30 June 2026
Rains transform Udaipur. Green hills, full lakes, cool air, and misty mornings — and Dilip Niwas sits right in the middle of it all.
Most people plan their Udaipur trip in winter or summer. But the travelers who visit during monsoon — July through September — come back saying the same thing: "That was the most magical version of Udaipur I've ever seen."
The Aravalli hills turn deep green overnight. Fateh Sagar Lake and Badi Lake fill up and shimmer under dramatic grey skies. The air carries the scent of wet earth and wild jasmine. The city slows down, the crowds thin out, and something quieter — something more real — takes over.
Now imagine waking up to all of that from a boutique hillside retreat that sits right inside it.
That is exactly what Dilip Niwas, Udaipur gives you every monsoon season.
Before we talk about the stay, let's talk about the season — because understanding the monsoon helps you appreciate why Dilip Niwas is the perfect base for it.
From June end to September, the Aravalli range surrounding Udaipur transforms completely. The brown and golden hills you see in travel photos? They turn into lush, layered green carpets that look almost unreal after a heavy shower. If you stay anywhere near Badi Road — where Dilip Niwas is located — you sit inside this transformation, not just watching it from a distance.
Udaipur's lakes — Fateh Sagar, Badi, Pichola — reach full capacity during monsoon. The waterline rises, the reflections intensify, and the whole city feels like it's floating. Monsoon is, undisputedly, the most photogenic time to visit Udaipur's lakes.
Peak season hotels in Udaipur charge a premium and fill up fast. Monsoon is lean season, which means you get better rates, personal attention, and peaceful spaces. You don't share the Fateh Sagar promenade with a thousand other tourists. You almost have it to yourself.
Unlike the dry heat of summer, monsoon Udaipur stays between 22°C and 30°C — breezy, overcast, and comfortable for walking, exploring, and long evenings outdoors.
Let's get specific. There are many hotels in Udaipur. What makes Dilip Niwas the right choice for a monsoon retreat?
Dilip Niwas sits on Badi Road, Hills Avenue, in the lap of the Aravalli hills — just minutes from Badi Lake and around 10 minutes from Fateh Sagar Lake. This is not a city-centre hotel. It is a hillside nature retreat that places you inside the landscape you came to experience.
When it rains, you don't watch it from a sealed window of a city hotel. You hear it on the rooftop, smell it in the garden, and feel it in the air from your private balcony. The hills outside your room look like a painting. The fish pond fills up. The lawns glisten. The Aravalli mist rolls in and wraps around you.
No resort on the lakeshore gives you this. No hotel in the old city gives you this. Only a hillside nature retreat like Dilip Niwas does.
The Dilip Niwas rooftop restaurant is one of the most talked-about features of the property — and it becomes magical during monsoon.
Sit on the rooftop with a cup of masala chai as the first monsoon shower breaks over the Aravalli ridge. Watch the clouds build from the west. See the hills change colour in real time. Eat a bowl of hot dal baati churma as the rain patters on the open terrace above.
This is not a description of a packaged experience. This is what actually happens here every July evening.
The rooftop offers panoramic views of:
All eight rooms at Dilip Niwas are individually designed and stay comfortably cool during monsoon — no damp walls, no musty air. The property sits on elevated terrain with good ventilation, and every room connects visually to the outdoors through its colour, light, and view orientation.
The Sunrise Suite faces east — you catch the first monsoon light and the mist rising off the hills. The separate living area becomes your personal reading and chai corner on rainy afternoons.
The Emerald Escape (400 sq. ft., queen bed) is named for green — and it earns that name in monsoon. The nature view from this room during peak July greenery is genuinely stunning.
The Swapna Lok Suite features a private bathtub — and there is nothing quite like a warm soak while monsoon rain falls outside your window in the Aravalli hills.
The Rose Retreat and The Citrine Glow work beautifully for couples who want a cosy, warm-toned cocoon on a grey monsoon afternoon.
Dilip Niwas operates a family kitchen. Everything is prepared fresh, every day, with local ingredients and heritage Rajputana recipes. And monsoon is when Rajasthani food truly comes into its own.
Your mornings start with hot parathas, ginger chai, and fresh seasonal fruit on the rooftop as the hills clear after a night of rain.
Afternoons call for Besan Gatte Curry, piping hot and tangy, with freshly made bajra rotis. Evenings bring Dal Baati Churma by a candlelit rooftop table while the rain comes and goes in waves over the Aravalli.
And if you ask the hosts — Aryaveer and Ritika — they will make you Ker Sangri exactly the way their family has made it for generations, with wild desert beans slow-cooked in Rajputana spices.
No hotel buffet. No restaurant menu. Just real food, made with love, served with a story.
You do not need to leave the property to have a full monsoon day at Dilip Niwas. Here is what a typical monsoon day looks like here:
Morning — Yoga on the lawn as the hills clear. Breakfast on the rooftop with views of mist lifting off the Aravalli.
Late Morning — Walk barefoot on the wet grass. Sit by the fish pond. Pick up a book from the reading corner. Sketch the hills from the garden.
Afternoon — Take a monsoon cooking class in the family kitchen. Learn to make gatte ki sabzi or try your hand at making churma the traditional way.
Evening — Watch the monsoon sunset from the rooftop. The colours on a post-rain Udaipur sky — dusty orange, deep violet, and burning pink — are unlike anything in dry season.
Night — Dinner under the stars (or under a soft rain) on the rooftop. Hot kheer. Warm conversations with your hosts. The Aravalli silhouetted against a moonlit monsoon sky.
Dilip Niwas is the ideal base for monsoon exploration of Udaipur. Here are the best nearby experiences during the season:
Badi Lake (2 min) — Walks along the full, shimmering lake. The green hills around Badi Lake during monsoon make it one of Udaipur's most underrated views.
Fateh Sagar Lake (10 min) — Boat rides on a full lake with dramatic monsoon clouds overhead. The evening promenade with bhutta (corn) and street chai in the rain is a Udaipur ritual.
Bahubali Hill (4.5 km) — A short morning hike through monsoon greenery for sunrise views. The forest trail is alive, fragrant, and utterly beautiful in July–August.
Sajjangarh — Monsoon Palace (6 km) — This palace is literally named after the monsoon. It was built to watch monsoon clouds roll in over Udaipur. Visiting it in the actual monsoon is a full-circle experience.
Saheliyon Ki Bari (15 min) — The garden of maids, with its fountains and lotus pools, reaches peak beauty in monsoon.
City Palace & Old City (20 min) — Quieter in monsoon, more personal, with wet stone lanes and golden fort walls glistening after rain.
Monsoon Udaipur is one of India's most romantic backdrops. A boutique retreat, a rooftop dinner in the rain, a private bathtub suite, and the Aravalli hills in full monsoon green — Dilip Niwas delivers the complete picture. The Swapna Lok Suite is particularly popular for monsoon honeymoons.
Children experience real nature here — monsoon rain, the fish pond, the lawns, the hills. The Family Haven suite comfortably accommodates a family of four. Homestyle meals and safe, spacious grounds make this a refreshing alternative to a resort or city hotel.
Monsoon solitude at a hillside retreat is a creative person's dream. Dilip Niwas has reading nooks, garden corners, and a rooftop that becomes your private thinking space on a rainy afternoon. Many guests arrive with a notebook and leave with pages filled.
Book the entire property exclusively and make the monsoon yours. The pool, the rooftop, the garden, and the family hall — all to your group. It is one of the best private group getaways in Udaipur during the monsoon season.
Udaipur is a 6-hour drive from Jaipur, 4 hours from Ahmedabad, and 12 hours from Mumbai — making it perfect for a long monsoon weekend. Dilip Niwas is the kind of place that rewards an unhurried 3–4 day stay.
Best months: July and August for peak monsoon magic. September for a drier but still-green experience.
What to pack: Light rainwear, comfortable walking sandals or waterproof footwear, a warm layer for cool evenings, and your camera for the light.
Roads: Most roads around Udaipur stay accessible in monsoon. Badi Road to Dilip Niwas is well connected.
Health: Drink filtered water (provided at the property), use mosquito repellent in the evenings, and eat freshly cooked food — all of which Dilip Niwas naturally ensures.
Advance booking: Monsoon sees growing demand as travelers discover off-season Udaipur. Book at least 2–3 weeks ahead for July and August to secure your preferred room.
Dilip Niwas offers personalized monsoon stay experiences. You can request:
Book directly for best rates and personalised service:
Most travelers skip Udaipur in monsoon because they think rain means ruined plans. The ones who come anyway discover the real Udaipur — alive, lush, unhurried, and unexpectedly beautiful.
Dilip Niwas does not just give you a room in Udaipur. It gives you a home inside it. A rooftop to watch the rain fall over the Aravalli. A kitchen that fills the air with the smell of real Rajasthani cooking. Hosts who treat you like you have always belonged here.
The best hotel in Udaipur for monsoon is not the biggest one. It is not the most expensive one. It is the one that makes the rain feel like it was planned for you.
That hotel is Dilip Niwas.
