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12 Places to Visit Near Delhi in June 2026 for a 2-Day Trip (All Under 300 KM)

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Delhi’s southwest monsoon is forecast to arrive June 27–30, 2026, ending a month that averages 32°C with peaks of 44°C and 22 rainy days (IMD/AccuWeather, 2026). The 12 best places to visit near Delhi in June — Rishikesh, Mussoorie, Lansdowne, Kasauli, Kanatal, Dhanaulti, Neemrana, Bharatpur, Morni Hills, Damdama, Agra, and Mathura-Vrindavan — all sit within a 300 km radius and work as 2-day weekend trips.

Delhi’s June is the cruelest month before the rains arrive. The city averages a 32°C mean with a 44°C peak high and humidity climbing from 72% on June 1 to 77% by June 14 (AccuWeather Delhi June 2026). The India Meteorological Department confirmed the southwest monsoon arrived on the Kerala coast on June 4, 2026, with Delhi-NCR expecting onset between June 27 and June 30, 2026 (NewsX/IMD). That window — late June into the first July rains — is when the surrounding hills, wetlands, and heritage towns peak in mood and value.

This guide ranks the 12 best places to visit near Delhi in June 2026, each chosen for a doable 2-day trip under 300 km one-way. You will find drive times, monsoon-safety notes, places to visit, things to do, and a tested itinerary for each — no padding, no filler entries.

In this Blog

Why Plan a Trip from Delhi in June 2026?

June is the swing month and exactly why so many travelers search for places to visit near Delhi in June each year. The weather in New Delhi in June pushes the heat index past 45°C through the first three weeks, then collapses into thunderstorms once the monsoon trough arrives. With the IMD forecasting below-normal seasonal rainfall at 90% of the Long Period Average due to a strengthening El Niño (SundayGuardian/IMD, 2026), Northwest India will still see substantial rain — just slightly less than the LPA average.

For travelers, this is good news. The classic monsoon tourist places in India near Delhi — the Garhwal foothills, Shivalik ranges, and Rajasthan’s Aravalli belt — stay accessible without the road washouts that hit deeper Himachal and Uttarakhand in July. The places to visit near Delhi in monsoon listed here all sit on routes the IMD has not flagged for severe landslide risk in June 2026.

1. Rishikesh, Uttarakhand — Best Overall River & Spiritual Escape (240 KM)

Image credit: 
Niloy Banerjee via unsplash

Rishikesh, Rishikesh, India

Rishikesh tops our list of places to visit near Delhi in june because the Ganga at full pre-monsoon flow plus 22–32°C foothill air gives an immediate 10–12°C drop from Delhi’s heat. The drive takes 5.5 hours via NH-334 (Delhi → Meerut → Roorkee → Haridwar → Rishikesh) and the route stays in the plains until the very last stretch, so monsoon road risk is minimal.

Why it’s great:

  • 22-32°C foothill air — a 10-12°C drop from Delhi’s June heat.
  • Ganga at peak pre-monsoon flow — the strongest river current of the year.
  • Yoga, adventure, food, and spirituality stacked in one walkable stretch.
  • Rafting still operates through early-to-mid June (closes June 30).
  • Tapovan cafe strip rivals any beach-town vibe in India.

Places to visit:

  • Triveni Ghat — Site of the daily sunset Ganga Aarti, where the Ganga meets the Yamuna and the mythical Saraswati. The 30-minute lamp ceremony at 7 PM is free and draws around 2,000 devotees nightly even in low season.
  • Beatles Ashram (Chaurasi Kutia) — The abandoned 1968 ashram where the Beatles wrote much of the White Album, now covered in monumental street-art murals. Entry ₹150, open 10 AM-4 PM.
  • Lakshman Jhula & Ram Jhula — Twin suspension bridges across the Ganga linking ashrams, temples, and the cafe strip. Lakshman Jhula is under repair; Ram Jhula remains the active crossing.
  • Neelkanth Mahadev Temple — A 32 km drive up into the hills, one of the most revered Shiva temples in Uttarakhand. Open 6 AM-7 PM, no entry fee.

Things to do:

  • Ganga rafting (12 km, 18 km, or 26 km stretches) — Operates until June 30 only. ₹600–1,500 per person depending on stretch; book at any Tapovan agency.
  • Sunrise yoga at Anand Prakash or Parmarth Niketan — Drop-in classes ₹500–800. No prior booking needed for general Hatha or Vinyasa sessions.
  • Bungee at Jumpin Heights, Mohan Chatti — India’s highest fixed bungee at 83 m. ₹3,700 per jump; operates through monsoon unlike rafting.
  • Evening Ganga Aarti at Parmarth Niketan — Free, 7 PM daily, includes guided chanting on the ghat steps with floating diya offerings.
  • Cafe-hop the Tapovan strip — Little Buddha Cafe, Cafe Karma, and Pyramid Cafe each have rooftop Ganga views and full vegan menus.

Heads-up: Commercial Ganga rafting suspends June 30 for the monsoon season. Book early-June dates if rafting is the goal.

Best Places to Stay in Rishikesh

Room 1 GF @ Vista Divine
Grey 1 BHK @ Nirvanika Wellness

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — drive in, evening aarti, Tapovan cafe dinner. Day 2 — sunrise yoga, Beatles Ashram, lunch, drive back.

2. Mussoorie, Uttarakhand — Best Classic Hill Station (280 KM)

Image credit: RAHUL KUMAR via unsplash

The “Queen of Hills” sits 280 km from Delhi at 2,000 m elevation, where June temperatures hold at 16–24°C — a 16°C drop from Delhi’s afternoon high. Mussoorie is the most accessible full hill-station experience among places to visit near new delhi, with the drive taking 6 hours via NH-334 and the Dehradun-Mussoorie ghat road.

Why it’s great:

  • Full hill-station experience at the closest 2,000 m altitude from Delhi.
  • 16°C drop from Delhi’s afternoon highs even on a sunny June day.
  • Walkable Mall Road, colonial-era Landour, and Doon Valley views in one trip.
  • Strong cafe and bakery culture rare for North Indian hill stations.
  • Direct connections to Dhanaulti, Kanatal, and Tehri for itinerary stretching.

Places to visit:

  • Kempty Falls — A 40-foot cascade 15 km from Mall Road that triples in volume during early monsoon. Entry ₹50, parking ₹100; carry a change of clothes for the wade-in pool.
  • Mall Road — Pedestrian-only after 5 PM, runs from Library Chowk to Kulri Bazaar. Lined with colonial shops, ice-cream stalls, and the heritage Cambridge Book Depot.
  • Lal Tibba — Mussoorie’s highest point at 2,275 m with telescope viewing toward Banderpunch and Nanda Devi peaks (clear-weather only). The British-era observation post sits 6 km from Mall Road.
  • Landour — The upper-Mussoorie cantonment of authors and old-Hollywood expats. Visit Char Dukan’s four-stall square, Kellogg’s Memorial Church, and provisioner Anil Prakash at Sister’s Bazaar.

Things to do:

  • Cable car to Gun Hill — The second-highest point in Mussoorie at 2,024 m, accessed via an 8-minute ropeway from Mall Road (₹150 round trip). Best at sunset.
  • Camel’s Back Road walk — A 3 km flat loop with a natural rock formation shaped like a camel’s hump. The sunset stretch toward Kulri is the prettiest 30 minutes in town.
  • Landour Bakehouse breakfast — Colonial-era recipes including a 60-year-old banana-bread recipe and a Doon Valley view from the deck.
  • Happy Valley Tibetan Buddhist quarter — Mussoorie hosted the Dalai Lama in 1959; the Tibetan colony and IAS Academy here reflect that history. Free entry to the prayer hall.
  • Kempty Falls dip — Pre-monsoon water levels make this one of the few months the pool is safe and warm enough for an actual swim, not just a wade.

Heads-up: Friday-evening Delhi traffic stretches the Dehradun-Mussoorie ghat road into 2-hour crawls. Leave Delhi by 5 AM Saturday or Thursday night.

Villas to Stay in Mussoorie

Arncliff Villa
Berg @ Chalet Rushli – Kanatal

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — Kempty Falls, Mall Road, sunset at Camel’s Back. Day 2 — Landour breakfast, Lal Tibba, Sister’s Bazaar, drive back via Dehradun.

3. Lansdowne, Uttarakhand — Best for Quiet Off-Beat Pine Forests (250 KM)

Lansdowne is the under-the-radar pick among best places to visit in monsoon near delhi. This Garhwal Rifles cantonment town at 1,700 m holds onto a colonial-village hush you won’t find in Mussoorie or Nainital, and the drive is just 250 km via NH-534 — about 6 hours including breaks.

Why it’s great:

  • Cantonment town means no high-rises, no chain hotels, and zero touts.
  • 14–22°C daytime range — coolest among non-Garhwal-interior options.
  • Lower weekend crowds than any other hill station on this list.
  • Pine and deodar forest trails start from the town center itself.
  • Strong dark-sky conditions; visible Milky Way on clear nights.

Places to visit:

  • Bhulla Tal — A 6-acre lake built by the Garhwal Rifles regiment, surrounded by pine and oak. Paddle boats run ₹150 for 30 minutes; cafe and bird-watching deck on the eastern bank.
  • Tip-N-Top (Tiffin Top) — The highest viewpoint in Lansdowne at 1,734 m, reached via a 2 km uphill walk. On a clear morning you can see Chaukhamba and Trishul peaks.
  • St. Mary’s Church — Built 1895 in stone, the colonial church now functions as a Garhwal Rifles museum with regimental medals, period uniforms, and old battle photographs.
  • Bhim Pakora — A pair of balanced boulders that wobble when pushed but never fall; local legend ties them to the Mahabharata. Free entry, 5 km from town.

Things to do:

  • Garhwali Mess war memorial walk — The regiment’s officers’ mess preserves 19th-century campaign maps and silverware. Civilian entry by ₹100 donation; ask the duty officer at the gate.
  • Trek to Tarkeshwar Mahadev Temple — 38 km from Lansdowne through deodar forest, a Shiva temple at 1,800 m surrounded by giant cedar trees. Best done as a Day 2 morning loop with a hired car.
  • Nature walks at Snow View Point and Hawa Ghar — Both within 4 km of town, both are quiet pine-grove walks with bench seating ideal for sunrise reading.
  • Visit Daragahi Sain Shrine — A Sufi shrine in the cantonment area, less touristy than the bigger temples; a contemplative 20-minute visit. Quiet hours 4–6 PM.
  • Forest birdwatching at sunrise — Himalayan bulbul, oriental turtle dove, and great barbet are common in the pine belt around Bhulla Tal. Carry binoculars.

Heads-up: The town shuts early — restaurants close by 9 PM. Plan dinner at your hotel.

Best Cottages to Stay in Lansdowne

Flame @ Hill Top Heaven
tatvam

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — afternoon arrival, Bhulla Tal, Tip-N-Top hike. Day 2 — sunrise at Tip-N-Top, brunch, Garhwali Mess museum, drive back.

4. Kasauli, Himachal Pradesh — Best for First-Time Hill Travelers (290 KM)

Image credit: Zonayed Ahmed via unsplash

Kasauli sits 290 km from Delhi at 1,927 m on the edge of the Shivaliks — a 5.5-hour drive via NH-44 (Delhi → Ambala → Pinjore → Kasauli). Like Lansdowne, it’s another cantonment town, which means clean roads, low crowds, and pine-scented walking trails everywhere. Temperatures in June hold at 15–24°C.

Why it’s great:

  • 5.5-hour highway drive — almost entirely on a 4-lane NH till Pinjore.
  • 15–24°C daytime, cool enough that AC is irrelevant in June.
  • Mall Road end-to-end is a 15-minute walk — antidote to Shimla.
  • Strong heritage hotel inventory in restored colonial bungalows.
  • Easy combine with Pinjore Gardens and Chail (45 km extension if going for 3 days).

Places to visit:

  • Monkey Point — Kasauli’s highest point at 1,927 m, set inside an IAF station. Visitors must surrender phones and ID at the gate. The 4 km uphill walk ends at a small Hanuman temple with a 360° Shivalik view.
  • Christ Church Kasauli — Built 1853 in neo-Gothic style with stained glass imported from England, one of the oldest churches in North India. Services Sundays at 10 AM; visiting hours 7 AM–7 PM.
  • Sunset Point (Mall Road end) — A flat 1.5 km walk from the central square ending at a Shivalik panorama. The local chai cart sets up daily by 5 PM — bring a flask if you prefer your own.
  • Manki Point Hanuman Temple — A small Hanuman temple at the summit of Manki Point ridge, the spot Hindu mythology says Hanuman rested at while carrying the Sanjeevani herb.

Things to do:

  • Walk the Gilbert Trail — A 1.5 km flat nature trail along a Shivalik ridge, lined with oak and rhododendron. The most photogenic 30 minutes in town and accessible to all fitness levels.
  • Kasauli Brewery visit — Asia’s oldest distillery, founded 1820. Tours require pre-booking by email, but the brewery shop sells full bottles of the in-house single malt without notice.
  • Day-trip to Pinjore Gardens — 22 km downhill, a 17th-century Mughal garden with terraced fountains. Best visited en route back to Delhi (₹35 entry, opens 7 AM).
  • Old Lawrence School heritage visit — Established 1847, a heritage boarding school whose campus is open to visitors on weekend mornings. Ask at the main gate.
  • Mall Road shopping — Handwoven Himachali shawls, walnut-wood crafts, and cherry preserves from the army welfare canteen. Cash works better than UPI here.

Heads-up: Many heritage hotels here have a 2-night minimum on weekends. Confirm before booking.

Cottages to Stay in Kasauli

Juniper W/ Pvt Jacuzzi @ Sirmour Baag
Château du Raga Penthouse

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — Monkey Point, Sunset Point, Mall Road dinner. Day 2 — Christ Church, Gilbert Trail walk, brunch, drive back via Pinjore Gardens.

5. Kanatal, Uttarakhand — Best for Adventure Camping (300 KM)

Image credit: 
TEJASHVI VERMA via unsplash

Kanatal is the best place to visit in june near delhi for travelers who want hill-station weather without hill-station crowds. At 2,590 m and exactly 300 km from Delhi via Mussoorie, Kanatal is a tiny ridgetop village with apple orchards, deodar forest, and a string of adventure camps along the Tehri-Chamba road. June temperatures: 13–22°C.

Why it’s great:

  • 2,590 m altitude — the coolest spot on this list (13–22°C in June).
  • Adventure camps run rappelling, zip-line, and night treks daily through monsoon.
  • Genuine dark-sky village — Milky Way visible to the naked eye.
  • Apple orchards bear fruit through June — paid orchard walks are common.
  • Connects naturally with Dhanaulti and Tehri Dam for a tighter 3-day plan.

Places to visit:

  • Surkanda Devi Temple — At 3,030 m, one of the 51 Shakti Peethas of Hindu tradition, reached via a 2 km uphill trek from the road head. Panoramic Garhwal views including Bandarpoonch on clear days.
  • Tehri Dam viewpoint — Asia’s highest dam at 260 m, holding back the Bhagirathi to form Tehri Lake. The Koti Colony viewpoint shows the spillway and submerged stupas of old Tehri in dry months.
  • Kodia Jungle — A stretch of dense deodar and oak forest, locally believed to host leopards and Himalayan black bears. Guided nature walks ₹500 per group through camp operators.
  • Dhanaulti Eco-Parks (8 km from Kanatal) — Amber and Dhara Forest Department parks with rope bridges, swings, and old-growth deodar canopy. Entry ₹35.

Things to do:

  • Rappelling and zip-line at Kanatal Camps — Most resorts run a daily 4-hour adventure block including rappelling, valley crossing, and zip-line for ₹1,500 per person.
  • Bonfire and stargazing nights — At 2,590 m and without local light pollution, the night sky here is genuinely Bortle Class 3. Camps run guided star-spotting through summer.
  • Boating at Tehri Lake — The reservoir has motor and pedal boats; cottage industries run jet-ski rides from Koti for ₹500 per 10 minutes.
  • Sunrise trek to Surkanda Devi — Leave camp by 5:30 AM to catch the temple at first light and clear cloud-cover before the day heats up.
  • Apple orchard walks — June is fruit-bearing season; local orchards welcome paid walk-ins at ₹100 per head with informal guided tasting.

Heads-up: Limited dining outside hotel camps. Pack snacks if you are particular about food.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — arrival, Surkanda Devi trek, bonfire dinner. Day 2 — Tehri Dam viewpoint, Dhanaulti Eco Park stop on return.

6. Dhanaulti, Uttarakhand — Best for Apple Orchards & Eco-Parks (290 KM)

Image credit: Terra Slaybaugh via unsplash

Dhanaulti pairs naturally with Kanatal but earns its own slot among places to visit near delhi in monsoon for the Eco-Park network and apple-orchard belt that becomes brilliantly green in late June. Sitting at 2,286 m on the same Mussoorie-Tehri ridge, the drive is 290 km / 6 hours via NH-7 and Mussoorie bypass.

Why it’s great:

  • 14–23°C through June — second-coolest pick on this list after Kanatal.
  • Forest Department Eco-Parks are well-maintained and family-friendly.
  • Apple orchards line the Mussoorie-Tehri road from kilometre 28 onward.
  • Less developed than Mussoorie — true village quiet at night.
  • Combines easily with Mussoorie for a Day 2 stop on the return.

Places to visit:

  • Amber & Dhara Eco-Parks — Twin Uttarakhand Forest Department parks at 2,250 m, both with deodar canopy trails, swings, and rope bridges. ₹35 entry; open 9 AM-6 PM.
  • Potato Farm Trek route — A 4 km walk from the main road through commercial potato farms and onto a forest viewpoint above Tehri Dam. Best between sunrise and 9 AM.
  • Surkanda Devi Temple base — Shared with Kanatal, but the trek to Surkanda is actually closer from the Dhanaulti side (8 km vs Kanatal’s 14 km).
  • Apple orchard belt along Mussoorie-Tehri road — Dhanaulti is at the edge of Garhwal’s apple-growing region. Orchards from kilometre 28 onward welcome paid walk-ins.

Things to do:

  • Rope-bridge and rappelling at Amber Eco-Park — Forest Department–run adventure setup, ₹300 per person, ideal for first-timers and kids.
  • Photograph the Garhwal range from Adventure Park viewpoint — The highest open vantage in Dhanaulti town. Free entry; best clarity 5:30–7 AM.
  • Hanuman Mandir at the eastern ridge — A small temple at the east edge of town with the cleanest sunrise view in the Mussoorie-Dhanaulti belt.
  • Eat at Dhaba Tahli (forest dhaba) — Ridge-side roadside dhaba with the best aloo paratha and pahadi dal on the route. Cash only.
  • Dawn birdwatching in deodar canopy — Dhanaulti hosts the Himalayan monal and koklass pheasant. Carry binoculars; best between 5:30 and 7 AM.

Heads-up: Cell signal is patchy. Download Google Maps offline before leaving Mussoorie.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — Eco-Parks, Potato Farm walk. Day 2 — Surkanda Devi sunrise, return via Mussoorie for Mall Road lunch.

7. Neemrana, Rajasthan — Best Heritage Fort Weekend (120 KM)

Image credit: 
Arpit Jain via unsplash

Neemrana is the closest serious heritage stay among places to visit near Delhi in June, and the only one on this list reachable in under 3 hours. The 15th-century Neemrana Fort-Palace sits 120 km southwest on NH-48 (Delhi-Jaipur highway) — drive time 2.5 hours flat. The compressed itinerary makes this the ideal “leave Saturday morning, back Sunday evening” pick.

Why it’s great:

  • 2.5-hour straight-shot drive on the Delhi-Jaipur expressway.
  • A genuine 15th-century fort experience, not a heritage replica.
  • 12-level vertical layout means a half-day of in-fort exploration.
  • India’s longest fort zip-line (1.2 km) operates daily through June.
  • Easy add-on extensions to Sariska Tiger Reserve or Alwar.

Places to visit:

  • Neemrana Fort-Palace — A 1464-built Aravalli hilltop fort across 12 vertical levels, now a heritage hotel and the central attraction. Day visit allowed for ₹2,500 per person (includes lunch and pool access).
  • Neemrana Baoli — A 9-storey stepwell, 100 m deep, built in the 1700s. Free entry; located 3 km from the fort, often missed by day-trippers.
  • Sariska Tiger Reserve — 100 km southeast, a 2-hour drive. June is hot for safaris but the reserve runs morning slots from 6 AM. Pre-book via Rajasthan Tourism Online.
  • Kesroli Hill Fort — 35 km from Neemrana, a 14th-century fort run as a Neemrana group property. Worth a half-day visit for a quieter heritage experience.

Things to do:

  • Zip-line over the Neemrana Fort moat — India’s longest fort zip-line at 1.2 km across 5 separate cables. ₹1,800 per person; operates 9 AM–5 PM, weather permitting.
  • Sunset at the infinity pool — One of North India’s most-photographed hotel views, with the Aravalli range as the backdrop. Hotel guests only.
  • Self-guided heritage walk inside the fort — Cover all 12 levels including hanging gardens, vintage Chambers, and audience halls. Map available at reception.
  • Wine tasting at Sula’s Alwar tasting room — 60 km away at Hotel Rajwada Resort. Worth a half-day detour if you have flexible Day 2 plans.
  • Camel and bullock-cart village rides — Arranged through the fort concierge, ₹500 for an hour through the surrounding farmland.

Heads-up: Rates triple on long weekends. Book at least 6 weeks ahead for June Saturdays.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — fort tour, zip-line, sunset infinity pool. Day 2 — Baoli, Sariska Tiger Reserve gate or drive to Sariska Palace, return.

8. Bharatpur (Keoladeo National Park), Rajasthan — Best for Birdwatching (220 KM)

Image credit: 
Madhushree Narayan via unsplash

Bharatpur ranks among the top places to visit in india in monsoon for one reason: the UNESCO World Heritage Keoladeo National Park goes from dry winter staging ground to a 29-square-km wetland complex once pre-monsoon showers fill the bunds. June marks the start of resident-bird breeding — painted storks, Indian darters, herons, and openbill storks build colony nests in the Babul trees. Drive is 220 km via NH-21, roughly 4.5 hours.

Why it’s great:

  • UNESCO World Heritage wetland comes alive with breeding-season birds in June.
  • 4.5-hour highway drive — quickest way to a true wildlife reserve from Delhi.
  • 200+ painted-stork nesting pairs concentrate at the central wetland.
  • Pairs naturally with Mathura-Vrindavan on the return route (45 km detour).
  • Significantly cheaper than Corbett or Ranthambore for similar wildlife experience.

Places to visit:

  • Keoladeo National Park (Ghana Bird Sanctuary) — The UNESCO World Heritage 29 sq km wetland. Entry ₹75 for Indians; rickshaw plus naturalist guide ₹250/hour. Gates open 6 AM.
  • Lohagarh Fort — The “Iron Fort” of the Jat kings, never breached in three Mughal sieges. Within Bharatpur city; entry ₹50; museum closes 5 PM.
  • Government Museum Bharatpur — Inside Lohagarh Fort, with a strong collection of Jat-era weaponry, Mughal-era inscriptions, and Bharatpur royal portraits.
  • Deeg Palace — 32 km from Bharatpur, an 18th-century Jat summer palace with 12 garden-style courtyards and Mughal-style water-jet systems. Entry ₹25.

Things to do:

  • Sunrise cycle-rickshaw safari at Keoladeo — The park has trained naturalist rickshaw-pullers; the 4-hour dawn slot is when birds are most active and the light is best for photography.
  • Bicycle the 12 km Keoladeo loop — Rent at the entrance for ₹50/day; less crowded than rickshaw routes and you can stop wherever you want.
  • Painted-stork breeding colony walk — The Babul-tree nests at the central wetland host 200+ nesting pairs in June-July. Best viewed from the Shanti Kuteer hide.
  • Bharatpur old-town food trail — Brijwasi Royal does the classic Rajasthan thali; Kakaji is the go-to for kachori-sabzi breakfasts. Both walking distance from Lohagarh’s east gate.
  • Photograph the wetland at golden hour — Reflections of monsoon clouds across the central pool are unique to the June-September window.

Heads-up: Carry insect repellent. The park gets buggy after pre-monsoon rains.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — afternoon arrival, evening park walk. Day 2 — sunrise rickshaw safari, Lohagarh Fort, drive back via Mathura.

9. Morni Hills, Haryana — Best Hill Drive Without Leaving the Plains (250 KM)

Image credit: Priyank Pathak via unsplash

Morni is the only proper hill station in Haryana and one of the more unexpected places to visit near new delhi for a 2-day getaway. At 1,267 m in the Shivalik foothills, 250 km from Delhi via NH-44 and Panchkula, Morni is a 5-hour drive that ends with twin lakes — Tikkar Taal — set in a sub-tropical forest.

Why it’s great:

  • The only real hill station inside Haryana — no inter-state permit hassles.
  • Twin lakes (Tikkar Taal) and Haryana’s highest peak (Karoh) in one stop.
  • 19–29°C in June — 10°C lower than Delhi and cool enough to skip AC.
  • No foreign tourists, modest local crowds even on weekends.
  • Combines with Pinjore Gardens and Chandigarh on the return drive.

Places to visit:

  • Tikkar Taal — Twin lakes (a 1 km hill ridge separates them) in a 2 sq km basin. The larger lake has paddle boats; the smaller is for fishing. Haryana Tourism’s complex sits between the two.
  • Karoh Peak — Haryana’s highest natural point at 1,514 m, reached via a 4 km moderate trek from Tikkar Taal. The summit has a small temple and a panoramic Shivalik view.
  • Morni Fort ruins — A Mughal-era hilltop fort, mostly ruined but with intact bastions and original cisterns. Free entry; 6 km from Tikkar Taal.
  • Adventure Park, Morni — Haryana Tourism’s commercial outdoor space with rappelling, rock climbing, and a children’s zip-line. Open 9 AM–6 PM.

Things to do:

  • Paddle boating at Tikkar Taal — ₹150 for 30 minutes, available 8 AM–7 PM. The larger lake takes pedal boats; the smaller is for catch-and-release fishing.
  • Rappelling and rock climbing at Adventure Park — ₹500–1,000 per activity, instructors are NIM-certified. Good for first-time climbers and groups.
  • Birdwatching at Tikkar Taal — Indian peafowl, hornbills, and 80+ documented bird species in the surrounding forest. Dawn is best; the dam-edge boardwalk is the prime spot.
  • Pinjore Gardens stopover on return — 25 km downhill, the Mughal-Sikh terrace garden with fountains and the Yadavindra Botanical Park. ₹35 entry.
  • Tikkar-to-Karoh ridge hike — A 4 km point-to-point through dense sub-tropical forest. Half-day activity; carry water and start before 8 AM.

Heads-up: Limited cell coverage and only 4-5 hotels. Book direct, not through aggregators.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — Tikkar Taal, paddle boating, sunset at Adventure Park. Day 2 — Karoh Peak trek, Morni Fort, drive back via Pinjore Gardens.

10. Damdama Lake & Sohna, Haryana — Best for a Single-Night Reset (60 KM)

Image redit: Ekabhishek via wikimedia commons

If you want the shortest entry on this list of places to visit near delhi in monsoon, Damdama Lake delivers. Sitting just 60 km southeast of Delhi via the Faridabad-Sohna road, this 3,000-acre lake in the Aravalli foothills is reachable in 90 minutes. The Sohna sulphur hot springs sit 7 km away.

Why it’s great:

  • 90-minute drive — leave Delhi after work on Friday, eat dinner lakeside.
  • Lake hits its annual peak surface area only in monsoon months.
  • Natural sulphur hot springs at Sohna with documented medicinal value.
  • Hot air balloon rides operate over the lake on weekends.
  • Easiest “reset weekend” from Delhi when you have only one night to spare.

Places to visit:

  • Damdama Lake — Up to 3,000 acres at its monsoon peak, set in the Aravalli foothills 60 km from Delhi. Free entry; boating ₹100 for 30 minutes from the Botanix jetty.
  • Sohna Sulphur Springs — Natural hot mineral springs roughly 7 km from Damdama, with documented medicinal value for skin conditions. Best accessed via the Royal Tulip resort’s day pass.
  • Damdama Hot Air Balloon Pad — Weekend-only balloon rides over the lake, organized by Sky Waltz Balloon Safari. ₹12,500 per person for a 1-hour flight.
  • Aravalli Bio-Diversity Park (Faridabad side) — 30 km from Damdama on the way back to Delhi, a quiet wetland-and-forest reserve with marked walking trails.

Things to do:

  • Boating and pedal-boats at Damdama Lake — Haryana Tourism Botanix and the Aravali Golf Club both offer lake access. Combined with breakfast packages.
  • Sulphur-springs day pass at Royal Tulip Sohna — ₹2,500 per person includes lunch and access to the natural hot-spring pool. The minerals are said to ease skin conditions.
  • Cycling on the Sohna-Mewat road — 20 km flat ride along the Aravalli base. Rentals available at Botanix from ₹300 per day with helmet.
  • Sunrise hot-air balloon ride — Books out 2-3 weeks ahead. Sky Waltz pad opens at 5 AM; balloons land 50 minutes later on a designated farm plot.
  • Bird-watch at Damdama wetland edges — Migratory ducks return early August but resident herons and ibises are abundant June-July at dawn.

Heads-up: Day-trippers crowd the lake on Sundays. Reserve Saturday for the lake and Sunday for Sohna hot springs.

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — afternoon arrival, lakeside dinner. Day 2 — boating, Sohna hot springs, lunch, drive back.

11. Agra, Uttar Pradesh — Best for Heritage with Monsoon Light (230 KM)

Image credit: Koushik Chowdavarapu via unsplash

Agra makes the list of best places to visit in monsoon near delhi because monsoon-overcast skies turn the Taj Mahal’s marble into a softer, more photogenic surface than the hard mid-summer glare of May. The Yamuna also returns to flow by late June, framing the Taj from the Mehtab Bagh side. Drive is 230 km via Yamuna Expressway, 3.5 hours.

Why it’s great:

  • 3.5-hour expressway drive — quickest route to a UNESCO World Heritage Site.
  • Monsoon-cloud light flatters the Taj’s white marble far better than May glare.
  • Yamuna refills by late June, restoring the Mehtab Bagh reflection view.
  • Three UNESCO World Heritage Sites within a 12 km radius (Taj, Fort, Fatehpur Sikri).
  • Petha and Mughlai food trail is best done in cool monsoon weather.

Places to visit:

  • Taj Mahal — UNESCO World Heritage 17th-century mausoleum, the headline visit. Entry ₹50 (Indians), ₹1,100 (foreigners); closed Fridays. Sunrise is the only crowd-free window.
  • Agra Fort — UNESCO World Heritage 16th-century Mughal fort, the seat of the empire until 1638. Entry ₹50. The Diwan-i-Khas balcony has the best across-the-Yamuna Taj view.
  • Mehtab Bagh — A 25-acre Mughal garden directly across the Yamuna from the Taj, the only spot to see the Taj’s full reflection at sunset. Entry ₹25.
  • Itimad-ud-Daulah (Baby Taj) — The first Mughal building in white marble, built 1622-1628, predates the Taj and uses similar pietra dura inlay. Entry ₹40.

Things to do:

  • Sunrise at the Taj Mahal — Gates open 6 AM; arrive by 5:45 AM to be among the first 50 in. The light hits the eastern minaret at 6:15 AM in June.
  • Petha and chaat trail through Sadar Bazaar — Panchhi Petha (since 1898), Bhagat Halwai’s bedai-poori breakfast, and Brij Wasi mawa kachori in a single 90-minute walk.
  • Sheroes Hangout cafe — Run by acid-attack survivors, no fixed menu pricing (pay what you wish). A powerful side visit on the M.G. Road stretch.
  • Sunset photography at Mehtab Bagh — The Yamuna returns to full flow by late June, framing the Taj’s reflection. Tripods allowed; entry closes at 6:30 PM.
  • Kalakriti cultural show — A 1-hour music-and-dance retelling of the Taj Mahal’s story, daily 7 PM. ₹1,200 for premium seats; English subtitles available.

Heads-up: The Taj is closed on Fridays. Plan Saturday morning for the main visit.

Best Villa to Stay in Agra

Verdant Acres

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — afternoon arrival, Agra Fort, Mehtab Bagh sunset. Day 2 — Taj sunrise, breakfast, Baby Taj, drive back.

12. Mathura-Vrindavan, Uttar Pradesh — Best for Spiritual Travel (180 KM)

Image credit: Mohit Sharma via unsplash

Mathura-Vrindavan completes our list as a spiritual counterweight to the hill stations above. The twin towns are 180 km from Delhi on the Yamuna Expressway, a 3.5-hour drive. The pre-Janmashtami atmosphere starts building in mid-June, and the temples are noticeably less crowded than the peak August window — making June one of the best windows for an unhurried darshan.

Why it’s great:

  • 3.5-hour expressway drive, easy on any car class.
  • June crowds are 40% lighter than the Janmashtami peak in August.
  • Twin-town format means new temples and ghats every 10 minutes.
  • Strongest sweetmeat trail in North India (peda, makhan misri, malai laddoo).
  • Free Prem Mandir light-and-music show is one of India’s best evening visuals.

Places to visit:

  • Krishna Janmabhoomi (Mathura) — The temple complex at the site of Krishna’s birth. Free entry, but phones, cameras, and bags must be deposited at lockers outside; security is strict.
  • Banke Bihari Temple, Vrindavan — The most visited temple in Vrindavan, dedicated to a child-form of Krishna. Opens 7:45 AM-12 PM and 4:30-9:30 PM; go at 7 AM to avoid crushes.
  • Prem Mandir, Vrindavan — A marble temple complex built 2012-2017 with intricate carvings of Krishna-Radha lore. Free entry. The 7 PM 30-minute light-and-music show is the best non-religious visual on the trip.
  • Nidhivan — A small forest grove in Vrindavan, locally believed to be where Krishna and the gopis dance every night. Open during the day only; closes at sunset by tradition.

Things to do:

  • Yamuna Aarti at Vishram Ghat (Mathura) — Daily 7 PM, 25-minute ceremony with floating diyas down the river. Smaller and more intimate than Haridwar or Varanasi.
  • Sweetmeats trail in Mathura — Brijwasi Mithai Wala for peda (since 1844), Shankar Mishtan for buttery makhan misri, and Govind Sweets for malai laddoo. All within a 1 km walk.
  • ISKCON Vrindavan kirtan session — 4-7 PM daily, the international Krishna-consciousness movement’s flagship Vrindavan temple. Free entry; visitor cafe attached.
  • Boat ride on the Yamuna at Keshi Ghat — 30-minute rides ₹200 per person; especially atmospheric in early morning fog before 7 AM.
  • Govardhan parikrama (shortcut version) — Most pilgrims do the 21 km loop in 5-6 hours on foot. If short on time, drive 1 km to Govind Kund for a quick darshan instead.

Heads-up: Banke Bihari Temple crowds get crushing even off-season. Go at 7 AM, not 10 AM.

Best Places to Stay in Mathura

Vrindara Niwas

2-day itinerary: Day 1 — Mathura temples, Vishram Ghat aarti. Day 2 — Vrindavan temples, Prem Mandir, drive back.

Comparison Table: 12 Best Places to Visit Near Monsoon in June in Delhi

#DestinationDistanceDrive TimeJune TempBest For
1Rishikesh240 km5.5 hr22-32°CRiver & yoga
2Mussoorie280 km6 hr16-24°CClassic hill station
3Lansdowne250 km6 hr14-22°COff-beat quiet
4Kasauli290 km5.5 hr15-24°CFirst-time hill travel
5Kanatal300 km7 hr13-22°CAdventure camping
6Dhanaulti290 km6 hr14-23°CEco-parks & forests
7Neemrana120 km2.5 hr26-38°CHeritage fort
8Bharatpur220 km4.5 hr25-38°CBirdwatching
9Morni Hills250 km5 hr19-29°CHill drive in Haryana
10Damdama60 km1.5 hr27-39°CSingle-night reset
11Agra230 km3.5 hr26-39°CMonsoon-light heritage
12Mathura-Vrindavan180 km3.5 hr27-38°CSpiritual travel

June 2026 Weather Snapshot: Delhi vs. The 12 Destinations

Delhi’s June 2026 averages 32°C with 22 forecast rainy days and 72-77% humidity (AccuWeather, 2026). All 12 destinations sit lower on temperature, with the hill stations averaging 10-15°C cooler. The IMD’s 90% LPA forecast means rain will come but not in damaging quantity — ideal for travelers wanting “monsoon mood” without flooded roads.

For the cool factor: Lansdowne (14-22°C), Kanatal (13-22°C), and Dhanaulti (14-23°C) lead the list.

For the shortest drive: Damdama (60 km), Neemrana (120 km), and Mathura-Vrindavan (180 km).

For monsoon photography: Bharatpur wetlands, Rishikesh Ganga ghats, and Agra Taj under cloud-light.

Across all 12 places to visit near Delhi in June above, the temperature gap from Delhi runs between 7°C (Damdama, Neemrana) and 19°C (Kanatal, Lansdowne) — meaning even the closest day-trip options shave meaningful heat off a June weekend.

Quick Picks: Best Places to Visit Near Delhi in June by Travel Style

The following grouping makes the 12 places to visit near delhi in june easier to filter by travel intent. Pick one bucket and the choice narrows to 2-3 options.

  • Couples seeking quiet: Lansdowne, Kasauli, Neemrana.
  • Families with kids: Mussoorie, Damdama, Dhanaulti.
  • Solo or spiritual: Rishikesh, Mathura-Vrindavan.
  • Photographers: Bharatpur, Agra, Kanatal.
  • Adventure first: Rishikesh (rafting until June 30), Kanatal (zipline/rappelling), Morni Hills (trekking).
  • Heritage first: Neemrana, Agra, Mathura-Vrindavan.

Where Not to Go Near Delhi in June (and Why)

A few popular monsoon picks deliberately did not make this list of places to visit near Delhi in June. Jim Corbett’s core Dhikala, Bijrani, and Jhirna zones close progressively from June 15 for the monsoon breeding season (Uttarakhand Forest Department, 2026 schedule) — only the Sitabani buffer zone stays open, which thins the experience.

The Char Dham route above Rishikesh (toward Kedarnath, Badrinath) sees the year’s highest landslide frequency in late June and July; the IMD has issued advisory alerts for NH-7 above Devprayag through both months. Manali, Shimla beyond Kasauli, and Mcleodganj all sit above the 300-km cutoff and cross stretches with documented June-July road closures.

If you must do hills above 1,800 m in late June or delhi in july, hold to the Mussoorie-Kanatal-Dhanaulti ridge or Kasauli — these stay on relatively stable Shivalik terrain.

2026 Monsoon Travel Tips for Delhi Trips

Before you leave Delhi for any of these places to visit near Delhi in June — or the broader set of places to go in monsoon in india — the practical layer matters more than the destination choice. Below are the operating rules we use ourselves for June-July weekend trips.

  • Leave by 5 AM on Saturdays. Delhi-NCR exit traffic on NH-44 and NH-48 stretches 90 minutes past 7 AM.
  • Download offline maps. Cell signal drops above 1,500 m and at Bharatpur wetlands.
  • Carry physical ID. Hotel check-ins in Uttarakhand and Himachal verify against state e-pass systems in monsoon months.
  • Check IMD daily. The IMD Delhi Forecast PDF is updated by 0935 IST every morning.
  • Carry a microfiber towel + light raincoat. Hotel towels stay damp once monsoon humidity sets in.
  • Don’t rely on roadside dhabas above 1,800 m past 8 PM. Most close early in monsoon. Plan dinner at your stay.

Frequently Asked Questions

What are the best places to visit near Delhi in June for a 2-day trip?

Rishikesh (240 km), Mussoorie (280 km), and Neemrana (120 km) are the three most popular 2-day picks. Rishikesh covers spiritual and adventure together, Mussoorie offers the classic hill-station experience, and Neemrana is the only sub-3-hour heritage option from Delhi with a true fort-palace stay.

Is June a good time to visit hill stations near Delhi?

Yes — the first two weeks of June give the clearest hill-station views, and the last week sees the first monsoon clouds roll in, which most travelers prefer for the cool dramatic light. Temperatures at hill stations like Mussoorie or Kasauli hold at 14-24°C versus Delhi’s 32°C average.

How hot does Delhi get in June 2026?

Delhi’s June 2026 averages 32°C with a peak high of 44°C and humidity climbing from 72% to 77% by mid-month, according to AccuWeather and IMD data. The southwest monsoon is expected to arrive in Delhi between June 27 and June 30, 2026, ending the worst of the dry heat.

Which destinations near Delhi stay cool during monsoon?

Lansdowne (14-22°C), Kanatal (13-22°C), Dhanaulti (14-23°C), and Kasauli (15-24°C) stay the coolest. All four are Shivalik/Garhwal foothill towns between 1,700 and 2,600 m elevation, where June daytime highs rarely cross 25°C even on clear days.

Are roads to hill stations safe during monsoon in June?

Yes for the shortlist above — Mussoorie, Kasauli, Lansdowne, Kanatal, and Dhanaulti all sit on NH stretches the IMD has not flagged for landslide risk in June 2026. Routes above 1,800 m beyond these towns (Char Dham, Manali, deep Himachal) carry materially higher June-July landslide risk and should be avoided.

What is the cheapest 2-day trip from Delhi in June?

Damdama Lake (60 km) and Morni Hills (250 km) are the cheapest options. Damdama works as a one-night reset costing roughly ₹5,000 for two including fuel, while Morni Hills delivers a full hill-station feel for around ₹8,000 for two with Haryana Tourism’s Tikkar Taal complex as a base.

Can I do Rishikesh rafting in June 2026?

Yes — but only until June 30. The Uttarakhand Tourism Department suspends commercial Ganga rafting on June 30 each year for the monsoon high-flow season and reopens around mid-September. Book early-to-mid June dates if rafting is your main reason for visiting.

Is Jim Corbett open in June?

Partially. The Dhikala, Bijrani, and Sona Nadi core zones close progressively from June 15 for the monsoon breeding season. Only the Sitabani buffer zone stays open through monsoon. If wildlife is your priority, choose Bharatpur (Keoladeo) over Corbett in June.

The Verdict: Where to Go and How to Decide

For a first-time June weekend trip, Rishikesh is the strongest overall pick among places to visit near delhi in june — the 5.5-hour drive, the Ganga in full pre-monsoon flow, and the layered experience of yoga, food, and walks make it hard to beat. For couples wanting quiet, Lansdowne or Neemrana give the cleanest weekend. For families with kids, Mussoorie or Dhanaulti.

Simple decision rule:

  • Have 3 days and want hills? → Mussoorie + Dhanaulti combo.
  • Have 2 days and want hills? → Lansdowne or Kasauli.
  • Have 2 days and want heritage? → Neemrana or Agra.
  • Have 2 days and want spiritual? → Rishikesh or Mathura-Vrindavan.
  • Have 1 night only? → Damdama Lake or Neemrana Fort.

Whatever you pick, leave Delhi by 5 AM Saturday, check the IMD bulletin before driving, and book your stay 4-6 weeks ahead for any June weekend. The list of best places to visit near delhi in june is short enough that the good hotels fill up fast — and long enough that there is a fit for every travel style.

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