Charaideo holds Ahom royal memory in maidams, sacred burial mounds, ancestral groves and monuments preserving ancient dynastic heritage.
Haflong offers a glimpse of Assam's serene hilltops, misty peaks, tribal marketplaces, vibrant handicrafts, and serene lakes situated above the plains.
The rolling plantations, research, colonial bungalows, and tea culture that shape daily local life are all on display in Jorhat, Assam.
Kamakhya crowns Guwahati with the Kamakhya Temple, ancient Shakti rites, pulsating pilgrimages and enduring age-old tantric traditions.
Kaziranga embodies Assam’s wild heart in the form of vast grasslands safeguarding the rhinoceros and rich riverine biodiversity in the plains.
Majuli is the epitome of Assam's vibrant culture, which includes boat festivals, mask-making, folk arts, the river island of Satras, and village rhythms.
Manas preserves Assam’s biodiversity as a UNESCO park with rare tigers, elephants, riverine forests and community-led conservation efforts.
Ancient tanks, palaces, and temples that speak of royal rites and enduring historical crafts are examples of Sivasagar's Ahom grandeur.
Tezpur fuses myth and river vistas with archaeological sites, classical arts and sweeping Brahmaputra panoramas that invite reflection.
Kaziranga’s grasslands host the world’s largest one-horned rhinoceros population, along with tigers, elephants and thousands of birds. Mana’s visitors may glimpse rare golden langurs, pygmy hogs, wild water buffalo and endemic turtles. Safaris often reveal rhinos wallowing in marshes and elephant herds grazing in tall grass under hornbill-filled skies.
Assamese cuisine reflects the region’s culture through fresh local ingredients cooked in traditional ways, offering a taste of the land’s history, traditions, and everyday life.