2025 Ajanta Travel Guide: Must-see attractions, popular food, hotels, transportation routes (updated in April)
Ajanta Today's Weather
Clear with poor air quality 25-43℃
All Moments About Ajanta
Ajanta, the power of faith
Ajanta Caves, Aurangabad, Maharashtra, India, are the most beautiful and oldest Buddhist caves in the world. They were built in 350 BC by drilling holes in the mountain to create huts, churches, temples, etc. There are 30 caves in total, using only hammers and chisels to drill. Inside the caves, there are beautiful carvings of both Buddhism and Buddha images.
Later, the Ajanta Caves became deserted caves covered with vines and trees until 1819 when John Smith, a British soldier, went into the forest to hunt animals until he reached the mountain range of Ajanta village and accidentally discovered this cave. It has become another important place that remains beautiful to this day.
For those who want to visit and pay homage to the Buddha images inside the cave and want to take beautiful pictures without being disturbed, it is recommended to go in the morning, the first trip. If there are more tourists and locals, the entrance fee for Thai passports is the same as for Indians.
Katsuda
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The Ajanta
The Ajanta Caves, a group of Buddhist grottoes hidden in the deep mountains of Aurangabad in central India, were built around the 2nd century BC to the 7th century AD, and are older than the Dunhuang Mogao Grottoes in China.
Because the traffic is not convenient, this world intangible cultural heritage is relatively unfamiliar to most Chinese people. Even the Chinese materials available on the Internet are scarce, but there are still a lot of beautiful Indian ancients. Buddha statues and murals are amazing!
If you have the opportunity to come and see for yourself, you will not have to spend a trip to India. It is really a "living Indian Buddhist site."
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The Ajanta
The Ajanta Caves are considered by many historians to be the best painting grotto in the world. The art that attracts attention is considered to be the most important representative of ancient Indian murals.
Xuan Zang used to pilgrimage to Ajanta in the early 7th century and made the earliest record of it.
Ajanta has a total of 30 grottoes, built from the 2nd century BC to the 7th century AD, including 5 temples and 25 meditation rooms, distributed in a semicircle in the valley, which was just Indian Buddhism. In the heyday, carvings and murals were masterpieces, and the entire tour took about 3 hours.
Traffic Strategy:
It is easy to find a bus to Aurangabad at the Jalgang Bus Station, while the Ajanta Caves are halfway between them and the ticket to Ajanta is 65 rupees. The journey takes one and a half hours, there are many shifts, there is no shift for more than half an hour, and the driver is told before the train, they will call you.
Attractions Raiders:
The entrance of the Ajanta Caves is on the side of the road. After getting off the bus for 10 rupees, you enter a park and walk to a market to see one. Clock Room, you can store your own large luggage here, 10 rupees (must be stored here with big luggage, no branch), then take a sightseeing car to enter the grotto (air conditioning 20 rupees, no air conditioning 10 Rupee, the two cars are rotated, there is no option), the next car is the scenic ticket office, as always 250 rupees.
Ajanta Caves are closed every Monday, please be careful to avoid this time.