Maharashtra, India

State guide with cities, regions, and key information.

Introduction
Maharashtra is India's economic engine and its most urbanized major state — home to Mumbai (the financial capital), Pune (the IT and education hub), and a hinterland of Deccan Plateau geography that holds Ajanta and Ellora's cave masterpieces, Shivaji's Maratha hill forts, and a Maharashtrian culture built on pragmatism, vada pav, and the conviction that hard work and proper organization can solve most problems. With 125 million people and India's highest state GDP, Maharashtra drives more of the national economy than any other state.

Discover Maharashtra

The Ajanta Caves, cut into a horseshoe-shaped cliff above the Waghora River in Aurangabad district, contain 30 rock-cut Buddhist caves dating from the 2nd century BCE to the 6th century CE — and include the finest surviving ancient Indian paintings anywhere. The murals in Caves 1, 2, 16, and 17 depict Jataka tales (previous lives of the Buddha) with a sophistication of color, perspective, and emotional expression that influenced art from Sri Lanka to Japan. The Padmapani (lotus-bearing Bodhisattva) in Cave 1 is India's equivalent of the Mona Lisa in terms of art-historical significance. The caves were abandoned after the 6th century, swallowed by jungle, and rediscovered in 1819 by a British hunting party following a tiger — the tiger escaped; the caves changed art history. Entry ₹600 for foreigners; caves open 9 AM-5:30 PM, closed Mondays. The site is 107 km from Aurangabad (2.5 hours by road). Photography is restricted in some caves to protect the murals. Visit with a guide (available at entrance, ₹500-1,000) — without context, the paintings' significance is easy to miss. Allow 3-4 hours. The Maharashtra Tourism bus from Aurangabad (₹750 including Ajanta and Ellora on separate days) is the standard approach.

Travel Types

UNESCO Cave Masterpieces

Ajanta's Buddhist murals (2nd century BCE) and Ellora's Kailasa Temple carved from a single cliff — two of humanity's most ambitious artistic and architectural achievements, both near Aurangabad.

Hill Fort Trekking

Over 350 Maratha-era hill forts across the Sahyadri mountains — from easy day hikes near Pune to challenging monsoon treks with dramatic cliff-edge viewpoints.

Mumbai: India's Maximum City

Colonial architecture, Bollywood, street food genius, Dharavi's enterprise, Marine Drive's Art Deco, and Ganesh Chaturthi — the city that compresses India's extremes into one peninsula.

Konkan Coast & Malvani Cuisine

The 720-km coast from Mumbai to Goa — hidden beaches, sea forts, coral reefs at Tarkarli, and Malvani seafood (fish curry, bombil fry, sol kadhi) via the spectacular Konkan Railway.

Wine Country & Nashik

India's Napa Valley: Sula, York, and Grover Zampa vineyards at 600 meters in the Nashik Valley — tasting rooms, the annual Sula Fest, and Hindu pilgrimage sites along the Godavari River.

Maharashtrian Food Culture

Mumbai's vada pav, Pune's misal pav, Kolhapuri heat, Konkan seafood, and Aurangabad's Mughlai — Maharashtra's food map spans street snacks, fiery curries, and India's underrated wine scene.

Important Travel Information for Maharashtra
  • Ajanta and Ellora require separate days (107 km apart). Both close one day per week: Ajanta on Monday, Ellora on Tuesday. Plan your Aurangabad itinerary accordingly.
  • Mumbai monsoon (June-September) brings heavy flooding — some areas become impassable, local trains are disrupted, and flights are delayed. Plan accordingly if visiting during monsoon.
  • Hill fort trekking during monsoon is spectacular but requires preparation: waterproof gear, good footwear (trails are slippery), leech socks, and group travel. Don't trek alone in unfamiliar areas.
  • The Konkan Railway is scenic but long (Mumbai to Goa: 12 hours). Book in advance on IRCTC; window seats on the sea side offer the best views.
  • Ganesh Chaturthi (August-September) transforms Mumbai and Pune — expect crowds, processions blocking roads, and a festive atmosphere. Hotel prices spike; book ahead.
  • Maharashtra's alcohol policy: available through government shops and licensed restaurants. Mumbai is the most liberal; some rural districts have restrictions. Legal drinking age is 25.
  • Pune-Mumbai Expressway: one of India's best highways but heavy truck traffic and aggressive driving require caution. Self-driving is feasible but hiring a driver is recommended for first-timers.
  • Marathi is the state language; Mumbai is multilingual (Hindi, Marathi, English, Gujarati). In rural Maharashtra, Marathi is dominant — basic phrases ('namaskar' for hello, 'dhanyavaad' for thank you) are appreciated.
Cities in Maharashtra

1 city with detailed travel information