Fatehpur Sikri in May
Uttar Pradesh, India
The exposed red sandstone palace complex becomes a heat reflector above 45°C with zero shade coverage
May bakes Fatehpur Sikri at 40-46°C. The red sandstone becomes untouchable. The Buland Darwaza shimmers in heat haze. Tourist numbers collapse to near zero. The site technically stays open but visiting between 10am and 4pm risks heatstroke. The few who come are transit tourists between Delhi and Agra who stop for 30 minutes maximum.
The May story
There is no leisure case for May Fatehpur Sikri. The red sandstone at 46°C is dangerous to touch. Heat haze blurs photography. The site is technically open but the 30-minute walk through the complex becomes a health risk after 9am. If transiting and determined to see it: arrive at 6am, carry 3 litres of water, wear full sun protection, and leave by 8am. You'll see the main structures but won't linger. The village below has chai and basic shade. The irony of visiting a city possibly abandoned due to water crisis while desperately seeking water yourself is heavy-handed but true. May is when Fatehpur Sikri most powerfully communicates its essential nature: a magnificent city in the wrong location. See it in November instead.
Why May scores 2.0/10
Weather
Extreme 28-46°C. Open hilltop site is a heat trap — no shade on the palace complex. Red sandstone stores and radiates heat. Dangerous. Avoid.
Who should go
- ✓First-time travelers
- ✓Senior citizens
- ✓Nobody should plan a May visit specifically
- ✓Transit tourists stopping briefly on Delhi-Agra route
- ✓Extreme-heat documentary photographers
- ✓Architecture scholars researching water management failures
Who should think twice
- ✗All leisure travellers with schedule flexibility
- ✗Families, elderly, anyone with cardiovascular conditions
- ✗Photographers needing more than a 2-hour dawn window
- ✗Anyone expecting guides, food stalls, or services to be operational
All 12 Months
| Month | Score | Note |
|---|---|---|
| January | 8.0/10 | Cool 7-20°C. Perfect for exploring Mughal ruins all day. Buland Darwaza and Panch Mahal in golden winter light. Few tourists. Carry a jacket. |
| February | 8.0/10 | Pleasant 10-24°C. Warming up nicely. Salim Chishti dargah peaceful. Red sandstone glows in afternoon sun. Comfortable walking weather throughout. |
| March | 6.0/10 | Warming 15-30°C. Still comfortable mornings for the hilltop complex. Holi adds colour. Afternoons warming — shade scarce on the palace plateau. |
| April | 4.0/10 | Hot 22-40°C. Exposed sandstone plateau radiates heat by 10am. Buland Darwaza steps punishing in afternoon sun. Dawn visits only viable. |
| Mayviewing | 2.0/10 | Extreme 28-46°C. Open hilltop site is a heat trap — no shade on the palace complex. Red sandstone stores and radiates heat. Dangerous. Avoid. |
| June | 2.0/10 | Worst heat 30-47°C with pre-monsoon humidity. Climbing Buland Darwaza steps risks heatstroke. Empty but for good reason. Do not visit. |
| July | 4.0/10 | Monsoon 28-36°C. Rain makes sandstone steps slippery. Humidity high. Site partially waterlogged. Fewer visitors but conditions uncomfortable. |
| August | 4.0/10 | Monsoon continues, 27-35°C. Ruins atmospheric in rain but slippery underfoot. Muggy conditions. Green surroundings contrast with red stone nicely. |
| September | 6.0/10 | Rain easing, 25-34°C. Still warm and humid. Ruins greener from monsoon growth. Crowds thin. Decent for photography on overcast days. |
| October | 10.0/10 | Best month, 20-32°C. Clean post-monsoon air. Red sandstone glows in golden light. Buland Darwaza against blue sky iconic. Perfect all-day exploration. |
| November | 10.0/10 | Ideal 12-28°C. Cool, dry, clear. Mughal ruins comfortable to explore leisurely. Salim Chishti tomb marble cool underfoot. Peak photography season. |
| December | 8.0/10 | Cool 7-22°C. Crisp winter mornings at the ruins. Fog possible early but clears. Good day trip from Agra. Quiet, atmospheric, uncrowded. |
Ready to book your stay?
We sit before the booking layer, not beside it — compare prices on the platforms below.
Tours and experiences
Treks, safaris and day tours — compare on the platforms below.
We don't take payment to feature any destination, stay or operator. Book through a link here and we may earn a small commission, at no extra cost to you. It never affects our scores or recommendations. Editorial policy
Don't miss the next Fatehpur Sikri window
One Sunday briefing on where to actually go in India, plus a 3-week heads-up before each destination you save hits its peak month. No spam.
Free. No sponsored picks. Unsubscribe in one click.