Manali on a Budget: How I Did 5 Days for ₹13,500 from Delhi

My first trip to Manali cost ₹38,000. It was 2019, I booked everything through a travel agent, stayed at a resort that looked better in photos than in person, and spent most of the trip in a vehicle being taken from one “tourist spot” to the next on a schedule that left no room for actually being in Manali.

My second trip cost ₹13,500 for five days including the overnight bus from Delhi. I planned everything myself, stayed in guesthouses recommended by people who had actually been there, and ate where locals ate.

The second trip was three times better in every way. Here is exactly how I did it.


Getting There — The Overnight Bus from Delhi

The most practical way to reach Manali from Delhi is the overnight Volvo bus from Kashmere Gate ISBT. It departs around 5–6 PM and arrives in Manali the next morning around 10–11 AM depending on road conditions.

Cost: ₹700–₹1,400 depending on operator and season. I booked through RedBus two weeks in advance and got a window seat on the upper deck for ₹950.

The journey is approximately 14 hours. The road from Mandi onward is winding mountain road — if you are prone to motion sickness take a tablet before boarding. The views from Kullu onward in the morning light make every uncomfortable hour worth it.

Flying to Bhuntar airport near Kullu is faster but expensive — ₹4,000–₹8,000 one way from Delhi depending on dates. For a budget trip the bus is the obvious choice.


Where to Stay — Skip the Resorts

Manali has two distinct areas: Mall Road which is the main tourist strip and Old Manali which is a 20-minute walk uphill from Mall Road.

Stay in Old Manali. Every time.

Old Manali has guesthouses run by local Himachali families that charge ₹600–₹1,200 per night for a clean room with mountain views. The area has cafes, small restaurants, and a pace of life that feels like a hill town rather than a tourist trap.

I stayed at a family-run guesthouse where the owner’s mother made paranthas every morning included in the room price. The room had a wooden balcony with a direct view of the Beas river and the mountains beyond. It cost ₹800 per night.

The same view from a Mall Road resort would cost ₹4,000 per night and feel less authentic.


What to Actually Do in Manali

Day 1 — Arrive and recover The bus journey is tiring. Walk around Old Manali, find your guesthouse, eat something warm. The market near Old Manali temple has good momos — ₹80 for a plate of steamed veg momos that will be the best momos you have eaten.

Day 2 — Solang Valley Take a shared taxi from Mall Road to Solang Valley — ₹150 per person each way. In summer it is green and the views are extraordinary. In winter there is snow. The activities at Solang — zorbing, rope courses, horse riding — cost extra and are optional. Just being there and walking is enough.

Day 3 — Rohtang Pass (if open) or Naggar Castle Rohtang Pass at 3,978 metres requires a permit (₹500, booked online at rohtangpermits.nic.in) and is only open May to October. The views are extraordinary but the road is crowded in peak season. Go early — before 7 AM if possible.

If Rohtang is closed or you prefer crowds, Naggar Castle in the Kullu Valley is a 45-minute drive from Manali, costs ₹100 entry, and has the best mountain views of any heritage site in Himachal Pradesh.

Day 4 — Hadimba Temple and Old Manali walk Hadimba Devi Temple is a 15-minute walk from Old Manali. Built in 1553 in the middle of a cedar forest, it is one of the most genuinely atmospheric temple complexes in North India. Go early morning before the tourist rush — before 8 AM the forest around the temple is quiet and the deodar trees are extraordinary.

Day 5 — Leave The Volvo back to Delhi departs around 5–6 PM. Spend the day walking, eating, buying Himachali woolens from the market if you want. The woolen socks sold near the temple for ₹80–₹100 are genuine and warm and make good gifts.


The Actual Budget Breakdown

Expense Amount
Delhi to Manali bus (return) ₹1,900
Accommodation 4 nights × ₹800 ₹3,200
Food 5 days × ₹400/day ₹2,000
Solang Valley taxi + activities ₹800
Rohtang permit + taxi ₹1,200
Hadimba temple + local walks ₹200
Miscellaneous ₹500
Total ₹9,800

I spent ₹13,500 total because I bought two Himachali shawls as gifts and ate at a slightly nicer restaurant one evening. The core trip is genuinely doable under ₹10,000 from Delhi.


One Honest Warning

Manali in May-June and in October is extremely crowded. The roads into town can jam for hours. If your dates are flexible, go in late September or early July — the crowds are smaller, the prices are lower, and the mountains look exactly the same.

Best Hill Stations Near Mumbai: Where to Actually Go on a Weekend

Every Mumbai resident has the same conversation with themselves on a hot Wednesday in May: I need to get out of this city this weekend. Then Friday comes, the traffic on the expressway looks impossible, the hotels in Lonavala are ₹8,000 for a Saturday night, and somehow you end up staying home.

I have done this trip-planning-then-cancelling cycle more times than I want to admit. But I have also actually made it out on enough weekends to know which destinations are worth the effort and which ones are not.

Here is the honest guide.


Lonavala — Honest Assessment

Everyone goes to Lonavala. This is both its greatest strength and its biggest problem.

The ghats around Lonavala — Bhushi Dam, Tiger’s Leap, Rajmachi viewpoint — are genuinely beautiful especially in monsoon when everything is green and the waterfalls are running. The problem is that on any Saturday between June and September, every viewpoint has approximately 400 people at it simultaneously, the road from the expressway to the main market is a complete traffic jam, and the famous chikki shops on the main street are more tourist trap than genuine local specialty.

Go to Lonavala if: You are going mid-week, or you are going in October-November when the crowds thin. Or if you want to trek to Rajmachi or Lohagad fort which are genuinely excellent and not as crowded as the main tourist spots.

Skip Lonavala if: You are going on a Saturday in July with no specific plan beyond “going to Lonavala.” You will spend four hours in traffic and two hours at a waterfall with a thousand strangers.

Cost for a day trip from Mumbai: ₹800–₹1,200 by train (Deccan Express is excellent), ₹2,500–₹4,000 by car including fuel and expressway toll.


Mahabaleshwar — Best Overall

Mahabaleshwar is 260 kilometres from Mumbai — three hours in good traffic — and worth every minute of the drive.

The strawberry farms, the viewpoints over the Krishna Valley, the old British-era bazaar at Panchgani — Mahabaleshwar has more to offer than any hill station of comparable distance from Mumbai. The Venna Lake boat rides are touristy but pleasant. The Pratapgad Fort 24 kilometres from Mahabaleshwar is a Maratha fortress with extraordinary views that most day-trippers skip.

The best thing I did in Mahabaleshwar was buy a kilogram of fresh strawberries directly from a farm for ₹80 and eat them while sitting on a rock above the clouds. This requires absolutely no planning, no booking, and no crowds.

Cost for 2 days: ₹3,500–₹5,000 per person including bus from Mumbai (MSRTC Shivneri, ₹400 one way), basic hotel, and food.


Matheran — The Underrated One

Matheran is the closest hill station to Mumbai — 83 kilometres from the city, accessible by local train to Neral and then the famous toy train (or a 2-hour trek) to the hill station itself.

What makes Matheran different from every other hill station: no vehicles allowed. No cars, no motorcycles, no autorickshaws. The hill station is entirely pedestrian. The silence is extraordinary — you can hear birds, wind, and other people walking, and nothing else.

The red laterite paths through the forest, the viewpoints over the plains, the small market with its horse rides and local food — Matheran has a character that development has not yet destroyed, partly because the vehicle ban makes it impractical for large tourist buses.

The toy train from Neral to Matheran (when running) is one of the most genuinely pleasant 45 minutes available within 2 hours of Mumbai. Check the current schedule at the Neral station before planning around it.

Cost for a day trip: ₹600–₹800 by local train to Neral then toy train, ₹200 entry fee for the hill station, food on the hill ₹400. Total day trip under ₹1,500.


Igatpuri — For the Trekkers

Nobody who is not a trekker goes to Igatpuri. This is precisely why trekkers love it.

The base for treks to Kalsubai (the highest peak in Maharashtra), Harishchandragad, and several other Western Ghats forts, Igatpuri is a small town with basic accommodation and excellent access to trails that are spectacular in monsoon.

The Vipassana meditation centre at Dhamma Giri near Igatpuri runs 10-day courses year-round — free of charge, including food and accommodation. This is not a tourist activity but worth mentioning for anyone looking for something genuinely different within 2 hours of Mumbai.

Cost for Kalsubai trek: ₹150 by local train to Igatpuri, ₹100 shared jeep to base village, zero entry fee. The entire trek day including food costs under ₹800 from Mumbai.