiet, devout, and above the city noise — is entirely different from the busy tourist circuit below. Visit at sunset for extraordinary golden-hour light over the valley.

    Detailed Information Timings 7:00 AM – 5:00 PM (winter hours may vary) Entry Fee: Free ID Required: Yes—carry a valid government photo ID Distance from Dal Lake: 4 km (15 min by cab) Best Time to Visit Early morning for clear views; evening for golden hour. Photography is allowed outside but restricted inside the sanctum.

    Hazratbal Shrine — A Must-Visit Place in Srinagar

    The Hazratbal Shrine on the northern shore of Dal Lake is the holiest Muslim shrine in Kashmir and one of the most architecturally stunning must-visit places in Srinagar. The white marble dome and minarets, perfectly reflected in the still lake waters at dusk, make it one of the most photographed sights in the city. The shrine houses a sacred relic—a hair believed to belong to the Prophet Muhammad—displayed publicly on select religious occasions.

    Even for non-Muslim visitors, the shrine is deeply moving. The architecture is exquisite, and the atmosphere of devotion is palpable. It is open to all faiths. Dress modestly—full sleeves, covered legs, and women should carry a head covering. Visit on Friday morning for the full experience of communal prayer. Entry is free.

    Old City Srinagar — What to See Beyond the Tourist Trail

    Most visitors follow the standard Srinagar sightseeing route—Dal Lake, Mughal gardens, and Shankaracharya—and miss Old Srinagar entirely. This is the city's most authentic quarter, and it answers the question of what to see in Srinagar beyond the postcard views.

  • Jamia Masjid — Srinagar's Grand Friday Mosque: Built in 1394 CE by Sultan Sikandar, Srinagar's main congregational mosque seats 33,000 worshippers under a stunning pagoda-style tiered roof supported by 378 wooden pillars—each carved from a single deodar tree. The interior's forest of carved columns in dim light is one of the most atmospheric spaces in the city. Located in the heart of Old Srinagar near Nowhatta Chowk.
  • Free entry | Closed during Friday prayers | Modest dress required

  • The Bund & Craft Markets — Where to Buy Genuine Kashmiri Goods: The Bund—a riverside promenade along the Jhelum River—and the adjacent old-city markets are Srinagar's best shopping destinations. Look for: hand-knotted Kashmiri carpets, pure pashmina shawls (test by pulling through a ring—real pashmina passes, synthetic does not), papier-mâché boxes, walnut wood carvings, Kashmiri saffron (world's finest—buy from certified shops only), dry fruits, and hand-embroidered shawls. Bargain respectfully — it is expected.
  • Best: 10 am – 6 pm | Many shops closed Fridays | Buy saffron from govt emporiums

    More Best Places in Srinagar — Don't Miss These

  • Pari Mahal — The Palace of Fairies: A ruined 17th-century garden palace built by Dara Shikoh on a hilltop with commanding views of Dal Lake and the Srinagar valley. The terraced arched ruins draped in flower gardens and the unobstructed panorama make it a favorite among photographers. Sunset here is exceptional. Entry: ₹30. One of the most underrated picnic spots in Srinagar.
  • Entry: ₹30 | Best at sunset

  • Nagin Lake — Dal Lake's Quieter Sister: Connected to Dal Lake by a narrow channel, Nagin Lake is smaller, cleaner, and significantly less crowded. The houseboats here are generally of a higher standard, and the atmosphere is more private. A favorite among repeat visitors and luxury travelers wanting a quieter Srinagar, Kashmir, tourism experience.

  • Shah Hamdan Mosque (Khanqah-e-Moula): Built in 1395 CE along the Jhelum River, this is one of the finest examples of Kashmiri wooden architecture in existence. The tiered pagoda-style roof, intricate papier-mâché interiors, and riverside location make it one of Srinagar's most beautiful buildings. A short walk from Jamia Masjid in the Old City.

  • Hari Parbat Fort — Srinagar's Overlooked Landmark: This imposing 18th-century fort sits on a rocky hillock above the city, visible from almost everywhere in Srinagar. The fort walls circle the entire hill and enclose several temples and a mosque. An ASI permit is required to enter the fort, but the surrounding pathways offer excellent views of the city and Dal Lake without any entry fee.
  • ASI permit for entry | Views free

  • Floating Post Office — A World Curiosity: One of only a handful of floating post offices in the world, this institution sits in a shikara-shaped houseboat on Dal Lake near Boulevard Road. Send a postcard home with the world's most unusual postmark. Open on working days, 10 am – 4 pm. Free to visit—postage extra.

  • Boulevard Road & Dalgate — The Srinagar View Promenade: The Boulevard Road running along the western shore of Dal Lake is Srinagar's finest Srinagar-view promenade—lined with chinar trees, shikara jetties, craft shops, and restaurants. An evening walk here as the sun turns the lake copper-gold and shikaras glide past is one of Srinagar's great free pleasures. Dalgate at the southern end has a vibrant local market scene.

  • Sri Pratap Singh Museum — Srinagar's Best Museum: Housed in a handsome colonial-era building near Lal Mandi, this is Jammu & Kashmir's main state museum. Collections include Kashmiri miniature paintings, shawls, weapons, natural history, and archaeological finds. Well worth two hours for history and culture enthusiasts. Free entry. Closed Mondays. Open 10 am – 5 pm.
  • Free entry | Closed Mondays | 10 am – 5 pm

    Best Places Near Srinagar — Day Trips Worth Taking

    Srinagar is the perfect base for day trips across the Kashmir Valley. These are the places near Srinagar that every visitor should consider adding to their itinerary.

  • Gulmarg: 56 km · 2 hrs. Gondola to 3,979m, Asia's best ski slopes, wildflower meadows. → Gulmarg guide

  • Pahalgam: 96 km · 3 hrs. Betaab Valley, Aru Valley, Chandanwari, Lidder River walks.

  • Sonmarg: 80 km · 2.5 hrs. Thajiwas Glacier, Sindh River, gateway to Leh-Ladakh → Sonmarg guide

  • Dachigam National Park: 22 km · 45 min. Home to the endangered Hangul deer and Himalayan wildlife.

  • Yusmarg: 47 km · 1.5 hrs. Peaceful meadow ringed by pine forests — far less crowded than Gulmarg.

  • Verinag Spring: 80 km · 2.5 hrs. Source of the Jhelum River — a beautiful Mughal octagonal spring garden.
  • How to Plan Your Srinagar Local Sightseeing — Day by Day

    Based on 12 years of planning Srinagar sightseeing trips, here is the most efficient schedule for covering the best Srinagar tourist places without feeling rushed.

  • Day 1 — Dal Lake, Houseboat & Floating Market: Arrive in Srinagar. Check into your houseboat on Dal Lake. Afternoon: first shikara ride through the lotus gardens and floating market lanes. Evening: a sunset shikara on the open lake as the mountains turn pink. Dinner onboard the houseboat. Sleep to the sound of water.

  • Day 2 — Mughal Garden Circuit & Shankaracharya Temple: Morning: sunrise shikara (book the 6 am slot). After breakfast: drive to Chashme Shahi (quietest, opens early), then Nishat Bagh (12 terraces, full ascent for the view), then Shalimar Bagh (sound & light show in summer evenings). Squeeze in Shankaracharya Temple before or after for the panoramic valley view.

  • Day 3 — Old City, Hazratbal & Shopping: Morning: Hazratbal Shrine on the northern Dal Lake shore. Walk through Jamia Masjid and the Old City lanes—Shah Hamdan Mosque and the Bund craft market. Afternoon: pashmina and saffron shopping at the Bund and Lal Chowk. Optional: Pari Mahal at sunset for the valley panorama.

  • Day 4+ — Gulmarg, Pahalgam or Sonmarg Day Trips: Use Srinagar as your base. Gulmarg day trip (56 km, 2 hrs each way) for the Gondola ride. Pahalgam day trip (96 km, 3 hrs) for Betaab Valley. Sonmarg day trip (80 km, 2.5 hrs) for Thajiwas Glacier. Each makes an excellent full-day excursion on a separate day.
  • Need a Custom Srinagar Itinerary? Namaste Yatra Travels builds fully customized Srinagar sightseeing plans for all group sizes, budgets, and trip durations. Contact us for a free personalised itinerary →

    What Is the Best Time to Visit Srinagar for Sightseeing?

    The best time to visit Srinagar is March to May (spring) for the Tulip Garden bloom and 10–22°C temperatures. June to August is ideal for green valleys and outdoor sightseeing. September to November brings golden chinar foliage and smaller crowds. December to February offers a snow-covered city — magical but cold.

    SeasonMonthsWeather & Experience
    SpringMar – MayTulip Garden, cherry blossoms, almond flowers, clear skies. Best overall season.
    SummerJun – AugLush green valley, lotus blooms on Dal, 18–28°C. Perfect for outdoor sightseeing.
    AutumnSep – NovChinar trees turn gold-red. Saffron harvest. Fewer crowds. Best for photography.
    WinterDec – FebSnow-covered city. Dal Lake at its most dramatic. Gulmarg skiing nearby. -5 to 5°C.

    → Full guide: Best time to visit Srinagar — month-by-month guide

    Best time to visit Kashmir — complete seasonal guide

    Srinagar Sightseeing Tips — From 12 Years & 500+ Trips

  • Book the 6 am shikara, not the 9 am one. The sunrise light on Dal Lake and the floating market activity are incomparable. Late shikara slots miss the magic entirely.
  • Visit the Mughal gardens on a weekday. Weekends and public holidays see significantly more domestic visitors. Weekday mornings are quieter and better for photography.
  • For the Tulip Garden, align your travel dates precisely. The bloom window is just 3–4 weeks. One week late and you miss it entirely until next year. Contact us for the exact opening date.
  • Carry valid government photo ID everywhere. Shankaracharya Temple requires ID. Several city checkpoints may ask for it. Always carry your Aadhaar or passport on Srinagar sightseeing days.
  • Dress modestly at all religious sites. Covered arms and legs, head coverings for women at mosques, and shoes removed at all religious sites—this applies at Hazratbal, Shankaracharya Temple, and Jamia Masjid.
  • Book a private cab for the day, not auto-rickshaws. For Srinagar local sightseeing covering multiple sites, a private cab (₹1,200–₹2,000/day) is far more efficient and comfortable than individual auto-rickshaw hops.
  • Buy saffron and pashmina only from certified government emporiums. Both are heavily adulterated in tourist-facing shops. Our guides always take travelers to verified suppliers.
  • Do not miss the Old City. The tourist circuit can make Srinagar feel like a series of garden gates and lake views. The Old City—Jamia Masjid, the Jhelum riverbank, the medieval wooden architecture—is where the real city lives.
  • Srinagar Tourist Places — Frequently Asked Questions

    What are the top places to visit in Srinagar?

    The top places to visit in Srinagar are Dal Lake (houseboat and shikara), Shalimar Bagh, Nishat Bagh, Chashme Shahi (the three Mughal gardens), Shankaracharya Temple, Hazratbal Shrine, the Tulip Garden (spring only), Jamia Masjid, Pari Mahal, and the Bund craft markets. All can be covered in 3 well-planned days of Srinagar sightseeing.

    How many days are enough for Srinagar sightseeing?

    3 full days is the minimum for complete Srinagar tourist places coverage—Day 1 for Dal Lake and houseboat, Day 2 for the Mughal gardens circuit and Shankaracharya Temple, and Day 3 for Hazratbal, the Old City, and shopping. For day trips to Gulmarg, Pahalgam, and Sonmarg, add 3 more days minimum. → How many days for Kashmir trip?

    What is Srinagar famous for?

    Srinagar is famous for Dal Lake and its traditional houseboats; shikara rides; the three Mughal gardens (Shalimar Bagh, Nishat Bagh, and Chashme Shahi); Asia's largest Tulip Garden; Shankaracharya Temple; Hazratbal Shrine; and world-renowned Kashmiri handicrafts, including pashmina shawls and hand-knotted carpets. It is the summer capital of Jammu & Kashmir and a UNESCO-recognized city of crafts and folk art.

    What is the best time to visit Srinagar for sightseeing?

    March to May is the best time for Srinagar sightseeing—the Tulip Garden blooms, cherry blossoms carpet the gardens, and temperatures are 10–22°C. June to August is ideal for green valleys. September to November brings golden chinar foliage and smaller crowds. December to February is magical under snow but cold (0°C or below). → Best time to visit Srinagar

    What is the entry fee for the Mughal gardens in Srinagar?

    Shalimar Bagh and Nishat Bagh entry fees are ₹24 per person for Indian nationals and ₹600 for foreign nationals. Chashme Shahi also charges ₹24. The Tulip Garden charges ₹50 for adults and ₹25 for children. Shankaracharya Temple and Hazratbal Shrine are free to visit.

    Are there good picnic spots in Srinagar?

    Yes. The best picnic spots in Srinagar include Nishat Bagh (12 terraced levels with Dal Lake views), Pari Mahal (hilltop ruins with valley panoramas), the Nagin Lake shore (quiet and clean), and the Botanical Garden near Chashme Shahi. All are accessible to the public with minimal or no entry fees and make excellent picnic and leisure stops on any Srinagar sightseeing day.

    How do I plan Srinagar local sightseeing transport?

    For Srinagar local sightseeing, a private cab for the day (₹1,200–₹2,000) is the most efficient option—a local driver covers all the Mughal gardens, Shankaracharya Temple, and the Old City in one well-paced day. For Dal Lake, hire a shikara (₹600–₹1,200/hour). Auto-rickshaws work for short city hops at ₹60–₹150 per trip. → Cabs in Srinagar — rates & trusted operators

    What are the best places near Srinagar for day trips?

    The best places near Srinagar for day trips are Gulmarg (56 km, 2 hrs — Gondola ride and ski slopes), Pahalgam (96 km, 3 hrs — Betaab Valley and Aru Valley), Sonmarg (80 km, 2.5 hrs — Thajiwas Glacier), and Dachigam National Park (22 km — wildlife sanctuary). All make excellent full-day excursions from Srinagar. → Kashmir tour itinerary guide

    Amit Raj

    Kashmir Travel Expert & Founder, Namaste Yatra Travels

    Amit Raj has personally travelled Kashmir in every season—spring tulips, summer treks, autumn chinar colors, and winter snowfall—for over 12 consecutive years. He has planned and executed more than 500 Kashmir tour packages for couples, families, honeymooners, and solo travelers from every major Indian city. Every itinerary, cost figure, and tip in this guide comes from direct, on-the-ground experience — not from secondary research. He founded Namaste Yatra Travels specifically to make Kashmir trips accessible, reliable, and unforgettable for every kind of traveler.
  • Experience — 12 Seasons in Kashmir
  • Expertise — 500+ Trips Planned
  • Authority — Local Ground Network

Explore More Kashmir Guides

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Kashmir Tour PackagesComplete guide — root pillar
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Tulip Garden SrinagarTimings, tickets & best time
Srinagar Mughal GardensShalimar, Nishat, Chashme Shahi
Gulmarg Tour PackageGondola, ski & stays
Sonmarg Valley GuideThajiwas Glacier & day trips
Best Time to Visit SrinagarMonth-by-month guide
5-Star Hotels SrinagarLuxury stays & houseboats
Budget Hotels Dal LakeBest value picks
Cabs in SrinagarLocal transport & taxi fares
5 Nights 6 Days PackageMost popular itinerary
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Topics Covered

Srinagar TourismKashmir Travel GuideDal LakeMughal GardensTulip Garden SrinagarKashmir Tour PackagesPlaces to Visit in Srinagar